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                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-!'omeroy, 0., Friday, Oct. 22, 1976

:;:::;:;~::::::::::::;::::::::~-:;:::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::

''

,Bellow hopes to stay~cool

., PATRICK J. KHLl.!, .
: CHJCAGO (UPI)-Author
l!aul Bellgw is out there,
looking fcf "dream space "
· \oday, so be can resume
~lUng the novels that Thurs.
·day wm him the Nobel Prize
for literature.
, At a news conference coo·
~ucted witll wit and charm,
.the whlte./u!i!'ed Bellows, 61,
' '

•

Tbll week'• wllllliJJI Ohio '
. Letlery aumbers: .Pol 0'
Gold
Three-4fell oumber

a University of Chicago wrell:hed. 1hope it l.sn'tgolng
U5 ( four~ne-flve).
English prof essor , to make me wretched, but
Tbree-4feit number
acknowledged he feared the then I'm a more cynical
5%1 (five-two-one),
fame that goes along . with character ... "
Five-digit nu111ber
being a Nobel laureate.
"Being a writer is a rather · 73!%0 toeven·lhree·two·
"The child In me is delight· dreamy thing. And nobody
lw..zero),
ed," he said, "The adult in likes to have the diaphanous
Double Play
me \B skeptical."
tissues torn ... One has to
Thre"""'lt number Relaxed In a light green protect one's dream space."
73S (aeveD-tbree-etgbl).
turtle neck shirt and dark
Bellow turned aside a
Five-digit number green suit, Bellow said .he chance to talk about politics · .79877 1aeven·nlae·elgbt·
hoped the award would not llut did aim one' barb at
seveo·tevenl.
change him as it did the late President Ford. Told the
Slx-dlglt, number American author John Stein· President had said the
7«255 tseven-four-sll·twO. '
•
beck. .
winning of all seven Nobel
flve-flve).
"I knew Steinbeck quite prizes this year by
Winning color-Green.
well and I remember oow . Americans showed the
burdened he was by the Nobel United Sta!A!s was a great Sen! fill mel
prite. He felt' that he had to in tellectual haven, Bellow
DIVORCE ASKED
give a better account of said :
Nellie
B.
Hendrix,
himsell than he had done.
"Somebody must have told Syracuse has filed suit lor
"I remember feeling rather President Ford that because I di·v.Q~"ce In Meigs County
sorry
for him. I feU it lay aU don't think he would have Common Pleas Court against
Aladdin Temple Chanters
too
heavily
on him ... -and I discerned it for himself."
•of Columbus will entertain at
Norman
R.
Hendrix,
:the Fann Bureau aMuai thlilk it made him quite
Syracuse.
meeting next Tuesday, Oct.
•26, at the Cheste.r Grade
;school at 7:21 p.m. Oris
Juvenile girl
:Roush, president of lhe Meigs
(Continued from page l i
·CoUnty Fann Bureau said a
steak dinner will be served. the frequency of inadvertent overpressurlzation Incidents, that is taken north
. Price of tickets. Is $1.50 for a catastrophic rupture will occur," Fluegge told a news
;adults and $1 for children.
conference. The massive steel pressW'e vessels house a
Juvenile Officer, Carl R•
, The program being plaMed reactor's nuclear fuel. A failure of that contairunent system, Hysell, this week conveyed a
;for the evening has a Fluegge sa id, could set the stage for a large scale release or 15-year old girl to Columbus
·highlight as · the Aladdin radlocative materials.
,
a'nd to the Ohio Youth ·
:Temple Shrine Chanters from
Benard C. Rusche, director of the NRC's office of nuclear Commission for placement
·columbus. Another im· power regulation, acknowledged some reactors had been later in a Cleveland Group
portant item will be the overpressurlzed while starting up, but said there are wide home. The girl was found
kickoff of the Fann Bureau margins of safely and the incidents have not warranted halting guilly by the court as a status
Identification for Crime the reactors.
offender in thai she was
·Prevention Program.
.
unruly by not submllting
: Roilsh Said the business
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EXPOSITION Commission herself to the discipline and
;session. will Include adoptil)g decided not to change its decision to hold the 1971 Ohio Slate control ·of her parents and
·the organization's 1977 Fair nine days earlier than usual despite gelling a number of school a·uthorlties. She
:resolutions.
verbal and written protests Thursday at its monthly meeting. recently was bpelled from
;: Reservations for the dinner County fairs aroWJd the state and the Ohio Fair Managers school for abusiveness of
·can be made by· calling Association wrote to ask there be no advance , and 10 teachers.
:Pomeroy 992-2181 or any of representatives of the Allen County Fair appeared before the
,the following board mem· commission asking a change from the scheduled Aug. 1&amp;-28,
Rocking chairs
hers, although a limited 1977, dates. All said there would be conflicts •with prev iously
'nwFber of tickets may be set county lair dates.
need sponsors
JlU!'thased at the door. The
•board members and their
"Old Rocking Chair's Got
;pi!One numbers: Oris Roush
'em."
EXTENDED OlrrLOOK
,742-2134, Earl Dean 9115-3855,
Members of the Eastern
Suaday through
Ralph Carl992-2.184, Bill Carr
High
Schoo!' Future
Tuesday, cool through tbe
lltl5·3882, Tom Hsmm 949·
(ConUnued from page 11
Homemakers of America will
period wltb a chance of
,2574, Don Wilson · 698-3004, scary."
be in their rocking chairs
rain
Monday. Highs In the
:Etila Wolfe 247·2278, Mrs.
from 7 a.m. lo 5 p.ril.
Police witnesses said the
,John- Colwell 742-:!002, Mrs. SID!IIli!r plane "disintegrated 50s aad low 60s, and low• In
Saturday at the Kroger Store
Donald Mora 992·7765, in lillie billy pieces" but Bolt tbe 30s and low lOs.
parking lot in Pomeroy.
·Nonnan Will 742·2791, Tom appeared to r eta in some
Sponsors being needed for
Sayre 843-2491, Henry .Frailk control of the' larger craft and
the " rock·a-thon/' all in1192·7895 and Mrs. Harold may have been attempting an
dividuals, 0rganlzations or
·White 742-2889.
businesses wishing to sponsor
emergency landing on the
a "rocker" is invited to can
street.
Cloudy toni gh'
and , 949·2063.
·~
.
Saturday. A little wanner
Saturday. Lows tonight mid
30s. Highs Saturdsy upper
IN SEA EXERCISE
50s. Chance of rain near zero
(ConUnued from page I)
Marine
2nd Lt. Karl R.
today, 10 per cent tonight, '.!0
Russell, whose wife Linda is
goal, they say, will be to lay per cent Saturday.
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
to rest what they call Ford's
Roy 0. Smith of Route 3, ·
" misrepresentations ~ ' of U.N. UMBRELLA
Pomeroy, . participated In
where Carter stands on taxeS
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) exercise
"Bonded Item" in
spendlpg and defense.
International cooperation Is
needed to prevent a the North Sea. He is serving
confron tation between as a member· of Regimental
COF C TO MEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of industrial and developing Landing Team-8, a comtommerce will meet Monday countries that could have the ponent of the lth Marine
at the Meigs Inn lor its noon same effect on the world as Amphibious Brigade. A 1974
luncheon meeting. ·Issues the Cold War, says U.N. graduate of Palomar College,
four through seven will be Secretary General Kurt San Marcos, Calif., with an
associate of arts degree, he
explained and discussed. All Waldheim:
" An adverse relationship joined the Marine Corps in
members are urged to attend.
between these groups could May 1967.
, . - - - - - - - - . be as divlsive and disruptive
5-Pack of 12 Ga.
astheColdWarbetweenEa,st
MILLER COMING
and West in the decades
Congressman
Clarence .
1 1.49
for All Occasions
inunediately following the
5- Pack of I6.20
1-..._:,.;;...;.:;.;..z.;;,;:,;::~;;....-1 end of the second world war," . Miller will be speaker when a
·we Wire Flowers
Waldheim said Thursday Meigs County Republican
or .410 Ga .
t-~...:;;E•~•;;.,•Y;.;w,;;he;:.;,;re;__-1 ·night at a dinner of the World Rally is held at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
'1.39
Affairs Council.
l------..:..:.=--1
Waldheim described the Elementary School. Can·
~
role of the United Nations in dldates will be present. The
the "continuous process of public is invited.
.ORE
Pomeroy
F'low!r
Shop
dialogue and negotiation" as
TRUE VALUE ST
"a universal wnhrella, an
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
acceptable
forum for debate
I'll. 992-2039
Ph. 992-5781
Chester
985-3301
and the necessary central
seryices."

·Chanters

News •• in Briefs

Planes

I

Weather

Final round

DEER

SLUGS

1

p '

00r bec~m~g _ poor~r ·

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The statistical picture of the

American ecoocrny on the
eve of the presidential
election shapes up as
t'&lt;IIlfort,able If you can alford
it, but gloomy If you're sick,
poor or jobless.
The ecoocrnic outlook is
almost certain to become a
holly debated issue in the
closing days of the campaign.
All of the pre,election
statistics now are in, and tlie
indicators for prices, jobs and
IX'Oductlon show that healthy,
educated Americans w.ith
jobs are holding their own,
perhaps advanciilg. But the
ill-&lt;!ducated , those In had

health, and the poor and
jobless are losing ground. '
The Census Bureau says
the gap between America's
rich and poor increased In the
two most recent years
surveyed, 1974 and 1975. At
the same time the number of
Americall.'l living in ...,verty
increased, reversing a trend
of an ever smaller
percentage of i!npoverlshed
AmerlcaM.
· The Labor Department
said Thursday the cost of
living increased a moderate
0.4 per cent in september'
But despite the 4.8 per cent
annual rate of infla lion- less
than hall the rates of 1974and

V0 11eyball teams top /
·

·

. .4-m·a·t ches
Opponents m
.
·
The Meigs Girls' Volleyball .
teams picked up more wina
this week. On Mondsy they
staged a come-from-behind
win over host Southern after
dropping the first game of the
match by the lop-sided score
of IS-3.
They came hack to win the
second game 1~.0, and then in
the deciding third game eked
out a 15-13 win In a real
thriller.
Then on Tuesday, using
good overall team play, the
Varslty had an easy time
over Wellston, 15·9 and 15·2.
But the Reserves didn't
fare quite as well as they
dropped a hard'fought match
lo the Wellston team.
Weliston won the first game
15-2, but then Meigs bounced
back lo take the second 15.0
before dropping the third
game 15-3.
On Wednesday in a
triangular match with Athens
and Kyger Creek, the local
girls proved their superiority
as they took wins over both
teams. Meigs had an easy
time with Athens as the local
gals won in two straight
games, 15-rand 15-9. .,.
But Kyger proved to be
good match for the Marauat
gals as the Gallla team won
the first game 15·2. Meigs bsd
to bounce back to take the
second game 15·7 and lie
things up. In the third and
deCiding
game,
Pam
Vaughan served seven
straight points and was
backed up by some fine team-

work as the Meigs gals won
going awy, 15-4.
.
1n a reserve match against
Athens, the Meigs JV's also
had a successful nlghlas they
won two straight, 15-5 and 15·
4.
The Varsity 's record on the
season stands at a fine 13-4
mark while the reserves are
Ni. Meigs hosts the f\A
Sectional Tournament and
the local gals go against
Belpre at I p.m; on Saturdsy,
October 30. Good lu ck,
Meigs!

BA UM

I
LEVY' ENDORSED
The Pomeroy Elementary
School PTA has endorsed the
luberculsois levy lo be voted
upon Nov. 21n Meigs County.
The levy was ,65 of a mill in
past years but this year has
been reduced to .4 of one mill,
The levy is a renewal.

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR

PLEASANT VALLEY

D~RGES -

AT THE INN

"TIGRESS"
2 (;ALS
FROM PARKERSBURG

Ault, Middleport; Mrs. Frank
Morrison, Henderson; Mrs.
Franklin Persinger, Ban·
croft; Jimmie Snodgrass,
Racine ; Mrs. .John Smith,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Dana
Chapman, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs . . Alva Luckeydoo,
Letart; Mrs. Marvin Holley,
Apple Grove ; Mrs . John
Keys, Whiteall, N. Y.; Anna
Dale, Leon; Rqbert Smith,
Henderson; and Emmett
Collins, Galllpolli! Ferry.

COMJNGTOMALL
ATHENS - Fashion Bug,
B. Dalton Bookseller and
Radio Shack, tbree large
retail ,chains, have announced that they will
establish stores· at Athens
Uoblei Medical Cealer
Mall, Athens, Ohio, the
.
(Dischargea, Oct.ll)
150,000 square-foot com·
George
Abraham, Merle
munity mall now under
Bethel, Elizabeth Bolan;'
construction.
Herman ' Borland, Aiva
Byers, Ryan Fletcher, Elaine
Holley, Vonda Jordan, Don
Kapp, Norina Kerns, Mrs.
HYMN SING SET
RUTLAND - There will be RonnJe Longworth and son,
a hyliUl sing Satu\'(lay, Oct. Mary Lyons, Paul McKinney,
2:), at 7:30 p.m. at the Louis McMurray, Oneida
FreeWill Baptist Church, Mullens, Sharen Pettry,
Salem Street, Rutland. The Kathryn Potts, Lavanina
Shafer family wilL be the Rose, Frances Secoy, Couller
featured singers. Pastor Shuler, Everett Thacker,
Lelan Haley invites the public Cindy Tucker, Robert White,
and singers to attend.
Beverly WUkins and Patrick
Williams.

"Serlt'ice Miser"" Chassls. lnsta-Matic ~ cor()'
Tuni~. ln·Une Picture Tube. l ow Energy Con·
sumphon. Picture Comrol. W~lriul gralri 11nish
on ~las!lc cablr)el.

POMEROY .

. 91'2-5291

Middleport, 0.

·This time whole hoU$e moving
By Alma Manhall

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - Persons
I move from one house to another ana think
nothing about lt. But now It Is common·
place above New Haven on US 33 to look
out and ~ee your neighbor's house moving
down the highway (above).
Tnday I looked out my window and
' what did I see movlng down ltiough the
cornfield - well, it was Mrs. Ralph
!Minnie) King's two story house.

The Appalachian power bought her
property. So !.firulle had to move - what
better way than move your beloved home
with everything inUJct. By thew~. Mlrinle
is abnost a next door neighbor now.
Bot Hauley of Parkersburg paved the
way through the com fields and brush with
a bulldozer to make way for this &amp;uge
undertaking. This home was a four room
structure in 1920 llut through the years has
been enlarged to l90k as It does above.

Hiring is
·predicted

MEIGS H.OMJ!:C(JMING - Meigs High Principal James Sandy Garnes, Crystul Hall, Q\lt'&lt;ln Paulo Elcninger, Janie
GALLIPOLIS - As many· as 65 ad·
Diehl crowned Paula Eichinger homecoming queen Friday
Hutchinson, Juckle Kink; bllck r OW' Bobby Powers, Paul
di[lonal staff persons prob!'bly will be
evening in pregame ceremonies preceding the Melgs-GAHS
Rl'Cd, Terry Farrar, Crcn.!On Pratt ,. Tim Scftes; In front ,
hired in the coming tw..year period by the
football game: Above Is Queen Paula and her court, 1-r, front,
Jody Tuylor and Todd llood.
Gallia.Jackson·Melgs Community Health
Center.
These people, according to Maxine
Meanwhile, administrative changes In by the board Into the newly created responsible for a wide v11rlety of Center
Plummer of the Gallia, Jackson, Meigs 646 the Mental Health Center were announced position of Center Director. He replaces administrative and operations functions.
board, will be mostly certilled and last week by the board of directors after Its Malcolm Orebaugh aB the chief executive Orebaugh had served ns chief executive
licensed mental health professionals and October meeting.
'
of the center, while Orebaugh will rdain officer of the center for more than a year
skilled technicians.
I Continued on puge 2)
Dr. George B. Greaves was installed the· title of Administrator and will be

+.

tmts
VOL. II NO. 39

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

And on the 1st floor, sale of men's insulated coveralls,
work jackets, mens. we.stern and sport shirts.
Visit Elberfelds Mechanic Street Warehouse for special
sale prices on GE color Television sets.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
HOW ABOUTTIIOSEREDS ! - TN!t'swhatOhioSpeakeroftheHouse, Vern
Riffe; left, of New Boston said Friday afternoon.as he gla~ced at the Gallipolis
Tribune while In the Old Frell!'h City to campaign for incumbent Ron James IDProctorvllle) right, who is seeking reelectioo lo the 92nd District, Ohio House of
RfprJ!SB!Itatives. Both appeared ala "Meet the Candidates" rally Friday night In
the RD.!lneyGrange Hall. See picture of candidates on Pg. 2.

NEW HOURS:

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1976

Services of the Meigs County Health
Department will be curtailed in 1971 due to
a cut in the budget, Mrs. Gene Lyons,
assistant administrator of the Meigs
County Board of Health, said Friday.
Mrs. Lyons and Joan Culp, sanitarian ,·
said a budget in the amount of $58,000 was
submitted to the budget commission for
approval. In return the department was
sent a statement from the budget com·
mission, unsigned, allowing only a budget
in the amoWJt ol $46,365, which they called
inadequate.
They both staled that If a "workable
budget" is not agreed upon by the end or
the year, it is po"''ible that t~ ~ office of the
,health department would be cl.osed by Jan.
, 1. of 1977.
·
They explained the budget of $46,365
will not meet the health department needs.
They also indicated that the budget
commission has hampered their operation
due to the reduction of funds .
Mrs. Lyons and Mrs . .Culp said the
department needs · two sanitarians but
money is not available. They stated thai
members of the board of health are not
active as they openly say tl)ef don't have
time to devote to the needs o the depart·
ment because of their regular em·
plo)'lllent.
·
'
Mrs. Lyons and Mrs. Culp have tried
to tslk to the county auditor, Howard
'Frank, WhO ~ on the budget commission,

to rectify the budget, which really is the
duty of health department members, but
got no respqnse.
The two women pointed out that they
are now handling the sewage lind food
service prog~ams and the money from the
two programs goes directly lo the county,
not to health department. The county is
also benefitting froll) vital statistics
moriey which previously went to the
county health department registrar.
They went on to explain thai lhe
department can't ·admini~ter various
programs and clinics since It Is understaffed. In addition to Mrs. Lyons and
Mrs. Culp, there is one other employe,
~ry Myers, .RN, public health nurse.
They also stated thai the , budget. for
Meigs County is much lower than
surrounding counties, comparable to size,
including Vinton Couniy.
.
Mike Clifford, staff representative of
the Oh io Civil Service Employees
Association, said:
"After meeting with the members of
the board who would attend a meeting It Is
my feeling that the board lacks Interest
and is non-functioning. I feel they shou14
tender resignations at once and an
emergency session of the advisory com·
mittee should appoint a new working
health board to service the people of Meigs

NEW HOURS:
MON.
8am-5pm
nJES.
8am-5pm
WEi&gt;. Sam -.5 pm
THURS. 8am-3pm
FRI.
8am - 7pm
SAT.
8am-3pm

allocnte&lt;l to th e health department, the
leSltcr afnounl the . suhdlvlsions receive.
· They said th nt inlhe $56,000 budget the
scnio•· cl erk ;ndmi nl&gt;trHtlve ussl•tanl)
su lary· was ln crenscd from $fl,700' to $8,500
and the senior saniturlqn's post wns in·
creas&lt;'li from $6,800 to $9,:100. Dr. Selhn J.
Blazewicz, county health cmmnlssloner.
signed the budget request.
Collins and Frank said that the reduced
budget of $4U,365 submitted by the llud"et
commission back to lhc department
provides for raises of some $300 lor lhe two
emplnyes for 1977 rather than lhe large
rallies listed In tha health deparllilcnt
budget.
It was also pointed out thai acoordin8 ·'
to Ohio Cod~. the bgdget conunisalon has
the right to . reduce ligures submitted on
the budget of a~y governmental unll or
subdivision.

"The auditor, Howard Frailk, who ill a

'

VICKIE LYI'ffl ROUSH, center, was crqwned Southern's homecoming Queen

during half~imeactlvities at Soutbern-Symmes Valley football game Friday night · •
in Racine. VIckie is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush, Letart Falls.
Shown with Queen Vickie is Rick Findley, her escort, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Findley, Letart Falls, and 197~ Queen Debbie Roush, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
WlljLer Roush ,Syracuse, who crowned Vickie. See picture of court.on page 4.

'

Public works offered
PORTSMOUTII - Tuesday, October
211 is the earliest day for acceptance of

applications for pobllc works projects
under the Local Public Works Em·
ployment Program, Title I.
The Ohio V-lley Reglonal Develo~
ment Commission was advised Friday by
Phillip 'tA!velle, Athens, Economic
Dlwelopmeht AdminlJtration repre8en·
tat!Ye lor Ohio or the October 211 date.
Appllcatlons must be submitted to the
Chicago EDA offiCe. The agency will have
five days to review the application and
.mate sure that It has been completed
properly. At lbe end of the five days, EDA
may return the application without
prejudice .0 thit the applicant may
correct any deficiencies.
'
If the IJIPllcation is not returned for
cqrrectlons,lf begiM lbe lio day·procesalng
pepocl. EDA Will make no final approyal of
aq appUcaU• unill 30 days after Its
r~pt
A.etl clearinghouae response
Is ncetved
30 days have elapsed,
Uaclfr
I of Palllle Law IH47, fZ
bllllt•
naO.IIlo Ill O.Uee palllk
wor11 pr ell In ,...... of bigb ,.aem·
pl~fllleal. T~ of the U ,QVRDO eooatlel

Look for the sign
of convenience
'

member of the budget committee, refus~rl
to talk wltb me about the board of henlth
this morning ."
Meantime, Saturdsy morning Fronk
and Treasu'rer George Colltns, who make
up the budget commission, along with th&lt;&gt;
prosecuting attorney, explained aspects of
the budget which they said In reality has
been increased for 1977.
The two said that In 1976, the health
department budget was $35,975.69 and In
addition a deficit in the department from
1973 and 1974 totaling $16,287.23 was paid
off. According to a report from an audit ,
the deficit In the department dev eloped
~cause the prior auditor railed· to with·
bold the correct amount from each sub·
division for opera.tlons ~ lbe department.
Frank and Ccllinalald that the budget
as requested by the department for the
$58,000 would .cut into the subdivisions of
the county. In other words, the more

County."

RODNEY - Approximately 150 prosecuUng attorney seeking reelection;
persons filled the Rodney Grange HU Lloyd OsMer, GOP county commissioner
Friday evening for a "Meet the Can- candidate, Jan. 2 tenn and Lonnie W.
didates" session.
Burger, Democrat county commissioner
The gathering · was sponsored by candidate for the Jan . 2 tenn.
Green Township officials.
Rep. James was accompanied by Ohio
Seven candidates seeking local and Speaker of the House, Vern Riffe, New
district . posts' attended Friday's eve~t. Boston.
Including incumbent Democrat State
Riffe called James."one of the finest
Representative Ron James; Atty. Joseph yopng representatives the state has ever
L. Cain, Democrat candidate for had," and urged area voters to return him
prosecuting attorney; Archie Meadows, to the 92nd District post on Nov. 2.
Democrat candidate for county com·
Representatives from the Gallla
milll!ion.ei', Jan. 3 term; Vernon Kuhn, County District Library were on band to
Independent candidate for sheriff; Atty. seek support for the renewal of a .2 of a
Gene Wetherholt, GOP Incumbent
(Continued on (lll8e 2)

We're going to keep our Auto Bank
open 15 hoursJonger each week ...
for your convenience.

'

PRICE 25 CENTS

meet candidates night

convemence

pomeroy
national
bank

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

Riffe, James headline

,foryo~r

"

Werner Radio &amp; T.V.

.. ..

In the furniture department on the 3rd floor, sale group of
Kroehler sofas and living room suites 20 per cent savings
on wall accessories, pictures, planters, mirrors, swag
lamps. Also big savings on bars and bar stools.

Ouaaar 100% Solid State Color TV

992-3629

.

Special sale prices this weekend·on women's coats, girls
coats. A special '12 price sale, womens coordinate
sporhwear (selected group).
·

POft!PrOy
national
bank

'\.;

DR. GREAVES

ShQp Saturday 9:30a.m. to 5 p.m.
BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs Loca I School
District Board of Education
will meet in special session at
7 p.m. Monday lri the junior
high school cafeteria.

'

Health budget in Meigs slashed

If you are short.on tjine, or in ~ hurry . . ~ then you
need convenient Pomeroy National Bank hours.

17"diagonal ·

'

Open Friday Night Til 8

NOVDIIIER I, 1976

THE MEIGS INN

..

.'

1\EWIIOORS
EFFECJl\IE M OF

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
· 10 TIL 2

.

WUumn

OPENING DATE

QUASAR

rr
rl

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

FLOWERS

992 2039

197f&gt;-Americarw who eamed
less than !lie median Income
of~ per week lost groWJd.
The department said real
spendable eamlng-fler
adjustment for inOation ll(ld
deductions for taus and
social security-for a
working class family of four
dipped 0.5 per cent In
September and was o.• per
cent less than a year ago •
These ·are Americans whose ·
gross weekly earnings are
$17U9.
And a sizeable segment of
the cooswner price increases
were for medical services, an
expense item that hits the
sick harder than the healthy.

. Velerau HemorW BUJIIal
ADMITTED - Sandra .
Little, Pomeroy; Yvonne
Scally, Middleport ; Mlcbelle
DeLancey, ,Belpre; Harold
Gilmore, Pomeroy; Fnida
Lewis,
Clifton ;
John
Wlllbarger, Long Bottom;
Judy Pugh, Cheshire; David
Deem, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Carolyn
Reynolds, Ethel Carter,
Frona RlfOe, Alberta Spaun,
1net Stivers, Sally Savage,
Harry Coleman.

-RltC
I.

- ~

JDLJ WHITEHEAD, DAUGHTER of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead,
Reedsville, was croW.ed homecoming queen at·Eastern High School Friday night .
in halftime ceremonies by Jan Wilson, right, the school's·1915 homecoming queen:· •
'""'.t•oiont lwldv voted on lhe queen . See pictures of Royal Court oo page 4.

may quallly for LPW projects because of
exce!llve ilaemploytilent rates.
Lavelle advlsed OVRDC said that
EDA wUI soon issue additional changes in
the rules goveriiing Title I.
Only projects eligible for Title I f!lll·
dlng are those for which conatruction has
not Yet been lniUated, and lbe impending
regulations will tlefine "Initiation of
coJIS\ruction." The new regulations will
add five nercenta2e oolnta to a orotect's
rank If the appllcatlon Is for a general
purpose of government and if the sponsOr
is a school district or special unit of
government, lbe project's rank will In·
Cfel\le by three percent.
The regulations will delete lhe
requirement that projects ' must be com·
pleted within two years after funding date,
will state that Title I funds may be used to
lease a project site providing the lease is
long~enn and cannot be cancelled, and
:wtu make clear that any facility leued for
the sole use of a private, profit-making '
l'f WAS A BIG NIGHT FOR TIIESE two first graders 9f ~ Plalna who
organization are not eligible lor Title I
were selected attendants to the queen at Easlern High School's homecoming
funding, but a private, non-profit
Friday night. They are 'Jell CaldWeU, ..n or Mr. and Mrs. James Caldwell Route
orgavlzation may lease a facility
I, Reedsville, crownbearer, and Lori Burke, dHughler of Mr. and Mrs. 'Roberl
Blake, RoUI e 2, Coolville, flower ~irl.
(Ccntlnued on '[lll8e 2)

iV

·'• ~·

COMMISSION TO MEET
VOTING PLA~HANGED '
Pomeroy - The Meigs County
GALUPOLIS Gallla County RegiBnal Planning Commission will meet
, Board of Electl0111 ann ced .Friday a at 3 p.m. Monday at the conference room
change In the voting pia for the 445 ofthe A.S.C.S. office of the Fanners Bailk
reglstOI'ed vo!era in Perry Twp.
·
Bull ding In Poriieroy, Items to be placed In
Tile voting erecinct has been c~anged the overall economic ·devel~pment plan,
from the Perry Twp. townhouse to South· 6eing updated, clearinghouse revleWll, and
western High School. Lack of sufficient the•capltal improvement~~ capability study
parking space was the . reason for the will be among matters of business to be
change.
discUssed. ·

Crises goes im.noti.ced
.

CHEYENNE (UPI) - The president of
a national engineers' aSIIOciatlon claims
the jKibllc is. unaware of the U.S. ener!IY
problem until a crisis occurs because there
Is no federal.energy policy.
Edward Slowter, head of the National
Society of Professional Engineers' and an
executive of the Batlelle Memorial
Institute In ColumbUs, Ohio, Friday told a
southwest regional meeting of the. group
the a\'erHge citizen does not believe there
Is an energy protilem in \he United States.
"There is very little thai appears in the
jress about energy," he said. "Gradual
devel nents don 't make the news, but
evon ,
th e problem becomes severe

.and the public becomes aware ol It.
"P.11til then, though·.. we are only
.ali'!,!lng the problem!' 1
/ Slowter., said the 70,000·m~mber
engineering wociation Is committed to
support !or tbe establishment of a national
energy policy.' .
"Our society Is greatly concerned about
not having a national energy policy," he
!lllid. "We · want to see the federal
government bring sueh a policy to the
attention of \be public."
·
He said industry canool proceed with
energy deveiOllffient without knowing
what the federal government plans to do in
the policy-making area.

�I
_,

· Z.A- The Swllay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. ..,.•1976

•

.. #

Polije

3-A- The SUnday 'flmes.Sentlnel,iiSundaliilyi,Oc
illt.l 214,111976
l -iii.
. .iiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiilii.

Rap Brown

looking
for man
'

..

AMONG candidates attending ·Friday's "Meet the Candidates" ilession In the Rodney
Grange Hall were , left to right, Ally. Joseph Cain, Archie Meadows, Vernon Kuhn, Lonnie
Burger, Atty. Gene Wetherholt, and Uoyd Danner. On right is Stuart Coronel.

Charlene Hively,

Riffe, James

Public works

(Continued from page 1)
mill-operating levy which wiil appear on
the ballot next week. Senior Citizens
representatives asked for support on a .2 of
a mlll levy for th.at oreanization.
A representa!lye _fr9!!1._the Ohioans
for Utility. Refom was on hand to seek
support on State Issues 4 through 7.
Entertainment was furnished by the
Olde Tyme Chor us.
Julie Webb , chainnan of the session,
served as master of ceremonies.
Stuart Coronel spoke on behalf of the
Carter-Mondale presidential ticket.

(Continued from page 1)
providing it also will be used f.or public
purposes.
The forthcoming regulations will
adjust the project selection procedure in
cases where certain portions of a state
have received an inordinate number of
projects, or where the labor r!lquirements
of projects exceed the available supply of
unemployed iabor.
Anumber of counties cities villages
boards of education and library 'boards i~
the Ohio Valley Regional Development
District are expected .to submit applications to EDA for LPW Title 1 funding.

~

\

·'

life. ·

clerk,

LOCAL DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES WERE on hind
to hear Vernal Rlffe, Jr., New Boston, speak at the Meigs
County Democratic Headquarters Friday night, From the
left are James Roush , county commisaioner candidate; Mr.

Rifle, James Proffitt, ca~te for sheriff

lind Jllll!l
Bailey, candidate lor county commissioner. See page 4 ~or
picture of Riffe, Ron James and Chester Wells of the Meigs
County Democratic Party.
·

..

Catholics ask change in

Miller one

of 15 best

~th

excommunication policy

money

hosting open
house Sunday

Mason qualified for federal help

•

Brown's lawyer, Liz
Schiielder, an attorney with
the Center for Constitutional
Righll, 11ld the 32-year-old
Brown; a leading figure in the
1960's
black
power
movement, received per·
mission Friday from New
York State parole authorities
to take up residence in
Georgia.
"He eJipects to leave on·
Monday," Ms.' Schneider
said. "His plans are just to go
to Goorgia to live ·with his
JVife and find some work to
·110," .
The lawyer said the state
of Goorgia would assume •
·.: parole supervision over
' Brown with the details to be
worked out later.
Brown was J)l!roled after
serving part of a 5 to 15-year
tenn for robbery and assault
in coqnection with a hldup at
a New York city bar and a
shootout with I!Oiice in which
he waa wounded.
He was handed over to.
federal marshals Thursday
when he left Green Haven
State Prison in stonnville, N.
Y., but !,.leased in New York
Clty when authorities in
Louisiana announced they
would drop federal fireanns
·charges that had been pend·
Ing against him since 1968.

COLO\\
.

.

1/wntn•

Tonight tllru

Tuesday
Show begins at 8:00
p.m.

Walt Disney's

GUS
Edward Asner
Don Knotts

Tim Conway
Cartoon

restrictions

Sunday

on aloohol off

·Story of blood collection
told iri tri-state counties

THE GREAT TEXAS
DYNAMITE [HA.~E
~]0

CI.AUDIA JENNINGS · IOCn'" IOMES 1

VILLANOVA ROMPS
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Charlie Gross ran for two
touchdowns Saturday to lead
Vlltanova to an easy 34-14
vicotry over Youngstown:
R

Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

0

GALLipOLIS - ·This is the
extreme
northwestern
township of the county; it was
formed from Raccoon
township, June :;, lBIO;
organized June 2, 1812, and
the first meeting for election
purposes was held at the
house of Stephen Holcomb, on
the last Saturday in July 1810.
The nilmber of votes cast
.was about 18 arid the
following is a list of them:
Stephen Holcomb, Phillip
Shlntaffer, John Robinson,
George Tyler, Isaac Tyler,
William Glenn, Joseph
McKnight, Wllliam Ewing,
Enoch McNeal, William
Burrell, Benjamin · Mills ,
William Woods , William
Hucx, Matthew Edmonson,
Hugh Poor, William Traylor,
Thomas Ewing and Samuel
R. Holcomb.
The first settlement In the
township was on Raccoon
Creek, near the present
village of Vinton , the first
cabin being built by -Josej)h
McKnight; George Tyler,
however, iS said .to be the first
settler. The first child born
within the township was
John, a son to Elizabeth and
David Daniels, and the first
wedding was that of James

SUppOrt
nuke p· OWer

OPENING DATE

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
OCTO.ER 24 THRU.

iFOOTLONG HOT

64~
''Fixed The Way

· You Like 'Em"

Crosa:

•

'·'

·

LONNIE W. BURGER

Ohio Pos t Office .
By car l'ller· dall y and
Sund ay 75c per _week. Motor
route SJ .25 per month .
'
MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATE S
The . Gallipolis . Da l ly
Tr ibune In Ohio and· west
Virginia one year S22,00 ; six
months $11.50 ; three months
S7 .00 . E_lsewhere $26:00 per
year ; · six months S1J.50;
three months S7 .50 ; motor
route SJ .25 monthly . ·
The. Dally Sentinel , one
year $22.00 ; Six m onths
$1 1, 50 ; thrte months $7,00.
Eluwhere
$26 .00 ; · ! f)(
months Sll.SO ; thr ee months
.

The United Press In ·
te rnatlonal Is exc lUsivelY

D.moc:r•t

LLOID E. DANNER
Republican

lAMEs

C• .SAUNDERS

•

NIDAY
Rooubllcan

PAVL D.

. IAMIIJ C. SAVNDDS
You can start right here in Ga lila Countv to ab ure straight forward local gOvernrnont
ahd concerned representation for you and a II of the rtsldents of our county .
To know .the problems, the C0!l1_,1uloners need to trav el throughout Gallla County
and talk to· the people.
Elect a concerned Com missioner.

ELECT JAMES C. SAUNDERS

the uu for

publication of all nellfS
di spatc hes credited to t~e
n ewspaper and atso the loca l
news published herein .

The preceding paid for by the Committee to Elect James C. Saunder s Commissioner .
Ann E. Sa.unders, Trea surer . ·

:-SAVE UP TO 50%
•

On Uving Room and Dining Room Suites
'

P(PIL&amp;I

lUlU
•

Gaipolis, o;

PIONEERS ON TOP
ALUANCE, Ohio (U P!) Marietta's Mark Boy ran for
two touchdowns Saturday to
spark the Pioneers to a 2M
. Ohio Conference victory over
Mount Union and epoil the
Purple
Radi crs'
homeruwin~ .

'

.

~ ··

.SOFA &amp; LOVE SEAT
Regular
NOW .•52497
$749.95

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW '37497
$749.95

SOFA-LOVE SEAT~HAIR
Regular
$799.95
NOW '55997

2-SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW '30997
$619.9$

SECTIONAL with SLEEPER
Regular
NOW '52497 .
$749.95

SOFA
&amp; CHAIR .
.
Regular
. NOW '24997
. $499.95

Regular

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
. s799.9~
NOW '559"

SOFA &amp; CHAIR.
Regular
NOW '199'7
$399.95

sOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW '59497
$8405

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW •32497
$649.95
LOVE SEAT SLEEPER
Regular
NOW '99'7
$199.95

SOFA &amp; LOVE SEAT
Regular
NOW •83997
$1199.95
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW '59497
$849.95

LOVE SEAT
NOW '24497
$349.95

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
NOW '249"
$499.95

SOFA &amp; CHAIRS
· Regular
NOW •489"
$699.95

Regular

LOVE SEAT

PLUS MORE LIVING
ROOM SUITES

'19fr7
NE

· Mahoganey TableWith6 Chairs
Regular
NOW '479"

DINING ROOM SUITE
~eguar
NOW '14$2999.95 .
.
,,--

Cherry ll..ttatt
Regular
NO
' W •18497

CHERRY
Regular

j

••

on the ballot for the term
beginning Jan. 2,1977.

day . Entered n ncond c;;lass
mailing matter at Pomeroy,

entitled to

cnhaugc u •xt year .

JAMES C. SAUNDERS

825 Third Ave ., G3lt lpolisl
OhiO 45631.'
Published -every weekday
eve ning except Saturday .
Second Cless P~lage P ~ud
at Galllpoll.s, Oh o 45631.
THE DAI L Y S ~TINE· L· '
111 Court St ., Pt~·meroy , 0 .
45769 . Publl$hed every week day evening except Satur -

S7 .5 0.

HRITAJN'S Prime
Minister James Oillaghan
haa at least one bright spot
to contemplat e In the
general gloo m- of lhe
Brili s h
econo mi c
situation. OU from the new
. North Sea · field s II
reported coming b1 at a
f••ter rate than expected
and will save the
exchequer an t~stimatcd
$1.65 billion in foreign

When you vote for Ga'llia County Commissioner on
November 2nd, be sure to vote for ~

DA~L~Li~?tl'~e

$459.95

I .

Reed and carvi~ • settlcment in the wilderness of
tbat time. Some 200 persons
stood in Wednesday's rain to
attend the dedication event
with Kirk. Brian, Allen and
Scott Reed, direct descen•
dants of Major Reed. taking
part in the unveiling of the
marker.
The flag presented by Rep.
James is one which has flown
over the statehouse in
Columbus. Also during the
ceret)lonies on the behalf of
the Ohio Historical Society a
REP. JAMES
bicentennial flag was
presented to the Re~dsville
Community .
Defile."
Children of the Riverview
The Riverview Girl Scout
School
attended
the •nd Boy Scout Troops led the
ceremonies along with the pledge to the flag with the
Eastern High School band Rev . John Douglus giv.ing the
directed by James Willlelm. Invocation. The benedidlon
The band opened the was.by the Rev . Eldon Blake.
ceremonies with the National The ceremonies were
Anthem and concluded with a ' followed by a reception•! the
nu.mber "~'rench National Riverview School.

Engineers

CLOSED FOR

Blood pressure needs attention

·!

Glenn and wife, in 1811'.
by parties who were boring
The first grist·mill was for oil. After reaching a depth
erected by Enoch McNeal, of 7110 feet, they came to this
about the year 1815: lt was medical water, which rushed
located on Bfg Ra ccoon . up so violently that the idea of
Creek, and run by water · trying for oil bad to be
power. In 1819 Stephen and abandoned. The driest season
Samuel Holcomb erected the had no effect upon lt, but it
first sawmilHor John Adney, continued to flow in 1882 just
atthe village of Vinton. It was ·as rapidly as when it first
run by Mr. Adney for a conimenced. The water of
number of years and sold to this well was very cold and
James McGee for $3,0110.
contained gas, salt and iron,
in !BOO, Ezra Barker taught with so much of the former .
a · school composed of 10 that it burned like oil by
scholars, in a log cbaln with a touching a lighted match to it.
board roof. lt .\\!as seated with · The township map is taken
benches, and had a wide from the Galila County Atlas
hoard around the wall for a of 1874. The history is from
writing desk.
Hardesty's Atlas· of 1882.
· There was preaching in Reprints of both books are
section 24 in 1811, about the available from Sue Moulton
time the township wsa 446-9655 ; Henny Evans 446organized. In 1812, the 177:i, and Ann Jenkins 44eHalcyon church society was 4926.
fonned , with Rev. Able M.
Sargeant as pastor, among
the original members of
which were Matthias Gray
and Christina ROQp.
The village of Vinton was .
"
laid out ln 1832, by Samuel
Holcomb so is located ~pon
the Columbus, Hocking ·
·
Valley &amp; Toledo Railroad,.
about sixteen miles . north·
west of Gallipolis and had a
population of 200 in 1880. At
WASHINGTON (UP!) that time it oontained a flour Nearly 50,0110 engineers and
mill, a factory for carding scientists have signed a
and spinning wool , two statement urging voters tum
stores , two hotels, , and · down proposals appearing on
several churches.
the Nov. 2 ballot In six states
Ewlngton is a village that would limit the growth of
·
located about two and one· nuclear energy.
half miles north of Vinton. II
The National Snciely of
was laid out iil11i!i2 by George Professional Engineers said
Ewing, and had a pouplation Friday !bat it Initiated the
in 1880 of eighty-five. The signature
drive
"to
great attraction here was the demonstrate the confidence
Salt Well, which was engineers and scientiSts have
discovered in 1866, during the in nuclear energy a&amp; an
oil excitement In the county, essential source of power."
·Edward E. Slowter of
Columbus, Ohio, said the
statement was aimed at
propoSals appearing on the
state ballot in Arizona,
Colorado, Montana, Ohio,
Oregon and Washington.
The six antl·nuclear
proposals are similar .to, but
l~ss stringent than, an
Initiative that was rej~ed
by CaUfornla voters in that
state's· June primary election. They generally would
require safety certification
and Insurance steps that the
nuclear Industry fears would
prevent new atomic power
OCTQBER 30
installations.
"Every day our country
becomes more and more
dependent on foreign nations
for our energy resources,"
said the statement, · which
was signed by 49 ,777 ·
engineers and scientiSts.
· " If we do nothing to free
ourselves from this depend·
ence, we will soon reach the
point where another oil
embargo could result in
massive disruption of our
economy. We believe passage
of ballot measures designed
to delay, Impede or even
block construction of nuclear
power plants ... ls contrary to
th~ best interests of the
people of those states and of
the country!'

MEIGS THEATRE

DR. LAMB.

Area Deaths

Publishing Co.

,

I

1

:

Published every Sunday
by
Tne
Ohio
Valley

• dm
• 1810
IIuntmgton Twp., organiZe

the:

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

A

WATCH FOR
Fprtgeg...:...:.·

•

REEDSVILLE - Rep. Ron
James dedicated a memorial
to Major Reed, founder of
Reedsville, and presented an
American Flag to the
Riverview
School
in
ceremonies held Wednesday.
Major Reed (1789·1879), a a .
native. of Washington County,
N. Y;, was a veteran of the
War .of 1812, a Justice of the
peace in Olive Township for
51 years and was a Meigs·
Co unty Commissioner .
Reedsville was laid out by
Major Reed about 185:i and
Olive Township in Meigs
County was named for his
daughter.
In a talk at the dedication ,
Rep . James spoke of the
· sincere dedication of Major

VACATION
••

Memorial de~cated to
founder oi Reedsville

·

Election My

Passing at intersection is charged

0

NEw YORK (UP!) - Jt.
Rap Brown, paroled from
state priaon and I~ of
federal charges, plans to
travel ·to Atlanta, With his
wile nezi week to begin·a new

Career center

·'

"

in Georgia

DAY SET ASIDE
MIDDLEPORT ~
November I hal been 1et
aside by the Mete•· Local
School Dlatrict for Jlllrent
coolereaces aad indivldusl
bulldlog ln;ervlce
r
making prdcess, approved a
DETROIT (UPI )
program1. Parenti are
Delegates to an un· proposal Friday·by voice vote
encouraged to contact
precedented conference of stating:
.
building principals to 1et
"We
recommend
...
!bat
American
Catholics
have
United States, owing to the previous lack
appointments for con·
(Continued from page 1)
approved a resolution urging bishops of the United States
of
any
generally
accepted
standards
or
a
W
A
S
H
I
N
G
T
0
N
ferences
wilb
tbelr
prior to the present change. This move was
their bishops to seek repeal of take the action required to
Congressman C. E. Miller (R· children' a teachers, Any
viable at'!!rediting body . Staff members of
made to me.et the requirements of funding
church
policy
ex· appeal the penalty of
·
.
the Joint Commission have been working
Ohio ) has been named one of queaUons regarding Ws
sources requiring ~ senior clinician,
communicating divorced automatic •~communication
for
the
past
seven
years
to
develop
quality
the
15
most
fiscally
day
should
be direeted to
preferably a clinical psychologist Qr
decreed by,the Third Council
Catholics who remarry.
standwds, and will begin accreditation
respon•lble members of the the offices of ibe individual
psychiatrist to have prima ry respon·
The vote, and all other of Baltimore (In 1884) · for
U.
S.
House
of
Represen·
...
buUdiDg
prtnclJIIlia.
site
reviews
in
January
of
1977.
sibillty for the day to day operations of the
The loca I center will attempt to he
tative:. by the nonpartisan :::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::{:::::::::::::: action by the conference, is Catholics 'who dare to
center.
subject to endorsement of the remarry after divorce.' "
BITTER CAMPAIGN
Natio1 ,al Taxpayers Union.
considered for the initial sample group of
The board of directors acted to apply
Thousands of American
nation's 330 bishops, who
DUBLIN, Ireland (UPI ) 50 centers throughout the United States
"W
•:
are
pleased
to
com·
Russia
unlikely
Immediately for accreditation of the
Catholics
have remanied In
convene
ned
May
in
Chicago.
upon which·future standards will be based. Irish politica l leaders mend Cong. Miller for his
Mental Heallh Center by the Joint Com.defiance
of
the ban and, by
If
approved
by
the
bishops,
it
In other busine.s, the board approved Saturday predicted a bitter vigonus efforts to promote t
't a1
mission for the Accreditation of Hospitals,
1
!isca
sanity,
lower
taxes,
and
O
go
I
one
church
law,
are · not con·
would
go
to
the
Pope
for
the hiring of Harriet Kaufma n, a specialist election campaign to find a
Division of Community Mental Health.
sidered
members
in good
approval.
the
intelligent
use
of
our
tax
successor
to
President
in clinical psychology and child developWASHINGTON (UPI)
This move will result in an immediate and
standing.
dolll,rs,"
said
William
The
1,340
delegates
most
of
Cearbhaill
0
Dalaigh,
who
ment, who will re~;e i ve her doctorate . ln
Russia has become so linked
continual upgrading of center mental
Delegates also voted to aak
psychology
from the Uni versity of resigned aohead of state over Bonner, Executive Director with the West through them rank-llnd·flle Catholics
health services, a nd will contribute
an "insult" by a government of the nonprofit organization. business ventures Initialed taking part for the first time bishops to work for "an
Nebraska
in
December.
After
a
vigorous
significantly to the financial soundness of
personnel search lasting several monlhs, minister. Prem ier Liam " In an era of wasteful under Leonid Brezhnev !bat a In the U. S. church's policy • adequate and accessible"
the center, as·many sources or funding at·e
national health care plan ;
coalition spending and inefficiency, he return to Soviet economic and
the board also approved the hiring of Cosg rave 's
expected In the future to be contingent
amnesty for illegal lm·
has placed himself con·
Eugene
C
oombs
as
fin
ance
officer.
government
ruled
out
an
political isolationism appears
upon accreditation.
migrants; an .. end to
Coombs 'is an accountant and computer ea rly ge neral election $istently on the side of the unlikely , a congressional
At present there are no natiorally
production and possession of
data management specialist currently following 0 Dalaigh's abrupt taxpayer."
report said Saturday.
accredited mental health centers in the
The
NTIJ
voting
study
is
nuclear
arins; and unresignation.
residing in Illinois.
The Joint Economic
based on 25 key spending
condlttonal
amnesty for
votes in the House of Committee's 821 •page
VIetnam war resistel'll; and
Representatives. Mr,·t!ofiller collection of studies by in·
an end to the sale of transfer
voted 11correct" 80 per cent of teiUgence analysts and other
of weapons overseas.
the lime by the NTU stan- experts said continuing the
Conservative churchmen
trend toward new trade ' · RIO GRANDE - The said
dard.
Miller
deserves
the
lt,wss uncertain whether
POINT PLEAMNT community building or a fire community leaders that his County School Superin· thanks of every taxpayer, agreements, joint ventures· students and staff at Buckeye bishops
would approve the
Mason County, due to its high station .
office would assist them in tendent Lowell Cook; Mason said Bonner. "We need more and other commercial deals Hllls Career Center Invited
lifting
of
church punishment
unemployment rate, has been
Several projects for the filing their applications.
re presentatives Jim like him if we are going to will make Moscow even more the public to attend a11 Open for divorced Catholics who
placed In a grouping with 20 county including three
Present were . Mason Lavender, Ed Perry, Bob
dependent on the West. ·
House Sunday afternoon, remarry.
other counties in the state to community buildings and a County Co mmissi oners Roush and John Harrah; New bring·spending under control
October 31, between I p.m.
and
reduc~. the burden of
A proposal to grant winnen
qualify lor the bulk of .funds fire station hav e been Agnes Roush and Michael Haven representatives
and 4 p.m. During the tour the status of preachers - an
eannarked for West Virginia proposed as possible projects Whalen, county clerk L. W. Mayor Charles Roush, and taxes on the average citizen." DEFECTOR REnJRNING
day students and staff eccleslaslical step below. the
by the recently passed Public that woulp qualify for monies Getty : Point Pleasant Mayor William 1\lrd; and Baden
TEHRAN, Iran (I!PI) members will be available to priesthood -Is On the agenda
Works Bill, it ha s been from the PuWc Works Bill. Joh n Musgrave; Public Community representatives
Iran announced Saturday it answer questions concerning today.
learned.
·
The Region II director told Se rvice District represen· Dorset Keefe• ahd James
would return a defectlrig the various Adult and High
Other matters before
According to Ray Crabtree,
tative Calvin Smith; Mas0n Keefer.
military pilot to the Soviet Sctlool vocational programs today's final conference
director of Region II who met
Union under the terms of an being offered. Tours will be session included a call lor a
Wednesday with a large
agreement dealing with conducted throughout the constitutional amendment
groqp of community leaders,
civilian airplane. hijacklngs. facilities. Participants may barring legaUzed abortions.
$9.9 million has been ear·
The decision was reportedly ' meet In the cafeteria for
The conference is con·
marked for use in West
made under intense pressure coffee during hours of the sidered a landmark because
Virginia.
POMEROY - John E.
The patrol sa id an auto vehicle driven by John
COLUMBUS - Director from Moscow, including activities. The $4.2 mllllon
Mason County qualifies as Houck, 70, Patriot Star Rt., driven by Barbara Sue Fry, Heiskell, 36, Rt. I, Cheshire, Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio reminders it reguarly facUlty Is located on 4e acres it granted ordinary·Catholic
one of those 20counties due to 1 Gallipolis, was charged with 33, Rt . 3, . Pomeroy, at· started to pass, There was Department of Liquor returned Iranian guerrillas on County Road 57B (Old men and women a voice In
Its high unemployment rate passing at an intersection tempting to turn left into a minor damage.
Control has announced there fleeing across the 1,200-mile Route 35) northwest of here. formulating U. S, chureh. .
which was at 8.B percent In following an accident at l:55 private driveway lust as a
is no longer a law prohibiling border between the two For directions or inlonnation policy previously drawn up
exclusively by bishops.
August, accordin g to a a.m. Friday at the junction of
the ·sale of alcoholic countries.
call 614-245-,';336.
spokesman from the West SR 7 and CR :; in Meigs
•
beverages on election day.
Virginia Job Service Office. County.
The prohibition was
. Mastin County ranks 13t h in
The Ga l!ia· Meigs Post Ships prowl for .tomcat missile
removed by House Blll 158,
unemployment in the state. State Highway Patrol said
which : repealed section
includin g
the
three the accident occurred when
4301.65 and amended Sections
LONDON (UPI) - Two U. plane's 13-fool Phoenix 4301.22 and 4301.99 of the Ohio
metropolitan areas.
Houck's car attempted to
S.
Navy ships sailed back missile, whose super-secret Rev ise d Code, . effective
The Public Work s Bill pass a car making a left turn
Saturday
to the waters ~ver guidance system is said to be August 13, 1976. ·
~which was signed and put into
driven by Robert L. Snowden,
the
f'
l4
Tomcat
fighter plane proof against electronic
law by the President several 23, Rt. 1, Rutland. There was
All state liquor stores and
still
without
sighting
its top jamming. "We still haven't agencies will remain open on
weeks ago, is designed to moderate da!ll"ge.
provide Jobs f!!r'__ pJ9J~ts
No one was cited in a secret Pheni• missile but foUnd it," a Navy spokesman ·Tuesday, Nov. 2, General
GALLIPOLIS - Ever
In addition, a bloodmobile technology, it iS now possible "
which would have a lasting similar acciciJnt at 3:33 p.m . amitl indications the plane said Saturday. •"The NRI is Election Day. ln'addition, the
wonder
how
the
blood
you
·
v
isi\s
each of the 52 counties to give patients only
would
be
recovered
soon.
still
looking
for
it.!'
' and beneficia l effect in on SR 7 in the vicinity of
Director stated that penni!
donate
is
collected
and
used?
an
average
of once a month. specified components they',
There
was
no
sign
of
the
commun.ities, such as a Smith's Honda Sales.
holders may sell those
The
blood
you
donlite
Here,
equipment
and staff need. They can · be ad- ;•
alcoholic bever_ag~s__ _which through -Tri.State Red Cross
-are
dispatched
to
specified ministered as medicine to : •
they are licensed to sell.
Bl!)Od
Center
ts
collected
at
placeS.
hemophiliacs, persons un- ~.
Director Reich also
The next bloodmobile visit dergoing various kinds of.:
reminded penni! holders that sites or a center or sub-center
Eastern Standard Time in Gants County and 51 oth~r In Galila County 18 at Grace surgery, pregnant womeil ~
returns to Ohio at 2 a.m., counties In West Virginia, United Methodist Church, exposed to Gennan Measles, :
Ohio, Kentucky and Virginia. Second Aye. and Cedar St., shock victims, organ trans- '
Sunday, Oct. 31.
. .
Regular weekly donor from 121o 6 p.m. in Galilpolls, plant recipients, infants;
When the clock strikes 2
hours
are set up at the blood Thursday Oct. 28.
n~ing lost Hulda replaced!
a.m., lt will, In fact, be I a.m.
center
in
Huntington
and
subDuring
a
bloodmobile
visit,
.
and
cancer patients.
:
The time change will give an
centers
in
Beckley,
beds,
tables
and
equipment
Tbe
whole
blood
and
~
extra hour of business to
Charleston,
ParkersbUi'g
and
are
set
up
in
facilities
components
donated
by.
, permit establishments ·en·
· titled to be open until 2:30 the chapter house In Ports- provided by Grace Church. volunteers and proceued by ~
By Lawre~~te E. Lamb, M.D. up with some solution for me,
mouth.
You should talk over your envelope for it. Just send a.m.
The blood ts collected and Red Cross · go to ap·~
, DEAR DR. LAMB- I am because with all these problem with your doctor and your letter to me In care of
transported back to the blOOd proximately 92 hospitals In :,
: 48 ye~rs old, weigh 210 problems combined, ~om e tell him you want to try to this newspaper, P.O. Box
center in Huntington for the Tri.State Red Cross Blood •
: pounda and am 5 feet 4. By days it just seems like I won't lower your pressure with 1551, Radio City Station, New
processing and testing and Center region, In one day, ~
:: the time I get to the doctor's be able to cope with them weight reduction and salt rest York, NY 111019.
sent by request .to hospitals. the center recei,ves requesta 7
1 office my blood pr.essure is
much longer.
r~strictioo . He will help you.
Don't plan on losing too
Back at the blood center, from ~ese hospitals for 250 to ;
.
"
.
I your blood is typed for 300 units.
~ 180 over 120.
DEAR READER - Have
The reason you bave been fa.st. !!'took along time to get I
. My doctor had me on heart, 'you are on the right given medicines 'is simply that heavy and it will take a
compatibility, tested lor
It is. tbe responstbillty ol~
LONNIE FARLEY
GERTRUDE HARRIS
' several medicines before track. The most important that your doctors are also long tlm.e to get .rid of it
MARIETTA - Lonnie
MIDDLEPORT - Ger· antibodies and checked to Red Cross to meet these •
. ( tcylng Ser·Ap-Es. After three thing you can do for yourself worried about your blood safely. Stay on !bat diet no Farley , age 62, Marietta, trude Alice Harris, 61, a insure a safe product . for needs at all times. However,;
away Oct. 15, at the residenl of 192 Beach St.. patient use. After testing, there Is not one hospital tn the ,
:; weekll. on !bat medicine I had iS lose weight.
pressure while you are matter wbat: Don't let your passed
Fairview Manor Nursing Middleport , died at the home
;. nightmares, severe
Ser-Ap-Es is a combination needing to lose weight. •
friends or family distract Home in Beverly after a long of a daughter and son-hlaw whole blood can be stored or region that does not run •
·: depression and was thinking medicine that contains
You probably should take you.
•
illness.
·
in Columbus 2: 30 a.m . separated Into . a host of dangerolll!lY low of blood at~
:; of ways to commit suicide. At Serpasil. This medicine is one of the mild diuretics He was the son of the late Saturday . She was born ln. therapeutic and diagnostic some time during the year,,
Start an exercise program
; times I was unable to control capable of causing the mental water pills. I would recom- and walk, walk, walk, Walk a Lon Farley and Loma Wines. Jackson on June 10, ~ 1 9 15.
drugs. One unit ol your blood . according to Red ero.. of· ·
She is survived by her
; my ann muscles, and it felt symptoms you describe. This mend Diuril or Hydrodiuril short distance that doesn' He was also preceded in
can help save the lives of a ficiais.
(
by his stepfather , husband, Paul Harris ; one
• like a cereal bowl was. irri· can happen Iii a nonnal and· nothing else, These do tire you and ' then gradually de-f'th
Because of the conatant~
Wilbur Wines.
daughter , Mary Harris minimum of nine people
; bedded in the top of my head. · person but is particularly nothing to your nervous increase the amount every
Robinson, Columbus ; she
when separated into com· need for an · undelennlned
; I had a general mental likely to oecur in a person system and act only lo day. Try to build up to
He i!l. survived by his wife. sons :
Edward
Boyer,
ponents.
amount of blood, Red
Elsie Farley and son Tommy Clevelar1d ;
Harry
and
' change.
who already tends to be eliminate salt alid water. walking at least an hour of
Red
Cells,
leukocytes
depends
on the volunteer :
Marietta : three ,sisters and Her man Harris , both of
; I changed doctors and was depressed.
They will help lower your every day. You don't need to one brother, Mrs . Marvin Columbus ; J.!lmes Harris, at (white cells), platelets and donor. Moreover, the need for:
~ put on Naturetin. With the
Some people do not respond pressure some and probably walk fast, just every day. Go (Lucille) Yeauger . Mrs . home ; William Harris, plliama are basic blood blood rises yearly 'due to ,
&gt; first pill I felt like I wanted to as usual to tranquilizers and enough to keep you out of. · to a shopping mall to walk if Ric hard I Ruth ) Fink and Coolville, and Br u~e Harris. components. · In order to rapid advancements ln 1
Earl Wines. all of Cheshire•: U. S. Army ; three brothers,
: climb the waD. Tranquilizers a number of medicines used danger.
one ts nearby if you don't Mrs. Eddie !Dorothy) Boyer . Jack Stewarl, Wellston, and sepatate these basic com· medical technology ac-,
; such as Equanll seem tci to treat ~igh blood pressure
The rest will be up to you. want to do it out of doors. 1 of Middleport,· and. several George and Ernest Stewart. ponents, the whole blood unit companied by Increased '
; irritate my nervous system do have major side effects. That means a ded ica ted
(l"' !l.1M h1Js ; 16 grandchildren
If you are able to swim you nieces ctnd nephews.
contained In a. collection bag numbers of open-heart:
::.ut vivr. and one gre'af ·
• instead of cahning me. I've That is why many doctors weight control program.· To could also begin swtnuning
accompanied
by "satellite" surgeries 1 and transplant
randdaughter .
He was a m'ember of No. 9
; quit taking all medication prefer to treat elevated blood help yqu I am sending you every day. Don't allow some Church
bags, are spun tn refrigerated operati0111, say olflclals,
,
in 1\\ar ie tta ,
Funeral services will be
' and am trying to lose weight. pressure • with the least The Health Letter number 4- helath club, though, to get
centrifuges. Componenla are
It Is throUgh the conUnued '
Ser vices were held at th e held 1 p.m . Tuesday at the
; But I'm worried !bat in the amount of the most effective 7, Weight Losing Diet. Others ·you · to do anything more Mc Clure Funeral Home with Rawling~ Coa l s Funeral then able to be •~pressed into support of the iunleer
: meantime the blood pressure medicine. There is always the who want this lnfonnation strenuous than walking or the Rev . Duane Biehl of . lrlome with bur ia l in Meigs the remaining satellite bags donor that pall. Is can
iatlng . Bur ial was in the lv'emorlal Cemetery .
"' may cause more serious · dan~r that the treatment can send 50 cents, with along, swimming until you have lost fic
receive their tot blood
8Mker CP.meter y. Mar ie lla .
Friends may ca d at the and stored until' needed.
: problems.
.
With the development of needs through the ~ Crosa
may . be worse than the stamped, self-addressed a great de&amp;l ,of weight.
MilitMrv ri t~s we r e con
funer al home from Monda Y..
I'm hoping you can come disease.
dueled .
unltl the time of the services .' modern
transfusion Blood Prou,a111.

llirUng pre~cted

'

will settle

· GALUPOUS- City pollee
here Saturday were seeking a
man described as ~ wearing
blue jea111, a blue jacket with
a slim build between the ages
18·22 ior questioning In
connection with the .. alleged
theft of two watches from
Price and Son Pbannacy.
said she discovered two
watches bad been taken from
a case. She aaked a man In
the store of the above
description about It and he
ran out the store.
Ga llia Co_unty ~herlff's
· deputies Fr~day . mght in·
vestigated a traffic acciden.t
at Spring Valley Plaza. ·
According to the report, an
auto. driven by Carolyn S?e
Bostic, 16, Rt. 2•. GallipoliS,
backed up stnkmg and
breaking a window at the
Sprtnt Valley Clothmg
Center.
Arrests recorded were
Robert D. Herdman, 38,
Gallipolis, charged with DWJ
and po~ession of marijuana ;
Thomas E. Young , 19,
Gallipolis, Gene E. Payne, 19,
Rio Grande and William D.
Schopis, 19, Gallipolis, all for
disorderly conduct and Jack
L. Quimby, Jr., 19, Gallipolis,
for DW~. ·

Ill ! N 'I' I ~ (I T 0 ~-

......

NOW •22997

$~9.95

PLUS MANY

MORE
BARGAINS

.

.

'
'

.

�I
_,

· Z.A- The Swllay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. ..,.•1976

•

.. #

Polije

3-A- The SUnday 'flmes.Sentlnel,iiSundaliilyi,Oc
illt.l 214,111976
l -iii.
. .iiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiilii.

Rap Brown

looking
for man
'

..

AMONG candidates attending ·Friday's "Meet the Candidates" ilession In the Rodney
Grange Hall were , left to right, Ally. Joseph Cain, Archie Meadows, Vernon Kuhn, Lonnie
Burger, Atty. Gene Wetherholt, and Uoyd Danner. On right is Stuart Coronel.

Charlene Hively,

Riffe, James

Public works

(Continued from page 1)
mill-operating levy which wiil appear on
the ballot next week. Senior Citizens
representatives asked for support on a .2 of
a mlll levy for th.at oreanization.
A representa!lye _fr9!!1._the Ohioans
for Utility. Refom was on hand to seek
support on State Issues 4 through 7.
Entertainment was furnished by the
Olde Tyme Chor us.
Julie Webb , chainnan of the session,
served as master of ceremonies.
Stuart Coronel spoke on behalf of the
Carter-Mondale presidential ticket.

(Continued from page 1)
providing it also will be used f.or public
purposes.
The forthcoming regulations will
adjust the project selection procedure in
cases where certain portions of a state
have received an inordinate number of
projects, or where the labor r!lquirements
of projects exceed the available supply of
unemployed iabor.
Anumber of counties cities villages
boards of education and library 'boards i~
the Ohio Valley Regional Development
District are expected .to submit applications to EDA for LPW Title 1 funding.

~

\

·'

life. ·

clerk,

LOCAL DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES WERE on hind
to hear Vernal Rlffe, Jr., New Boston, speak at the Meigs
County Democratic Headquarters Friday night, From the
left are James Roush , county commisaioner candidate; Mr.

Rifle, James Proffitt, ca~te for sheriff

lind Jllll!l
Bailey, candidate lor county commissioner. See page 4 ~or
picture of Riffe, Ron James and Chester Wells of the Meigs
County Democratic Party.
·

..

Catholics ask change in

Miller one

of 15 best

~th

excommunication policy

money

hosting open
house Sunday

Mason qualified for federal help

•

Brown's lawyer, Liz
Schiielder, an attorney with
the Center for Constitutional
Righll, 11ld the 32-year-old
Brown; a leading figure in the
1960's
black
power
movement, received per·
mission Friday from New
York State parole authorities
to take up residence in
Georgia.
"He eJipects to leave on·
Monday," Ms.' Schneider
said. "His plans are just to go
to Goorgia to live ·with his
JVife and find some work to
·110," .
The lawyer said the state
of Goorgia would assume •
·.: parole supervision over
' Brown with the details to be
worked out later.
Brown was J)l!roled after
serving part of a 5 to 15-year
tenn for robbery and assault
in coqnection with a hldup at
a New York city bar and a
shootout with I!Oiice in which
he waa wounded.
He was handed over to.
federal marshals Thursday
when he left Green Haven
State Prison in stonnville, N.
Y., but !,.leased in New York
Clty when authorities in
Louisiana announced they
would drop federal fireanns
·charges that had been pend·
Ing against him since 1968.

COLO\\
.

.

1/wntn•

Tonight tllru

Tuesday
Show begins at 8:00
p.m.

Walt Disney's

GUS
Edward Asner
Don Knotts

Tim Conway
Cartoon

restrictions

Sunday

on aloohol off

·Story of blood collection
told iri tri-state counties

THE GREAT TEXAS
DYNAMITE [HA.~E
~]0

CI.AUDIA JENNINGS · IOCn'" IOMES 1

VILLANOVA ROMPS
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Charlie Gross ran for two
touchdowns Saturday to lead
Vlltanova to an easy 34-14
vicotry over Youngstown:
R

Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

0

GALLipOLIS - ·This is the
extreme
northwestern
township of the county; it was
formed from Raccoon
township, June :;, lBIO;
organized June 2, 1812, and
the first meeting for election
purposes was held at the
house of Stephen Holcomb, on
the last Saturday in July 1810.
The nilmber of votes cast
.was about 18 arid the
following is a list of them:
Stephen Holcomb, Phillip
Shlntaffer, John Robinson,
George Tyler, Isaac Tyler,
William Glenn, Joseph
McKnight, Wllliam Ewing,
Enoch McNeal, William
Burrell, Benjamin · Mills ,
William Woods , William
Hucx, Matthew Edmonson,
Hugh Poor, William Traylor,
Thomas Ewing and Samuel
R. Holcomb.
The first settlement In the
township was on Raccoon
Creek, near the present
village of Vinton , the first
cabin being built by -Josej)h
McKnight; George Tyler,
however, iS said .to be the first
settler. The first child born
within the township was
John, a son to Elizabeth and
David Daniels, and the first
wedding was that of James

SUppOrt
nuke p· OWer

OPENING DATE

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
OCTO.ER 24 THRU.

iFOOTLONG HOT

64~
''Fixed The Way

· You Like 'Em"

Crosa:

•

'·'

·

LONNIE W. BURGER

Ohio Pos t Office .
By car l'ller· dall y and
Sund ay 75c per _week. Motor
route SJ .25 per month .
'
MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATE S
The . Gallipolis . Da l ly
Tr ibune In Ohio and· west
Virginia one year S22,00 ; six
months $11.50 ; three months
S7 .00 . E_lsewhere $26:00 per
year ; · six months S1J.50;
three months S7 .50 ; motor
route SJ .25 monthly . ·
The. Dally Sentinel , one
year $22.00 ; Six m onths
$1 1, 50 ; thrte months $7,00.
Eluwhere
$26 .00 ; · ! f)(
months Sll.SO ; thr ee months
.

The United Press In ·
te rnatlonal Is exc lUsivelY

D.moc:r•t

LLOID E. DANNER
Republican

lAMEs

C• .SAUNDERS

•

NIDAY
Rooubllcan

PAVL D.

. IAMIIJ C. SAVNDDS
You can start right here in Ga lila Countv to ab ure straight forward local gOvernrnont
ahd concerned representation for you and a II of the rtsldents of our county .
To know .the problems, the C0!l1_,1uloners need to trav el throughout Gallla County
and talk to· the people.
Elect a concerned Com missioner.

ELECT JAMES C. SAUNDERS

the uu for

publication of all nellfS
di spatc hes credited to t~e
n ewspaper and atso the loca l
news published herein .

The preceding paid for by the Committee to Elect James C. Saunder s Commissioner .
Ann E. Sa.unders, Trea surer . ·

:-SAVE UP TO 50%
•

On Uving Room and Dining Room Suites
'

P(PIL&amp;I

lUlU
•

Gaipolis, o;

PIONEERS ON TOP
ALUANCE, Ohio (U P!) Marietta's Mark Boy ran for
two touchdowns Saturday to
spark the Pioneers to a 2M
. Ohio Conference victory over
Mount Union and epoil the
Purple
Radi crs'
homeruwin~ .

'

.

~ ··

.SOFA &amp; LOVE SEAT
Regular
NOW .•52497
$749.95

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
Regular
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$749.95

SOFA-LOVE SEAT~HAIR
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SECTIONAL with SLEEPER
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LOVE SEAT SLEEPER
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~eguar
NOW '14$2999.95 .
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Cherry ll..ttatt
Regular
NO
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CHERRY
Regular

j

••

on the ballot for the term
beginning Jan. 2,1977.

day . Entered n ncond c;;lass
mailing matter at Pomeroy,

entitled to

cnhaugc u •xt year .

JAMES C. SAUNDERS

825 Third Ave ., G3lt lpolisl
OhiO 45631.'
Published -every weekday
eve ning except Saturday .
Second Cless P~lage P ~ud
at Galllpoll.s, Oh o 45631.
THE DAI L Y S ~TINE· L· '
111 Court St ., Pt~·meroy , 0 .
45769 . Publl$hed every week day evening except Satur -

S7 .5 0.

HRITAJN'S Prime
Minister James Oillaghan
haa at least one bright spot
to contemplat e In the
general gloo m- of lhe
Brili s h
econo mi c
situation. OU from the new
. North Sea · field s II
reported coming b1 at a
f••ter rate than expected
and will save the
exchequer an t~stimatcd
$1.65 billion in foreign

When you vote for Ga'llia County Commissioner on
November 2nd, be sure to vote for ~

DA~L~Li~?tl'~e

$459.95

I .

Reed and carvi~ • settlcment in the wilderness of
tbat time. Some 200 persons
stood in Wednesday's rain to
attend the dedication event
with Kirk. Brian, Allen and
Scott Reed, direct descen•
dants of Major Reed. taking
part in the unveiling of the
marker.
The flag presented by Rep.
James is one which has flown
over the statehouse in
Columbus. Also during the
ceret)lonies on the behalf of
the Ohio Historical Society a
REP. JAMES
bicentennial flag was
presented to the Re~dsville
Community .
Defile."
Children of the Riverview
The Riverview Girl Scout
School
attended
the •nd Boy Scout Troops led the
ceremonies along with the pledge to the flag with the
Eastern High School band Rev . John Douglus giv.ing the
directed by James Willlelm. Invocation. The benedidlon
The band opened the was.by the Rev . Eldon Blake.
ceremonies with the National The ceremonies were
Anthem and concluded with a ' followed by a reception•! the
nu.mber "~'rench National Riverview School.

Engineers

CLOSED FOR

Blood pressure needs attention

·!

Glenn and wife, in 1811'.
by parties who were boring
The first grist·mill was for oil. After reaching a depth
erected by Enoch McNeal, of 7110 feet, they came to this
about the year 1815: lt was medical water, which rushed
located on Bfg Ra ccoon . up so violently that the idea of
Creek, and run by water · trying for oil bad to be
power. In 1819 Stephen and abandoned. The driest season
Samuel Holcomb erected the had no effect upon lt, but it
first sawmilHor John Adney, continued to flow in 1882 just
atthe village of Vinton. It was ·as rapidly as when it first
run by Mr. Adney for a conimenced. The water of
number of years and sold to this well was very cold and
James McGee for $3,0110.
contained gas, salt and iron,
in !BOO, Ezra Barker taught with so much of the former .
a · school composed of 10 that it burned like oil by
scholars, in a log cbaln with a touching a lighted match to it.
board roof. lt .\\!as seated with · The township map is taken
benches, and had a wide from the Galila County Atlas
hoard around the wall for a of 1874. The history is from
writing desk.
Hardesty's Atlas· of 1882.
· There was preaching in Reprints of both books are
section 24 in 1811, about the available from Sue Moulton
time the township wsa 446-9655 ; Henny Evans 446organized. In 1812, the 177:i, and Ann Jenkins 44eHalcyon church society was 4926.
fonned , with Rev. Able M.
Sargeant as pastor, among
the original members of
which were Matthias Gray
and Christina ROQp.
The village of Vinton was .
"
laid out ln 1832, by Samuel
Holcomb so is located ~pon
the Columbus, Hocking ·
·
Valley &amp; Toledo Railroad,.
about sixteen miles . north·
west of Gallipolis and had a
population of 200 in 1880. At
WASHINGTON (UP!) that time it oontained a flour Nearly 50,0110 engineers and
mill, a factory for carding scientists have signed a
and spinning wool , two statement urging voters tum
stores , two hotels, , and · down proposals appearing on
several churches.
the Nov. 2 ballot In six states
Ewlngton is a village that would limit the growth of
·
located about two and one· nuclear energy.
half miles north of Vinton. II
The National Snciely of
was laid out iil11i!i2 by George Professional Engineers said
Ewing, and had a pouplation Friday !bat it Initiated the
in 1880 of eighty-five. The signature
drive
"to
great attraction here was the demonstrate the confidence
Salt Well, which was engineers and scientiSts have
discovered in 1866, during the in nuclear energy a&amp; an
oil excitement In the county, essential source of power."
·Edward E. Slowter of
Columbus, Ohio, said the
statement was aimed at
propoSals appearing on the
state ballot in Arizona,
Colorado, Montana, Ohio,
Oregon and Washington.
The six antl·nuclear
proposals are similar .to, but
l~ss stringent than, an
Initiative that was rej~ed
by CaUfornla voters in that
state's· June primary election. They generally would
require safety certification
and Insurance steps that the
nuclear Industry fears would
prevent new atomic power
OCTQBER 30
installations.
"Every day our country
becomes more and more
dependent on foreign nations
for our energy resources,"
said the statement, · which
was signed by 49 ,777 ·
engineers and scientiSts.
· " If we do nothing to free
ourselves from this depend·
ence, we will soon reach the
point where another oil
embargo could result in
massive disruption of our
economy. We believe passage
of ballot measures designed
to delay, Impede or even
block construction of nuclear
power plants ... ls contrary to
th~ best interests of the
people of those states and of
the country!'

MEIGS THEATRE

DR. LAMB.

Area Deaths

Publishing Co.

,

I

1

:

Published every Sunday
by
Tne
Ohio
Valley

• dm
• 1810
IIuntmgton Twp., organiZe

the:

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

A

WATCH FOR
Fprtgeg...:...:.·

•

REEDSVILLE - Rep. Ron
James dedicated a memorial
to Major Reed, founder of
Reedsville, and presented an
American Flag to the
Riverview
School
in
ceremonies held Wednesday.
Major Reed (1789·1879), a a .
native. of Washington County,
N. Y;, was a veteran of the
War .of 1812, a Justice of the
peace in Olive Township for
51 years and was a Meigs·
Co unty Commissioner .
Reedsville was laid out by
Major Reed about 185:i and
Olive Township in Meigs
County was named for his
daughter.
In a talk at the dedication ,
Rep . James spoke of the
· sincere dedication of Major

VACATION
••

Memorial de~cated to
founder oi Reedsville

·

Election My

Passing at intersection is charged

0

NEw YORK (UP!) - Jt.
Rap Brown, paroled from
state priaon and I~ of
federal charges, plans to
travel ·to Atlanta, With his
wile nezi week to begin·a new

Career center

·'

"

in Georgia

DAY SET ASIDE
MIDDLEPORT ~
November I hal been 1et
aside by the Mete•· Local
School Dlatrict for Jlllrent
coolereaces aad indivldusl
bulldlog ln;ervlce
r
making prdcess, approved a
DETROIT (UPI )
program1. Parenti are
Delegates to an un· proposal Friday·by voice vote
encouraged to contact
precedented conference of stating:
.
building principals to 1et
"We
recommend
...
!bat
American
Catholics
have
United States, owing to the previous lack
appointments for con·
(Continued from page 1)
approved a resolution urging bishops of the United States
of
any
generally
accepted
standards
or
a
W
A
S
H
I
N
G
T
0
N
ferences
wilb
tbelr
prior to the present change. This move was
their bishops to seek repeal of take the action required to
Congressman C. E. Miller (R· children' a teachers, Any
viable at'!!rediting body . Staff members of
made to me.et the requirements of funding
church
policy
ex· appeal the penalty of
·
.
the Joint Commission have been working
Ohio ) has been named one of queaUons regarding Ws
sources requiring ~ senior clinician,
communicating divorced automatic •~communication
for
the
past
seven
years
to
develop
quality
the
15
most
fiscally
day
should
be direeted to
preferably a clinical psychologist Qr
decreed by,the Third Council
Catholics who remarry.
standwds, and will begin accreditation
respon•lble members of the the offices of ibe individual
psychiatrist to have prima ry respon·
The vote, and all other of Baltimore (In 1884) · for
U.
S.
House
of
Represen·
...
buUdiDg
prtnclJIIlia.
site
reviews
in
January
of
1977.
sibillty for the day to day operations of the
The loca I center will attempt to he
tative:. by the nonpartisan :::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::{:::::::::::::: action by the conference, is Catholics 'who dare to
center.
subject to endorsement of the remarry after divorce.' "
BITTER CAMPAIGN
Natio1 ,al Taxpayers Union.
considered for the initial sample group of
The board of directors acted to apply
Thousands of American
nation's 330 bishops, who
DUBLIN, Ireland (UPI ) 50 centers throughout the United States
"W
•:
are
pleased
to
com·
Russia
unlikely
Immediately for accreditation of the
Catholics
have remanied In
convene
ned
May
in
Chicago.
upon which·future standards will be based. Irish politica l leaders mend Cong. Miller for his
Mental Heallh Center by the Joint Com.defiance
of
the ban and, by
If
approved
by
the
bishops,
it
In other busine.s, the board approved Saturday predicted a bitter vigonus efforts to promote t
't a1
mission for the Accreditation of Hospitals,
1
!isca
sanity,
lower
taxes,
and
O
go
I
one
church
law,
are · not con·
would
go
to
the
Pope
for
the hiring of Harriet Kaufma n, a specialist election campaign to find a
Division of Community Mental Health.
sidered
members
in good
approval.
the
intelligent
use
of
our
tax
successor
to
President
in clinical psychology and child developWASHINGTON (UPI)
This move will result in an immediate and
standing.
dolll,rs,"
said
William
The
1,340
delegates
most
of
Cearbhaill
0
Dalaigh,
who
ment, who will re~;e i ve her doctorate . ln
Russia has become so linked
continual upgrading of center mental
Delegates also voted to aak
psychology
from the Uni versity of resigned aohead of state over Bonner, Executive Director with the West through them rank-llnd·flle Catholics
health services, a nd will contribute
an "insult" by a government of the nonprofit organization. business ventures Initialed taking part for the first time bishops to work for "an
Nebraska
in
December.
After
a
vigorous
significantly to the financial soundness of
personnel search lasting several monlhs, minister. Prem ier Liam " In an era of wasteful under Leonid Brezhnev !bat a In the U. S. church's policy • adequate and accessible"
the center, as·many sources or funding at·e
national health care plan ;
coalition spending and inefficiency, he return to Soviet economic and
the board also approved the hiring of Cosg rave 's
expected In the future to be contingent
amnesty for illegal lm·
has placed himself con·
Eugene
C
oombs
as
fin
ance
officer.
government
ruled
out
an
political isolationism appears
upon accreditation.
migrants; an .. end to
Coombs 'is an accountant and computer ea rly ge neral election $istently on the side of the unlikely , a congressional
At present there are no natiorally
production and possession of
data management specialist currently following 0 Dalaigh's abrupt taxpayer."
report said Saturday.
accredited mental health centers in the
The
NTIJ
voting
study
is
nuclear
arins; and unresignation.
residing in Illinois.
The Joint Economic
based on 25 key spending
condlttonal
amnesty for
votes in the House of Committee's 821 •page
VIetnam war resistel'll; and
Representatives. Mr,·t!ofiller collection of studies by in·
an end to the sale of transfer
voted 11correct" 80 per cent of teiUgence analysts and other
of weapons overseas.
the lime by the NTU stan- experts said continuing the
Conservative churchmen
trend toward new trade ' · RIO GRANDE - The said
dard.
Miller
deserves
the
lt,wss uncertain whether
POINT PLEAMNT community building or a fire community leaders that his County School Superin· thanks of every taxpayer, agreements, joint ventures· students and staff at Buckeye bishops
would approve the
Mason County, due to its high station .
office would assist them in tendent Lowell Cook; Mason said Bonner. "We need more and other commercial deals Hllls Career Center Invited
lifting
of
church punishment
unemployment rate, has been
Several projects for the filing their applications.
re presentatives Jim like him if we are going to will make Moscow even more the public to attend a11 Open for divorced Catholics who
placed In a grouping with 20 county including three
Present were . Mason Lavender, Ed Perry, Bob
dependent on the West. ·
House Sunday afternoon, remarry.
other counties in the state to community buildings and a County Co mmissi oners Roush and John Harrah; New bring·spending under control
October 31, between I p.m.
and
reduc~. the burden of
A proposal to grant winnen
qualify lor the bulk of .funds fire station hav e been Agnes Roush and Michael Haven representatives
and 4 p.m. During the tour the status of preachers - an
eannarked for West Virginia proposed as possible projects Whalen, county clerk L. W. Mayor Charles Roush, and taxes on the average citizen." DEFECTOR REnJRNING
day students and staff eccleslaslical step below. the
by the recently passed Public that woulp qualify for monies Getty : Point Pleasant Mayor William 1\lrd; and Baden
TEHRAN, Iran (I!PI) members will be available to priesthood -Is On the agenda
Works Bill, it ha s been from the PuWc Works Bill. Joh n Musgrave; Public Community representatives
Iran announced Saturday it answer questions concerning today.
learned.
·
The Region II director told Se rvice District represen· Dorset Keefe• ahd James
would return a defectlrig the various Adult and High
Other matters before
According to Ray Crabtree,
tative Calvin Smith; Mas0n Keefer.
military pilot to the Soviet Sctlool vocational programs today's final conference
director of Region II who met
Union under the terms of an being offered. Tours will be session included a call lor a
Wednesday with a large
agreement dealing with conducted throughout the constitutional amendment
groqp of community leaders,
civilian airplane. hijacklngs. facilities. Participants may barring legaUzed abortions.
$9.9 million has been ear·
The decision was reportedly ' meet In the cafeteria for
The conference is con·
marked for use in West
made under intense pressure coffee during hours of the sidered a landmark because
Virginia.
POMEROY - John E.
The patrol sa id an auto vehicle driven by John
COLUMBUS - Director from Moscow, including activities. The $4.2 mllllon
Mason County qualifies as Houck, 70, Patriot Star Rt., driven by Barbara Sue Fry, Heiskell, 36, Rt. I, Cheshire, Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio reminders it reguarly facUlty Is located on 4e acres it granted ordinary·Catholic
one of those 20counties due to 1 Gallipolis, was charged with 33, Rt . 3, . Pomeroy, at· started to pass, There was Department of Liquor returned Iranian guerrillas on County Road 57B (Old men and women a voice In
Its high unemployment rate passing at an intersection tempting to turn left into a minor damage.
Control has announced there fleeing across the 1,200-mile Route 35) northwest of here. formulating U. S, chureh. .
which was at 8.B percent In following an accident at l:55 private driveway lust as a
is no longer a law prohibiling border between the two For directions or inlonnation policy previously drawn up
exclusively by bishops.
August, accordin g to a a.m. Friday at the junction of
the ·sale of alcoholic countries.
call 614-245-,';336.
spokesman from the West SR 7 and CR :; in Meigs
•
beverages on election day.
Virginia Job Service Office. County.
The prohibition was
. Mastin County ranks 13t h in
The Ga l!ia· Meigs Post Ships prowl for .tomcat missile
removed by House Blll 158,
unemployment in the state. State Highway Patrol said
which : repealed section
includin g
the
three the accident occurred when
4301.65 and amended Sections
LONDON (UPI) - Two U. plane's 13-fool Phoenix 4301.22 and 4301.99 of the Ohio
metropolitan areas.
Houck's car attempted to
S.
Navy ships sailed back missile, whose super-secret Rev ise d Code, . effective
The Public Work s Bill pass a car making a left turn
Saturday
to the waters ~ver guidance system is said to be August 13, 1976. ·
~which was signed and put into
driven by Robert L. Snowden,
the
f'
l4
Tomcat
fighter plane proof against electronic
law by the President several 23, Rt. 1, Rutland. There was
All state liquor stores and
still
without
sighting
its top jamming. "We still haven't agencies will remain open on
weeks ago, is designed to moderate da!ll"ge.
provide Jobs f!!r'__ pJ9J~ts
No one was cited in a secret Pheni• missile but foUnd it," a Navy spokesman ·Tuesday, Nov. 2, General
GALLIPOLIS - Ever
In addition, a bloodmobile technology, it iS now possible "
which would have a lasting similar acciciJnt at 3:33 p.m . amitl indications the plane said Saturday. •"The NRI is Election Day. ln'addition, the
wonder
how
the
blood
you
·
v
isi\s
each of the 52 counties to give patients only
would
be
recovered
soon.
still
looking
for
it.!'
' and beneficia l effect in on SR 7 in the vicinity of
Director stated that penni!
donate
is
collected
and
used?
an
average
of once a month. specified components they',
There
was
no
sign
of
the
commun.ities, such as a Smith's Honda Sales.
holders may sell those
The
blood
you
donlite
Here,
equipment
and staff need. They can · be ad- ;•
alcoholic bever_ag~s__ _which through -Tri.State Red Cross
-are
dispatched
to
specified ministered as medicine to : •
they are licensed to sell.
Bl!)Od
Center
ts
collected
at
placeS.
hemophiliacs, persons un- ~.
Director Reich also
The next bloodmobile visit dergoing various kinds of.:
reminded penni! holders that sites or a center or sub-center
Eastern Standard Time in Gants County and 51 oth~r In Galila County 18 at Grace surgery, pregnant womeil ~
returns to Ohio at 2 a.m., counties In West Virginia, United Methodist Church, exposed to Gennan Measles, :
Ohio, Kentucky and Virginia. Second Aye. and Cedar St., shock victims, organ trans- '
Sunday, Oct. 31.
. .
Regular weekly donor from 121o 6 p.m. in Galilpolls, plant recipients, infants;
When the clock strikes 2
hours
are set up at the blood Thursday Oct. 28.
n~ing lost Hulda replaced!
a.m., lt will, In fact, be I a.m.
center
in
Huntington
and
subDuring
a
bloodmobile
visit,
.
and
cancer patients.
:
The time change will give an
centers
in
Beckley,
beds,
tables
and
equipment
Tbe
whole
blood
and
~
extra hour of business to
Charleston,
ParkersbUi'g
and
are
set
up
in
facilities
components
donated
by.
, permit establishments ·en·
· titled to be open until 2:30 the chapter house In Ports- provided by Grace Church. volunteers and proceued by ~
By Lawre~~te E. Lamb, M.D. up with some solution for me,
mouth.
You should talk over your envelope for it. Just send a.m.
The blood ts collected and Red Cross · go to ap·~
, DEAR DR. LAMB- I am because with all these problem with your doctor and your letter to me In care of
transported back to the blOOd proximately 92 hospitals In :,
: 48 ye~rs old, weigh 210 problems combined, ~om e tell him you want to try to this newspaper, P.O. Box
center in Huntington for the Tri.State Red Cross Blood •
: pounda and am 5 feet 4. By days it just seems like I won't lower your pressure with 1551, Radio City Station, New
processing and testing and Center region, In one day, ~
:: the time I get to the doctor's be able to cope with them weight reduction and salt rest York, NY 111019.
sent by request .to hospitals. the center recei,ves requesta 7
1 office my blood pr.essure is
much longer.
r~strictioo . He will help you.
Don't plan on losing too
Back at the blood center, from ~ese hospitals for 250 to ;
.
"
.
I your blood is typed for 300 units.
~ 180 over 120.
DEAR READER - Have
The reason you bave been fa.st. !!'took along time to get I
. My doctor had me on heart, 'you are on the right given medicines 'is simply that heavy and it will take a
compatibility, tested lor
It is. tbe responstbillty ol~
LONNIE FARLEY
GERTRUDE HARRIS
' several medicines before track. The most important that your doctors are also long tlm.e to get .rid of it
MARIETTA - Lonnie
MIDDLEPORT - Ger· antibodies and checked to Red Cross to meet these •
. ( tcylng Ser·Ap-Es. After three thing you can do for yourself worried about your blood safely. Stay on !bat diet no Farley , age 62, Marietta, trude Alice Harris, 61, a insure a safe product . for needs at all times. However,;
away Oct. 15, at the residenl of 192 Beach St.. patient use. After testing, there Is not one hospital tn the ,
:; weekll. on !bat medicine I had iS lose weight.
pressure while you are matter wbat: Don't let your passed
Fairview Manor Nursing Middleport , died at the home
;. nightmares, severe
Ser-Ap-Es is a combination needing to lose weight. •
friends or family distract Home in Beverly after a long of a daughter and son-hlaw whole blood can be stored or region that does not run •
·: depression and was thinking medicine that contains
You probably should take you.
•
illness.
·
in Columbus 2: 30 a.m . separated Into . a host of dangerolll!lY low of blood at~
:; of ways to commit suicide. At Serpasil. This medicine is one of the mild diuretics He was the son of the late Saturday . She was born ln. therapeutic and diagnostic some time during the year,,
Start an exercise program
; times I was unable to control capable of causing the mental water pills. I would recom- and walk, walk, walk, Walk a Lon Farley and Loma Wines. Jackson on June 10, ~ 1 9 15.
drugs. One unit ol your blood . according to Red ero.. of· ·
She is survived by her
; my ann muscles, and it felt symptoms you describe. This mend Diuril or Hydrodiuril short distance that doesn' He was also preceded in
can help save the lives of a ficiais.
(
by his stepfather , husband, Paul Harris ; one
• like a cereal bowl was. irri· can happen Iii a nonnal and· nothing else, These do tire you and ' then gradually de-f'th
Because of the conatant~
Wilbur Wines.
daughter , Mary Harris minimum of nine people
; bedded in the top of my head. · person but is particularly nothing to your nervous increase the amount every
Robinson, Columbus ; she
when separated into com· need for an · undelennlned
; I had a general mental likely to oecur in a person system and act only lo day. Try to build up to
He i!l. survived by his wife. sons :
Edward
Boyer,
ponents.
amount of blood, Red
Elsie Farley and son Tommy Clevelar1d ;
Harry
and
' change.
who already tends to be eliminate salt alid water. walking at least an hour of
Red
Cells,
leukocytes
depends
on the volunteer :
Marietta : three ,sisters and Her man Harris , both of
; I changed doctors and was depressed.
They will help lower your every day. You don't need to one brother, Mrs . Marvin Columbus ; J.!lmes Harris, at (white cells), platelets and donor. Moreover, the need for:
~ put on Naturetin. With the
Some people do not respond pressure some and probably walk fast, just every day. Go (Lucille) Yeauger . Mrs . home ; William Harris, plliama are basic blood blood rises yearly 'due to ,
&gt; first pill I felt like I wanted to as usual to tranquilizers and enough to keep you out of. · to a shopping mall to walk if Ric hard I Ruth ) Fink and Coolville, and Br u~e Harris. components. · In order to rapid advancements ln 1
Earl Wines. all of Cheshire•: U. S. Army ; three brothers,
: climb the waD. Tranquilizers a number of medicines used danger.
one ts nearby if you don't Mrs. Eddie !Dorothy) Boyer . Jack Stewarl, Wellston, and sepatate these basic com· medical technology ac-,
; such as Equanll seem tci to treat ~igh blood pressure
The rest will be up to you. want to do it out of doors. 1 of Middleport,· and. several George and Ernest Stewart. ponents, the whole blood unit companied by Increased '
; irritate my nervous system do have major side effects. That means a ded ica ted
(l"' !l.1M h1Js ; 16 grandchildren
If you are able to swim you nieces ctnd nephews.
contained In a. collection bag numbers of open-heart:
::.ut vivr. and one gre'af ·
• instead of cahning me. I've That is why many doctors weight control program.· To could also begin swtnuning
accompanied
by "satellite" surgeries 1 and transplant
randdaughter .
He was a m'ember of No. 9
; quit taking all medication prefer to treat elevated blood help yqu I am sending you every day. Don't allow some Church
bags, are spun tn refrigerated operati0111, say olflclals,
,
in 1\\ar ie tta ,
Funeral services will be
' and am trying to lose weight. pressure • with the least The Health Letter number 4- helath club, though, to get
centrifuges. Componenla are
It Is throUgh the conUnued '
Ser vices were held at th e held 1 p.m . Tuesday at the
; But I'm worried !bat in the amount of the most effective 7, Weight Losing Diet. Others ·you · to do anything more Mc Clure Funeral Home with Rawling~ Coa l s Funeral then able to be •~pressed into support of the iunleer
: meantime the blood pressure medicine. There is always the who want this lnfonnation strenuous than walking or the Rev . Duane Biehl of . lrlome with bur ia l in Meigs the remaining satellite bags donor that pall. Is can
iatlng . Bur ial was in the lv'emorlal Cemetery .
"' may cause more serious · dan~r that the treatment can send 50 cents, with along, swimming until you have lost fic
receive their tot blood
8Mker CP.meter y. Mar ie lla .
Friends may ca d at the and stored until' needed.
: problems.
.
With the development of needs through the ~ Crosa
may . be worse than the stamped, self-addressed a great de&amp;l ,of weight.
MilitMrv ri t~s we r e con
funer al home from Monda Y..
I'm hoping you can come disease.
dueled .
unltl the time of the services .' modern
transfusion Blood Prou,a111.

llirUng pre~cted

'

will settle

· GALUPOUS- City pollee
here Saturday were seeking a
man described as ~ wearing
blue jea111, a blue jacket with
a slim build between the ages
18·22 ior questioning In
connection with the .. alleged
theft of two watches from
Price and Son Pbannacy.
said she discovered two
watches bad been taken from
a case. She aaked a man In
the store of the above
description about It and he
ran out the store.
Ga llia Co_unty ~herlff's
· deputies Fr~day . mght in·
vestigated a traffic acciden.t
at Spring Valley Plaza. ·
According to the report, an
auto. driven by Carolyn S?e
Bostic, 16, Rt. 2•. GallipoliS,
backed up stnkmg and
breaking a window at the
Sprtnt Valley Clothmg
Center.
Arrests recorded were
Robert D. Herdman, 38,
Gallipolis, charged with DWJ
and po~ession of marijuana ;
Thomas E. Young , 19,
Gallipolis, Gene E. Payne, 19,
Rio Grande and William D.
Schopis, 19, Gallipolis, all for
disorderly conduct and Jack
L. Quimby, Jr., 19, Gallipolis,
for DW~. ·

Ill ! N 'I' I ~ (I T 0 ~-

......

NOW •22997

$~9.95

PLUS MANY

MORE
BARGAINS

.

.

'
'

.

�•

'

4-A-Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sur.lay, Oct. 24, 1976

Tests prove Swine .flu Shots
safe for children age 3-18
WASHINGTON (UPI) Children between 3 and 18
may start getting swine flu
shots as early as next month
as a result of two rounds of
tests that show they can be
safely immunized, according
to a government health
offiCial. ~.
But Dr. John R. Seal,
depuly director of the
National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, said

Friday tliat the swine flu the effort but ''It would be my three to recommend they be results presented In June. A
vaccination program for guess an appreciable number Included in !he vaccination more extensive ..aeries of
children is more complicated of children should be program this fall .
trials began in "August .00
than for adults and will imrnunized before the flu
The testing of the swloe.nu was . compleled earlier !hi!
require carefully adjusted, seaS(m ls over."
vaci:ine in children began last month.
·
dosages and probably two
" I really think we 've taken April with f.1ie first tentative
shots.
a large step forward," Seal
TI1e decision on when to said. "It 's very rea ssuring 11&gt;
begin vaccinating · . the us to know we can immunize .
nation's 40 million children children satisfactorily."
· FAsT REUEF for the irritation of back seat drivers is this' French&lt;nacte Citroen
under 18, and precisely how,
There are two types of
'"JCV" recently exhibited at an aulD show in Frankfurt, West Germany. Exhibitors said the
will be made after vaccines under study. Both
car can go "full speed in both directions - forwards and baCkwards."
gover'nment
scientists use a dead virus, but one has
evaluate test data presented been processed more thaq the
at a meeting at the National other. I&lt; results in fewer
Institutes of Health. Seal told reactions but requires two
a news conferenc&amp; the go- shots to produce the desired
ahead could come as early as immunity. ·
the first wee~ In Novem~r .
Dr . Peter Wright of
He said the fact that two Vanderbilt University, wbo
· doses probably will be needed helped direct the trials, said
to reduce reactions and not enough Is known about the
By EDWARD 'K, DeLONG
In its draft report the task Assoc iation all expressed ensure inununity wiil slow effects In children under
WASHINGTON (UP!) force called for culling 1985
The aulDmobije industry is fuel consumption below 1975 fears that cars meeting the
RACINE
Ernest fighting
a
proposed levels by 40 to 50 per cent for 27.5 mph standard would be
Wingett, veteran Democratic government requirement automobiles, 25 to 40 per cent so small, so lightweight and
. politician, chairman of the that would Ioree it lD boost for light trucks and 30 per so devoid of accessories that
Meigs County Democratic average gasoline mileage to cent for heavy transport the public would drive old
cars longer rather than bu~
Party, is a candidate for 27.5 miles per gallon by 1985. trucks.
·
the new ones.
Led by General Motors, the
Presidential Elector of Ohio,
Visit Our Sa lad Bar
Duncombe said such reduc"There is no prospect that
subject to approval by Paul giant of the industry, officials tions are technically possible.
Mushroom
Steak
the fuel savings projected in
Tlpp, state chairman.
ca ll the mandatory fuel
"Bu t it would be the sludy could be realized by
Mas'tie
d
Pota
toes &amp; Gravy
New development near Ru tland on one acre lOt$. 1
Wingett received the economy p roposa ls irresponsible to propose that compulsion, '' Duncombe
Vegetable
model homes open for inspection, Immediate
irrespon. (the resulting cars) could sell
support of the District 1'misleading, ''
Hot Rolls
said.
"Ma
nda
ting
fu
el
possessions
or
built
to
suit.
Democrat club in a meeting sible," "reckless,n · "con~ in t he volumes assumed in efficiency ,.. is fruitless If the
·
Coffee,
Tea or Mil k
Plus tax
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY OCT: ~3-24, 2·5 PM
Wednesdav at thP. .Tafok~"" trived" and too costly,
the report," he !Did a hearing customers refuse to buy."
Public Library . · Wi~g ett
Their · criticisms . were called to obtain public
Industry officials said tbe
ON RT. 124 &amp; NOBLE SUMMIT ROAD
Thursday
by corrunents on the report. "It
discovered that the Ohio heard
study
should
have
considered
State Democratic Party representatives of the would be reckless to assume boosting the price of gasoline
Convention, with h~!)~reds of Transportation Deparimenl, that they could replace the as an alternative lD imposing
sleepy delegates, had the Energy Research and existing fleet."
efficiency standards .
Adminisselected Sen. Jobn Glenn· for Development
He said the task force
"All that can be said at this
Presidential Elector althou2h tration, the Federal En- pr odu ced " con tr ive d time is that it is very hard lD
senators are specifically ergy Administration and standards unrelated to understand how members of
barred. by the U.S. Con- th e Environmental . customer preference" and, an industry can invest $5 to
stitution from holding that · Protection Agen cy. Those by pr edi cting a fuel $10 billion in extra capital,
agencies a!ld the National consumption cut of up to 1.3 .
position.
introduce cars with
Science
Foundation provided million barrels a day by 1995, can
Main speaker of the
radically
new features, can
evening was Jerry Adams. the task force that drafted the "sub stantially overstates develop and ·produce totally
candidate for the 9Jst District proposals.
wha t can be accomplished." ·new engines ... and still sell
Th e sharpest criticisms
of the Ohio H6use of
Duncombe, Ri chard these new products at lower
Representatives. 'l'wo points came from Dr. Henry L. Shackson of , Ford an&lt;) prices th an are charged
Duncombe, chief economist William. Eberle of the Motor
made by AdaRJB were:
today," Shackson said.
for
General Motors.
· He had been to the state
Vehicle Manufac turers
capital to testify against
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company's practice
of buying higher priced coal
from its own subsidiaries
rather than lower prjced coal
which is in·depen&lt;lenll y
. ~-· ·
mined.
The consumer in southeast
Ohio bears a second injustice
in that although a surplus of
grown primarily in th e these last two reasons) .
By Boyd A. Ruth
coal Is produced in this
eastern half of the · U:s.
Soli
Cons.
Service
In some cases, the reasons
1'\'gion, Columbus a~d other
However,
during
the
early
POMEROY
This
is
the
·for
growing spelt may have
city consumers pay a lower
1900s
it
was
grown
on
a
first
article
of
a
two
part
more
to do with tradition than
rate for electricity.
series. The second will come limited acreage from coast to with fact, with information
coast. Ohio spell production passed on by word of mouth
next week.
appears
to be concentrated in fo r generations.
When the word "spelt" is
used in. an assemblage of the northeastern and so uth·
Spell characteristics
' Valley Hospital
farmers or seedsmim it western portions of the state.
Alithe Ohio spells observed ·
Pleasant
DISCHARGED - Mrs . usually triggers a mixed However, some spell is grown have been quite similar in
reaction. A few will say they here in Meigs County.
appearance, being tall with
Harold Matheny, Mt. Alto;
Like
many
North
American
are
familiar
'
w
ith
'
the
crop.
lax" nodding, awn-less spi kes
Mona Jones, Point Pleasant;
crops,
spelt
was
introduced
Many
will
indicate
they
have
(heads) and glaborous white
Mrs. Leland Selby, New
on
numerous.
occasions
by
never
heard
the
word.
glumes
of ~ha ff. ~II sources
-f-'t-ut:p.ni.ri.l:'
Haven; Robert Van Meter,
immi
grants
fro
,
m
Europe.
Spell
is
a
relative
of
wheat,
examined
to date are exD~tu ~ ~ li r.u n "'0
Clifton; Kenneth Wills ,
H 1091
UT 111U l
IIOllll OU I ON '#Hf fi L5,
Mason; Darnell Jeffreys, being a member of the same According to an old history tremely susceptible to loose
.
.....,., ...
book,
spell
was
brought
to
smut (probably the majol'
Point Pleasant; Mrs. George species (Triticum aestivum)
. SAVE '50.00
Roush, Mason; Judith Jones, as common wheat, but has a eastern Ohio from Sw it~ disease of spell in Ohio ), leaf
zerland
by
ear~y
settlers.
It
rust, stem rust, powdery
·Ashville, 0 .; Mrs. Okey different subspecies (spelta
was
reported
as
having
been
vs
aestisum).
The
crop
is
mildew, and Hessian fly. All
Hurlow, Point Pleasant ; and
Anna Beaver, Point Pleasant. often incorrectly referred to grown in the mountains , of are Several days later in
as "spelts," "speltz," or Switzerland because wheat maturity than fhe latest
"spills.'' These are Old World would not ripen at the high wheat varieties available, all
designations
for spell and altitudes.
.are taller, and all lack th~ .:·"
LEGAL NOTICE
Why grow spell?
straw strength of currently
emmer. Emmer is a wheat
The Public Utilities Commis·
Spell , although fall-seeded , grown wheal varieties.
species (Triticum turgidum )
sian of Ohio has set tor
not grown in Ohio, but oc- is often used as a substitute
Test weight of spell in
~ubji c h~ari ng Case No .
crop for spring oats. It is generally between 30 and 40
casionally
produced
in
76-534-l'l-FAC, to review the
Michigan and the Dakotas. fr equently produ ced on pounds per bushel. This low
operati on of the fuel adjustNEW MI CROWAVE' OVE N
While no official spell acreages where soil drainage test weight, compared to
1ment clause and· the luel proHAS 2 POWER LEVElS
-Hutp.ui.n
±
is
poor
and
spring
oat
seeding
acreage estimates are made
wheat, is due to the
NOW THAW '&amp; COOK•
curement practices and !XlliDELUXE SELF-CLE ANING
in the U.S., it is fa irly certain at the opliumun date is dif· adherence of the chaff to the
cies ol the Ohio Powe1 Com·
30" oV eN-RANGE WITH
SAVE
pany, an October 25, 1976, at
that the total harvested fi cult because of hi~h soil kernel
when normal
BLIICt&lt; GLA SS DOOR t
"'IKifl nl!TliO'
10:00 A.M. at the offiCes of
SAVE
. threshing procedu res are
.acreage of spell in Ohio is moisture .
the· COmmission, 160 East
Other
reasons
for used. With the ~xception of
greater than that of rye or
Broad Street. Columbus,
barley. Currently spelt is production hav e included the few kernels which thresh
Ohio.
restricted acreage allotments free of the chaff, most heads
All interested persons will
on whea t, claims of higher break up at the nodes of the
WASHER FEATURES :
be ~i ven an opportunity to be
COURSE COMPLETED
yields than for wheat or oats rachis (the short joints within
heard . Further information
0 3 Wa sh ing action select ions.
MIDDLEPORT - Army (probably true on certain the heads upon which the
may be obtained by contact0
18 Lb . heavy mixed fabric loads .
Specialist
5
Larry
E.
Nelson
,
soils), greater tolerance of ker nels are born e). This
. ing the Comm1ssion.
0
Automati
c bleach &amp;fabri c sotrener
Middleport,
has
completed
wet soil conditions, better peculiar .threshing characTHEPUBUC UTILITIES
dispensers.
Wafer level control .
the
!94th
Annored
Brigade
grazing potential of spelL. teristi c, which allows
COMMISSION OFOHIO
Junior
Non-Commissioned
0
5
Waler
temperature
seleclions.
compared
to
wheat
or
oats,
adherence of all chaff
By Raooalt G. Ap~egate ,
Officer
Course
at
Fort
Knox,
and
ability
to
resist
lodging
0 Many olher wanted featu res'
components to the kernel, is ·
Se';etal'f
Ky.
on fertile soils (no data partially responsible for the
availabl e to substantiate high yields reported for spelt
DRYER FEATURES;
since about 20 to30 per cent of
0 6 Drying aclipn se le ol ions .
the total weight of the har·
0 Special Poty -Knil settin g.
vested .grain is composed of
0 Adju stable end of cyc le sign al
chaff. Considerable variation
plus oth er features you wan\!
in test weights may oflen be
Sheriff Robert c. Hartenbach has
related to the percentage of
been fighting crime in Meigs County
the
kernels threshing free
for the last 30 years.
from the chaff.
And
because
of
Sheriff
Spell is very similar to oats
Hartenbach's continued devotion to
in feeding value and chemical
Washer Model WLW3700T
Dtyor Model DLB2650T
good law enforcement, Meigs County
composition. With the ·chaff
has one of the lowest crime rates per
removed
by
special
GAS MODEL PRICED SLIGHTLY HIGHER
capita in the state or nation.
processing, chemical comYour vote and support can help it
position resembles that of ·
slay that way!
wheat. Grain to be fed to
livestock is usually ground to
avoid mouth irritation ca used
· by the sharp points of the
KEEP A GOOD
chaff of the whole grain.
•
Although the grain is usually
EXPERIENCED SHERIFF!
COME EARLY FOR CHOICE SELECTIONS!
fed on the farm where it is
Serving Meigs, Ootlio ond Muon counties.
produced , some suppli es
Jock W. Cersey, Mgr. Phone 9tl-2ll1
cntl'l' market channels and
STORE HOURS :
arl' u~ut~lly priced about the
Store
O,
p
en
8:30-S:JO
. Mitt closes ot .s p.m.
saml' as cwls.
I
Nl•xt w1•ck 1 will discuss
"Strved his Country in Time ot War &amp; Now Serving His County''.
t:ult ur;.ll l)f tl dir·es. seed

Wingett in

QUE!\N VICKIE'S COURT - At Southern High
School Friday night was first row, 1-r, Becky Evans, .
flower girl, and Daniel Gheen, crown bearer; second row,

Perry Smith, Cindy Warden, Bob Deeter, and Mary Kay
Woods; third row , Dave Roush, l,.isa Allen, Steve
LaVa)ley, Candy Riffle, Mike Warner and Sheila Crouch.

THIS IS THE ROYAl,TY AT Eastern High School's
Homecoming Friday Kight when Jlill Whitehead ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Reedsville,
was crowned que.en. The front row, I tor. Jeff Caldwell,
crownbearer; jeff Hedrick, escort; Teresa Edwards,
senior attendant; Mike Hall, escort; Juli Whitehead ,

Wedding rites
read in house
that's haunted

CHESTER WELLS, LEFT, HEAD of the Democrat Party in Meigs County, gree ts
Vernal Riffe Jr ., speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, and Rep. Ron James, nght,
when the tw~ arrived at Democrat Party headquarters Frida y night. Following a supper,
Riffe spoke on the behalf of Rep. James bid for reelection.

..

ters must include a recent
photo, a brief biography and
ST. CLAIRSV ILLE - on the basis of poise, per- phone number.
Applications are now being sonality and beauty of face
accepted for the annual Miss and figure. Applfcants must
Ohio Pageant to be staged for be between' 18 aud 28, never
the second time in married and at least six
Steubenville. The fiv e day months residents of Ohio;
event will be presented in the thus college dorm students
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Grand Concourse of the Fort are eligi ble. All girls in·
stock
market attempted to
Steuben Mall Feb. 9-13. The terested in competing for the
rebonnd
from its recent slide,
Miss Ohio Pageant is an Title must write to Miss Ohio
but
finished
the week
official Miss USA - Miss Pageant Headquarters, 124
irregularly
lower
in
Universe Contest.
Maher St.. St. Clairsville. moderate trading on the New
There is no ~~ ta lent ~' Ohio 43950 by Nov .. 21. Let·
York Stock Exchange
requirement. All judging is
because investors saw little
to stop the econom¥'S
slowdown.
Uncertainty over the
outcome of the presidential
IS
C
·
election and what will happen
GALL lA COUNTY
Power Con troversy. . by after Nov. 2also was a factor
DISTRICT LIBRARY
Arthur
Murphy .- ed .; in the selling that stopped a
!New Books Released )
Form work for Concrete · budding rally at midweek.
~-t 2 t976
Str uctures, by R. L.
~FICTION
· l.
As a result, the Oow Jones
PeurlfoY : Tang lewoo d, by
Fa lsfalf. bv Robert Nye: Her bert Kup ferberg : .industrial average managed
Ratse the Titanic! by Clive Grandparents. by Charlie W. to gain 1.75 points to 938.75.
Shedd ; Your Er roneous But the blue-chip average of
Cuss Ier; F oun der •s p rase,
1
by Joanne Greenberg : Zones. by Dr . Wayne Oyer :
k fin' hed 16 . l
Patriot's Dream. by Bar ba ra The Inner World of the 30 stoc s
lS
pam s
Michaels: Ceremony of the Middle-Aged Man, by Peter below its high for the week
Innocent,
by
Ta ylor Chew ;
Wa shing ton
os and still was 76.04 points
Caldwell: The Court-Martia l Leak ing, by Art Buchwald : below its 4Wlonth high of
of George Armsfrqng Custer. Waste Noj . Want Not, by
S
1 21.
by Douglas Jones ; Autumn Helen McC ull y; The Man . 1,014.79 on ep.
Lace, by Eileen Jackson ;· from Plains, by David
Things were worse on a
Regina , by Clare Darcy: The Kucharsky : All About broader scale. The NYSE
Baker's Daughler, by D. E. Au ction ;, bY L G. Hewift.
common stock index lost 0.48
Stevenson; Gerhar d1 ' s
d S dad &amp;
Children, by Jerrold Mund is:
to 53.42 an
tan r
Wtiole Hog , by David
Poor'l5{)().stock index, which
Wagoner: City of the Dead,
Mr. an d Mrs. William includes some over-theby H.erbert Li eberman: The Culwell called on the Brad· counter stocks, fell 0.92 to
Best Place to Be, by Helen ford Massey family near Rio 99 96
·van Slyke: Bride of the
F
1'h
· ·
Dullahan, by Sharon Wagner. Grande on riday .
e
Declines lopped advances,
NON-FICTION
Masseys
were former 970 to 798·, among the 2,076
The Last Chance ·Diet, by residents bere.
issues crossing the tape.
~R~oiibiieri.t•Liiliinnli;..iTiihl.e.iiNtluc~leiiaiir•••••••••-. Volume IDtaled 83,613,570
I
· sha res, compared with
89,346,240 last week and
86,105,690 traded during the
same week a year ago.
Bargain hl!flling following
the recent market slideaided by an 18 per cent juinp
in September housing starts
and an 11 per cent increase In
per mits - drove prices
moderately higher early In
the week.
The market was helped at
times by indi cations the
Federal Reserve Board
Total electric. bay window,
w6uld ease credit to help the
completely furnished, carpeted
economy. Late Friday, tbe
Fed reported its Open Market
throughout. Delivered &amp; set up.
Com mittee
votetl
in
September to ease credit
slightly and observers said
the 'believed the commitlee
may have done '\he same
thing at this week's me~t ing.
But the market contmued
to be · plagped by the
slowdown in the economy the
past six ,months. The growth
of the .Gross National
Product, stripped of inflaLion,
deciined to 4 per cent in the
third period from 4.5 in the
second and 9.2 in the first .
The
slowdown
was
confirmed further by some
ea rnin~s reporlfl of major

Pageant applications invited.

ROSSFORD, Ohio (UP! ) Count Dracula. got married
Friday night in a haunted
house.
Qressed as ·the famo1Jl!
vampire, John Becker wed
Sharry Zellner in a bouse
filled with 14 blood-and-guts
scenes, used annually to raise
money for the RossfordWoodville Jaycees.
Rossford Mayor Louis
Bauer
performed
the
ceremony in 8 11 Phantom of
the
Opera"
setting.
Attendants included the
Ghoul , Frankenstein,
Wolfman, the Cyclops and
Dr. Jekyll· and Mr. Hyde.
"John has been working on
the project the last two
months and hasn 'I had too
much time to spend with ber,
so she said if she can't beat
'em, join 1em," explained
David
Brown, public
relations man for the fundraising project.
What part did the bride
play?
'
"She played it pretty
straight," said Brown.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! ! .alehouse Reporter
COL JMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jame&gt; A. Rhodes, promising
legal
immunity
and
prole :lion against death
threals, . has pleaded with
empl1 .yes of the state Bureau
of Workmen's Compensation
lD crme forward with any
information on what he is

existence of , a large
audltqrll\lll 'in the old state
of!ice building where the
bureau is located. The
governor
said
that
auditorium wasn't large
enough.
'' We are going to get to the
bollDm of this and we don't
care what powerful people
are involved in·either party,"
calling an ''inside job" on said the governor, speaking
fraudulent claims.
of fraudulent claims and
. The employes were sum- "embezzlement" which he is
moned Friday afternoon , terming "the largest
without explanation, to a sacandal in the h~IDry of
meeting at Veterans' Ohio. n
Memorial Auditorium, at a
''But we need help on the
cost to the state of $197 rent inside to clean this tip. There
plus lost work time, to hear are 1,000 indictments on the
Rhodes pledge to etlminate a outside already, and if it's
" dark shadow" over the happening on the outside,
bureau and . Ohio Industrial there's some cooperation on
Conunisslon, which approves. the inside .
claims.
:·,. The O!C has Said there are
About400 employes trooped 88 indictments handed down
the half mile to Vets ' so far.
Memorial despite the
The faster It's finished. tbe

D . ·t n· t Library News

SPECIAL

companies . Traders sold
heavily when a number of
analysts again trimmed their
earnin gs est imates for a
number of companies.
Thursday 's Consumer
Price Index report showed a
0.4 per cent increase in
September, down from 0.5
per cent the month before.
But this added to investor
uncertainty over the future
course of the economy
because it also showed a
decline in real spendable
earnings.

Retail sales rose only 0.1
per cent in the latest week
and published reports said
consumers, though not
pessimistic about the outlook,
were spending cautiously.
Meanwhile, September
durable goods orders fell .3.1
per cent. But the report also
showed new orders for nondefense capital spending rose
1.8 per cent, compared with a
revised decline of 6.8 per cent
the month before. Nondefense capital goods are
considered · a barometer of
capital spending plans.
Prior lD their final debate
in Williamsburg, Va. Friday,
President Ford reportedly
was p'.eased w~th t~e decline .

70Xl4 - 77 MODEL

MOBILE HOME

St.)~ST,

?ERH~Ps,

DOUBLEWIDE

~'/

bureau

6Tt.'f1N6
FROM ltl!Cn.Et..IECt::S.

administrator, •

GALLIA ACADEMY
SENIORS
We are now making appointments
for senior pl)otographs at our studio.

TO MEET YOUR YEARBOOK DEADLINES
YOU MOST HAVE YOUR PHOTOGRAPH
TAKEN BY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30. ··

produced in Meigs County

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
446-7494
Spring Valley Plaza
·
Gallipolis
(1 mile west of Holzer Medical Center)
Open Tues .-Sat. 10-S, till8 on Thurs.

__..---~~-­

'

For Court of Appeals, vote Judge Franklin Sheeler, the only
candidate with judicial experience.
Everett Ridge , Chmn.
Sheeter Committee
14 South May Ave.
Athens, Ohio 45701

·~ 'to-23

~--------------~----- ·~---

.

'

8 CU. FT.

CO.OP
FREEZER

Sheriff Robert ·c. Hartenbach

.'
.,

~ upplit.·s.

;,1111 IHturc spell

.lrllpr t•n-mcnt
\

•2s

,
I I u I t~ • ) ..i ...11._...1....

Pd. by Candidate

'I I .

Mollll ftU 1!t

•so

SAVE $50 ~~i: PAIR

He ha s received three Ohio Supreme Court awards for Superior
,
· .
Judicial Service. ·

'

SAVE

'

EXPERIENCE COUNTS •••

Judge Sheeler has 15 years legal experience, including 9 outstand ·
ing years as a conservative,' competent Judge.
·

'9495

'.

$25

Call Now For Appointment

I

·I

AT POMEROY·LANDMARK

!;lltl~

Sheeler

!~

~

Spelt, similar to oats, is

'

JUDCE FRANKLIN

\ ED1S 11\1:»~ 5HOPl

' .
@r ~iG~y/&lt;tlA In~ I ~ : , , ,•,,, 011

THE MEIGS INN.

replacing Kenneth E. Krouse,.
woo resigned. Daugherty, 46, .
has been deputy administrtor
in charge of operations.
He said the employes
"wanted to hear from me
personlilly." But one employe
said the meeting was called
in a direetlve 'sent lD the
bureau,

_
Court of Appeals
"-......_

By Roger Bollen

IN 'IOOIZ CASE 1 SIR 1 I.

l\JOOLD

Speaking lD the bureau
personnel "as a fellow state
employe," Rhodes urged
them to "Cooperate to the
fullest extent with the news
media and Highway Patrol."
He said "flower funds" and
shakedowns for political
contributions would be Illegal
for either political party, and
that no pressU!'e would be
pennllted for those purposes.
Flower
funds
and
shakedowns are Illegal under
a 1973 state law.
The governor also f~lly '
annowiced the appointment ,
of Robert C.. Daugherty as

~

in inflauon. llut IJemocrat report led to .downward
Jinuny Carter was sharply revisions for the year.
critical of the 0.8 per cent
National SemiconduclDr;
decline in spendable earnings the third most active Issue,
in the past year.
dropped 6%to 27¥, on 694,ii00
Most analysts said they did shares. Analysts also
not expect the stock market , trimmed their estimates for
lD do much of anything until electronics and computers,
after the Nov. 2 election. One many of which are
analyst said the market institutional favorites.
might dawdle even after. the
Among the other issues in
election
because
the this
group,
Digital
campaigns have not spelled Equipment plunged 8'/s lD
out positions on issues, 142, IBM 61&gt; to 2561'., Texas
particularly the economic Instruments 5% to 101'18,
issue.
·
Centronics Data 4% to 25%.
Polaroid, the Big Board Other technology issues
volmne leader this week, fell suffered also . Teledyne
4% to 35 on 1,365,900 shares. dropped 6¥. to 59%.
The company reported higher
Dow Chemical was the
third quarter earnings, but third most active issue, up %
they were below what many to 41 on 7«,000 shares. Tbe
analysts had estimated. That finn's rower earnings had
been discounted earlier.
The threat of the
Organization of Petroleum
FROSHSHINE
Exporting Countries raising
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Jll'ic.es at the first of the year
(UP!) - A trip of freshman, and the uncertainly of this
Whittenberg running becks, nation's energy policies hurt
led by George Buckley with some of the energy issues.
thr e'e touchdowns,, and a Superior 011 fell 7to 207, Shell
defense that held Wooster to 011 5:Y. to 7!'/,, Atlantic
just 611 total yards, shined Richfield 2% to o3% and
Saturday In the Tigers' 33-j) Elixon 11&gt; to 511'..
Ohio Conference win over the
Fighting Scots.

FUNNY BUSINESS

faster the cloud of doubt will
be lifted," continued Rhodes.
"We want to clean up -tbe
mess that's been put in the
beadliites for the last six
weeks.
"I've asked the Highway
Patrol to provide inununily
'for anyone wbo Is willing to
belp."
Rhodes later !Did newsmen
be would personally "make
arrangements" for legal
implunity for infonnants .
He also warned the
employes against threats on
their lives for cooperating,
but said they would be
protected.
•
Asked later what he meant,
Rhodes said someone's life
had been threatened in
connection · with
the
workmen's compensation
fraud. He would not disclose
whose life and said he
"handled it myself. " Under
questioning, he would say
only that his own life has been
on other occasions in the past.

Carmakers 'mounting fight.
against 27.5 mpg proposal

elector

Rhodes.
pleads
for
shakedown
. ·
.
information in fraud probe

Stock market continues
slide
-·

Gallia County

race for

queen ; Mark Jlawk, escort; Diana Beneclum, senior
attendant, and Lori Burke, Hower girl;.back row, l .to r.•
Uta Young, freShman attendant ; Tom Jlarris, escort;
Brenda Frecker sophomore attendant; Joe Boyles,
escorti Theresa Browning, junior attendant, Jim Davis,
escort.

THE INN PLACE
Monday Night
Special

(I"

'

-.·. 4· ··· · -

POMEROY LANDMARK

�•

'

4-A-Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sur.lay, Oct. 24, 1976

Tests prove Swine .flu Shots
safe for children age 3-18
WASHINGTON (UPI) Children between 3 and 18
may start getting swine flu
shots as early as next month
as a result of two rounds of
tests that show they can be
safely immunized, according
to a government health
offiCial. ~.
But Dr. John R. Seal,
depuly director of the
National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, said

Friday tliat the swine flu the effort but ''It would be my three to recommend they be results presented In June. A
vaccination program for guess an appreciable number Included in !he vaccination more extensive ..aeries of
children is more complicated of children should be program this fall .
trials began in "August .00
than for adults and will imrnunized before the flu
The testing of the swloe.nu was . compleled earlier !hi!
require carefully adjusted, seaS(m ls over."
vaci:ine in children began last month.
·
dosages and probably two
" I really think we 've taken April with f.1ie first tentative
shots.
a large step forward," Seal
TI1e decision on when to said. "It 's very rea ssuring 11&gt;
begin vaccinating · . the us to know we can immunize .
nation's 40 million children children satisfactorily."
· FAsT REUEF for the irritation of back seat drivers is this' French&lt;nacte Citroen
under 18, and precisely how,
There are two types of
'"JCV" recently exhibited at an aulD show in Frankfurt, West Germany. Exhibitors said the
will be made after vaccines under study. Both
car can go "full speed in both directions - forwards and baCkwards."
gover'nment
scientists use a dead virus, but one has
evaluate test data presented been processed more thaq the
at a meeting at the National other. I&lt; results in fewer
Institutes of Health. Seal told reactions but requires two
a news conferenc&amp; the go- shots to produce the desired
ahead could come as early as immunity. ·
the first wee~ In Novem~r .
Dr . Peter Wright of
He said the fact that two Vanderbilt University, wbo
· doses probably will be needed helped direct the trials, said
to reduce reactions and not enough Is known about the
By EDWARD 'K, DeLONG
In its draft report the task Assoc iation all expressed ensure inununity wiil slow effects In children under
WASHINGTON (UP!) force called for culling 1985
The aulDmobije industry is fuel consumption below 1975 fears that cars meeting the
RACINE
Ernest fighting
a
proposed levels by 40 to 50 per cent for 27.5 mph standard would be
Wingett, veteran Democratic government requirement automobiles, 25 to 40 per cent so small, so lightweight and
. politician, chairman of the that would Ioree it lD boost for light trucks and 30 per so devoid of accessories that
Meigs County Democratic average gasoline mileage to cent for heavy transport the public would drive old
cars longer rather than bu~
Party, is a candidate for 27.5 miles per gallon by 1985. trucks.
·
the new ones.
Led by General Motors, the
Presidential Elector of Ohio,
Visit Our Sa lad Bar
Duncombe said such reduc"There is no prospect that
subject to approval by Paul giant of the industry, officials tions are technically possible.
Mushroom
Steak
the fuel savings projected in
Tlpp, state chairman.
ca ll the mandatory fuel
"Bu t it would be the sludy could be realized by
Mas'tie
d
Pota
toes &amp; Gravy
New development near Ru tland on one acre lOt$. 1
Wingett received the economy p roposa ls irresponsible to propose that compulsion, '' Duncombe
Vegetable
model homes open for inspection, Immediate
irrespon. (the resulting cars) could sell
support of the District 1'misleading, ''
Hot Rolls
said.
"Ma
nda
ting
fu
el
possessions
or
built
to
suit.
Democrat club in a meeting sible," "reckless,n · "con~ in t he volumes assumed in efficiency ,.. is fruitless If the
·
Coffee,
Tea or Mil k
Plus tax
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY OCT: ~3-24, 2·5 PM
Wednesdav at thP. .Tafok~"" trived" and too costly,
the report," he !Did a hearing customers refuse to buy."
Public Library . · Wi~g ett
Their · criticisms . were called to obtain public
Industry officials said tbe
ON RT. 124 &amp; NOBLE SUMMIT ROAD
Thursday
by corrunents on the report. "It
discovered that the Ohio heard
study
should
have
considered
State Democratic Party representatives of the would be reckless to assume boosting the price of gasoline
Convention, with h~!)~reds of Transportation Deparimenl, that they could replace the as an alternative lD imposing
sleepy delegates, had the Energy Research and existing fleet."
efficiency standards .
Adminisselected Sen. Jobn Glenn· for Development
He said the task force
"All that can be said at this
Presidential Elector althou2h tration, the Federal En- pr odu ced " con tr ive d time is that it is very hard lD
senators are specifically ergy Administration and standards unrelated to understand how members of
barred. by the U.S. Con- th e Environmental . customer preference" and, an industry can invest $5 to
stitution from holding that · Protection Agen cy. Those by pr edi cting a fuel $10 billion in extra capital,
agencies a!ld the National consumption cut of up to 1.3 .
position.
introduce cars with
Science
Foundation provided million barrels a day by 1995, can
Main speaker of the
radically
new features, can
evening was Jerry Adams. the task force that drafted the "sub stantially overstates develop and ·produce totally
candidate for the 9Jst District proposals.
wha t can be accomplished." ·new engines ... and still sell
Th e sharpest criticisms
of the Ohio H6use of
Duncombe, Ri chard these new products at lower
Representatives. 'l'wo points came from Dr. Henry L. Shackson of , Ford an&lt;) prices th an are charged
Duncombe, chief economist William. Eberle of the Motor
made by AdaRJB were:
today," Shackson said.
for
General Motors.
· He had been to the state
Vehicle Manufac turers
capital to testify against
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company's practice
of buying higher priced coal
from its own subsidiaries
rather than lower prjced coal
which is in·depen&lt;lenll y
. ~-· ·
mined.
The consumer in southeast
Ohio bears a second injustice
in that although a surplus of
grown primarily in th e these last two reasons) .
By Boyd A. Ruth
coal Is produced in this
eastern half of the · U:s.
Soli
Cons.
Service
In some cases, the reasons
1'\'gion, Columbus a~d other
However,
during
the
early
POMEROY
This
is
the
·for
growing spelt may have
city consumers pay a lower
1900s
it
was
grown
on
a
first
article
of
a
two
part
more
to do with tradition than
rate for electricity.
series. The second will come limited acreage from coast to with fact, with information
coast. Ohio spell production passed on by word of mouth
next week.
appears
to be concentrated in fo r generations.
When the word "spelt" is
used in. an assemblage of the northeastern and so uth·
Spell characteristics
' Valley Hospital
farmers or seedsmim it western portions of the state.
Alithe Ohio spells observed ·
Pleasant
DISCHARGED - Mrs . usually triggers a mixed However, some spell is grown have been quite similar in
reaction. A few will say they here in Meigs County.
appearance, being tall with
Harold Matheny, Mt. Alto;
Like
many
North
American
are
familiar
'
w
ith
'
the
crop.
lax" nodding, awn-less spi kes
Mona Jones, Point Pleasant;
crops,
spelt
was
introduced
Many
will
indicate
they
have
(heads) and glaborous white
Mrs. Leland Selby, New
on
numerous.
occasions
by
never
heard
the
word.
glumes
of ~ha ff. ~II sources
-f-'t-ut:p.ni.ri.l:'
Haven; Robert Van Meter,
immi
grants
fro
,
m
Europe.
Spell
is
a
relative
of
wheat,
examined
to date are exD~tu ~ ~ li r.u n "'0
Clifton; Kenneth Wills ,
H 1091
UT 111U l
IIOllll OU I ON '#Hf fi L5,
Mason; Darnell Jeffreys, being a member of the same According to an old history tremely susceptible to loose
.
.....,., ...
book,
spell
was
brought
to
smut (probably the majol'
Point Pleasant; Mrs. George species (Triticum aestivum)
. SAVE '50.00
Roush, Mason; Judith Jones, as common wheat, but has a eastern Ohio from Sw it~ disease of spell in Ohio ), leaf
zerland
by
ear~y
settlers.
It
rust, stem rust, powdery
·Ashville, 0 .; Mrs. Okey different subspecies (spelta
was
reported
as
having
been
vs
aestisum).
The
crop
is
mildew, and Hessian fly. All
Hurlow, Point Pleasant ; and
Anna Beaver, Point Pleasant. often incorrectly referred to grown in the mountains , of are Several days later in
as "spelts," "speltz," or Switzerland because wheat maturity than fhe latest
"spills.'' These are Old World would not ripen at the high wheat varieties available, all
designations
for spell and altitudes.
.are taller, and all lack th~ .:·"
LEGAL NOTICE
Why grow spell?
straw strength of currently
emmer. Emmer is a wheat
The Public Utilities Commis·
Spell , although fall-seeded , grown wheal varieties.
species (Triticum turgidum )
sian of Ohio has set tor
not grown in Ohio, but oc- is often used as a substitute
Test weight of spell in
~ubji c h~ari ng Case No .
crop for spring oats. It is generally between 30 and 40
casionally
produced
in
76-534-l'l-FAC, to review the
Michigan and the Dakotas. fr equently produ ced on pounds per bushel. This low
operati on of the fuel adjustNEW MI CROWAVE' OVE N
While no official spell acreages where soil drainage test weight, compared to
1ment clause and· the luel proHAS 2 POWER LEVElS
-Hutp.ui.n
±
is
poor
and
spring
oat
seeding
acreage estimates are made
wheat, is due to the
NOW THAW '&amp; COOK•
curement practices and !XlliDELUXE SELF-CLE ANING
in the U.S., it is fa irly certain at the opliumun date is dif· adherence of the chaff to the
cies ol the Ohio Powe1 Com·
30" oV eN-RANGE WITH
SAVE
pany, an October 25, 1976, at
that the total harvested fi cult because of hi~h soil kernel
when normal
BLIICt&lt; GLA SS DOOR t
"'IKifl nl!TliO'
10:00 A.M. at the offiCes of
SAVE
. threshing procedu res are
.acreage of spell in Ohio is moisture .
the· COmmission, 160 East
Other
reasons
for used. With the ~xception of
greater than that of rye or
Broad Street. Columbus,
barley. Currently spelt is production hav e included the few kernels which thresh
Ohio.
restricted acreage allotments free of the chaff, most heads
All interested persons will
on whea t, claims of higher break up at the nodes of the
WASHER FEATURES :
be ~i ven an opportunity to be
COURSE COMPLETED
yields than for wheat or oats rachis (the short joints within
heard . Further information
0 3 Wa sh ing action select ions.
MIDDLEPORT - Army (probably true on certain the heads upon which the
may be obtained by contact0
18 Lb . heavy mixed fabric loads .
Specialist
5
Larry
E.
Nelson
,
soils), greater tolerance of ker nels are born e). This
. ing the Comm1ssion.
0
Automati
c bleach &amp;fabri c sotrener
Middleport,
has
completed
wet soil conditions, better peculiar .threshing characTHEPUBUC UTILITIES
dispensers.
Wafer level control .
the
!94th
Annored
Brigade
grazing potential of spelL. teristi c, which allows
COMMISSION OFOHIO
Junior
Non-Commissioned
0
5
Waler
temperature
seleclions.
compared
to
wheat
or
oats,
adherence of all chaff
By Raooalt G. Ap~egate ,
Officer
Course
at
Fort
Knox,
and
ability
to
resist
lodging
0 Many olher wanted featu res'
components to the kernel, is ·
Se';etal'f
Ky.
on fertile soils (no data partially responsible for the
availabl e to substantiate high yields reported for spelt
DRYER FEATURES;
since about 20 to30 per cent of
0 6 Drying aclipn se le ol ions .
the total weight of the har·
0 Special Poty -Knil settin g.
vested .grain is composed of
0 Adju stable end of cyc le sign al
chaff. Considerable variation
plus oth er features you wan\!
in test weights may oflen be
Sheriff Robert c. Hartenbach has
related to the percentage of
been fighting crime in Meigs County
the
kernels threshing free
for the last 30 years.
from the chaff.
And
because
of
Sheriff
Spell is very similar to oats
Hartenbach's continued devotion to
in feeding value and chemical
Washer Model WLW3700T
Dtyor Model DLB2650T
good law enforcement, Meigs County
composition. With the ·chaff
has one of the lowest crime rates per
removed
by
special
GAS MODEL PRICED SLIGHTLY HIGHER
capita in the state or nation.
processing, chemical comYour vote and support can help it
position resembles that of ·
slay that way!
wheat. Grain to be fed to
livestock is usually ground to
avoid mouth irritation ca used
· by the sharp points of the
KEEP A GOOD
chaff of the whole grain.
•
Although the grain is usually
EXPERIENCED SHERIFF!
COME EARLY FOR CHOICE SELECTIONS!
fed on the farm where it is
Serving Meigs, Ootlio ond Muon counties.
produced , some suppli es
Jock W. Cersey, Mgr. Phone 9tl-2ll1
cntl'l' market channels and
STORE HOURS :
arl' u~ut~lly priced about the
Store
O,
p
en
8:30-S:JO
. Mitt closes ot .s p.m.
saml' as cwls.
I
Nl•xt w1•ck 1 will discuss
"Strved his Country in Time ot War &amp; Now Serving His County''.
t:ult ur;.ll l)f tl dir·es. seed

Wingett in

QUE!\N VICKIE'S COURT - At Southern High
School Friday night was first row, 1-r, Becky Evans, .
flower girl, and Daniel Gheen, crown bearer; second row,

Perry Smith, Cindy Warden, Bob Deeter, and Mary Kay
Woods; third row , Dave Roush, l,.isa Allen, Steve
LaVa)ley, Candy Riffle, Mike Warner and Sheila Crouch.

THIS IS THE ROYAl,TY AT Eastern High School's
Homecoming Friday Kight when Jlill Whitehead ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Reedsville,
was crowned que.en. The front row, I tor. Jeff Caldwell,
crownbearer; jeff Hedrick, escort; Teresa Edwards,
senior attendant; Mike Hall, escort; Juli Whitehead ,

Wedding rites
read in house
that's haunted

CHESTER WELLS, LEFT, HEAD of the Democrat Party in Meigs County, gree ts
Vernal Riffe Jr ., speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, and Rep. Ron James, nght,
when the tw~ arrived at Democrat Party headquarters Frida y night. Following a supper,
Riffe spoke on the behalf of Rep. James bid for reelection.

..

ters must include a recent
photo, a brief biography and
ST. CLAIRSV ILLE - on the basis of poise, per- phone number.
Applications are now being sonality and beauty of face
accepted for the annual Miss and figure. Applfcants must
Ohio Pageant to be staged for be between' 18 aud 28, never
the second time in married and at least six
Steubenville. The fiv e day months residents of Ohio;
event will be presented in the thus college dorm students
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Grand Concourse of the Fort are eligi ble. All girls in·
stock
market attempted to
Steuben Mall Feb. 9-13. The terested in competing for the
rebonnd
from its recent slide,
Miss Ohio Pageant is an Title must write to Miss Ohio
but
finished
the week
official Miss USA - Miss Pageant Headquarters, 124
irregularly
lower
in
Universe Contest.
Maher St.. St. Clairsville. moderate trading on the New
There is no ~~ ta lent ~' Ohio 43950 by Nov .. 21. Let·
York Stock Exchange
requirement. All judging is
because investors saw little
to stop the econom¥'S
slowdown.
Uncertainty over the
outcome of the presidential
IS
C
·
election and what will happen
GALL lA COUNTY
Power Con troversy. . by after Nov. 2also was a factor
DISTRICT LIBRARY
Arthur
Murphy .- ed .; in the selling that stopped a
!New Books Released )
Form work for Concrete · budding rally at midweek.
~-t 2 t976
Str uctures, by R. L.
~FICTION
· l.
As a result, the Oow Jones
PeurlfoY : Tang lewoo d, by
Fa lsfalf. bv Robert Nye: Her bert Kup ferberg : .industrial average managed
Ratse the Titanic! by Clive Grandparents. by Charlie W. to gain 1.75 points to 938.75.
Shedd ; Your Er roneous But the blue-chip average of
Cuss Ier; F oun der •s p rase,
1
by Joanne Greenberg : Zones. by Dr . Wayne Oyer :
k fin' hed 16 . l
Patriot's Dream. by Bar ba ra The Inner World of the 30 stoc s
lS
pam s
Michaels: Ceremony of the Middle-Aged Man, by Peter below its high for the week
Innocent,
by
Ta ylor Chew ;
Wa shing ton
os and still was 76.04 points
Caldwell: The Court-Martia l Leak ing, by Art Buchwald : below its 4Wlonth high of
of George Armsfrqng Custer. Waste Noj . Want Not, by
S
1 21.
by Douglas Jones ; Autumn Helen McC ull y; The Man . 1,014.79 on ep.
Lace, by Eileen Jackson ;· from Plains, by David
Things were worse on a
Regina , by Clare Darcy: The Kucharsky : All About broader scale. The NYSE
Baker's Daughler, by D. E. Au ction ;, bY L G. Hewift.
common stock index lost 0.48
Stevenson; Gerhar d1 ' s
d S dad &amp;
Children, by Jerrold Mund is:
to 53.42 an
tan r
Wtiole Hog , by David
Poor'l5{)().stock index, which
Wagoner: City of the Dead,
Mr. an d Mrs. William includes some over-theby H.erbert Li eberman: The Culwell called on the Brad· counter stocks, fell 0.92 to
Best Place to Be, by Helen ford Massey family near Rio 99 96
·van Slyke: Bride of the
F
1'h
· ·
Dullahan, by Sharon Wagner. Grande on riday .
e
Declines lopped advances,
NON-FICTION
Masseys
were former 970 to 798·, among the 2,076
The Last Chance ·Diet, by residents bere.
issues crossing the tape.
~R~oiibiieri.t•Liiliinnli;..iTiihl.e.iiNtluc~leiiaiir•••••••••-. Volume IDtaled 83,613,570
I
· sha res, compared with
89,346,240 last week and
86,105,690 traded during the
same week a year ago.
Bargain hl!flling following
the recent market slideaided by an 18 per cent juinp
in September housing starts
and an 11 per cent increase In
per mits - drove prices
moderately higher early In
the week.
The market was helped at
times by indi cations the
Federal Reserve Board
Total electric. bay window,
w6uld ease credit to help the
completely furnished, carpeted
economy. Late Friday, tbe
Fed reported its Open Market
throughout. Delivered &amp; set up.
Com mittee
votetl
in
September to ease credit
slightly and observers said
the 'believed the commitlee
may have done '\he same
thing at this week's me~t ing.
But the market contmued
to be · plagped by the
slowdown in the economy the
past six ,months. The growth
of the .Gross National
Product, stripped of inflaLion,
deciined to 4 per cent in the
third period from 4.5 in the
second and 9.2 in the first .
The
slowdown
was
confirmed further by some
ea rnin~s reporlfl of major

Pageant applications invited.

ROSSFORD, Ohio (UP! ) Count Dracula. got married
Friday night in a haunted
house.
Qressed as ·the famo1Jl!
vampire, John Becker wed
Sharry Zellner in a bouse
filled with 14 blood-and-guts
scenes, used annually to raise
money for the RossfordWoodville Jaycees.
Rossford Mayor Louis
Bauer
performed
the
ceremony in 8 11 Phantom of
the
Opera"
setting.
Attendants included the
Ghoul , Frankenstein,
Wolfman, the Cyclops and
Dr. Jekyll· and Mr. Hyde.
"John has been working on
the project the last two
months and hasn 'I had too
much time to spend with ber,
so she said if she can't beat
'em, join 1em," explained
David
Brown, public
relations man for the fundraising project.
What part did the bride
play?
'
"She played it pretty
straight," said Brown.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! ! .alehouse Reporter
COL JMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jame&gt; A. Rhodes, promising
legal
immunity
and
prole :lion against death
threals, . has pleaded with
empl1 .yes of the state Bureau
of Workmen's Compensation
lD crme forward with any
information on what he is

existence of , a large
audltqrll\lll 'in the old state
of!ice building where the
bureau is located. The
governor
said
that
auditorium wasn't large
enough.
'' We are going to get to the
bollDm of this and we don't
care what powerful people
are involved in·either party,"
calling an ''inside job" on said the governor, speaking
fraudulent claims.
of fraudulent claims and
. The employes were sum- "embezzlement" which he is
moned Friday afternoon , terming "the largest
without explanation, to a sacandal in the h~IDry of
meeting at Veterans' Ohio. n
Memorial Auditorium, at a
''But we need help on the
cost to the state of $197 rent inside to clean this tip. There
plus lost work time, to hear are 1,000 indictments on the
Rhodes pledge to etlminate a outside already, and if it's
" dark shadow" over the happening on the outside,
bureau and . Ohio Industrial there's some cooperation on
Conunisslon, which approves. the inside .
claims.
:·,. The O!C has Said there are
About400 employes trooped 88 indictments handed down
the half mile to Vets ' so far.
Memorial despite the
The faster It's finished. tbe

D . ·t n· t Library News

SPECIAL

companies . Traders sold
heavily when a number of
analysts again trimmed their
earnin gs est imates for a
number of companies.
Thursday 's Consumer
Price Index report showed a
0.4 per cent increase in
September, down from 0.5
per cent the month before.
But this added to investor
uncertainty over the future
course of the economy
because it also showed a
decline in real spendable
earnings.

Retail sales rose only 0.1
per cent in the latest week
and published reports said
consumers, though not
pessimistic about the outlook,
were spending cautiously.
Meanwhile, September
durable goods orders fell .3.1
per cent. But the report also
showed new orders for nondefense capital spending rose
1.8 per cent, compared with a
revised decline of 6.8 per cent
the month before. Nondefense capital goods are
considered · a barometer of
capital spending plans.
Prior lD their final debate
in Williamsburg, Va. Friday,
President Ford reportedly
was p'.eased w~th t~e decline .

70Xl4 - 77 MODEL

MOBILE HOME

St.)~ST,

?ERH~Ps,

DOUBLEWIDE

~'/

bureau

6Tt.'f1N6
FROM ltl!Cn.Et..IECt::S.

administrator, •

GALLIA ACADEMY
SENIORS
We are now making appointments
for senior pl)otographs at our studio.

TO MEET YOUR YEARBOOK DEADLINES
YOU MOST HAVE YOUR PHOTOGRAPH
TAKEN BY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30. ··

produced in Meigs County

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
446-7494
Spring Valley Plaza
·
Gallipolis
(1 mile west of Holzer Medical Center)
Open Tues .-Sat. 10-S, till8 on Thurs.

__..---~~-­

'

For Court of Appeals, vote Judge Franklin Sheeler, the only
candidate with judicial experience.
Everett Ridge , Chmn.
Sheeter Committee
14 South May Ave.
Athens, Ohio 45701

·~ 'to-23

~--------------~----- ·~---

.

'

8 CU. FT.

CO.OP
FREEZER

Sheriff Robert ·c. Hartenbach

.'
.,

~ upplit.·s.

;,1111 IHturc spell

.lrllpr t•n-mcnt
\

•2s

,
I I u I t~ • ) ..i ...11._...1....

Pd. by Candidate

'I I .

Mollll ftU 1!t

•so

SAVE $50 ~~i: PAIR

He ha s received three Ohio Supreme Court awards for Superior
,
· .
Judicial Service. ·

'

SAVE

'

EXPERIENCE COUNTS •••

Judge Sheeler has 15 years legal experience, including 9 outstand ·
ing years as a conservative,' competent Judge.
·

'9495

'.

$25

Call Now For Appointment

I

·I

AT POMEROY·LANDMARK

!;lltl~

Sheeler

!~

~

Spelt, similar to oats, is

'

JUDCE FRANKLIN

\ ED1S 11\1:»~ 5HOPl

' .
@r ~iG~y/&lt;tlA In~ I ~ : , , ,•,,, 011

THE MEIGS INN.

replacing Kenneth E. Krouse,.
woo resigned. Daugherty, 46, .
has been deputy administrtor
in charge of operations.
He said the employes
"wanted to hear from me
personlilly." But one employe
said the meeting was called
in a direetlve 'sent lD the
bureau,

_
Court of Appeals
"-......_

By Roger Bollen

IN 'IOOIZ CASE 1 SIR 1 I.

l\JOOLD

Speaking lD the bureau
personnel "as a fellow state
employe," Rhodes urged
them to "Cooperate to the
fullest extent with the news
media and Highway Patrol."
He said "flower funds" and
shakedowns for political
contributions would be Illegal
for either political party, and
that no pressU!'e would be
pennllted for those purposes.
Flower
funds
and
shakedowns are Illegal under
a 1973 state law.
The governor also f~lly '
annowiced the appointment ,
of Robert C.. Daugherty as

~

in inflauon. llut IJemocrat report led to .downward
Jinuny Carter was sharply revisions for the year.
critical of the 0.8 per cent
National SemiconduclDr;
decline in spendable earnings the third most active Issue,
in the past year.
dropped 6%to 27¥, on 694,ii00
Most analysts said they did shares. Analysts also
not expect the stock market , trimmed their estimates for
lD do much of anything until electronics and computers,
after the Nov. 2 election. One many of which are
analyst said the market institutional favorites.
might dawdle even after. the
Among the other issues in
election
because
the this
group,
Digital
campaigns have not spelled Equipment plunged 8'/s lD
out positions on issues, 142, IBM 61&gt; to 2561'., Texas
particularly the economic Instruments 5% to 101'18,
issue.
·
Centronics Data 4% to 25%.
Polaroid, the Big Board Other technology issues
volmne leader this week, fell suffered also . Teledyne
4% to 35 on 1,365,900 shares. dropped 6¥. to 59%.
The company reported higher
Dow Chemical was the
third quarter earnings, but third most active issue, up %
they were below what many to 41 on 7«,000 shares. Tbe
analysts had estimated. That finn's rower earnings had
been discounted earlier.
The threat of the
Organization of Petroleum
FROSHSHINE
Exporting Countries raising
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Jll'ic.es at the first of the year
(UP!) - A trip of freshman, and the uncertainly of this
Whittenberg running becks, nation's energy policies hurt
led by George Buckley with some of the energy issues.
thr e'e touchdowns,, and a Superior 011 fell 7to 207, Shell
defense that held Wooster to 011 5:Y. to 7!'/,, Atlantic
just 611 total yards, shined Richfield 2% to o3% and
Saturday In the Tigers' 33-j) Elixon 11&gt; to 511'..
Ohio Conference win over the
Fighting Scots.

FUNNY BUSINESS

faster the cloud of doubt will
be lifted," continued Rhodes.
"We want to clean up -tbe
mess that's been put in the
beadliites for the last six
weeks.
"I've asked the Highway
Patrol to provide inununily
'for anyone wbo Is willing to
belp."
Rhodes later !Did newsmen
be would personally "make
arrangements" for legal
implunity for infonnants .
He also warned the
employes against threats on
their lives for cooperating,
but said they would be
protected.
•
Asked later what he meant,
Rhodes said someone's life
had been threatened in
connection · with
the
workmen's compensation
fraud. He would not disclose
whose life and said he
"handled it myself. " Under
questioning, he would say
only that his own life has been
on other occasions in the past.

Carmakers 'mounting fight.
against 27.5 mpg proposal

elector

Rhodes.
pleads
for
shakedown
. ·
.
information in fraud probe

Stock market continues
slide
-·

Gallia County

race for

queen ; Mark Jlawk, escort; Diana Beneclum, senior
attendant, and Lori Burke, Hower girl;.back row, l .to r.•
Uta Young, freShman attendant ; Tom Jlarris, escort;
Brenda Frecker sophomore attendant; Joe Boyles,
escorti Theresa Browning, junior attendant, Jim Davis,
escort.

THE INN PLACE
Monday Night
Special

(I"

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-.·. 4· ··· · -

POMEROY LANDMARK

�•

..
6-A- The Sunday Times-&amp;nlllll!l, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

Rapists should die·on nearest tree
thinking, is the very worst
violation of women's rights
andthelawsofGodandman.
Even a 'woman &lt;' the
streets bas the right to
choose. But what o. the rights
of a 14, 11, 7 and 4 year old,
and younger! What is their
choice, and how Jo they ask
to be so molested. Where are
a women's clvU rights, that's
talked and preached so much
abqut?
.
.
' How Is · it the man is not
hanged to the first tree in
sight? Because we are so
civilized now that we let the
due · process of law !like
place! Law! What and where
is it? These and other law
breakers get a lawyer at
taxpayers' expense; go
through a big hearing, trial

By Goldie Clendeolo
PORTLAND - We see b~
about hall the papers we get,
rape has been committed;
also, that the women ask for
it, etc., etc.
All have a right to their own
opinion and there was a time
I didn't care for women
asking equal rights with men.
My views began to change
after 14 years of ma~iage ; a
husband who wanted some
one el5e, and my divorce that
gave him to her. The struggle
to keep four children, ~lone,
was rough. And I stlll wonder
how I did it. But with mY
family, the church, and God's
help they are all on their own
now and with good jobs.
There are many other ways
men have mistreated women,
but rape, to mv

w~v

nf

TillS IS HOW
IT WAS ...

· and other fol-&lt;le-rol ; then, tap
them gently on the wrist and
asy, "bad boy ·- don't be
naughty again, even though
she leads you on ."
In Columbus in 191i9 'round
the corner from my home by
Doctors North Hospital, a
young woman whose t•...lband
wb in the' pen for kUling . a
man, and her three year-old
girl Wllfe living in a cheap
upstairs· apa~tment. A
welfare recipient broke in
and raped her and threw her
downstairs. She hit her head,
and staggered out in the snow
where they found her body a
block away, by her bloody
barefoot tracks. The three
year-old had been mauled
and molested and killed.
This is city recorded. The
man? Served a few months
(no\ a year) and was back on
Skid Row again.
·
Never a Dispatch on
Gitizens Journal came out
there wasn'i a case like this
more or less.
Now universities have

college dormitory rooms for
the new generations male and
female, roommates !
In my volunteer . work
among th.e handicapped aa
escort and companiOn during
the day - among all ages,
I've aeen the aftermath .of
this flaunted crime.
And it's my opinion It
. should be dealt with as
murder - because most
women .never Uve again; not
. really.
How could a woman o~ ldrl

so badly abUied ever forget
such a soul sickening, heart·
breaking, physical violation?
Take this devU that kept a
child in the dungeon of his
home - to torture and 111e what if his brain II sick -he
should he chained up and
whipped and then hanged.
These times a·te like ·
Babylon- so why not puniJh
them who do such flendl.lh
things aa then?
.
When will It cl!ange?
Maybe when someone In high
places has U come home to
. them?
.
No! they'D pretend It never
happened - and hush It up.
..

J
·I

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED
DIRT EXTRACTION MElHOD

R
NTIAL.-C:OMIM . .
Slreakless Machine Wall w~chilnO
Uoholslerv- Windows· .Floors
Complete Line of .•. · '
C:ieaning Equipment &amp;. Supplies .,.

I
I

I
I

I
I
I
I
II

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE
.FOR
.
.FRIENDLY
.
. FREE ESTIMATES .

L--~~~~-~~~~~~~~!~-:~~, ~~~:......J

By FrankHIU
GALUPOUS - Recenlly aMr. lra G. Kinder, who lives in
Catlin , Illinois called me from the William-Ann Motel to ask
·me if I could help him locate Clay Chapel Cemetery. Kinder's
grandfather, Capt. Ira George Kinder and wife and other

DECADE OF PROGRESS - Ten years of designing artificial hearts has led Goodyear
researchers !rom bulky, handcrafted models 1background ) to the latest version, madr of
compression-molded synthetic rubber , ahd sma ll enough to be implanted in a human. Much
more research is needed, Goodyear cautions, before artificial hearts can be considered for
use in humans.

•

Gallia caught up m
War between States
'
By James Sands
Gollio County
Historical Society
GAU.IPOLIS - The Civil
War era was unique in the
history of Gallia county
inasmuch as it was the only
war in which Gallia was part
of the battlegroun4. Morgan,
on his raid, went through '
.much of the county;
numerous horses were stolen
and steamboats raided near
Gallipolis by the Confederate
General Jenkins.
And in March, 1863 when
the Confederates attacked Pt.
Pleasant in an attempt to
Seize the wharfboat, loaded
with supplies, Galli polis'
Captain Ford rafll his
steamboat to the point, tied a
line to the wharfboat and
towed it to GaUipolis. The
Trumbull and Gallia guards
along with Gallipolis
volunteers landed at Pt.
Pleasant and ran the Con··
federates into the hills.
GaUia made ready for the
war in 1861 with pep rallies
thr.oughout the county .
Thousands of people gathered
and during the emotion

pac~ed

final moments of the
revival-like meeting, Union
volunteers would be called to
come forward in the service
of 11 God and country."
Academies and public
schools enlisted boys for their
military drill units. Even at
such things as Sabbath School
conventions ~ the major part
of the day was spent with the
drilling of these units.
At a Sabbath School Con·
vention in 1861 in the bottom·
lands opposite New Zion
Cemetery (near C~nter.ville),
10 to 12 Sabba th Schools
marched· to the military
music of three · drill com·
ponies '(Safford 's, Waddle's
and Ripley's) . Some com·
munlties gave their boys
bounties of land to sign up. All
these things drunuued up
support to Hsave the Union."
Perhaps a sign of the
tragedy that was to come to
America occ urred in Sept.
18tH in Gallia. Appearing out
of the dark sky was a falling .
comet, and a few weeks later
the county was shaken by an
earthquake that lasted two
minutes.
.

• d
stru
Ck fro ffi b e h ffi
A. UtO
.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police investigated an ac·
cident Friday and another
early Saturday.
Friday at 9:11 p.m. on
Pomeroy's East Main St.
Kathryn Miller, 49, Tuppers
Plains, headed east was
stopped for a traffic light
when her auto was hit lrom
behind by a car driven by
Martha Husted, 64, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Husted was cited. to·
court for failure to stop within
assured clear distance. There

'

were no lnJUrlcs, and only
moderate damage to both
vehicles.
At 12:50 a.m. Saturday on
Pomeroy's East Main St.
Earl Archer, 24, Middleport,
was traveling east on East
Main when in lighting a
cigarette he drove off the
highway to the right and
struck a utility pole.
Archer was not injured.
There was medium dsmage,
and no citation .

Public Square in Gallipolis
was filled with anny supplies, inc luding ha y and
horses. In 1861 over I ,000
horses wintered at Gallipolis.
To feed these horses a
haystack with 1,800 tons of
hay was piled on the square.

Wounded soldiers were
brought by boat to Gallipolis
and taken along Second Ave.
to the military hospital .
Through much of the war
Second was nothing but a sea
of mud. At Camp Carrington
the hospital, at one time,
treated 4,000 soldiers. In
addition to the hospital there
was a ·"horsepital" that
treated General Rosenbrans'
horses.
The presence of so many
soldiers in Gallipolis caused
many problems for the town :
steali ng,

prostitution ,'

fighting (among the men and
with the town!olk), drunken·
ness, racial problems, •
runaway horses, children
drowning (playing along the
bu sy riv er lronp , and
soldiers $elling government
supplies. The conflict betwe en military and civil
authority was strained, par·
ticularly when the mayor of
Gallipolis was arrested by
the lith Regiment of Ohio
Volunteers lor confiscating a
horse and buggy left by a
Confederate spy.
The women of the town
worked especially hard
making bandages and
blankets. The flour mills and
the woolen mills ran all the
time. One U.S. government
ad in the local paper stated
that the government needed
to buy from the people of
Gallia county 300,000 bushels
of com, 100,000 bushels of '

gravestone he had been seeking.

diplomatic relations.
State Department spokes·
man Robert Funseth was
replying to questions raised
by news stories which in·
dicated Washington and
Hanoi were on the brink of
opening talks to discuss
diplomatic recognition.

We'r~

,

When we arrived back in UJwn I directed him to the. home
of Mrs. Dean Evans where he purchased a replica copy of the
Hardesty's Atlas. We then parted with a handshake, and I felL
pretty good when Kinder told me he had just spent the most
enjoyable hour and a half in his entire life, and that he would be
back.
Vernon Kuhn is a local relative of this ma11. I hope some
one will come up with some more information about the grand·
father of Ira Ge&lt;Jrge Kinder. I will be glad to give his address to

That's why your concerns are my concerns. I favor strong local control

of our schools, better crime control, better run government to assure
•

adequate services and the best use of our tax dollars.

. Because I've lived here and worked here all my life. My

THE REV . THOMAS FERGUSON, a ne~ro minister,
preache4 at a Free Will Baptist Church on Little Raccoon
Creek in Huntington Twp. in the early !BOOs. This was one of
the first churches for negroes in Ohio.
The first city school superintendent was Stilhnan Rice,
who served is:;a.oo.

five

your .needs. I hope my pledge to work to protect and meet these needs

"

will merit your support in the election.

billiard tables. Orie of the
hotels (Garnett House ) built
the county's first bowling
alley during the war. And
prices for almost everything
ran considerably higher than
before the war.
Not aU Gallians we~e for
the war effort. During
political years (elections) a
battle existed between the
Union supporters and the
Co pperheads (So uthern
sympathiz~rs). Each would
tear the 'other one's flag
down . In Ewington the
Copperheads broke into a

•

c
JOSEPH L CAl N

rt~f.

o\

The Triplett Family

PO. POL AOV.
,,

WE have

COOKWARE

~~ . c~

PORCELAIN

· GIILORE

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii
. iiiiiiiiiiitP

s

446-4554

Approximately 2 years of
private practice in Gallia
County.
..•

I share wlfli my fellow Gallla Countlans the
.concern about crime and the administration
of Justice. As your Prosecuting Attorney:

-I will be available , to
answer your complaints.

lf#"'"'-""\.

- 1 , will issue warrants
promptly when the facts so
justify.

Spring {Valley
529 JackSon Pike

Worked 31/~ · years as an
Assistant Attorney General
for the Slate of Ohio

' I WILL •••

WOODEN UTENSILS

iiiiiiiiiii

-Raised on a farm in Gallia
County. ·
-Educated in the public
schools of Gallia County
· -Received a Bachelor of
Science Degree and Law
Degree from Ohio Stale
University.

of France

of France

~'+-. . ~{\)~

-EXPERIENCE

-BACKGROUND~

'L .'''?i:t:::;.;:.....
~7

4

·······.&gt;;.·...........

-1 will restore aggressive

::o~:~~:~;o~!:~~:~~ of the

-1 will render prompl legal
services to your elected
township officials and other
county officials .
-1 will prosecute crime ·
. vigorously.

IX.I

·

·
]
· Josep~ L ~in~

.,.............· '

~

~o·~~~

HOURS:

OPEN TODAY 1 PM-G PM

If Thlsls What You the Voters Want
'

I '

Elect Cain for Prosecutor.
Pd.

,, .

-

,I

..

po·wELL'S
Store Hours
8 A.M. -tO P. M.

Mon .· Sal .
10 A. M. -10 P.M.
,day

s,

Prices EHectM

, 298 SECOND ST.
POM~ROY, OHIO

Thru Ocl 30

Abortions to get

and water loans, $100,000
(total debt of $22~,000); Medicaid money
recreation loans to turn
,NEW YORK (UP!) - A
farms into public recreation
law
barring the use of federal
areaa, $100,000 t tntal debt of
Medicaid
money for abor·
$225,000); and four other
\Ions
is
unconstltutlopal
programs with no fixed
because
It
discriminates
ceilings - rural housing
women
who cannot
against
loans, business and industrial
loans for pollution control, afford the full cost of the
grazing association loans, operation, a U. S. District
and irrigation, drainage and Court judge has ruled.
The decision by Judge John
. soil and water association
F. Dooling Friday struck
loans.
· The four SBA prgrams, · down the restriction Congress
with maxbnwn amounts are: had tacked on to a $56.11
regular business loans, billion appropriation for the
$500,000 ($150,000 .maximum Department of Health,
from SBA funds with rest Education and Welfare. The
from private lender with SBA bill was passed Sept. 30 over
guarantee) ;
economic President Ford's veto.
In his decision, which
opportunity loans for
economically or socially upheld arguments advanced
disadvantaged, $100,000; by several groups, Dooling
water pollution control loans ordered HEW to resume
tn meet federal or state Medicaid payments for
requirements Imposed under abortions nationwide.
the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act, no fiil:e!l ceiling;
and other "s ubstantial
economic injury" programs,
various or no .~lllngs.
Nelson said he has been
informed by the SBA that ali
of its offices would be ready
Ill handle potential applicants
for farmer-financing loans by
the end·of October or shortly
thereafter.

~~:~......~~.129

The No.1
Chain Saw Buy
BANQUET FROZEN U OZ.

T.V. DINNERS

elects five members

FOR PROSECUTOR

I

SBA and the Farmers Home
Administration tFrnHA) on
methods which the two
agencies will take to
cooperate in such aasistance.
It makeS;cl~ar that farmers
seeking loans wlll be en·
couraged by the field offices
of both agencies to use FmHA
lending programs whenever
the applicant meets FmHA
. eligibility standards and the
program meet the farmer's
needs.
.But it also says both
agencies wlil work together
and help the farmer fmd the
best program for his needs.
Specifically it provides
that :
- Potential applicants are
not tn be referred back and
forth between FmHA and
SBA.
- Neither agency will
refuse a loan request !tom an
applicant who prefers to file
with that agency.
- Applicants who are
denied FmHA assistance for
any reason, including lack of
FrnHA funding, may contact
SBA for assistance.
The eight FmHA programs
available, with maximum
&amp;mO;urlts , are : operating
·loans,
$50,000;
farm
ownership loans, $100,000
{t~Jtal debt of &amp;225,000); soil

1....---.---.--___,...---.......--r---,..---tll

Medical Center board

CAIN

school exhibiton being held at
the academy "and tore to
shreds the Union flag.
Besides Copperheads, the
county was full of con artists,
particularly counterfeiters.
Every once in a while, too, a
Confederate spy would turn
up. One such spy was in
casual conversation with his
.ca ptor. The Union soldier
mentioned to the man how
beautiful the moon was that
night. To which the Con·
federat e responded, "We
wouldn't have a moon like
that ln the south."

~~"'

Silver Bridge Plaza
Mon . lhru Sal. 10 ti19

Pastor Wahl's previous

ministry was at University
Heights Baptist Church in
IndianapOlis, Ind.
He will conclude his work
at Galli~olis on Sunday,
October 24 and take up a new
work at Cedar Forest Baptist
Church, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Associate pasto,r working
with Pastor Wahl during
much of his time here was
Harry Cole.

Family farmers may find it
easier now to get a
goverrunent loan from the
Small Busine 'ss
Administration.
Under a new law which was
sponsored by Sens. Gaylord
Nelson, [).Wis., and Jacob
Javits;R·N. Y., the SBA has
been directed ·tn make all of
its programs, including
lending programs, available
to family farmers.
Nelson, In urging passage
of the bill, had said that
although the SBA never
expressly excluded farms
and ranches from any loan
program, it refused such
assistance by administrative
action.
He said the SBA baaed its
stand on a section of the
Omni~ Small Business Act
which prohibited the agency
from duplicating financial
aid services avaUable from
other federal agencies.
New rules, in the wake of
President Ford signing the
Nelson,Javlts law, have been
issued by the SBA tn govern
future conduct In aiding
family farmers. The rules
incorporate the text of a Sept.
20
memorandum
of
understanding between the

. ELECT

•

of-

Colors

Offset pr.inting equipment
was purchased and the
church library increased to
900 volumes.
This period saw the bap!ism of 132 people and 188 new
members were added, along
with increases in the general
lund budget from $59,000 to
$75,000 and the missionary
budget from $16,870 to
$18,800.
·

Something to think about:
Where was beaf Venia, Ohio?

.A~~ ~l

Leather.

By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

The answer to last week's question:
Old maps of the Vlllage of Centerville show 'It having an
alley called Rambo alley.

Many

"

fami~, ·my

children and w~e. all are part of our community life. Our needs are

.

~8 .

Family farmers can obtain
small business loans now

PASTOR WAHL

14

Why?

For those who may be' interested :
Obediah Ralph operated the first post office in Morgan
Twp. in the early 1800s. It was located at the small vUlage of
Anselm.
Nicholas Mahew sold the lot io the Gallipolis Board of
Education on which Washington school stands.. The date was

' F?r The Gourmet In All of Us!

SHOES

"

neighbors.

anyone who can do so .

~;

$18.99
to S30.99

GALUPOUS -,. Deacons
of First Baptist Church said
here Saturday that in
January, of 1972 the church
welcomed a new pastor and
his famUy to the parsonage
which had been empty more
than a year.
The deacons said this new
pastor was Pastor Wilson
Wahl who began a fruitful
half decade"
He. saw the erection of
an Educational Building at a
total cost of $300,000 including
,equipment "(balance of
;mortgage is today less than
.$14,000); establishing of a
Famlly Night of graded study
for the Wednesday evening
service (tripling attendance
figures); the inaugerallon of
a fully graded children's
.worship, utilizing 25 workers;
the beginning of a solid youth
program with Pr0..Teens"
and the calling of a full time
youth director, Alvis Pollard
In the spring of '75.
•.
The youth attendance at
.Wednesday evening Bible
Study has reached over 60 at
present. A new 60-passenger
bus was purchased; an
llffiphasis on higher Christian
EducaUon . has resulted in
annual college trips to
Christian College campuses.

oats,
o hay,
1,000 3,000
cords tons
of wood.
In and
one ,..1l.~~~~~~~lltt;~~~~~~t/'l~~~~~~~~~~~lltt;lltt;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IIW!IItt",
shipment to the battle lines
the two flour mills in
GaUipolis each shipped 5,000
barrels of flour' and 10,000
boxes of hard bread.
During the war several new
buildings were erected in
~~~ ~0
Gallipolis, including ,
· numerous oyster saloons, i~e
!I
crea.m saloons, and just plain
old saloons, several with
r
-By ie Creuset
By Pillivuyt

AlliLETIC or LEISURE

PORTSMOUTH - - John Irwin, to destinations in many areas of the
Preaident of tlle Automobile Club of ' world.
. Soughem Ohio, has aru10unced the
Morton will have many of the
appointment of Robert L. Morton as management resplinslbillties held ..by
Executive' Vice President-Manager of John Irwin since 1951. Under Irwin's
the ~.000 member organization . .
•!eader$hip the club grew from 2,000
Morton siarted his Auto Club career members in Scioto County to more than
with t)le American Automobile 46,000 members in twelve counties with
· AMoclaUon in its Club ·Promotion service offices esiablished in Atllens,
DeplrtmOQt in 196l.ln 1963 he became
Belpre, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson,
Club Promotion Director for the Ohio Logan and Marietta. During this period
AM Alan. where he worked with 58 the Board of Trustees has been ex·
Ohio AAA Clu~ in upgrading' mem· paneled from nine members in Scioto
bershlp growth and services. He County to 30 members representing aU
became Executive Vice President of 12 counties served by the club.
the Warren Automobile Club in 1964.
The Automobile Club of Southern
Under his leadership during the next 12 Ohio now has 8$ fuU·tlme employees
yaarsthe Warren Auto Club progressed and 115 AAA Emergency ROild Service
in aU pllases of membership services garages under contract to serve Its
. and t~early doubled ita membets)lip to 46,000 members in Ohio's Southland. It
Ita present 32,000 members. Its most is the seventh largest of the 50 Ohio
spectacular growth •.waa in the World clubs and has been a leader in ,growth
Wide Travel Agency where he and service activities among aU AAA
developed a Group Tours operation that clubs. AAA membership in Ohio is
offered more than 100 hours·in the past 1,100,000 and over 18 mlllion nationally.
year and escorted nearly 3,000 people
The club serves 2« schooiB with

church .term

f

MIA lists still held up by Hanoi
WAS!llNGTON (UP!) The State · Department said
Friday there has been no
progress in getting Hanoi to
release all Its infonnalion ori
Americans missing in action
in Southeast. Asia, and that .
remains the condition for
talks on U.S.·Vietnamese

.As the war grew on, the

names new executive

fruitful

pushed new · orders for
facwry durable goods down
3.1 per cent in "September. It
was the third straight
monthly decline.
The Labor Department
said unions negotiating new
contracts settled for lower
pay increases In 1976 than in
197~ to indicate an easing of
Inflationary ll'essures ahead.
But the department said
factory workers made
greater galhs than in the
previous year and unions
with " escalator" clauses
settled for lesser amounts.
The
Commerce
Department aloo said durable
shipments in September fell
by the largest percentage in
nearly a year. The backlog of
ord~s also fell in Sep.tembeJ,
from $116.5 billion tn $116
billion , This indicates
factories were filling orders
faster, apparently because of
the reduction in demand for
new .business.
The. Labor Department
said the average increase for
union rontracts - excluding
money from cost-of-living
escalators - was 7 per cent
over the life of the pact
rom pared with 7.8 per cent in
1975. Pay hikes in th~ first
year of the contract averaged
. 8.9 per cent, down from 10.2
per cent.

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Treasury Secretary William
Simon says the ~low
reduction in the nation 's
unemployment rate Is one of
the most serious economic
II'Oblems facing the Ford
administration.
. . '
''The decline .in unem·
ployment, though below its
recession high point, is
Irregular and far slower than
we are w,Llllng to tolerate/'
Simon said Friday.
But Simon said the
.administration mus~ continue
tn fight "ruinous inflation
that crested in 1974 (and) was
the chief cause of the
recession that followed."
As Simon spoke in Coral
Gables, Fla., the goverflment
ROBERT MORTON
announced an easing of the
lnflattonm trend In wage
settlemenls · and persiste'nt
weak
demand
for •
safety programs, working with 58 manufactured goods.
schooiB on high school driver education
T he
C o m m e r c·e
projects and 80 schools in sponsoring Department said slumping
and equipping 1,800 School Safety consumer interest for cars,
Patrol hoys and girt..
trucks and autnmotive parts

•

•

•
m

The grandfather, who wasa river boat captain, died In 1889
while still in his 30s. His widow married a man in Gallipolis by
the name of Hay; they left for the Dakota territory. Her son,
Dayid, was the father of the gentleman seeking the
information. .
,
Mr. Kinder had never been to Gallia County.' It had been
his lifelong ambition to come here and see where his grand·
father and grandmother were buried. He was also interested in
seeing the home of Roy Caufman and his sister, Kate ·
Cherrington, who are now both deceased. They were cousins of
Ira Kinder.
Since I had done odd jobs for Kate Cherrington many years
ago I knew where she lived also (in the 500 block of Third
Ave. ). My friend Emory "Smiley" Bartels now own.s this ·
house.
We got out Lhe following morning about 7 a.m. We first
travelled down Third Ave. and I pointed out the Cherrington
house to him. Travelling down Rt. 7 we soon reached Clay
Chapel Cemetery. With little effort we soon located the gaves.
Kinder and I took snapshots of ·each other standing by t~e

Unemployment
disturbs Simon

Auto club association

Pastor Wahl

relatives were buried here and he wanted to visillbeir graves.

,

7-A-The Sunday Ttmes.S.ntinel, Swxlay, Oct. 24, 1976

Pol. Ad .

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - ·
The Bend Area Medical
Center, Inc. r~lected four
members to its board and
elected. one new member at
its annual meeting Thursday.
Re-elected to the hoard were
R. G. Greene, Jimmy Layne,
Richard Ord, and Ronald
ltobinson . The new member
is Donald F. Roush, All will
hold the positions until 1979.
Donna Thompson reporting
on the recruitment of per:
sonnel, said the promise of
four doctors is very likely at
this stage. She at.o reported
on six doctors who recently
visited the area.
Gary Pitz of the West
.Virginia Health Systems
Agency in Charleston, along
with Gary Richards, made a
presentation on the progress
ofthe center and promised to
support and help the center
with grants.
Anyone wanting to become
a member of the Medical
Center 'can do so for five
dol)ars a year. This can be
paid to Jimmy Layne at the

HI-C DRINKS

Mason County Bank, and the
money donated will be used
for operating expenses.
Present at the meeting
were John Campbell, Ahhole
Fisher, Margie Grinstead,
Harry Miller, Elizabeth
Reichert, Donna Thompson,
Karl Wiles . and Rome
Williams, all on the board of
directors; and Elsie Long,
George Hester and Mike Aulomatlc oiling
for bar and eut!lng chain Sellards.
standard equipment.

Home
Automatic
Chain Saw
Aufom1fl.c •II·•••'"" rlarttr
tor quick 'n easy starling .

Autontaflc orrl•pl•n clutdthe Industry's
sim plest. Smooth
Com.e In and

3/'100

· Limil1 Per Customer
Good
At Powell's
Offer
10-30-76

BEnY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES
18.5 ozs.

and reliable.
BARELY IN TIME
WAS!llNGTON (UP!)
Independent presidential
candidate Eugene J . McCarthy's attempt to be in·
eluded in .the presidential
debates was rejected Friday
by Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger, hours before the final
one. Warren E. Burger's
refusal w~s without comment.
·

460Z.

3/'1 00

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good
AI Powell's
Offer
I 0-30-76

try the 150-

wortd's best
chain saw value!
It has all the

features you'd expect
more expensive models.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Leadership

0.

9·LIVES

CAT FOOD
6.5 oz. 6/'1 00
Limit I Per Customer
At Powell's
Good
Offer
10·30-76

I

LOOK FOR OUR

James
Rou.sh
County C~mm1ss!~!!!

MYSTERY
.
SPECIAL '"
SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
ONLY!

�•

..
6-A- The Sunday Times-&amp;nlllll!l, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

Rapists should die·on nearest tree
thinking, is the very worst
violation of women's rights
andthelawsofGodandman.
Even a 'woman &lt;' the
streets bas the right to
choose. But what o. the rights
of a 14, 11, 7 and 4 year old,
and younger! What is their
choice, and how Jo they ask
to be so molested. Where are
a women's clvU rights, that's
talked and preached so much
abqut?
.
.
' How Is · it the man is not
hanged to the first tree in
sight? Because we are so
civilized now that we let the
due · process of law !like
place! Law! What and where
is it? These and other law
breakers get a lawyer at
taxpayers' expense; go
through a big hearing, trial

By Goldie Clendeolo
PORTLAND - We see b~
about hall the papers we get,
rape has been committed;
also, that the women ask for
it, etc., etc.
All have a right to their own
opinion and there was a time
I didn't care for women
asking equal rights with men.
My views began to change
after 14 years of ma~iage ; a
husband who wanted some
one el5e, and my divorce that
gave him to her. The struggle
to keep four children, ~lone,
was rough. And I stlll wonder
how I did it. But with mY
family, the church, and God's
help they are all on their own
now and with good jobs.
There are many other ways
men have mistreated women,
but rape, to mv

w~v

nf

TillS IS HOW
IT WAS ...

· and other fol-&lt;le-rol ; then, tap
them gently on the wrist and
asy, "bad boy ·- don't be
naughty again, even though
she leads you on ."
In Columbus in 191i9 'round
the corner from my home by
Doctors North Hospital, a
young woman whose t•...lband
wb in the' pen for kUling . a
man, and her three year-old
girl Wllfe living in a cheap
upstairs· apa~tment. A
welfare recipient broke in
and raped her and threw her
downstairs. She hit her head,
and staggered out in the snow
where they found her body a
block away, by her bloody
barefoot tracks. The three
year-old had been mauled
and molested and killed.
This is city recorded. The
man? Served a few months
(no\ a year) and was back on
Skid Row again.
·
Never a Dispatch on
Gitizens Journal came out
there wasn'i a case like this
more or less.
Now universities have

college dormitory rooms for
the new generations male and
female, roommates !
In my volunteer . work
among th.e handicapped aa
escort and companiOn during
the day - among all ages,
I've aeen the aftermath .of
this flaunted crime.
And it's my opinion It
. should be dealt with as
murder - because most
women .never Uve again; not
. really.
How could a woman o~ ldrl

so badly abUied ever forget
such a soul sickening, heart·
breaking, physical violation?
Take this devU that kept a
child in the dungeon of his
home - to torture and 111e what if his brain II sick -he
should he chained up and
whipped and then hanged.
These times a·te like ·
Babylon- so why not puniJh
them who do such flendl.lh
things aa then?
.
When will It cl!ange?
Maybe when someone In high
places has U come home to
. them?
.
No! they'D pretend It never
happened - and hush It up.
..

J
·I

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED
DIRT EXTRACTION MElHOD

R
NTIAL.-C:OMIM . .
Slreakless Machine Wall w~chilnO
Uoholslerv- Windows· .Floors
Complete Line of .•. · '
C:ieaning Equipment &amp;. Supplies .,.

I
I

I
I

I
I
I
I
II

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE
.FOR
.
.FRIENDLY
.
. FREE ESTIMATES .

L--~~~~-~~~~~~~~!~-:~~, ~~~:......J

By FrankHIU
GALUPOUS - Recenlly aMr. lra G. Kinder, who lives in
Catlin , Illinois called me from the William-Ann Motel to ask
·me if I could help him locate Clay Chapel Cemetery. Kinder's
grandfather, Capt. Ira George Kinder and wife and other

DECADE OF PROGRESS - Ten years of designing artificial hearts has led Goodyear
researchers !rom bulky, handcrafted models 1background ) to the latest version, madr of
compression-molded synthetic rubber , ahd sma ll enough to be implanted in a human. Much
more research is needed, Goodyear cautions, before artificial hearts can be considered for
use in humans.

•

Gallia caught up m
War between States
'
By James Sands
Gollio County
Historical Society
GAU.IPOLIS - The Civil
War era was unique in the
history of Gallia county
inasmuch as it was the only
war in which Gallia was part
of the battlegroun4. Morgan,
on his raid, went through '
.much of the county;
numerous horses were stolen
and steamboats raided near
Gallipolis by the Confederate
General Jenkins.
And in March, 1863 when
the Confederates attacked Pt.
Pleasant in an attempt to
Seize the wharfboat, loaded
with supplies, Galli polis'
Captain Ford rafll his
steamboat to the point, tied a
line to the wharfboat and
towed it to GaUipolis. The
Trumbull and Gallia guards
along with Gallipolis
volunteers landed at Pt.
Pleasant and ran the Con··
federates into the hills.
GaUia made ready for the
war in 1861 with pep rallies
thr.oughout the county .
Thousands of people gathered
and during the emotion

pac~ed

final moments of the
revival-like meeting, Union
volunteers would be called to
come forward in the service
of 11 God and country."
Academies and public
schools enlisted boys for their
military drill units. Even at
such things as Sabbath School
conventions ~ the major part
of the day was spent with the
drilling of these units.
At a Sabbath School Con·
vention in 1861 in the bottom·
lands opposite New Zion
Cemetery (near C~nter.ville),
10 to 12 Sabba th Schools
marched· to the military
music of three · drill com·
ponies '(Safford 's, Waddle's
and Ripley's) . Some com·
munlties gave their boys
bounties of land to sign up. All
these things drunuued up
support to Hsave the Union."
Perhaps a sign of the
tragedy that was to come to
America occ urred in Sept.
18tH in Gallia. Appearing out
of the dark sky was a falling .
comet, and a few weeks later
the county was shaken by an
earthquake that lasted two
minutes.
.

• d
stru
Ck fro ffi b e h ffi
A. UtO
.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police investigated an ac·
cident Friday and another
early Saturday.
Friday at 9:11 p.m. on
Pomeroy's East Main St.
Kathryn Miller, 49, Tuppers
Plains, headed east was
stopped for a traffic light
when her auto was hit lrom
behind by a car driven by
Martha Husted, 64, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Husted was cited. to·
court for failure to stop within
assured clear distance. There

'

were no lnJUrlcs, and only
moderate damage to both
vehicles.
At 12:50 a.m. Saturday on
Pomeroy's East Main St.
Earl Archer, 24, Middleport,
was traveling east on East
Main when in lighting a
cigarette he drove off the
highway to the right and
struck a utility pole.
Archer was not injured.
There was medium dsmage,
and no citation .

Public Square in Gallipolis
was filled with anny supplies, inc luding ha y and
horses. In 1861 over I ,000
horses wintered at Gallipolis.
To feed these horses a
haystack with 1,800 tons of
hay was piled on the square.

Wounded soldiers were
brought by boat to Gallipolis
and taken along Second Ave.
to the military hospital .
Through much of the war
Second was nothing but a sea
of mud. At Camp Carrington
the hospital, at one time,
treated 4,000 soldiers. In
addition to the hospital there
was a ·"horsepital" that
treated General Rosenbrans'
horses.
The presence of so many
soldiers in Gallipolis caused
many problems for the town :
steali ng,

prostitution ,'

fighting (among the men and
with the town!olk), drunken·
ness, racial problems, •
runaway horses, children
drowning (playing along the
bu sy riv er lronp , and
soldiers $elling government
supplies. The conflict betwe en military and civil
authority was strained, par·
ticularly when the mayor of
Gallipolis was arrested by
the lith Regiment of Ohio
Volunteers lor confiscating a
horse and buggy left by a
Confederate spy.
The women of the town
worked especially hard
making bandages and
blankets. The flour mills and
the woolen mills ran all the
time. One U.S. government
ad in the local paper stated
that the government needed
to buy from the people of
Gallia county 300,000 bushels
of com, 100,000 bushels of '

gravestone he had been seeking.

diplomatic relations.
State Department spokes·
man Robert Funseth was
replying to questions raised
by news stories which in·
dicated Washington and
Hanoi were on the brink of
opening talks to discuss
diplomatic recognition.

We'r~

,

When we arrived back in UJwn I directed him to the. home
of Mrs. Dean Evans where he purchased a replica copy of the
Hardesty's Atlas. We then parted with a handshake, and I felL
pretty good when Kinder told me he had just spent the most
enjoyable hour and a half in his entire life, and that he would be
back.
Vernon Kuhn is a local relative of this ma11. I hope some
one will come up with some more information about the grand·
father of Ira Ge&lt;Jrge Kinder. I will be glad to give his address to

That's why your concerns are my concerns. I favor strong local control

of our schools, better crime control, better run government to assure
•

adequate services and the best use of our tax dollars.

. Because I've lived here and worked here all my life. My

THE REV . THOMAS FERGUSON, a ne~ro minister,
preache4 at a Free Will Baptist Church on Little Raccoon
Creek in Huntington Twp. in the early !BOOs. This was one of
the first churches for negroes in Ohio.
The first city school superintendent was Stilhnan Rice,
who served is:;a.oo.

five

your .needs. I hope my pledge to work to protect and meet these needs

"

will merit your support in the election.

billiard tables. Orie of the
hotels (Garnett House ) built
the county's first bowling
alley during the war. And
prices for almost everything
ran considerably higher than
before the war.
Not aU Gallians we~e for
the war effort. During
political years (elections) a
battle existed between the
Union supporters and the
Co pperheads (So uthern
sympathiz~rs). Each would
tear the 'other one's flag
down . In Ewington the
Copperheads broke into a

•

c
JOSEPH L CAl N

rt~f.

o\

The Triplett Family

PO. POL AOV.
,,

WE have

COOKWARE

~~ . c~

PORCELAIN

· GIILORE

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii
. iiiiiiiiiiitP

s

446-4554

Approximately 2 years of
private practice in Gallia
County.
..•

I share wlfli my fellow Gallla Countlans the
.concern about crime and the administration
of Justice. As your Prosecuting Attorney:

-I will be available , to
answer your complaints.

lf#"'"'-""\.

- 1 , will issue warrants
promptly when the facts so
justify.

Spring {Valley
529 JackSon Pike

Worked 31/~ · years as an
Assistant Attorney General
for the Slate of Ohio

' I WILL •••

WOODEN UTENSILS

iiiiiiiiiii

-Raised on a farm in Gallia
County. ·
-Educated in the public
schools of Gallia County
· -Received a Bachelor of
Science Degree and Law
Degree from Ohio Stale
University.

of France

of France

~'+-. . ~{\)~

-EXPERIENCE

-BACKGROUND~

'L .'''?i:t:::;.;:.....
~7

4

·······.&gt;;.·...........

-1 will restore aggressive

::o~:~~:~;o~!:~~:~~ of the

-1 will render prompl legal
services to your elected
township officials and other
county officials .
-1 will prosecute crime ·
. vigorously.

IX.I

·

·
]
· Josep~ L ~in~

.,.............· '

~

~o·~~~

HOURS:

OPEN TODAY 1 PM-G PM

If Thlsls What You the Voters Want
'

I '

Elect Cain for Prosecutor.
Pd.

,, .

-

,I

..

po·wELL'S
Store Hours
8 A.M. -tO P. M.

Mon .· Sal .
10 A. M. -10 P.M.
,day

s,

Prices EHectM

, 298 SECOND ST.
POM~ROY, OHIO

Thru Ocl 30

Abortions to get

and water loans, $100,000
(total debt of $22~,000); Medicaid money
recreation loans to turn
,NEW YORK (UP!) - A
farms into public recreation
law
barring the use of federal
areaa, $100,000 t tntal debt of
Medicaid
money for abor·
$225,000); and four other
\Ions
is
unconstltutlopal
programs with no fixed
because
It
discriminates
ceilings - rural housing
women
who cannot
against
loans, business and industrial
loans for pollution control, afford the full cost of the
grazing association loans, operation, a U. S. District
and irrigation, drainage and Court judge has ruled.
The decision by Judge John
. soil and water association
F. Dooling Friday struck
loans.
· The four SBA prgrams, · down the restriction Congress
with maxbnwn amounts are: had tacked on to a $56.11
regular business loans, billion appropriation for the
$500,000 ($150,000 .maximum Department of Health,
from SBA funds with rest Education and Welfare. The
from private lender with SBA bill was passed Sept. 30 over
guarantee) ;
economic President Ford's veto.
In his decision, which
opportunity loans for
economically or socially upheld arguments advanced
disadvantaged, $100,000; by several groups, Dooling
water pollution control loans ordered HEW to resume
tn meet federal or state Medicaid payments for
requirements Imposed under abortions nationwide.
the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act, no fiil:e!l ceiling;
and other "s ubstantial
economic injury" programs,
various or no .~lllngs.
Nelson said he has been
informed by the SBA that ali
of its offices would be ready
Ill handle potential applicants
for farmer-financing loans by
the end·of October or shortly
thereafter.

~~:~......~~.129

The No.1
Chain Saw Buy
BANQUET FROZEN U OZ.

T.V. DINNERS

elects five members

FOR PROSECUTOR

I

SBA and the Farmers Home
Administration tFrnHA) on
methods which the two
agencies will take to
cooperate in such aasistance.
It makeS;cl~ar that farmers
seeking loans wlll be en·
couraged by the field offices
of both agencies to use FmHA
lending programs whenever
the applicant meets FmHA
. eligibility standards and the
program meet the farmer's
needs.
.But it also says both
agencies wlil work together
and help the farmer fmd the
best program for his needs.
Specifically it provides
that :
- Potential applicants are
not tn be referred back and
forth between FmHA and
SBA.
- Neither agency will
refuse a loan request !tom an
applicant who prefers to file
with that agency.
- Applicants who are
denied FmHA assistance for
any reason, including lack of
FrnHA funding, may contact
SBA for assistance.
The eight FmHA programs
available, with maximum
&amp;mO;urlts , are : operating
·loans,
$50,000;
farm
ownership loans, $100,000
{t~Jtal debt of &amp;225,000); soil

1....---.---.--___,...---.......--r---,..---tll

Medical Center board

CAIN

school exhibiton being held at
the academy "and tore to
shreds the Union flag.
Besides Copperheads, the
county was full of con artists,
particularly counterfeiters.
Every once in a while, too, a
Confederate spy would turn
up. One such spy was in
casual conversation with his
.ca ptor. The Union soldier
mentioned to the man how
beautiful the moon was that
night. To which the Con·
federat e responded, "We
wouldn't have a moon like
that ln the south."

~~"'

Silver Bridge Plaza
Mon . lhru Sal. 10 ti19

Pastor Wahl's previous

ministry was at University
Heights Baptist Church in
IndianapOlis, Ind.
He will conclude his work
at Galli~olis on Sunday,
October 24 and take up a new
work at Cedar Forest Baptist
Church, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Associate pasto,r working
with Pastor Wahl during
much of his time here was
Harry Cole.

Family farmers may find it
easier now to get a
goverrunent loan from the
Small Busine 'ss
Administration.
Under a new law which was
sponsored by Sens. Gaylord
Nelson, [).Wis., and Jacob
Javits;R·N. Y., the SBA has
been directed ·tn make all of
its programs, including
lending programs, available
to family farmers.
Nelson, In urging passage
of the bill, had said that
although the SBA never
expressly excluded farms
and ranches from any loan
program, it refused such
assistance by administrative
action.
He said the SBA baaed its
stand on a section of the
Omni~ Small Business Act
which prohibited the agency
from duplicating financial
aid services avaUable from
other federal agencies.
New rules, in the wake of
President Ford signing the
Nelson,Javlts law, have been
issued by the SBA tn govern
future conduct In aiding
family farmers. The rules
incorporate the text of a Sept.
20
memorandum
of
understanding between the

. ELECT

•

of-

Colors

Offset pr.inting equipment
was purchased and the
church library increased to
900 volumes.
This period saw the bap!ism of 132 people and 188 new
members were added, along
with increases in the general
lund budget from $59,000 to
$75,000 and the missionary
budget from $16,870 to
$18,800.
·

Something to think about:
Where was beaf Venia, Ohio?

.A~~ ~l

Leather.

By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

The answer to last week's question:
Old maps of the Vlllage of Centerville show 'It having an
alley called Rambo alley.

Many

"

fami~, ·my

children and w~e. all are part of our community life. Our needs are

.

~8 .

Family farmers can obtain
small business loans now

PASTOR WAHL

14

Why?

For those who may be' interested :
Obediah Ralph operated the first post office in Morgan
Twp. in the early 1800s. It was located at the small vUlage of
Anselm.
Nicholas Mahew sold the lot io the Gallipolis Board of
Education on which Washington school stands.. The date was

' F?r The Gourmet In All of Us!

SHOES

"

neighbors.

anyone who can do so .

~;

$18.99
to S30.99

GALUPOUS -,. Deacons
of First Baptist Church said
here Saturday that in
January, of 1972 the church
welcomed a new pastor and
his famUy to the parsonage
which had been empty more
than a year.
The deacons said this new
pastor was Pastor Wilson
Wahl who began a fruitful
half decade"
He. saw the erection of
an Educational Building at a
total cost of $300,000 including
,equipment "(balance of
;mortgage is today less than
.$14,000); establishing of a
Famlly Night of graded study
for the Wednesday evening
service (tripling attendance
figures); the inaugerallon of
a fully graded children's
.worship, utilizing 25 workers;
the beginning of a solid youth
program with Pr0..Teens"
and the calling of a full time
youth director, Alvis Pollard
In the spring of '75.
•.
The youth attendance at
.Wednesday evening Bible
Study has reached over 60 at
present. A new 60-passenger
bus was purchased; an
llffiphasis on higher Christian
EducaUon . has resulted in
annual college trips to
Christian College campuses.

oats,
o hay,
1,000 3,000
cords tons
of wood.
In and
one ,..1l.~~~~~~~lltt;~~~~~~t/'l~~~~~~~~~~~lltt;lltt;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IIW!IItt",
shipment to the battle lines
the two flour mills in
GaUipolis each shipped 5,000
barrels of flour' and 10,000
boxes of hard bread.
During the war several new
buildings were erected in
~~~ ~0
Gallipolis, including ,
· numerous oyster saloons, i~e
!I
crea.m saloons, and just plain
old saloons, several with
r
-By ie Creuset
By Pillivuyt

AlliLETIC or LEISURE

PORTSMOUTH - - John Irwin, to destinations in many areas of the
Preaident of tlle Automobile Club of ' world.
. Soughem Ohio, has aru10unced the
Morton will have many of the
appointment of Robert L. Morton as management resplinslbillties held ..by
Executive' Vice President-Manager of John Irwin since 1951. Under Irwin's
the ~.000 member organization . .
•!eader$hip the club grew from 2,000
Morton siarted his Auto Club career members in Scioto County to more than
with t)le American Automobile 46,000 members in twelve counties with
· AMoclaUon in its Club ·Promotion service offices esiablished in Atllens,
DeplrtmOQt in 196l.ln 1963 he became
Belpre, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson,
Club Promotion Director for the Ohio Logan and Marietta. During this period
AM Alan. where he worked with 58 the Board of Trustees has been ex·
Ohio AAA Clu~ in upgrading' mem· paneled from nine members in Scioto
bershlp growth and services. He County to 30 members representing aU
became Executive Vice President of 12 counties served by the club.
the Warren Automobile Club in 1964.
The Automobile Club of Southern
Under his leadership during the next 12 Ohio now has 8$ fuU·tlme employees
yaarsthe Warren Auto Club progressed and 115 AAA Emergency ROild Service
in aU pllases of membership services garages under contract to serve Its
. and t~early doubled ita membets)lip to 46,000 members in Ohio's Southland. It
Ita present 32,000 members. Its most is the seventh largest of the 50 Ohio
spectacular growth •.waa in the World clubs and has been a leader in ,growth
Wide Travel Agency where he and service activities among aU AAA
developed a Group Tours operation that clubs. AAA membership in Ohio is
offered more than 100 hours·in the past 1,100,000 and over 18 mlllion nationally.
year and escorted nearly 3,000 people
The club serves 2« schooiB with

church .term

f

MIA lists still held up by Hanoi
WAS!llNGTON (UP!) The State · Department said
Friday there has been no
progress in getting Hanoi to
release all Its infonnalion ori
Americans missing in action
in Southeast. Asia, and that .
remains the condition for
talks on U.S.·Vietnamese

.As the war grew on, the

names new executive

fruitful

pushed new · orders for
facwry durable goods down
3.1 per cent in "September. It
was the third straight
monthly decline.
The Labor Department
said unions negotiating new
contracts settled for lower
pay increases In 1976 than in
197~ to indicate an easing of
Inflationary ll'essures ahead.
But the department said
factory workers made
greater galhs than in the
previous year and unions
with " escalator" clauses
settled for lesser amounts.
The
Commerce
Department aloo said durable
shipments in September fell
by the largest percentage in
nearly a year. The backlog of
ord~s also fell in Sep.tembeJ,
from $116.5 billion tn $116
billion , This indicates
factories were filling orders
faster, apparently because of
the reduction in demand for
new .business.
The. Labor Department
said the average increase for
union rontracts - excluding
money from cost-of-living
escalators - was 7 per cent
over the life of the pact
rom pared with 7.8 per cent in
1975. Pay hikes in th~ first
year of the contract averaged
. 8.9 per cent, down from 10.2
per cent.

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Treasury Secretary William
Simon says the ~low
reduction in the nation 's
unemployment rate Is one of
the most serious economic
II'Oblems facing the Ford
administration.
. . '
''The decline .in unem·
ployment, though below its
recession high point, is
Irregular and far slower than
we are w,Llllng to tolerate/'
Simon said Friday.
But Simon said the
.administration mus~ continue
tn fight "ruinous inflation
that crested in 1974 (and) was
the chief cause of the
recession that followed."
As Simon spoke in Coral
Gables, Fla., the goverflment
ROBERT MORTON
announced an easing of the
lnflattonm trend In wage
settlemenls · and persiste'nt
weak
demand
for •
safety programs, working with 58 manufactured goods.
schooiB on high school driver education
T he
C o m m e r c·e
projects and 80 schools in sponsoring Department said slumping
and equipping 1,800 School Safety consumer interest for cars,
Patrol hoys and girt..
trucks and autnmotive parts

•

•

•
m

The grandfather, who wasa river boat captain, died In 1889
while still in his 30s. His widow married a man in Gallipolis by
the name of Hay; they left for the Dakota territory. Her son,
Dayid, was the father of the gentleman seeking the
information. .
,
Mr. Kinder had never been to Gallia County.' It had been
his lifelong ambition to come here and see where his grand·
father and grandmother were buried. He was also interested in
seeing the home of Roy Caufman and his sister, Kate ·
Cherrington, who are now both deceased. They were cousins of
Ira Kinder.
Since I had done odd jobs for Kate Cherrington many years
ago I knew where she lived also (in the 500 block of Third
Ave. ). My friend Emory "Smiley" Bartels now own.s this ·
house.
We got out Lhe following morning about 7 a.m. We first
travelled down Third Ave. and I pointed out the Cherrington
house to him. Travelling down Rt. 7 we soon reached Clay
Chapel Cemetery. With little effort we soon located the gaves.
Kinder and I took snapshots of ·each other standing by t~e

Unemployment
disturbs Simon

Auto club association

Pastor Wahl

relatives were buried here and he wanted to visillbeir graves.

,

7-A-The Sunday Ttmes.S.ntinel, Swxlay, Oct. 24, 1976

Pol. Ad .

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - ·
The Bend Area Medical
Center, Inc. r~lected four
members to its board and
elected. one new member at
its annual meeting Thursday.
Re-elected to the hoard were
R. G. Greene, Jimmy Layne,
Richard Ord, and Ronald
ltobinson . The new member
is Donald F. Roush, All will
hold the positions until 1979.
Donna Thompson reporting
on the recruitment of per:
sonnel, said the promise of
four doctors is very likely at
this stage. She at.o reported
on six doctors who recently
visited the area.
Gary Pitz of the West
.Virginia Health Systems
Agency in Charleston, along
with Gary Richards, made a
presentation on the progress
ofthe center and promised to
support and help the center
with grants.
Anyone wanting to become
a member of the Medical
Center 'can do so for five
dol)ars a year. This can be
paid to Jimmy Layne at the

HI-C DRINKS

Mason County Bank, and the
money donated will be used
for operating expenses.
Present at the meeting
were John Campbell, Ahhole
Fisher, Margie Grinstead,
Harry Miller, Elizabeth
Reichert, Donna Thompson,
Karl Wiles . and Rome
Williams, all on the board of
directors; and Elsie Long,
George Hester and Mike Aulomatlc oiling
for bar and eut!lng chain Sellards.
standard equipment.

Home
Automatic
Chain Saw
Aufom1fl.c •II·•••'"" rlarttr
tor quick 'n easy starling .

Autontaflc orrl•pl•n clutdthe Industry's
sim plest. Smooth
Com.e In and

3/'100

· Limil1 Per Customer
Good
At Powell's
Offer
10-30-76

BEnY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES
18.5 ozs.

and reliable.
BARELY IN TIME
WAS!llNGTON (UP!)
Independent presidential
candidate Eugene J . McCarthy's attempt to be in·
eluded in .the presidential
debates was rejected Friday
by Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger, hours before the final
one. Warren E. Burger's
refusal w~s without comment.
·

460Z.

3/'1 00

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good
AI Powell's
Offer
I 0-30-76

try the 150-

wortd's best
chain saw value!
It has all the

features you'd expect
more expensive models.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Leadership

0.

9·LIVES

CAT FOOD
6.5 oz. 6/'1 00
Limit I Per Customer
At Powell's
Good
Offer
10·30-76

I

LOOK FOR OUR

James
Rou.sh
County C~mm1ss!~!!!

MYSTERY
.
SPECIAL '"
SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
ONLY!

�Quiet Day
scheduled
Wednesday

:Woman 's-World
•
•
•

•.

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich
446-2342
992-2156

GAWPOIJS - A Quiet
Day Apart
has · been
scheduled at the Grace
United Methodist Church
Wednelday from 1:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m.
•·
.
The 111m pr~~er lfOIJIIII .ol-'- ·
the church • which meet
weekly on Tuesday and
Wednesday mornings are
llplliUIOring the day of proyer.
All area 'lt'OIIItn are ·lnvlted.
No
reservations
are
CIIESIURE - Pla111 were Ufta:i Me."
the October Guidepost, Cora
neceuary : however, those
made for the annual election
Roll call was a111wered by Rupe , and HWhat More"
who attend lhould bring a
day dinner to be held at the each member giVing her from a household magAzine,
sack IWICh. Beverage will be
lodge haU during . lhe Wed- favorlie song. The secretary Amy Short.
provided.
.
liesd.ay afternoon meeting of and treasurer rePQrts were
Seven members and one
Thil 11 the second Quiet
the Kyger Women's Society given by Cora Rupe and Illest, Beth Bradbury, were
Day Aport to be held at Grace
at the borne or Mary Brad- Melinda Bradbury, present.
Church. The first was held
bury.
respectively.
· A prayer and song closed
last Ash Wednesday.
_The meeting was opened by
The program consisted of the meeting. Refreabinents of
Theme will be "The Lord's
the prealdent, Mlli'y Sisson. .several readings : "World potato chips, cream pie,
Prayer II a Sununary of the
The Lord's Prayer w~a Series Madness," Nine Rupe; coHee and punch were served
Entire Gospel." RegiatratiOJt
r~peated in unison and
"St. Peter (It the Gate," by the hoatess alllliBted by
II 9:30 In the fellowship haD
opening song was "Love Melinda Bradbury ; " U He Cora Rupe.
with welcome and prayer tn
Came to Your House," from
the chapel scheduled at 10.
Meditations on the lAlrd's
'
Prayer wiU be given by Lis
Cornell and Phyl Thomas.
Quiet Time wiU be from 10:30
'
to 11;30,
GALLIPOLIS - Green be presented $10 from the system," and Mrs. Annette
Prayer lor
blessing
PTO held Its firat meeting of PTO to be used in the class- Ashcraft, ilrt Instructor for
precedin8IW1Ch
wlll be led by
Gallipolis City Schools who
the school year recently.
room. ·
Wildred Durha!JI.
. The meeting opened by the
The secretary's report of showed a film of last year's
ruffle
falling
over
the
A\ 12:30 the group will
POMEROY
The
pled.ge to the flag and the last meeting was read and . atudents at Green enjoying
shoulders. Elyse Burt, niece · gather In the chapel again
.
Memorial
BapUst
Church
of
devotions given by Gary the treasurer's report was the different forms of .art in Metairie, .La. was the setting of the bride, was flower girl, with opening prayer by Betsy
Steele . Steve . Theiss, given. Mr. Theiss reminded her classes.
Millllrd Foley, president of Saturday, Aug. 21, . for the wearing an empire style long Crank and meditations by
president, presided over the .the group that the ·main
Barbara Sheridan. Quiet
Green
baseball marriage of Miss Peggy dress in yellow with a wbite
meeting • .He introduced new source of income for the PTO the
She carried a Time will be from I to 2 p.m.
officers Joyce McKean, vice comes from the . banquets organization, presented a Read StovaU, daughter of oversklrt.
nosegay
of
white
daisies,
and Sharing Time wilh
Clement
E.
Stovall,
Sr.,
ol
president; Wanda Theiss, prepared
for
those third place . trophy to the Metairie, formerly of GreenDouglas
stovall,
nephew
of
Shirleen
WiBeman u leader
secretary and Gloria Danner, organizations desiring the school for Its participation lri
GALLIPOLIS The
the
bride,
served
as
ring
will
be
at
2 p.m . Dorothy
ville,
Miss.
,
and
the
late
Mrs.
treasurer.
PTO's service. There are two the Ohio VaUey Little League
marriage of JIU D. Jeffers,
bearer.
He
wore
a
beige
Shaw
wW
have
the
closing
Stovall,
to
Robert
R.
Smith,
Marvin McKelvey, prin- banquets scheduled, Oct. 25 and aMounced the Green
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
son of Mrs. Rolph Smith and tuxedo Identical to the prayer.
cipal, welcomed those and Nov: 11. All parents were Pony League won the the
John J. Jeffers of Gallipolis to
groom's.
RichardSigg,
Jr.,
of
The
hospitality
committee
late
Mr.
Smith
of
champlolllhlp in its division.
pt:esent and introduced the encouraged to particpate.
Danny R. Roush, son of Mr,
Melairie}-.La..
served
the
consists
of
VIolet
Berridge,
Hemlock
Grove.
The
Rev
.
Approximately 200 parents
following new teachers: Jucty · The .2 m1ll Renewal
and
Mrs. Richard P. Roush,
bridegroom
8Sbest
man,
and
chalnnan;
Carol
Cremeans,
George
Feazell
performed
Warehime, Title I; Shelly . Operating Levy (or the and children were invited to the 10 o'clock 111.orning the ushers were Clem Stovall, Gloria Young, Teresa Blhl, Letart, W. Va . was 110lemHood second grade· GaD library endorsed a majority visit the classrooms and meet ceremony.
Jr., of McComb, !4iss., Doug Sarp Sheets,,Joan Nibert and nized on Sunday, Sept. 19 at
Henniger, fourth grade, and 9f the members. Guest the teachers at the close of
Slovan
of Gulfport, Miss.,
The
bride
was
escorted
to
B.echtel. Mary 1:30 p.m. at The Firat Church
Michael Pe&lt;ry, Science.
speakers were Mrs, LuciUe the · meeting. There are the altar and given In both brothers of the. bride; Eslll-'r
Margaret
WiUis
wiU serve as of God of Gallipolis.
The rOODI count was won by Tutner, school nurse, · who usuaUy four PTO meetings a marriage by her father. She Jim Burt of Metairie, La., organiSt.
The dOUble ring ceremony
Miss Collins' Monday, explained her duties and the year, The next meeting Is wore a princess • style gowri brother·in·law of the bride
wilsperformed
by the Rev . C.
Wednesday and Friday "Program of School. Nurses scheduled for Jan. 18, 1977 or silk organza fashioned with and
P. Cooley. A half hour or preRon
~mith
of
l!lndergarten class. She wW in the Gallipolis City School when plans for a spring a high neck, with se...through Washington, D. C., brother of
nuptial music was provided
carnival wl1l be discussed.
by Adelaide Sanders ,
English net accented by re- the groom.
orga,.at.
embroidered Alencon llice
Miss Dot Walker, aunt of
1'he church was decorated
encrusted with see-through the bride, wore an aqua ~ll-- £.
with an archway of doves,
sleeves with a ruffle at the chiffon floor length dress with Sy~S 0
wrist and a ruffle trimmed matching cape. Her corsage
POMEROY
Steve baby's breath, greenery and
skirt which fell into a train. was a white orchid. Mrs. DawiOn of the CommQnity yellow bows. A white runner
Her veil of Wuslon was held in · Smith, mother of the groom, Mental Hellth Center was was used lor the wedding
place by a headpiece of wore a floor length dresi of
k 8t th Tueada "'""' procellion.
e
Y'""'~
The bride, given In
yellow sweetheart roses and paisley georgette chiflon over apea er
· GALurous ~ The Oc- dry . Then late in November
she carried a nosegay of pink with an orchid c;orsage. meeting of the Salisbury marriase by her l•ther, wore
tober Parent - Child at the second session, the
fl .,.,eptlon followed at The ~iroduced by Jease a gown of white ·satin,
baby's
breath,
white
can paint and
Workshop, sponsored by the children
dl
f featuring a round neckline
elegance, yellow sweetbeart Balcony in Metairie with Rlllfm Da
-::-,.an, wson, rector 0 with collar and empire waist
Frenc)l Art Colony, wiU be decorate. their creations for
music provided for by altetnativea
roses and love knots.
in the drug abuse
the first of a twcrpart series, the Christmas holidays.
. Mrs. Beth Burt of Metairie, 11 My~ag~."
program, outlined the ser- · and fitted A·llne skirt which
Mrs. Janet Byers and Mrs.
!tom 2 p.m. until ·4 p.m. on
FoUowing a wedding trip to vlct1 of the center and talked flowed Into a chapel length
La., served as matron-ofCarolyn
Hippensteel will
SUnday, Oct. 31 at Riverby
honor for her sister. She wore the Ozark Mountains and of the prop0sa) for a~djijonal train of dainty rosebud lace.
With the second session to be conduct both workllbops at
a yellow jersey knit dress, Chicago, the couple will services. He said that on Jan. She wore a three· tiered
River by. Children of all ages
~ld in late November,
empire style accented with a reside in Metairie.
1 a drug crlall hotUne wUI be headpiece, waist-length,
"Next Sunday will be the and the parents are invited to
put Into operation. ·Other trimmed in the dainty roses.
· first session . fn making attend. The parent-child
sei'vlcea which are on the She carried a white lace
Christmas decorations frlml workshops are open to the
asend1 for 1977 Include &lt;:Overed Bible with biby's
btead dough. The very small . public. No charge is made.
workshopa In family com- breath and yellow and white
children who attend will use All materials used at the
municatlon, camps and lace atreamers. Her jewelry
00okle cutters to make their workshops are provided.
recreation facillUes,lor lhoae COIIlllated of tl!ree necklaces,
decorations such as Santa Small children must be acPOMEROY ~ Descendants Lohrer, Shari and Mike,
with mental or drug related gifts . of the gro.g,m, the
groom's parents l'nd her
Claus, reindeer, bells, Christ; CO!llpanied by a responsible
of W. L. and Marne Whaley Kettering, and Doris E. problema.
AMY HARRIS SEARUI,
Itllls trees and the like. The adult.
held a reunion Sunday at the Whaley and children, Chip,
daughter of Mr. aad Mrs.
DawiiOh said that many of sister·
The monthly parent - child Keith Searll, Rt. 1, Midqlder childre~ wW be en·
Rock Springs Grange Hall. Alln and Jim, Golumbus.
the services of the center ~e
Mrs , Karen Shaver,
workshops
at Riverby are a dleport, celebrated her
couraged to create and mold
Mrs .. Harvey Van Vranken
provided free of chai'Jle while Columbus, matron of honor,
community project of the tbird blrlbdJiy . OD Del. 8 gave grace preceding the
and lister of the bride, wore a
tMir own designs.
·ro~
IIOme
tbere
b
a
fea,
but
gown leaturins an empire
French
Art
Colony.
Mrs.
; By making the bread dough
with a party at ber kome. A potluck dinner, Officers
that
no
one
II
turned
away
!Jtcorations in Detober, they Penny Moore is the chair·
beca111e of" an inability to pay. waist, short cap sleeves and a
Holly-Hobby cake, ice elected were Mrs. Hazel
t
h
gathered skirt trimmed In
will hilve plenty of time to man.
Wilson, Pomeroy R. D.,
cream IUid Kool-Aid were
Also speaIt ng ·at t e white lace In a sheer pale blue
president;
Charles
Hayes,
1erved to Mr. aDd Mn.
meeting was Jane BrownJ dotted swiss. She carried one
Uoyd Holl111111, Mr. aDd Atheris, Vice president ; Mrs.
tuberculosis
nurse. She tinted blue
tied with blue
Mn. Carl Searls, Calista Dale Whaley , Gallipolis,
talked on the tuberculosis
MASON,
W
.
VA.
Mrs.
levy renewal and of the and white lace atreamers.
Searlt, Juae Hulton and secretary; Terry Whaley,
Sandra Preece's third grade . services offered bY her office. She also wore a white picture
Columbus,
treasurer,
and
Mary
Tripp.
SeadlDI
cards
POMEROY - A donation Smith. Roll caD wlll be a
hat with blue ribbons.
ud gtfta were Mr, and Mrs. Karl Grueser, Pomeroy, class at Mason Elementary
o! $25 lor the Christmas favorite Christmas poem.
SChool recently reorganized The P'l'A voted to endorM the
Bridesmaid was Kathy
publicity.
Mn.
Wllller
Hollmaa,
Mr.
P1"0gr&amp;m at Miller Co~ge at
Mrs. Grace Pratt opened
Its
JAC
(Junior
American
levy·
Smith,
GaWpolls, friend of
lt wu decided that the
ud Mn. Roy Coleman,
tbe Dayton Veterans Hospital the meeting with prayer and
Citizens)
Club,
and
·chose
Mrs.
Sally
Lambert
the
bride.
She wore a sown of
TIHany and Tara, and Mr. reunion next year will bti held
was inade by the Past members ·stood in silent
presided
at
the
meeting
pale
apricot
ilheer dotted
"Davy
Crockett"
u
the
club
on the laat Sunday of June
aDd Mrs. Robert kid,
Presidents Parley of the tribute for the dead and to
name.
wlllch
opened
with
the
pledge
awi
featurinl!
an empire
88
with.the executive committee
Howard aod Tim.
American Legion Auxiliary, give the Pledge of Allegiance
Election
of
officers
was
to
the
nas
led
by
Brownie
waist
and
gathered
skirt
members to decide on the
Drew Webster Post 39, led by Mrs. Knapp. Officers'
held
with
MitcheU
Ruusb
Troop
1220.
A
report
wu
trimmed
In
white
lace.
She
place. Recognized and.
meeting Wednesday night at reporls were given. During.
elected president; Dreama given on the dinner Hrved to carried one apricot 1'0!10 tied
presented
giftS
were
Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Olan the social hour games were
the ·Mlllt Producers. Mrs. with apricot and white !lice
Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy, Honaker, vice-president; Carol
Knapp.
Kennedy announced
·
played with prizes going to
Angela
Lavender,
secretary,
the oldest; Joey MarkJ, the
the lallleatlval wiU be held on streamers. She also wore a
During the meeting con- Mrs. Faye Wildennuth, Mrs.
yoilngest. It was reported and John Cook, treasurer.
Nov. 13 and that work willie picture hat with apricot
ducted by Mrs. Knapp It was Catherine Welsh and Mrs. Iva
Others running for office
that there .have been two
decided to dispense with the Powell. Favors were boxes of
marriages since last year, were Darrell Mitchell, assignments will be made, rt~':· Roush of Letart, W.
November meeting and to Halloween" candy and
Scott. Van Vranken and Ronnie Williams, Robert John Lisle, principal, Va., brother o1 the groom,
have a c;:hristmas party and refreshments were served by
Sandra Oxley, and Cindy Umbarger, Dwayne Weaver, reported he had contacted the was best man. Ushers were
~gilt exchange on Dec. 15 at the hoatess .'
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ~ Quinn and Edward Hack- John Bond, Vera UUy, David high school a bout the Bob Roush, Letart, and Rick
tbe ·home of Miss Enna
The Haven Homemakers met worth, with two additions to Farr, Eric Smith, Alan :~~r
m:.~ Robinson of Clifton. Ring·
•
. recently at the home of Sadie the family, Jason Gobel and Luikart, Jo~. McCauley, room. The lltudenta will make bearer ·wa s Jeff Shaver,
Terry Neal, Linda Rob!, ancl the benchel with the PTO to Calumbus, nephew of the
·
,l.
Warth, New Haven, with Paul Hackworth.
.
bride.
'ASt~·
~wor
lunch being served before the. Attending-the reunion·were . Edd)e Cook.
The club b sponsored by . pay lor the materl.als.
Flower girl was Ellen
ti
'J:'
business meeting.
Mrs. cuckJer, Mrs. -Vena
Room count wu won by the Jeffers, Columbus, cousin of
.• POMEROY - Workshops furnished.
All repeated tbe L&lt;lrd's Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. the Col. Charles Lewis
first grade. ''Happy Land." to the bride. Her gown was an
in flower design wiU be of·
The workshops now prayer and the scripture was Harvey Van Vranken and Chapter of the DAR.
be prelented Sunday, 3 p.m. empire waist featuring a
fered by Mrs. Janet Bolin and scheduled are, Nov. 3, basic read by Mrs. Erma Funk and son, Matthew, Mr. and Mrs.
at
Trinity Churcb wss an- round neck and Short puffy
Mrs. Suzy Carpen~er floral design; Nov. 10, gourd consisted of tbe Iooth psalm. Tracy Whaley, Mr. and Mrs.
nounced.
aleeves. It was made of a
beCinnln&amp; in November. . charm, the technique of
Minutes of the last meeting Bud Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Refershmenta were served. White dotted swtsi with blue
BcKh Mrs. Bolin and Mrs. making wall and door were read by · the new Karl
Grueser,
Larry
Carpenter are accredited ~ngings or .table cen- secretary , Ethel Radcliff . Grueser; Pomeroy area; Mr.
flower show judges of the terpleces with golll'dS; Nov. Dues and pennies for friend· and Mrs. Gratis Bryant, Sr.,
Ohio Association of Garden 17, cornhusk roses; Nov. 24, · ship were·taken, and the club Powhattan Point; Mr. and
Clubs and bolh have wide Christmas wreatha and dlscussed pla111 for the shut- Mrs. Frederick (Babe)
-experlen.ce In arranging. garlsnda,andDec. l,modem InS at Chrlstmu.
Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
They are members of the design.
The lesaon for the month Whaley, and Terry Whaley,
RuUand Friendly Gardeners.
w~s photography . Com- Gallipolis.
GALL! POLIS ~ The
~ANAUGA Opening Jesus" was told by Florence
: The workshops will be
·nuttees were chosen and · Dana Howett of Shade; Mr. Pembroke. Club ,met on
song
waa
"Bieaaed
Hour of Allen followed by groUp
· given at the Rutland Church
SCENERY EN.iOYED
officers elected. Elected were and Mrs. But King, Mr. and Tuesday evening with Mrs.
singing of the hymn.
Prayer"
when
the
Kanatlia
dfChrlst. Tentative hours are
.POMEROY ~ Mrs. Dave Roberta Maynard, president; . Mrs. Bill Snyder, Tar! and MaMlng Wetherholt.
Emma Spencer aDd Pina
WSCW
held
Ita
October
!tom I to 3 p.m. in the af. Clayburn , Mrs. Hortense Ethel Radcliff, secretary and Timmy Snyder, Newark; Jan
Ward
gave a reading, "Some
The program wu given by meeting at the church.
temoonand from 7to 10 in the Preston and HatTy Preston recorder; Sadi~ Warth, and Jon Kostibal, Mr. and Mrs.
Reuona
Why We Pray." The
Keith Brandeberry wbo
Prayer wu led by Audrey
evening. The charge will be ' Columbus were Thursday telephone; Pearhe Gilland, Mrs. Mtlte Kostibal, Mr. and
quelltlon
lor group dlscusslon
reviewed
The
Gentle Brownell. RoU caU wu anf2 lor each workshop and to afternoon guests of Mrs. family service, Erma Fu~. Mrs. Charles Hayes, Aida Tasaday
written
by John swered with ICrlpture ver• wu "Can you tell of any time
"tegiater for any or all of the Campbell Harper. They are health; Iva Capehart, Whaley Yoder, Athens; Edith Nance. This II tbe story of the
beclnnlnc with the letter whtn you, or some of your
worlllhops contact should be the nieces and nephew of the. treasurer; and Gladys Hart, M. Whaley, Pagetown; Mr.
diacovery of a small, Isolated "0," Scl'iptare u Cbroniclea frienda uked for help, and
made with either Mrs. Bolin, late Campbell Harper and safety.
.·
and Mrs. Joe Marks, Tammy,
quite prlmiUve croup of 7:14 wu read by Evelyn God a111wered your prayer
742-1Jl!l6, or Mrs. Carpenter, came to Meigs County parThe November meehng Diane and Joe, J\!r. and Mrs. and
people living deep lnalde the Rothgeb, and the h)'lnn story, directly and Immediately?"
gj!~-3845. ,Most of · the ticuiariy to see t~e fall will be at the home of Iva Terry Ohlinger, Jay and Jon, l·~jJippint Rain forest.
Biblical eumples of
"What a Friend We Have in
materlala~supplleswillbe scenery.
C~~hart.
l hilo ; Mr. and Mrs.- Bill

·~~~~:~:::::~~~

flans made for election dinner

OCTOBER

EFFECilVE SUNDAY "AND
LADY VANnY

. . . .Leo

DIIP FRYER
7·2995

'111E:. CARTERS of Plains, Ga., may not be seeing so
much of each other at nome these days but their paths do

SCANNER
WITH
RADIO

Democratic presidential nominee has sald the separation
makes their reunions at airport and elsewhere

AM·FM

'* "'~;., 1M/lVIINo~rltlb'- ..+.ic~ aho K&lt;rH
Ill• lui PS·~H, (h.l ,_,• ...,~ ;.. . ....... AM rht l(eNIIo\e
b ~~
itftte
to l11~j~Gn~ ~\lblk S.. ...

partic!llar1y" happy occasions.

,...,..• ....,II ""olll1,

'f'H' tNI tndio.

measures which were
proposed by the Oh io
Legislatu re this session.
11

Rather than ena ctjng

other . proposa ls .Ohat the
legislative leadership has ·
bypassed that would have
been bettercrime deterrents,
according to Triplett.
Triplett outlines some of
the positive steps the General
Assembly should act on to
make cities, streets, and
neighborhoods more crime. proof:
Eliminate shock parole for
violent criminals, · create a
universa l hotline phone
number so that citizens can
ge t help quickly in an

legislation that would truly
lmlp the .local governments
fight the continuing rise of
crime " Trip. lett said "the
'
Ohio 'Legislature responded
to the crime crisis by pushng
for gun control bills that are,
in many ways, a n in· emergency situation , create ·
fring ement on citize ns' effective citizen crime
rights,"

Triplett 'iBid, "Gun control
for certain hideous crimes is
not the answer . lt would be
like posting a sign on your
door telling the criminal to
~c ome on in, there are no

preve ntion

and

'2''
Heck's Reg. '3.99 ·

,,

Heck's Reg. '37.99

JEWELRY DEPT.

Jewelry Dept.

Heck'i Reg. 79'

Jewelry Dept.

Housewares Dept.

PROPANE STOVE

Heck's Reg. 11.88

•1.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

WOOD.
DOWEL
SET

'100
Hardware Dept.

5410

•7.99

5 LB. WILD

BIRD FOOD
Heck's lieg.
$J.09

HARDWARE
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

20W50

Ul.-100

MOTOR OIL
LIMIT 6 OTS.

'4''

HECK'S
REG.
79' QT.

Heck's Reg. '7.99

20 GAllON .

EXTINGUISHER

·- $588
Heck's Reg .

$8 .99
HAIDWAIE
DfPT.

to homemakers

10 COUNT

FIRE

SELF-EJECTING

ICE CUBE TRAY
, HECk'S REG.
$1.~3

SJ29

NOIISIWAIIIIEPT.

TRASH BAGS
Heck's Reg.

99'

50~

·.:
1)

n·· .

:':hool

ho.ns oiffe red.

K.S

ReView given
at meeting

·Houseware Dept.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - George
Foss, Pomeroy, · Grace
Babout, Middleport.
DISCHARGES :... Els ie
White, Amy Eynon , Annette
Lambert, Birdie Conger,
Terry Reynolds, George
Rittenhouse, Sandra Little,
Robert Freed, Herma n
McMurray, James Hill .
lo

rose

Lunch served '

IITDIIOTIVI
DEPT.

Hardware Dept. ·

]AC club
reorganized

Donation made to hospital

CASTROL

u•a.o...nc

Bernz -0 -Motic I'I'IIJlli-purpose dry
chel!'licol'fjra t~IIIQ u i s her . Orll! " "''
' does :r oil. No mo"er what the u)urct
ol the fire, tflis hand)' extinguisht!f pul~
,_ it out , . orld ih low pr~te mokes it o
bor90 ln horG to pou up

Steve Dawson
t P'J10 ·

Whaley family reunites

69c

'122

.........,.c
PROPANE
TORCH

602~

Sports Dept.

PISTOL
POUCH
Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg. '1.36

Heck's Reg.

SPORTS DEPT,

\ $}22

ST

Bread dough decorations
tp be made in workshop

'34.9D

SAFETY
VEST

·Woman cited
for failure to
yield the road

. .UILL

Heck's Reg.

Sports Dept.

It is of utmost importance
that Ohio have stron~ anticri me la ws that really
combat crime."

59~

Heck's Reg: '26.99

l.

jill Jeffers is
September bride _

PAPER

99

Mr. and Mrs. Danny R. Roush

in August ceremony

TYPING

COFFEE POT

~19

Green PTO has first .meeting Smith-Stovall wed

100 SHEETS

I.

2-MANTEL
·LANTERN

citizens, and not tbe criminal.

GALLIPOLIS - Goldi e
Mae Rice, ~. Gallipolis, was
cited to Municipal Court for
failure to yield the right of
way following an accident
Friday on Second Ave. City
polic_e ~fficers said the Rice
11
car ~ed from a curb into
the side of an auto operated
by Kenneth M. Kiskis, 17, Rt.
2, Gallipolis. The re was
minor damage.
A backipg accident occurred in the 200 block of
Second Ave. where an auto
operated by Cecil D. Mehl, 39,
Ga llipolis, ba cked into a
vehicle operated by Joyce
Casto, Gallipolis.
A final accident was on
Second Ave. at Vine St. where
a semi driven by Doyle
Wayne Patton, 29, Rt. 1,
North Tazwell, Va., made a
sharp turn on Second Ave. In
order to avoid a collision,
Danny R. Evans, 17,
Gallipolis, swerved his car,
lost control and struck- a
concrete wall.

CORNING
ELECTRIC

-COLEMAN '

Heck's Reg. '21.99

Mr.r. Robert R. Smith

'29''

COLEMAN

'1866

228

Oiol·o·Br_. conlr'ols the
fiovor of tt.. co H"
otcord ing to i!ldividuot
loste pr.fere!Kn for sfroflg,
medium or mild coffee .

HECK'S REG.
114:99

·Clothing Dept.

27 cases

POMERO Y - Thirteen
defendants were fined and 14
others forfeit ed bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by J udge Robert E.
Buck were .James Westfall,
Galll polis , $9 and costs,
speeding ; Carl R. Cremeans,
Rt. 1 Reedsv ille, Judith L.
Hood, Middleport and
Theodore W. Reed, Middleport, $11 and costs each,
speeding; James S. Stillier,
Rt. 1 Reedsville, . $14 and
costs, speeding; Ea rl F.
Norton, Wellston, $12 and
costs, speeding; Larry H.
Farley, LOng Bottom, Carl R.
Hood, Mason, and Carl E.
Parker, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, speeding; Eddie
Russell, J r., Tuppers Plains,
$18 and costs, speeding; John
C. Ingels, Gallipolis, $25 and
costs, improper registration;
Dale Connolly, Long Bottom,
$10 and costs, disorderly
cond uct ; Lawrence R.
Groggel, Proctorville, $10
and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Mabel
Minard, Little
Hocking, $27.50, failure to
yield; Clair E. Martin,
Vinton, $28 .50, speed ing ;
Forest Springer, Adena, and
Donald E. Russell , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, $26.50 each,
speeding ; Benjamin C.
Rickard, South Point, $22.50,
illegal pa rking; Franklin
Casto, Rt. 3 Pomeroy,
Ti mothy
M.
Hurlow,
GaUipolis, Pau l A. Clark,
St. Albans, Harold A.
Radow, Huntington, Dean
Delcoro, Waynesburg, Paul
McCalvin, Ashland, Ky., Pan
. R. Ricae, Chesapeake, Terry
D. Wamsley, Point Pleasa nt
and Alexander F. Petrick,
Jr., Warren, $27.50 each,
· speeding.

IIIIIIIOftg

BATH SET

crime

awareness prog rams and
enact legislation that would
set mandatory sentences.
"The FBI statistics on the
rise of crime are shocking,"
Triplett said. "Between 1963
~uns In this house."
and 1974 rural crime in our
This is why Triplett sta le almost quadrupled (up
strongly opposes gun control 277 percent).
'
legis! alion.
There are ways to fight
Triplett also noted that gun crime, Triplett noted, ways
control legislation is not the thatget citlzeni involved, not
answer to curbing crh'ne. infringe upon their rights.
There have b9c n several
Triplett said . gun control
Jaws were a "hassle" to the
sportsmen who purchase
guns for hunting and to the
wives and husbands who buy
guns lo protect themselves
and their families.
" As
your
Sta te
Representati ve," Triplett
sa id, 11 1 would support
measures that protect the

settled
by court

j"

2 PIECE

legislative acts
the "so-ca lled anti-crime"

A .... w IIIOV..

HECK'S REG.
$129.96
JEWEliiY DEPT.

Triplett faults
IRONTON
Merril
Triplett, Republica n ca n·
dicta te for the 92nd Ohio
House seat today criticized

lopO f&lt;II C.,....io Ia

DRIP·O·LAIOR

sggg

GENERAL ELECTRIC

cross now and theri on Lhc campaign trall. The

12·c . .

.,DIAL•A••iluatiHtwr•.'

Hondy cooking guide with temperatures a nd
limes toltefully prll:'led on the wrap for
Continuo! reference. Big family size fi ...e
quorl copocil): with ovenproof see-thr\J glos•
CoYer .. Sturdy, lightweight deep fry 1troiner
with remoyable ha ndle.

~·

A

"

.

Other selections played Ineluded "We've Only Just
Begun," " lAVe Story" and "I
Honestly Love You."
.Immediately following the
ceremony a re,ceptlon was
held In the church so&lt;:lal
room. Athree tiered wedding
cake of yellow and white was
topped with two white doves.
Stalrsieps leading up each
side or the cake with
miniature repll.cas of the
wedding party on them. The
table was decorated with a
white lace tablecloth and
ui'Rierneath It was a yellow
cloth to bring out the yellow
and white theme. It alllo had
an Aladdin's lamp decoratod
with yellow roses and ribbon.
Hos(ess at the reception was
Mrs. Rachel Pullins of
GaWpolls Helping lll)rve were
Kim Waugh, Kala Sue Bush,
Unda Jeffers, Brenda Board
and ~elly Pullins, all of
Gallipolis.
Gueats were registered by
Katrlnka Hart, Letart, cousin
of the groom.
Out·of-town guests at·
tended from Letart, W. Va.;
Clifton, W. Va .; Degraff;
Columbus·, Lan••vllle
; New
..
Haven, W. Va.; Pt. Pleasant,
w.Va.; Parkersburg, W. Va.
and Sardis, Ohio. .
SUNDAY DEADLINE
The deadline lor weddiDJ
and eaaagement aotlcea
aad
aoctely
newa ltema lor the
Saaday Ttme..Seatlael 11
U UOOD OD tbe Thunday
precedlnl pabltcatloa·.
lalormatioa may be tunoed
Ia or maDed to ~ office of
the Galllpolla · Dally
Trtbane or Pomeroy DaUy
Seatlnel. E11111emoal aDd
weddiDI forma
are
available upon requett.

lining trimmed ln blue lace.
Her headpiece was baby's
breath and a blue dainty
ribbon .
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Jeflers wore a
short sleeved street length
skirt with veat and jacket of
shrimp color.
The groom's mother wore a
turquoise short sleeved street
l~ngth skirt with vest and
jacket trimmed in white.
Both mothers wore a corsage
of white roses.
Carla Fellure, soloist, sang
during the half hour of pre-

nuptial music, "Your Song,"
"Feelinaa/' 11 Annle's Song"'
and 11 The Lord's Prayer,'"

Church is scene of meeting

I

'

prayer were Plalrn91:15 by
Evelyn Rothgeb; DanielS :10,
Emma Spencer; Mark 14 :36,
Plna Ward : · Acts 16 :25,
Florence Alle.n, and Luke
?.'! :34, Audrey Brownell. Bible
questions were asked by Ptna
Ward, and Bible study wu I
Peter 3. Benedictlllll wu
glven by Florence Allen, and
49 sick calls were reported.
The next meeting wW be In
November at the home of,
Mrs. Ethel Wright.

•

~

�Quiet Day
scheduled
Wednesday

:Woman 's-World
•
•
•

•.

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich
446-2342
992-2156

GAWPOIJS - A Quiet
Day Apart
has · been
scheduled at the Grace
United Methodist Church
Wednelday from 1:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m.
•·
.
The 111m pr~~er lfOIJIIII .ol-'- ·
the church • which meet
weekly on Tuesday and
Wednesday mornings are
llplliUIOring the day of proyer.
All area 'lt'OIIItn are ·lnvlted.
No
reservations
are
CIIESIURE - Pla111 were Ufta:i Me."
the October Guidepost, Cora
neceuary : however, those
made for the annual election
Roll call was a111wered by Rupe , and HWhat More"
who attend lhould bring a
day dinner to be held at the each member giVing her from a household magAzine,
sack IWICh. Beverage will be
lodge haU during . lhe Wed- favorlie song. The secretary Amy Short.
provided.
.
liesd.ay afternoon meeting of and treasurer rePQrts were
Seven members and one
Thil 11 the second Quiet
the Kyger Women's Society given by Cora Rupe and Illest, Beth Bradbury, were
Day Aport to be held at Grace
at the borne or Mary Brad- Melinda Bradbury, present.
Church. The first was held
bury.
respectively.
· A prayer and song closed
last Ash Wednesday.
_The meeting was opened by
The program consisted of the meeting. Refreabinents of
Theme will be "The Lord's
the prealdent, Mlli'y Sisson. .several readings : "World potato chips, cream pie,
Prayer II a Sununary of the
The Lord's Prayer w~a Series Madness," Nine Rupe; coHee and punch were served
Entire Gospel." RegiatratiOJt
r~peated in unison and
"St. Peter (It the Gate," by the hoatess alllliBted by
II 9:30 In the fellowship haD
opening song was "Love Melinda Bradbury ; " U He Cora Rupe.
with welcome and prayer tn
Came to Your House," from
the chapel scheduled at 10.
Meditations on the lAlrd's
'
Prayer wiU be given by Lis
Cornell and Phyl Thomas.
Quiet Time wiU be from 10:30
'
to 11;30,
GALLIPOLIS - Green be presented $10 from the system," and Mrs. Annette
Prayer lor
blessing
PTO held Its firat meeting of PTO to be used in the class- Ashcraft, ilrt Instructor for
precedin8IW1Ch
wlll be led by
Gallipolis City Schools who
the school year recently.
room. ·
Wildred Durha!JI.
. The meeting opened by the
The secretary's report of showed a film of last year's
ruffle
falling
over
the
A\ 12:30 the group will
POMEROY
The
pled.ge to the flag and the last meeting was read and . atudents at Green enjoying
shoulders. Elyse Burt, niece · gather In the chapel again
.
Memorial
BapUst
Church
of
devotions given by Gary the treasurer's report was the different forms of .art in Metairie, .La. was the setting of the bride, was flower girl, with opening prayer by Betsy
Steele . Steve . Theiss, given. Mr. Theiss reminded her classes.
Millllrd Foley, president of Saturday, Aug. 21, . for the wearing an empire style long Crank and meditations by
president, presided over the .the group that the ·main
Barbara Sheridan. Quiet
Green
baseball marriage of Miss Peggy dress in yellow with a wbite
meeting • .He introduced new source of income for the PTO the
She carried a Time will be from I to 2 p.m.
officers Joyce McKean, vice comes from the . banquets organization, presented a Read StovaU, daughter of oversklrt.
nosegay
of
white
daisies,
and Sharing Time wilh
Clement
E.
Stovall,
Sr.,
ol
president; Wanda Theiss, prepared
for
those third place . trophy to the Metairie, formerly of GreenDouglas
stovall,
nephew
of
Shirleen
WiBeman u leader
secretary and Gloria Danner, organizations desiring the school for Its participation lri
GALLIPOLIS The
the
bride,
served
as
ring
will
be
at
2 p.m . Dorothy
ville,
Miss.
,
and
the
late
Mrs.
treasurer.
PTO's service. There are two the Ohio VaUey Little League
marriage of JIU D. Jeffers,
bearer.
He
wore
a
beige
Shaw
wW
have
the
closing
Stovall,
to
Robert
R.
Smith,
Marvin McKelvey, prin- banquets scheduled, Oct. 25 and aMounced the Green
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
son of Mrs. Rolph Smith and tuxedo Identical to the prayer.
cipal, welcomed those and Nov: 11. All parents were Pony League won the the
John J. Jeffers of Gallipolis to
groom's.
RichardSigg,
Jr.,
of
The
hospitality
committee
late
Mr.
Smith
of
champlolllhlp in its division.
pt:esent and introduced the encouraged to particpate.
Danny R. Roush, son of Mr,
Melairie}-.La..
served
the
consists
of
VIolet
Berridge,
Hemlock
Grove.
The
Rev
.
Approximately 200 parents
following new teachers: Jucty · The .2 m1ll Renewal
and
Mrs. Richard P. Roush,
bridegroom
8Sbest
man,
and
chalnnan;
Carol
Cremeans,
George
Feazell
performed
Warehime, Title I; Shelly . Operating Levy (or the and children were invited to the 10 o'clock 111.orning the ushers were Clem Stovall, Gloria Young, Teresa Blhl, Letart, W. Va . was 110lemHood second grade· GaD library endorsed a majority visit the classrooms and meet ceremony.
Jr., of McComb, !4iss., Doug Sarp Sheets,,Joan Nibert and nized on Sunday, Sept. 19 at
Henniger, fourth grade, and 9f the members. Guest the teachers at the close of
Slovan
of Gulfport, Miss.,
The
bride
was
escorted
to
B.echtel. Mary 1:30 p.m. at The Firat Church
Michael Pe&lt;ry, Science.
speakers were Mrs, LuciUe the · meeting. There are the altar and given In both brothers of the. bride; Eslll-'r
Margaret
WiUis
wiU serve as of God of Gallipolis.
The rOODI count was won by Tutner, school nurse, · who usuaUy four PTO meetings a marriage by her father. She Jim Burt of Metairie, La., organiSt.
The dOUble ring ceremony
Miss Collins' Monday, explained her duties and the year, The next meeting Is wore a princess • style gowri brother·in·law of the bride
wilsperformed
by the Rev . C.
Wednesday and Friday "Program of School. Nurses scheduled for Jan. 18, 1977 or silk organza fashioned with and
P. Cooley. A half hour or preRon
~mith
of
l!lndergarten class. She wW in the Gallipolis City School when plans for a spring a high neck, with se...through Washington, D. C., brother of
nuptial music was provided
carnival wl1l be discussed.
by Adelaide Sanders ,
English net accented by re- the groom.
orga,.at.
embroidered Alencon llice
Miss Dot Walker, aunt of
1'he church was decorated
encrusted with see-through the bride, wore an aqua ~ll-- £.
with an archway of doves,
sleeves with a ruffle at the chiffon floor length dress with Sy~S 0
wrist and a ruffle trimmed matching cape. Her corsage
POMEROY
Steve baby's breath, greenery and
skirt which fell into a train. was a white orchid. Mrs. DawiOn of the CommQnity yellow bows. A white runner
Her veil of Wuslon was held in · Smith, mother of the groom, Mental Hellth Center was was used lor the wedding
place by a headpiece of wore a floor length dresi of
k 8t th Tueada "'""' procellion.
e
Y'""'~
The bride, given In
yellow sweetheart roses and paisley georgette chiflon over apea er
· GALurous ~ The Oc- dry . Then late in November
she carried a nosegay of pink with an orchid c;orsage. meeting of the Salisbury marriase by her l•ther, wore
tober Parent - Child at the second session, the
fl .,.,eptlon followed at The ~iroduced by Jease a gown of white ·satin,
baby's
breath,
white
can paint and
Workshop, sponsored by the children
dl
f featuring a round neckline
elegance, yellow sweetbeart Balcony in Metairie with Rlllfm Da
-::-,.an, wson, rector 0 with collar and empire waist
Frenc)l Art Colony, wiU be decorate. their creations for
music provided for by altetnativea
roses and love knots.
in the drug abuse
the first of a twcrpart series, the Christmas holidays.
. Mrs. Beth Burt of Metairie, 11 My~ag~."
program, outlined the ser- · and fitted A·llne skirt which
Mrs. Janet Byers and Mrs.
!tom 2 p.m. until ·4 p.m. on
FoUowing a wedding trip to vlct1 of the center and talked flowed Into a chapel length
La., served as matron-ofCarolyn
Hippensteel will
SUnday, Oct. 31 at Riverby
honor for her sister. She wore the Ozark Mountains and of the prop0sa) for a~djijonal train of dainty rosebud lace.
With the second session to be conduct both workllbops at
a yellow jersey knit dress, Chicago, the couple will services. He said that on Jan. She wore a three· tiered
River by. Children of all ages
~ld in late November,
empire style accented with a reside in Metairie.
1 a drug crlall hotUne wUI be headpiece, waist-length,
"Next Sunday will be the and the parents are invited to
put Into operation. ·Other trimmed in the dainty roses.
· first session . fn making attend. The parent-child
sei'vlcea which are on the She carried a white lace
Christmas decorations frlml workshops are open to the
asend1 for 1977 Include &lt;:Overed Bible with biby's
btead dough. The very small . public. No charge is made.
workshopa In family com- breath and yellow and white
children who attend will use All materials used at the
municatlon, camps and lace atreamers. Her jewelry
00okle cutters to make their workshops are provided.
recreation facillUes,lor lhoae COIIlllated of tl!ree necklaces,
decorations such as Santa Small children must be acPOMEROY ~ Descendants Lohrer, Shari and Mike,
with mental or drug related gifts . of the gro.g,m, the
groom's parents l'nd her
Claus, reindeer, bells, Christ; CO!llpanied by a responsible
of W. L. and Marne Whaley Kettering, and Doris E. problema.
AMY HARRIS SEARUI,
Itllls trees and the like. The adult.
held a reunion Sunday at the Whaley and children, Chip,
daughter of Mr. aad Mrs.
DawiiOh said that many of sister·
The monthly parent - child Keith Searll, Rt. 1, Midqlder childre~ wW be en·
Rock Springs Grange Hall. Alln and Jim, Golumbus.
the services of the center ~e
Mrs , Karen Shaver,
workshops
at Riverby are a dleport, celebrated her
couraged to create and mold
Mrs .. Harvey Van Vranken
provided free of chai'Jle while Columbus, matron of honor,
community project of the tbird blrlbdJiy . OD Del. 8 gave grace preceding the
and lister of the bride, wore a
tMir own designs.
·ro~
IIOme
tbere
b
a
fea,
but
gown leaturins an empire
French
Art
Colony.
Mrs.
; By making the bread dough
with a party at ber kome. A potluck dinner, Officers
that
no
one
II
turned
away
!Jtcorations in Detober, they Penny Moore is the chair·
beca111e of" an inability to pay. waist, short cap sleeves and a
Holly-Hobby cake, ice elected were Mrs. Hazel
t
h
gathered skirt trimmed In
will hilve plenty of time to man.
Wilson, Pomeroy R. D.,
cream IUid Kool-Aid were
Also speaIt ng ·at t e white lace In a sheer pale blue
president;
Charles
Hayes,
1erved to Mr. aDd Mn.
meeting was Jane BrownJ dotted swiss. She carried one
Uoyd Holl111111, Mr. aDd Atheris, Vice president ; Mrs.
tuberculosis
nurse. She tinted blue
tied with blue
Mn. Carl Searls, Calista Dale Whaley , Gallipolis,
talked on the tuberculosis
MASON,
W
.
VA.
Mrs.
levy renewal and of the and white lace atreamers.
Searlt, Juae Hulton and secretary; Terry Whaley,
Sandra Preece's third grade . services offered bY her office. She also wore a white picture
Columbus,
treasurer,
and
Mary
Tripp.
SeadlDI
cards
POMEROY - A donation Smith. Roll caD wlll be a
hat with blue ribbons.
ud gtfta were Mr, and Mrs. Karl Grueser, Pomeroy, class at Mason Elementary
o! $25 lor the Christmas favorite Christmas poem.
SChool recently reorganized The P'l'A voted to endorM the
Bridesmaid was Kathy
publicity.
Mn.
Wllller
Hollmaa,
Mr.
P1"0gr&amp;m at Miller Co~ge at
Mrs. Grace Pratt opened
Its
JAC
(Junior
American
levy·
Smith,
GaWpolls, friend of
lt wu decided that the
ud Mn. Roy Coleman,
tbe Dayton Veterans Hospital the meeting with prayer and
Citizens)
Club,
and
·chose
Mrs.
Sally
Lambert
the
bride.
She wore a sown of
TIHany and Tara, and Mr. reunion next year will bti held
was inade by the Past members ·stood in silent
presided
at
the
meeting
pale
apricot
ilheer dotted
"Davy
Crockett"
u
the
club
on the laat Sunday of June
aDd Mrs. Robert kid,
Presidents Parley of the tribute for the dead and to
name.
wlllch
opened
with
the
pledge
awi
featurinl!
an empire
88
with.the executive committee
Howard aod Tim.
American Legion Auxiliary, give the Pledge of Allegiance
Election
of
officers
was
to
the
nas
led
by
Brownie
waist
and
gathered
skirt
members to decide on the
Drew Webster Post 39, led by Mrs. Knapp. Officers'
held
with
MitcheU
Ruusb
Troop
1220.
A
report
wu
trimmed
In
white
lace.
She
place. Recognized and.
meeting Wednesday night at reporls were given. During.
elected president; Dreama given on the dinner Hrved to carried one apricot 1'0!10 tied
presented
giftS
were
Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Olan the social hour games were
the ·Mlllt Producers. Mrs. with apricot and white !lice
Gladys Cuckler, Pomeroy, Honaker, vice-president; Carol
Knapp.
Kennedy announced
·
played with prizes going to
Angela
Lavender,
secretary,
the oldest; Joey MarkJ, the
the lallleatlval wiU be held on streamers. She also wore a
During the meeting con- Mrs. Faye Wildennuth, Mrs.
yoilngest. It was reported and John Cook, treasurer.
Nov. 13 and that work willie picture hat with apricot
ducted by Mrs. Knapp It was Catherine Welsh and Mrs. Iva
Others running for office
that there .have been two
decided to dispense with the Powell. Favors were boxes of
marriages since last year, were Darrell Mitchell, assignments will be made, rt~':· Roush of Letart, W.
November meeting and to Halloween" candy and
Scott. Van Vranken and Ronnie Williams, Robert John Lisle, principal, Va., brother o1 the groom,
have a c;:hristmas party and refreshments were served by
Sandra Oxley, and Cindy Umbarger, Dwayne Weaver, reported he had contacted the was best man. Ushers were
~gilt exchange on Dec. 15 at the hoatess .'
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ~ Quinn and Edward Hack- John Bond, Vera UUy, David high school a bout the Bob Roush, Letart, and Rick
tbe ·home of Miss Enna
The Haven Homemakers met worth, with two additions to Farr, Eric Smith, Alan :~~r
m:.~ Robinson of Clifton. Ring·
•
. recently at the home of Sadie the family, Jason Gobel and Luikart, Jo~. McCauley, room. The lltudenta will make bearer ·wa s Jeff Shaver,
Terry Neal, Linda Rob!, ancl the benchel with the PTO to Calumbus, nephew of the
·
,l.
Warth, New Haven, with Paul Hackworth.
.
bride.
'ASt~·
~wor
lunch being served before the. Attending-the reunion·were . Edd)e Cook.
The club b sponsored by . pay lor the materl.als.
Flower girl was Ellen
ti
'J:'
business meeting.
Mrs. cuckJer, Mrs. -Vena
Room count wu won by the Jeffers, Columbus, cousin of
.• POMEROY - Workshops furnished.
All repeated tbe L&lt;lrd's Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. the Col. Charles Lewis
first grade. ''Happy Land." to the bride. Her gown was an
in flower design wiU be of·
The workshops now prayer and the scripture was Harvey Van Vranken and Chapter of the DAR.
be prelented Sunday, 3 p.m. empire waist featuring a
fered by Mrs. Janet Bolin and scheduled are, Nov. 3, basic read by Mrs. Erma Funk and son, Matthew, Mr. and Mrs.
at
Trinity Churcb wss an- round neck and Short puffy
Mrs. Suzy Carpen~er floral design; Nov. 10, gourd consisted of tbe Iooth psalm. Tracy Whaley, Mr. and Mrs.
nounced.
aleeves. It was made of a
beCinnln&amp; in November. . charm, the technique of
Minutes of the last meeting Bud Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Refershmenta were served. White dotted swtsi with blue
BcKh Mrs. Bolin and Mrs. making wall and door were read by · the new Karl
Grueser,
Larry
Carpenter are accredited ~ngings or .table cen- secretary , Ethel Radcliff . Grueser; Pomeroy area; Mr.
flower show judges of the terpleces with golll'dS; Nov. Dues and pennies for friend· and Mrs. Gratis Bryant, Sr.,
Ohio Association of Garden 17, cornhusk roses; Nov. 24, · ship were·taken, and the club Powhattan Point; Mr. and
Clubs and bolh have wide Christmas wreatha and dlscussed pla111 for the shut- Mrs. Frederick (Babe)
-experlen.ce In arranging. garlsnda,andDec. l,modem InS at Chrlstmu.
Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
They are members of the design.
The lesaon for the month Whaley, and Terry Whaley,
RuUand Friendly Gardeners.
w~s photography . Com- Gallipolis.
GALL! POLIS ~ The
~ANAUGA Opening Jesus" was told by Florence
: The workshops will be
·nuttees were chosen and · Dana Howett of Shade; Mr. Pembroke. Club ,met on
song
waa
"Bieaaed
Hour of Allen followed by groUp
· given at the Rutland Church
SCENERY EN.iOYED
officers elected. Elected were and Mrs. But King, Mr. and Tuesday evening with Mrs.
singing of the hymn.
Prayer"
when
the
Kanatlia
dfChrlst. Tentative hours are
.POMEROY ~ Mrs. Dave Roberta Maynard, president; . Mrs. Bill Snyder, Tar! and MaMlng Wetherholt.
Emma Spencer aDd Pina
WSCW
held
Ita
October
!tom I to 3 p.m. in the af. Clayburn , Mrs. Hortense Ethel Radcliff, secretary and Timmy Snyder, Newark; Jan
Ward
gave a reading, "Some
The program wu given by meeting at the church.
temoonand from 7to 10 in the Preston and HatTy Preston recorder; Sadi~ Warth, and Jon Kostibal, Mr. and Mrs.
Reuona
Why We Pray." The
Keith Brandeberry wbo
Prayer wu led by Audrey
evening. The charge will be ' Columbus were Thursday telephone; Pearhe Gilland, Mrs. Mtlte Kostibal, Mr. and
quelltlon
lor group dlscusslon
reviewed
The
Gentle Brownell. RoU caU wu anf2 lor each workshop and to afternoon guests of Mrs. family service, Erma Fu~. Mrs. Charles Hayes, Aida Tasaday
written
by John swered with ICrlpture ver• wu "Can you tell of any time
"tegiater for any or all of the Campbell Harper. They are health; Iva Capehart, Whaley Yoder, Athens; Edith Nance. This II tbe story of the
beclnnlnc with the letter whtn you, or some of your
worlllhops contact should be the nieces and nephew of the. treasurer; and Gladys Hart, M. Whaley, Pagetown; Mr.
diacovery of a small, Isolated "0," Scl'iptare u Cbroniclea frienda uked for help, and
made with either Mrs. Bolin, late Campbell Harper and safety.
.·
and Mrs. Joe Marks, Tammy,
quite prlmiUve croup of 7:14 wu read by Evelyn God a111wered your prayer
742-1Jl!l6, or Mrs. Carpenter, came to Meigs County parThe November meehng Diane and Joe, J\!r. and Mrs. and
people living deep lnalde the Rothgeb, and the h)'lnn story, directly and Immediately?"
gj!~-3845. ,Most of · the ticuiariy to see t~e fall will be at the home of Iva Terry Ohlinger, Jay and Jon, l·~jJippint Rain forest.
Biblical eumples of
"What a Friend We Have in
materlala~supplleswillbe scenery.
C~~hart.
l hilo ; Mr. and Mrs.- Bill

·~~~~:~:::::~~~

flans made for election dinner

OCTOBER

EFFECilVE SUNDAY "AND
LADY VANnY

. . . .Leo

DIIP FRYER
7·2995

'111E:. CARTERS of Plains, Ga., may not be seeing so
much of each other at nome these days but their paths do

SCANNER
WITH
RADIO

Democratic presidential nominee has sald the separation
makes their reunions at airport and elsewhere

AM·FM

'* "'~;., 1M/lVIINo~rltlb'- ..+.ic~ aho K&lt;rH
Ill• lui PS·~H, (h.l ,_,• ...,~ ;.. . ....... AM rht l(eNIIo\e
b ~~
itftte
to l11~j~Gn~ ~\lblk S.. ...

partic!llar1y" happy occasions.

,...,..• ....,II ""olll1,

'f'H' tNI tndio.

measures which were
proposed by the Oh io
Legislatu re this session.
11

Rather than ena ctjng

other . proposa ls .Ohat the
legislative leadership has ·
bypassed that would have
been bettercrime deterrents,
according to Triplett.
Triplett outlines some of
the positive steps the General
Assembly should act on to
make cities, streets, and
neighborhoods more crime. proof:
Eliminate shock parole for
violent criminals, · create a
universa l hotline phone
number so that citizens can
ge t help quickly in an

legislation that would truly
lmlp the .local governments
fight the continuing rise of
crime " Trip. lett said "the
'
Ohio 'Legislature responded
to the crime crisis by pushng
for gun control bills that are,
in many ways, a n in· emergency situation , create ·
fring ement on citize ns' effective citizen crime
rights,"

Triplett 'iBid, "Gun control
for certain hideous crimes is
not the answer . lt would be
like posting a sign on your
door telling the criminal to
~c ome on in, there are no

preve ntion

and

'2''
Heck's Reg. '3.99 ·

,,

Heck's Reg. '37.99

JEWELRY DEPT.

Jewelry Dept.

Heck'i Reg. 79'

Jewelry Dept.

Housewares Dept.

PROPANE STOVE

Heck's Reg. 11.88

•1.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

WOOD.
DOWEL
SET

'100
Hardware Dept.

5410

•7.99

5 LB. WILD

BIRD FOOD
Heck's lieg.
$J.09

HARDWARE
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

20W50

Ul.-100

MOTOR OIL
LIMIT 6 OTS.

'4''

HECK'S
REG.
79' QT.

Heck's Reg. '7.99

20 GAllON .

EXTINGUISHER

·- $588
Heck's Reg .

$8 .99
HAIDWAIE
DfPT.

to homemakers

10 COUNT

FIRE

SELF-EJECTING

ICE CUBE TRAY
, HECk'S REG.
$1.~3

SJ29

NOIISIWAIIIIEPT.

TRASH BAGS
Heck's Reg.

99'

50~

·.:
1)

n·· .

:':hool

ho.ns oiffe red.

K.S

ReView given
at meeting

·Houseware Dept.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - George
Foss, Pomeroy, · Grace
Babout, Middleport.
DISCHARGES :... Els ie
White, Amy Eynon , Annette
Lambert, Birdie Conger,
Terry Reynolds, George
Rittenhouse, Sandra Little,
Robert Freed, Herma n
McMurray, James Hill .
lo

rose

Lunch served '

IITDIIOTIVI
DEPT.

Hardware Dept. ·

]AC club
reorganized

Donation made to hospital

CASTROL

u•a.o...nc

Bernz -0 -Motic I'I'IIJlli-purpose dry
chel!'licol'fjra t~IIIQ u i s her . Orll! " "''
' does :r oil. No mo"er what the u)urct
ol the fire, tflis hand)' extinguisht!f pul~
,_ it out , . orld ih low pr~te mokes it o
bor90 ln horG to pou up

Steve Dawson
t P'J10 ·

Whaley family reunites

69c

'122

.........,.c
PROPANE
TORCH

602~

Sports Dept.

PISTOL
POUCH
Heck's Reg.

Heck's Reg. '1.36

Heck's Reg.

SPORTS DEPT,

\ $}22

ST

Bread dough decorations
tp be made in workshop

'34.9D

SAFETY
VEST

·Woman cited
for failure to
yield the road

. .UILL

Heck's Reg.

Sports Dept.

It is of utmost importance
that Ohio have stron~ anticri me la ws that really
combat crime."

59~

Heck's Reg: '26.99

l.

jill Jeffers is
September bride _

PAPER

99

Mr. and Mrs. Danny R. Roush

in August ceremony

TYPING

COFFEE POT

~19

Green PTO has first .meeting Smith-Stovall wed

100 SHEETS

I.

2-MANTEL
·LANTERN

citizens, and not tbe criminal.

GALLIPOLIS - Goldi e
Mae Rice, ~. Gallipolis, was
cited to Municipal Court for
failure to yield the right of
way following an accident
Friday on Second Ave. City
polic_e ~fficers said the Rice
11
car ~ed from a curb into
the side of an auto operated
by Kenneth M. Kiskis, 17, Rt.
2, Gallipolis. The re was
minor damage.
A backipg accident occurred in the 200 block of
Second Ave. where an auto
operated by Cecil D. Mehl, 39,
Ga llipolis, ba cked into a
vehicle operated by Joyce
Casto, Gallipolis.
A final accident was on
Second Ave. at Vine St. where
a semi driven by Doyle
Wayne Patton, 29, Rt. 1,
North Tazwell, Va., made a
sharp turn on Second Ave. In
order to avoid a collision,
Danny R. Evans, 17,
Gallipolis, swerved his car,
lost control and struck- a
concrete wall.

CORNING
ELECTRIC

-COLEMAN '

Heck's Reg. '21.99

Mr.r. Robert R. Smith

'29''

COLEMAN

'1866

228

Oiol·o·Br_. conlr'ols the
fiovor of tt.. co H"
otcord ing to i!ldividuot
loste pr.fere!Kn for sfroflg,
medium or mild coffee .

HECK'S REG.
114:99

·Clothing Dept.

27 cases

POMERO Y - Thirteen
defendants were fined and 14
others forfeit ed bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by J udge Robert E.
Buck were .James Westfall,
Galll polis , $9 and costs,
speeding ; Carl R. Cremeans,
Rt. 1 Reedsv ille, Judith L.
Hood, Middleport and
Theodore W. Reed, Middleport, $11 and costs each,
speeding; James S. Stillier,
Rt. 1 Reedsville, . $14 and
costs, speeding; Ea rl F.
Norton, Wellston, $12 and
costs, speeding; Larry H.
Farley, LOng Bottom, Carl R.
Hood, Mason, and Carl E.
Parker, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, speeding; Eddie
Russell, J r., Tuppers Plains,
$18 and costs, speeding; John
C. Ingels, Gallipolis, $25 and
costs, improper registration;
Dale Connolly, Long Bottom,
$10 and costs, disorderly
cond uct ; Lawrence R.
Groggel, Proctorville, $10
and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Mabel
Minard, Little
Hocking, $27.50, failure to
yield; Clair E. Martin,
Vinton, $28 .50, speed ing ;
Forest Springer, Adena, and
Donald E. Russell , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, $26.50 each,
speeding ; Benjamin C.
Rickard, South Point, $22.50,
illegal pa rking; Franklin
Casto, Rt. 3 Pomeroy,
Ti mothy
M.
Hurlow,
GaUipolis, Pau l A. Clark,
St. Albans, Harold A.
Radow, Huntington, Dean
Delcoro, Waynesburg, Paul
McCalvin, Ashland, Ky., Pan
. R. Ricae, Chesapeake, Terry
D. Wamsley, Point Pleasa nt
and Alexander F. Petrick,
Jr., Warren, $27.50 each,
· speeding.

IIIIIIIOftg

BATH SET

crime

awareness prog rams and
enact legislation that would
set mandatory sentences.
"The FBI statistics on the
rise of crime are shocking,"
Triplett said. "Between 1963
~uns In this house."
and 1974 rural crime in our
This is why Triplett sta le almost quadrupled (up
strongly opposes gun control 277 percent).
'
legis! alion.
There are ways to fight
Triplett also noted that gun crime, Triplett noted, ways
control legislation is not the thatget citlzeni involved, not
answer to curbing crh'ne. infringe upon their rights.
There have b9c n several
Triplett said . gun control
Jaws were a "hassle" to the
sportsmen who purchase
guns for hunting and to the
wives and husbands who buy
guns lo protect themselves
and their families.
" As
your
Sta te
Representati ve," Triplett
sa id, 11 1 would support
measures that protect the

settled
by court

j"

2 PIECE

legislative acts
the "so-ca lled anti-crime"

A .... w IIIOV..

HECK'S REG.
$129.96
JEWEliiY DEPT.

Triplett faults
IRONTON
Merril
Triplett, Republica n ca n·
dicta te for the 92nd Ohio
House seat today criticized

lopO f&lt;II C.,....io Ia

DRIP·O·LAIOR

sggg

GENERAL ELECTRIC

cross now and theri on Lhc campaign trall. The

12·c . .

.,DIAL•A••iluatiHtwr•.'

Hondy cooking guide with temperatures a nd
limes toltefully prll:'led on the wrap for
Continuo! reference. Big family size fi ...e
quorl copocil): with ovenproof see-thr\J glos•
CoYer .. Sturdy, lightweight deep fry 1troiner
with remoyable ha ndle.

~·

A

"

.

Other selections played Ineluded "We've Only Just
Begun," " lAVe Story" and "I
Honestly Love You."
.Immediately following the
ceremony a re,ceptlon was
held In the church so&lt;:lal
room. Athree tiered wedding
cake of yellow and white was
topped with two white doves.
Stalrsieps leading up each
side or the cake with
miniature repll.cas of the
wedding party on them. The
table was decorated with a
white lace tablecloth and
ui'Rierneath It was a yellow
cloth to bring out the yellow
and white theme. It alllo had
an Aladdin's lamp decoratod
with yellow roses and ribbon.
Hos(ess at the reception was
Mrs. Rachel Pullins of
GaWpolls Helping lll)rve were
Kim Waugh, Kala Sue Bush,
Unda Jeffers, Brenda Board
and ~elly Pullins, all of
Gallipolis.
Gueats were registered by
Katrlnka Hart, Letart, cousin
of the groom.
Out·of-town guests at·
tended from Letart, W. Va.;
Clifton, W. Va .; Degraff;
Columbus·, Lan••vllle
; New
..
Haven, W. Va.; Pt. Pleasant,
w.Va.; Parkersburg, W. Va.
and Sardis, Ohio. .
SUNDAY DEADLINE
The deadline lor weddiDJ
and eaaagement aotlcea
aad
aoctely
newa ltema lor the
Saaday Ttme..Seatlael 11
U UOOD OD tbe Thunday
precedlnl pabltcatloa·.
lalormatioa may be tunoed
Ia or maDed to ~ office of
the Galllpolla · Dally
Trtbane or Pomeroy DaUy
Seatlnel. E11111emoal aDd
weddiDI forma
are
available upon requett.

lining trimmed ln blue lace.
Her headpiece was baby's
breath and a blue dainty
ribbon .
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Jeflers wore a
short sleeved street length
skirt with veat and jacket of
shrimp color.
The groom's mother wore a
turquoise short sleeved street
l~ngth skirt with vest and
jacket trimmed in white.
Both mothers wore a corsage
of white roses.
Carla Fellure, soloist, sang
during the half hour of pre-

nuptial music, "Your Song,"
"Feelinaa/' 11 Annle's Song"'
and 11 The Lord's Prayer,'"

Church is scene of meeting

I

'

prayer were Plalrn91:15 by
Evelyn Rothgeb; DanielS :10,
Emma Spencer; Mark 14 :36,
Plna Ward : · Acts 16 :25,
Florence Alle.n, and Luke
?.'! :34, Audrey Brownell. Bible
questions were asked by Ptna
Ward, and Bible study wu I
Peter 3. Benedictlllll wu
glven by Florence Allen, and
49 sick calls were reported.
The next meeting wW be In
November at the home of,
Mrs. Ethel Wright.

•

~

�ONE DAY ONLY

WHEY

,4

Regular Price

On tllis day in history:
In 1861, the first telegram

was transmitted across the
United
States
from
CAlifornia Chief Justice
stephen Field to President
Abraham
Lincoln
in
Washington . ·
In 1939, women's hbslery
made of nylon went on sale
for the first time.
In 1945, U.S. Secretary of
State
James
Byrnes
announced the United
Nations charter ha.d gone intO
effeCt ·following Sovie~
ratification.
.
In 1975, Generalissimo
Francisco Franco of Spaili
lay near deatlland was allot¢
to he succeeaed by Prince
.Juan Carlos. A1ao tllat day\
the Turkish ambassador to
France was kiUed by gunmen
in Paris.
.

Sunday Oct. 24
$109500 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '89500
·"
$209500, •••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••• '149500
5
249500 •• ! •••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••• '2095 00
5
299500 .............................. '2595 00
.$329500 ......................... ~ •••• '289500
$349500 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '299500

s1195 Spinet Piano's
00

by KIMBALL
SUNDAY
$
OCT. 24th
ONE DAY
ONLY

379500 ••••••••• ~~ ••••••••••••••••••
$399500 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
.

5

4395

00

······~~·····················

'3795

00

Layaway Now For Christmas ••••

I DOORS OPEN

· Sony, but we cannot take trade-ins at these prices.

12 NOON-CLOSE AT 6:00 PM I

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.
•

..

FREE: Bench, Tuning·and Delivery
NO DOWN PAYMENT &amp;s4.28 PER WEEK

•

5

00

61 Court St.

...~. 330 Second Avenu~l

.

..

SUNDAY· OCTOBER 24th.
.

.

'

.

ONE DAY·ONLY
INSTANT
. KITCHEN GLAMOUR!
.

TiiEE PLANTED- Fourth grade students gathered outside Washington Elementary
in order to observe the planting of a smaU sugar maple donated by Sarah Daniels a
member of Mrs. Preston's class. The tree planting repr~nta tlle final stages of a soc'ial
studies umt on forest regioos. In addition, three more trees were brought in by J~son
Sommer. Troy Broyles and Kenny Robinson which were planted on the hlll behind the
school . Other activities ~or the unit includ.ed a talk by forestry major Amo Hoskins and a trip
around the school in wh1ch students studied the role of trees in the environment their care
and their uses. The maple tree can beobeerved as it grows through the year fro.;,.the fourth
grade classroom. The forestry unit was cooducted by Miss Karol Carpenter a student
teacher from Rio Grande College,
'

.

STORY &amp;CLARK CONSOLE PIANOS

The Easy-To-Do
Kitchen Remodeling
Kit ... Or We
Install

Key Club projects discussed
CHESHIRE - Possible
school and community
projects were discussed
Wednesday at a meeting of
tlle Key Club of Kyger Creek
High School.
The president, Steve Derst,
presided and reported on the
state Key Club project of
"Save a Child." The mem~
hers voted to have a collection taken at the Kyger
Creek-North Gallla game and
divide. the donation between
the state project and the
Gallia County Emergency
Squad. The club tllanked the
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club for
its sponsorship, and the check
sent to tlle club for ita
•. assistance at the Kiwanis
Pair Booth.
.
The Kiwanis .International
Board has designated ·the
week of Nov. 14-2D . as Key
Clog Week. The club is
Pf8P4ring school and community activities to com-

memorate the "eek.
· for an inter-dub and an inOn Oct . .13, the club was vitation wUI be extended to
presented a program by J. the Point Pleasant club to
Rusk on the sport of fishing. visit Kyger Creek:
Refreshments "ere served
Key Clobbers Steve Roush
following the presentation. and Woody Burnette were
The club is planning a selected to attend the
faculty volley ball game, a Kiwahis Club meeting next
christmas project and Wednesday. The meeting
visitations to other Key Clubs adjourned with the Pledge of
in the area. They will traver Allegiance and the ritual of
to Point Pleasant this week ringing the Key Club bell.

,,-• .. ,,

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME

1,1

t

HUNTINGTON, W . li A. 15701

~HOHI

IODAY.
10~ 1,111 UliMA II

CALL COLLECT

525-9020

FREE: Bench; Delivery &amp; Tuning

Thinking about Mw kitchen
cabinet.? Now you can sove up to

See the Schult Sectional Home, also
Schult Homes 70xl4 and the most
elegant Holy Park.

50% by simply taking oK your old
dOQrs ond drawer frOilts qnd replac·
ing with CABINET-PA.K® ·wood·
grained panels surfaced with fORMI- .
CA. It's easy! No muu, no fun ·your cabinet contents remain undis-

Governors 70xl4 spa.cious sky.line
circle kit. Stop by &amp; see our huge
selection.

turbed .

Do It yourMif

No 'Money Down &amp;Only s5.89 Per Week

or we

install.

HOME PARK &amp;SALIS

•

•

916 5TH AVENUE

QUALITY FIRST

K&amp;K MOBILE
A tllought for the dsy :
American noveliBI William
Faullmer said, "I believe that
' man will not merely endUre
.•. he will prevail." ·
.

...

KITCHEN
CONVERSION
PANELS

Has AGreat SeleCtion

.

.

'"

._,

675-3000'

ADDRESS

:

PHONE

I

Point Pleasant

Jackson Awe.
I

NAME

1
I
I

+U'f.-MASTERCHARGEC.rn
30lu ppor RI ver
~old
.
. Acron From
Open Mon. thru Sot.
Sliver Brldgt p .. ,.
.
10 to 9
·

Golllw:...fd••••It's IHir Comfort"'...

r--;A~~~D~;~;;0-0-;~;A~I~;;~(~;R~--- ---------- ---~j

i1

L

00

5
Special

'

I

:

I

ZIP

I
I
I

I
I

.
'
· •
I
, ----------------- ~ ----- ------------~ ----·

SUNDAY QNLY-Door's Open 12 Noon, Close 6:00 PM
BRUNICARDI MUSIC·COMPANY
.

• r.t

,/

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�ONE DAY ONLY

WHEY

,4

Regular Price

On tllis day in history:
In 1861, the first telegram

was transmitted across the
United
States
from
CAlifornia Chief Justice
stephen Field to President
Abraham
Lincoln
in
Washington . ·
In 1939, women's hbslery
made of nylon went on sale
for the first time.
In 1945, U.S. Secretary of
State
James
Byrnes
announced the United
Nations charter ha.d gone intO
effeCt ·following Sovie~
ratification.
.
In 1975, Generalissimo
Francisco Franco of Spaili
lay near deatlland was allot¢
to he succeeaed by Prince
.Juan Carlos. A1ao tllat day\
the Turkish ambassador to
France was kiUed by gunmen
in Paris.
.

Sunday Oct. 24
$109500 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '89500
·"
$209500, •••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••• '149500
5
249500 •• ! •••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••• '2095 00
5
299500 .............................. '2595 00
.$329500 ......................... ~ •••• '289500
$349500 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '299500

s1195 Spinet Piano's
00

by KIMBALL
SUNDAY
$
OCT. 24th
ONE DAY
ONLY

379500 ••••••••• ~~ ••••••••••••••••••
$399500 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
.

5

4395

00

······~~·····················

'3795

00

Layaway Now For Christmas ••••

I DOORS OPEN

· Sony, but we cannot take trade-ins at these prices.

12 NOON-CLOSE AT 6:00 PM I

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO.
•

..

FREE: Bench, Tuning·and Delivery
NO DOWN PAYMENT &amp;s4.28 PER WEEK

•

5

00

61 Court St.

...~. 330 Second Avenu~l

.

..

SUNDAY· OCTOBER 24th.
.

.

'

.

ONE DAY·ONLY
INSTANT
. KITCHEN GLAMOUR!
.

TiiEE PLANTED- Fourth grade students gathered outside Washington Elementary
in order to observe the planting of a smaU sugar maple donated by Sarah Daniels a
member of Mrs. Preston's class. The tree planting repr~nta tlle final stages of a soc'ial
studies umt on forest regioos. In addition, three more trees were brought in by J~son
Sommer. Troy Broyles and Kenny Robinson which were planted on the hlll behind the
school . Other activities ~or the unit includ.ed a talk by forestry major Amo Hoskins and a trip
around the school in wh1ch students studied the role of trees in the environment their care
and their uses. The maple tree can beobeerved as it grows through the year fro.;,.the fourth
grade classroom. The forestry unit was cooducted by Miss Karol Carpenter a student
teacher from Rio Grande College,
'

.

STORY &amp;CLARK CONSOLE PIANOS

The Easy-To-Do
Kitchen Remodeling
Kit ... Or We
Install

Key Club projects discussed
CHESHIRE - Possible
school and community
projects were discussed
Wednesday at a meeting of
tlle Key Club of Kyger Creek
High School.
The president, Steve Derst,
presided and reported on the
state Key Club project of
"Save a Child." The mem~
hers voted to have a collection taken at the Kyger
Creek-North Gallla game and
divide. the donation between
the state project and the
Gallia County Emergency
Squad. The club tllanked the
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club for
its sponsorship, and the check
sent to tlle club for ita
•. assistance at the Kiwanis
Pair Booth.
.
The Kiwanis .International
Board has designated ·the
week of Nov. 14-2D . as Key
Clog Week. The club is
Pf8P4ring school and community activities to com-

memorate the "eek.
· for an inter-dub and an inOn Oct . .13, the club was vitation wUI be extended to
presented a program by J. the Point Pleasant club to
Rusk on the sport of fishing. visit Kyger Creek:
Refreshments "ere served
Key Clobbers Steve Roush
following the presentation. and Woody Burnette were
The club is planning a selected to attend the
faculty volley ball game, a Kiwahis Club meeting next
christmas project and Wednesday. The meeting
visitations to other Key Clubs adjourned with the Pledge of
in the area. They will traver Allegiance and the ritual of
to Point Pleasant this week ringing the Key Club bell.

,,-• .. ,,

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME

1,1

t

HUNTINGTON, W . li A. 15701

~HOHI

IODAY.
10~ 1,111 UliMA II

CALL COLLECT

525-9020

FREE: Bench; Delivery &amp; Tuning

Thinking about Mw kitchen
cabinet.? Now you can sove up to

See the Schult Sectional Home, also
Schult Homes 70xl4 and the most
elegant Holy Park.

50% by simply taking oK your old
dOQrs ond drawer frOilts qnd replac·
ing with CABINET-PA.K® ·wood·
grained panels surfaced with fORMI- .
CA. It's easy! No muu, no fun ·your cabinet contents remain undis-

Governors 70xl4 spa.cious sky.line
circle kit. Stop by &amp; see our huge
selection.

turbed .

Do It yourMif

No 'Money Down &amp;Only s5.89 Per Week

or we

install.

HOME PARK &amp;SALIS

•

•

916 5TH AVENUE

QUALITY FIRST

K&amp;K MOBILE
A tllought for the dsy :
American noveliBI William
Faullmer said, "I believe that
' man will not merely endUre
.•. he will prevail." ·
.

...

KITCHEN
CONVERSION
PANELS

Has AGreat SeleCtion

.

.

'"

._,

675-3000'

ADDRESS

:

PHONE

I

Point Pleasant

Jackson Awe.
I

NAME

1
I
I

+U'f.-MASTERCHARGEC.rn
30lu ppor RI ver
~old
.
. Acron From
Open Mon. thru Sot.
Sliver Brldgt p .. ,.
.
10 to 9
·

Golllw:...fd••••It's IHir Comfort"'...

r--;A~~~D~;~;;0-0-;~;A~I~;;~(~;R~--- ---------- ---~j

i1

L

00

5
Special

'

I

:

I

ZIP

I
I
I

I
I

.
'
· •
I
, ----------------- ~ ----- ------------~ ----·

SUNDAY QNLY-Door's Open 12 Noon, Close 6:00 PM
BRUNICARDI MUSIC·COMPANY
.

• r.t

,/

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�•

4-~The

•
•
•

Sunday Times-sentinel, Slllllay, Oct. 24, 1976

Miss Smith weds
Arlen Owens II

~::::;:~;:;:;~:=:;:;::=:;:::::::;:::::-:::·:·:·:·:-::·:~:::::::::;;::::::x::::::%:-n::z.:;:;:~~~~
.""'i1S6M~J!'JIJIIIJJIII,~~

Community . •.
Charlene
Ii -Corner ByHoeflich
~

'

POMEROY - ~'irst just this reminder "Happy Land" will be presented this afternoon at 3 pm. at
'l'rlnlly Church, and it 'a sure to he a delight.
The·presentation telling of our heritage In song ~nd story
features a cast of 21 sln8ers and Interpreters using flute, ·
dulcimer and reed organ as their accomuanlment.
.The total cost to bring the production to Meigs County is
~ with $2•0 ol that amount helng paid by the Ohio Arts .
Council. Several of -the banks and some organizations have
contributed to the $120 needed locally. You may , however , he
asked todrop a small contribution at the door lf the full amount
hasn't already been raised. The Meigs County Histories\
Society is sponsoring the performance.
BOBBY, SHAWN LOGAN
AMERICAN HANDICRAFTS is coming to Meigs CoWlty
Helen Williams, Sally Lambert and Lois Pauley will be
opening a shop here in about two weeks . .
They'll he occupying the hack room and the basement of
the former Shuler home on West Main .where the Pauleys now
have Nationwide and Strout Really , Not only are there three
owners planning to handle all of the American Handicrafts
usual stock; but. they will be offering classes in a variety of
crafts.
.
TOYS FOR TOTS are needed at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The hospital auxiliary is heading up a drive tif get together
some toys for the children who are hospitalized. These, of
course, need to be new toys. Want to help' You might call Mrs.
Jessie White.
.
RECEIVING a life membership pin at the Ohio General
Baptist Convention came as quite a surprise for Mrs. Nellie
Winston . She was recognized during the Convention held
recently in Columbus for her dedication to the church and
presented .the life membership pin .
APPALACHIAN music is certainly appealing and I hope
you have the opportunity to hear Jennifer Shee.ts' versatile
progra[ll. She's traveling to Columbus perindically to perform
under the Ohio Arts CoWlcll program for elementary schools
there.
However, Monday, 10:20, she will perform at the Pomeroy
Elementary School and on Tuesday, at the same time , at the
Middleport mementary School. While she will not he doing a
full program with a workshop as she doe$ in the Columbus
schools, it will be educational and entertaining. We're sure
that either school would welcome a few visllors, but you might
want to check with Robert Morris, principal.
HERBERT apd Betty Gilkey got a look last week at fall in
the Great Smoky Mountains . The two spent several days
vacationing in Gatlinburg, Tenn . and they returned to Ohio to
.rto. some visiting with relatives.
THIS IS A YEAR of special concern for keeping America
beautiful and as a reminder for some who may get c~ reless,
The Rutland Garden Club has put out anti-litter posters.
UNDA JETI was moved from intensive care Friday and
is now in Room 4()3 at the Holzer Medical Center. She suffered
u heart a ttac~ Monday , Visitors are permitted and she, of
cour!*l, would enjoy cards .
.

COURT TO LISTEN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Supreme Court of Ohio
~' riday agree,d to hear oral
urguments in the appeal of a
law giving the state Board of
Education authority to assign

a.~ademlc school districts to
joint vocational districts. The
case pits the hoard ag~inst
the Eastland Vocational
School District in Franklln
CoWlty. No hearing date was
set.

Boys observe birthdays
POMEROY - The birthdays of Bobby and . Shawn
Logan were observed Oct. 16
with a party at the home of
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan. Bobby
was one, and Shawn, two.
A Mickey Mouse theme
was carri ed ·out
hi
the decorations for Ihe
party With Kim Roush
assisting Mrs. Logan. The
cake, a Mickey Mouse
replica, was baked by Mrs. c.
Kuhl, Pomeroy, whose son,
Charles, Is stationed aboard
the "Spruance" at Portsmoulth, Va. with Dwight
(Skip) Logan, Jr., father of
Bobby and Shawn. ·
··· Cake, ice cream and punch
were served to the gue~s.
Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mr . .and

'

\

By Polly Cramer

Rub salt in pots
to remove odor

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - Do you or
any of your readers know how
to remove the smell pf
gasoline from stainless steel
pots and pans ? My "little
angel" used rriy good pots to
catch gasoline leaking from
his minibike. The resulting
smell makes it impossible fqr
me to use them.
JOYANNE.
DEAR JOYANNE - I am
sure you have thoroughly
wasbed . everything the
· , gasoline feU on, so there Is no
danger of a fire from ' a
dropped matcb, gas burner,
etc. Moistened salt will

•

You're heading in the
right direction ...

If you're heading to Commercial .&amp; Savings Bank to
deposit your .money.
Invest your money in an account whiGh pays the maximum
interest. A savings account lets you put money away for
the future, insuring your_savlngs up to $40,000. It's a great
way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank is a great
place to save.

MEMBER FDIC

I

Mrs. Virgil Wamsley; Klm
, and Krista Roush, Gary
Davis, Mrs. Avice BaUey,
Mrs. Sandt Sargent and
Jonathan. Balloons and
lolloPQI!S-Were given as
favors.
Sending gilts were their
great-grandfather, George
Logan, BernlceKlng1Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, and
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan,
Scoll and Gary, Topsham,
Maine.
Dwight (Skip) Logan, Jr.
returned to Norfolk Sunday
afternoon and that . evening
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight -Logan,
s,. returned Shawn and
Bobby ·to their home In
Cb~rleston . The chlldr~n
VISited several days before
the party.

P'olly's Pointers

.·

I

remove_tlie odor of gaaoUDe
from one's hands. I would rub
It all over the paas, leave
them for some time and then
wash tborougbly wltb a
strong detergent. Wasblng In
vinegar mfgbt belp, too. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -lam sure
many of the readers have
wondered what to do with outdated linen carendar towels.
Many times they can be
bought very ch ~ aply . at
garage sales, too. I sewed
several together to make a
gay kitchen table cloth. The
number required depends on
the size of the cloth needeil.
They also make nice "slipcovers" for the backs of
kitchen chairs and look very
colorful when used both these
ways. - B.M.C.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with motorists,
especially those wlth long
cars, who do not pull aU the
way into the marked off
parking places In lots. Often a
good part of a car extends out
into the lane. When this
happens on both sides of a
lane one can barely squeeze
through when getting out. I
!)ave seen such lanes so
blocked off that cars could
not get through, but had to
back all the way out.
Everyooe knows that it Is not
easy or safe. - BEATRICE.
DEAR POLLY - Ethel
wanted to know 'how one
should charge lor handmade
articles. I was told by a yam
shop to charge three times
the price of the materia~
involved in the making.. I
believe most people use this
as a basis for figuring such
prices. (Polly's note- Other
readers wrote that they, too,
cbarge,on this same basis.) SUSAN L.
DEAR POLLY - Wben
baking cookies I remove the ·
hot ones from the cookie
sheet and put them on brown
grocery bags. The paper
absorbs ~ny grease, protects
the COWlter top from the hot
trays and the cleanup ls easy.
. I just throw away the paper
with the loose crumbs on 11. ROBERTA .
..
DEAR POLLY - When the
doctor gives me· an ap·
polntment caro, I paper cUp
It to thel'f\onth of the calendar
when it will be needed. 'l'hb
~lendar hangs lnalde the
cupboaro door, where I am
reminded dally of eomln8
appointments. In lhis way
there Is ·no danger of miss~
or forgetting hard-to-get
appointments. All appointments lire ·done the
· same way. -' HELEN.

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK

,..

COURT STREET

-

SILVER BRIDGE PlAlA

NOW YOU KNOW
fp 1918, at Bahia FeliJ,
Cbile, rain fell on all but 18
dsys of the year. And on those

--•-------•----------~~~~----..1 18 it drizzled!

iACKSON- The Christ
United MethodlJt -Church of
Jactaon wu the setting for
the awruner afternoon wedding of MlBs Bonnie Smith
and Arlen Owens II.
The Rev. Clifton Hatfield
officiated at the open chUfl:h
wedding lleld June 12. The
couple exchanged vows at 3
p.m.
Mlas Smith 18 the 1!a ug!Ur
of Mr. and _Mrs. H-I:ry L.
Smith of Jackson . Mr.
Owens' parents ar• i\lr. and
Mrs. Arlen Owt••· ,.f Rio
Orande.
The weddln8
c was
created by · using a seven
branch candelabra with
white
candles
and
cascading sprays of yellow
daisies, white daisieo, yellow
pompons, while button pompons and bnby's breath. A
matching
;.rrangemenl
covered the altar .and was
centered !lith a large unity
candle with two smaller
caildles on each side.
The double ring ceremony
was preceded by a half hour
of music. Organist Mrs.
Edith Ross of Gallipolis
played "The Bach Prelude,"
~~Clare de Lune" and 11 Love
Story." Soloists were Mr.
Gale Douthitt, Marietta and
Merlyn Ross of Gallipolis.
Mr. Douthitt sang "Annie's
Soog'' and 11·8Qmetin1.es,"
and Mr. Ross' selections in-

c\uded "Love Never Ends,"
"Working Together, Uving •
Together" and "Sunrlae,
Sunset." He also sang the
"Lord's Prayer" as .!:e cou.
pie knelt at the altar during
theceN!ffiOny.
·
The bride, escorted lo the
altar by her father and glveli
In marrUige by her parenl8, ,.
was aljlred in a while gown
fashioned of silk organza
over peau taffeta with a VIctoria neckline· edged in·
Venice lace. The gown
featw·sheer bishop sleeves
endln8 in wide cuffs. A blb
tucked ~ce was edged with
a scalloped Venice lace edged band. A controlled A·Hne
skirt fell from 8 modified empire waisllne ending in a
floWlce. A band nf Venice
lace encircled the hemline "
which extended ' into a semi
cathedral train: Appliqued
Venice lace motifs adorned
the A·line skirt. H~r veil con- .
_slsted of a camelot cap of appllgued Venice lace and tiny
seed pearls holding a mantilla of imported English illusion and matching lace.
She carried a cascade styled bouquet of yellow
sweetheart roses and white
ball pompons accented with
loops of while ribbon and ivy
with green foliage. The bride
observed the tradition of
5Jmething . old, something new, something bor·
· rowed, something blue, and a

Mrs. Ronnie Lee Durst
"·

Mr. and Mrs. Arlen ·Owens II

lucky 'penny In her shoe.
· Serving her sister-In-law as
matron of honor wao Mrs.
Helen Jo Smith of Jackson.
Bridesmaids were Debbie
Bennett, aunt of the groom,
Vinton; Betsy Hughes,
Gallipolis and Jana Prieot,
Marion, both close friends of
U1e couple. The attendants
CORA - .The Cora WSCW Church," Sharon Jeffers; wore gowns of yellow
met In the horrie of Zenia "Old Fashioned Folks." Anna polyester overlayed with
Evans on Oct. 14. Following Mae Morgan, and Sylvia sheer white organza and·emgraee by Sylvia Gilliam, a Gilliam · chose for the bossed with white daisies.
·diMer was served and en- bicentennial -~vent, "The the bodice was fashioned
joyed by !he group,
Passing of The Uttle Red with a scoop nee~ and puffed
The program began with Schoolhouse."
·
sleeves. The gatheN!d skirt,
group singing of "Heavenly
Velma Ellis, accompanied which feU from an empire
Sunllgbt," _accompanied by ·by Anise Wood on the piano, walsUine, was accented with
Regina Akers on the piano. sang, "Nearer My God To an eight inch rufflel The
Biblestudyleader,AnnaMae Thee." Everyone joined in waisUine was trinuned with
· Morgan read scripture from s!J!glng "Happy Birthday" 1o green grosgrain ribbon. They
ll,Pf!ler. Readings Included : Sylvia Gilliam and Regina -wore identical necklsces, a
"~b Daily , Wish," Joan Akers.
gift Of the bride, and white
B~; "A Child Goes To
Many of the members picture .hats . trimmed with
brought old Items for show green ribbons to match their
.
and tell. The group was en- dresses. Each carried a sum~. Q.;. tertained and amused over mer bouquet arrangement
I .I
many of the articles shown. of yellow daisies, white butThe business·. portion of the ton pompons and baby's
meeting was conducted by breath. The flowers were ar.
the president, Gladys Akers. ranged 1n white wicker
Bernice Bode Osol Both the secretary and· fireside baskets accented
. For Sunday, Oct. 24, 1978
treasurer reports were given. Wlth green bows and
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll It) Responding to compassion streamers.
Don't let emotion ru le your of hwnan need, the motion
Julie Wright of Jackson
po&lt;kelbook loday. You could was made by Etta Altizer and · was the flower girl. Her gown
overspend so much you'll blow
ded by Anise Wood th t was fashioned of material
the whole thing.
secon
, a
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) theCoraWSCWpurchasetwo matching that of the
Avoid legal negollallons or ver- gift certificates for Church bridesmaids' gowns. The
bodice was designed with a
bal commitments today. Things Women. United.
.
will not work out to your advanElectton of offtcers was high roWld neck, short puffed
1age.
l)eld. All existing officers, sleeves ·and the skirt was
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) with the exception of the made of many tiers of ruffles.
Feelings could run high on lhe president, will retain their The walsillne was trimmed
Job today. Try not to overreact. offlces for another year. with _green grosgrain ribbon
You could become lrustrated by Gladys Akers has fuUilledher and her white reed 'Princess
dinner lime.
obllgatlons as the Cora styled basket was filled with
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) WSCW president for the past white petals for stro'lfin8 and
Don't depend o.n friends to show two years. Daisy Evans was
the baridle was decorated
you a good t1me today. Your
.
Judgment Is not all that good. una:_wno~ly chosen as the with a small nosegay of
Your trust lri another could be new preBldent. The meeting yeUow daiSies, white button
miSplaced.
closed with
everyone pornp&lt;ins, baby's breath and
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) That lire iepeatlng the WSCW prayer. a white how with streamers.
you started at home yesterday is
The neJ:t meeting ~ be in She wore a halo of baby's
still smoldering. Don't expectthe the home of Fannie Jones. breath and yellow daisies In
lamlly lo obey your every com- Eventofthemonthwlllbethe her hair.
mand today.
.
"Christmas Bazaar."
David Owens of Rio
VIRGO (Aug. 23·8opt. 22) Don't
.

Cora women meet
at Evans home

Ast

·
M
Grap •

put anything In wrlling today and
avoid alt~rlng anything you've
previously agreed to. You'll ta.ke
a loss If you do either.

LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) Others
can't be expected to help with
llnanctal problems today. You'll
have to do so yourself or wait till

Grande served as his
brother's best mail. Ushers
were Greg , Leichisin,
Cleveland, friend of the couple:' Mike Smith, Jackson,
brother of the bride; Thurl
Jay Owens, Rio Grande, Rio
Grande, brother of the
groom.
John Owens of Rio Grande,
brother of the groom, served
as a junior usher.
.
The groom-groomsmen and
father of the bride were attired iii yellow and black · .
tUJedos with yellow ruffled
shirts. The groom's boutonniere was three white
sweetheart roses, and the
groomsmen wore boutonnier~s made of white
.daisies.
. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Smith wore a •
gown of polyester knit In
blending shades of aqua,
orang~ and ivory.
Mrs. Owelu! was attired in
a sleeveless gown , of
polyeoter knit. The Dora!
print of lavender, gold and
orange was ' on a white'
background. Both mothers ·,
wore corsages Of orange
sweetheart roses.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held In the
church fellowship hall. The
bride's table was decorated
with a while tablecloth
centered with a four-tier wed- :
ding cake. , The table :
featured the bridal colors of :
yellow and green. The-cake · •
was topped with the tradl-~:
·Ilona!, mlnlatUN! bride and :.:
groom.
Emnur Jean Arthur, South,
Webster, cousin Of the bride, •
attended the guest register. A:
rehearsal dinner was held at:
the home of the groom's:
parents on Friday evening. ;
FoUowlng a brief Wedding •
trip to Cincinnati; the:
. newlyweds are mldlng at:
Apt. 46, Stone Crest South;
Apts., Jackson. ·
:
•

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heritage house

SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nor. 22)
starting anything new today.
Better to go It alone, but be certain you're not selfiSh in your approach.

CAPRICORN 4Doc.

22~on.

•
.,

'

18)

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.,
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,
"
"'

.J.

•

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'L

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T~e

domestic scene isn't too
harmonious today. It might be
wise to buy a few things for the
home to pacify the family.

..
1

WINNER
.

Avour ·

OF tSo GIFJ

The Mocassin •••
It just makes.good sense!

WBirthday

.CERTIFM'.Alt-

E111r wondtr lrlily ~this clauit knps comin' ba:k?
The lfiiWtlr is in this easy stepper! Freshly styled witb i

unn01eosaary mental anguish.

Oct. 24, 1871
So11111 aplendiOopportunities will
be offered you thl!l year through

contacts and associates. Your
chanc•s lor success are good If
you exercL"'8 keen judgment.
l NLWSPAPER t-"NTl:RPRISE ASSN, i

ENGAGED-Mr.andMrs. W1111amR. Cspehart,Sr.,
Middleport, are annoWlclng the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Robin Rae, to
Paris Rufford Heos, Cheater, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
· James Albert Heos. The bride-elect is a junior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Meigs High
School and is enrolled at Hocking Technics) School in
Nelsonville. A December wedding is being planned.

Mr.Jiirlan w.n.
,...OJ, Cillo

comfort and ver11tility ·• it'severythinu you could

!l~

l

,..lhtruppen $22

blue (

\I

1

Generation Rap . ~
Hel~n

~

sat;'i

Peddler's Pantry

China,

Sr. Citizens
Ca'--

e

20% OFF ·

-I

=:;;:

NATURALIZE~

Fashion ease you'll
love getting used to ·
, ·
25 99

milk. . '

PLAZA

~1

canl.i

conniG .

,.or want or nttd •. • end MORE!' In

To the place where they've learned to expect the unexpected - the
unusual - the gr':_atest ~ In gifts,
.

LETART, W. Va. - reception were held at the
;;:::::::::::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:~!~~t::~s..~~~~:::.o;:::.':-.·~:=:;:*~:§:::::~:::;~::$1
WttERE ELSE
Katheryn Teresa D'Annunzlo Bridgeport Country Club.
and Roonle 1M Durst were · Mills .Susie Allen and Miss
un)ted in milrrl!'ge 1n a Debbie Plum served the cake
double rin8. cere111ony per- and Miss Ubbo Simmerman
By
and Sue Hottel · ;..
formedat2p.m. on Aug.14 at registered the guests.
6
the Immaculate Conception
The bride 18 a 19'13 graduate
.__State&amp; Third - - - - - - - - - · · Gallipolis. 0 .
Catholic . Church
at of Waahlngton lrvln8 High
Clsrklburg.
School In Clarksburg and
The Second Time Around
The ceremony ,was per- holds a degree in radiologic
RAP :.
formed by Father Emil technology from West
Wben I was in the etghth grade, I got pregnant and gave
•-,
a-'"'-'
by
Fa"·r
Virginia
University
Medical
Do.,... _.,...
w"'
my haby boy up for adopUon. My Immediate family stood by
Larry W. -Dorsch. i
Center.
me,butsomeoftheelderlyrelatlvesstlllavoldme.
Tile bride is the da
. u•hter
The grooin, 8 graduate of
'-... of
......t month, I found I was pregnant once more. Even
Mr. and Mrs. Ben D'Anniii!Zlo Point Pleasant Htgh School,
thon•h J remember soine of the -horrible t(Jings my relatives
of 21 Monroe: Street, Is presently working on his
have decided to keep the baby.
Clarksburg, W. ·Va. and !he master's
degree
in CHU c
·
1 am now a hl~h school senior and feel responsible and
"""""'
H WOMEN
· enoll8h to ,...,..,
•·
-·.. is the son of Mr. and agriculture .eco· nomlcs at · lt'R th
bll t ttUnited
d
secure'
raise tny child, In spite Of the pressure to give
Mrs. Ralph L. Durst of WVU.
mv 1es e pu c 0 a en a him or her up. I need this baby to Jove and care for. Help me
Letart, W. Va.
.
Follo'lfin8 a weddbig trip to ~ o:;:l ar:- J•U wo~ks/: prove to them I'm right, - ,RHONDA
The bride, escorted by her Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Nags
eo Y a
race n
RHONDA :
·
father, was attired 'in a gown · Head, Mr. and Mrs. 'Durot Me 1h 0 d 1s t Ch u r c h ·
I'm sorry: We csn't plead your cause on the lew facts
of sllk organza and cluney will mlde In Morgantown-. ' Registration, 9 ' 30 a.m.; you've given us. You say you're responsible and mature, but
lace, accented with lace
Oilt of town guests were workshop, 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. you've left out some Important details. Such as: •
appliques, with a V·nectline from Ohio Massachusetts RIVERSIDE STUDY Club, 1
Whowillcareforthebabywhlleyouflnlshschool?
and Juliet sleeves. The Michigan, 'North Carolina: p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Who will foot the bllls until you can get a job and wUI be on
neckllnewaaedgedwithlace, Fplorida , niCalilornla ' and :~ ~~t Epling, Sr., 603 your own? Can you saddle reluctant parents with these
1 a.
aswerethesleeves. Froman ennsyva
AMERICAN
LEGION . w&lt;rries?
.
empire walstline fell a cirWho Is the father? Will he help outflnanclally? '
AUJIJiary,
Will motherhood mean as much when 1't shit'·
CUiar lklrl with a·ccents of
11
TUnitd '!1, 1regular
h ·
., to d'1apero,
lace . and rufntng which 1'':01 :~::s: : · · ·
mlee nhag 11 7ue3s0 ay n 1 e twoo'clock feedings, less freedom, fewer dates, and multiple
formed an apron ~feet that
eglon
' ' p.m.
problems?
circled to the back.)l'alstllne.
WEDNESDAY
Andthebigone:.Areyoubelngfalrtothechlld?
Ruffles and lace flouneed the
.1REVIVAL BEGINS Wed·
Talk all these questions over with your parents before you
hemline and swept 10 ,the .
~nuar
nesday at the Morgan Center · tnake a flnan decision. UTHEY think you're right, you won't
chapel train. Her cathedral ·
We s I e y an Church. needanyprooffrom us. - HELEN AND SUE
length vel\ was edged with
GAWPOUS _ The Senior Evangelists, Rev. John Hersmatching lace and fell from a , Citizens Center, located at 220 man and Rev, Theron
csme\ot cap of lace . and Jackson Pike In the County Durham. Services, 7:30
-One Week Le!t in Paul Davies Jewelers Big 30th Anniversary Sale.
pearls.
l
Home Building, Ia open nightly.
What a great way'to buy those special gifts for Christmas at 20 per
The bride wore a illamond Monday throll8h Friday from QUIET DAY of Prayer
cent
off. ·
pendant necklace and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule Wednesday at Grace United
earrings, belonging , to her of activities for lhls week 18: Methodist Church, 9:30 a.m.
-20 per cent off on Loose, Unmounted Dlll!monds ~ . Ail sizes,
paternal grandmother, and
Monday,Oct.25-Phystca\ to 2:30 p.m. All county
carried a bouquet of Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; 0\de women Invited. Brin8 sack
prices and qualities. Then we'll set your diamond on a beautiful piece
sweetheart roses and baby's Tyme Chor Balance of • lunch; beverage will be
Of l~wetry from our extensive ring, pendent, earring , or ile tac
breath, accented with white Florida trip~ due today, 1-3 provided. Nursery available.
mounting collection . €ach diamond has been carefully graded and
satin streamers, tied In love p.m.;
carrys a certified written appraisal to assure you of true value. ·
I
Cakndar
knots.
Tuesday, Oct. 26- Quilting
'
Mlss Mary Madia, cousin of and visiting, 9 a.m.-a p.m.
-20 per cent off on all Noritake Patterns. Thais right! 20 per ceni off
Exhibit for the month of October : Annual antique show •
the bride, wu the ffi!ild of · Wednesday, Oct. 27 featuring Victorian anttqueo from the area.
regi'rdless If Its one piece or an entire set of china, stoneware,
hooor, ·and bridesmald8 were Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
. . . · Gallery hours: Saturdays and Sundays, t unti15 p.m.;
crystal
or stjlinless. Great lor fill -in or replacement . Over 1SO
Mrs. Sharon Barker, sister of Caro Gameo, 1-3 p.m.; Rio
Tuesdays
and
Thursdays,
tO a.m. untll3 p.m., Riverby.
patterns
now on display for your viewing.
·
the groom, Miss Kathy Grande College · Recreation
Oct.
26,
Tuesday,
8
p.m.
F
AC
Trustees
Meeting
Neavln, Mlss Mary Me- u p.m.
'
Riverby.
·
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-Don't miss this one. Sale ends Sat. Oct. 30th.
Fadden, Mlas Jan CantareW,
Thuraday Oct. 21 - BlrOct.
28,
Thursday,
9
11
a.m.
Christmas
Committee
and
Miao
Scarlett thday party, 1:30 p.m.
River by. ,
· '
McGiumphy. They wore
Frlday,Oct.29-Art~,
Oct. 31, Sunday Z-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop
Identical gowtl.l of ~prlcot 1-a·p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
Making
Christmas decorationa from bread d0118h, Part I Of ~
and ivory volle •print, · The Senioro' eo.op and the
.two part workshop; Part II will be In November. Janet Byers
designed with square Craft Shop Ire open for sales
· and Carolyn Hippensteel, Instructors. Open to the publlc no
necklines and sleeveless at 12:»-1:30.
charge; all materials furnished.
'
404 SEODND AYIHUI • .......,
bodices. 4ce with apricot
The Senior Nutrition
Exhibit for the month of November: Matted photographs
Invited
ribbon Inserts edged the Program serves the following
.._MI!W.I'" AMIAICAH Qau IOCiiTY
by li&gt;Clli photographers; Ama~ur and professional to be
neckllnea and bodices. The t.- meals this week at 12 noon:
judged separately; 5 categories: Nature, Action, Humor and
line atlrts, accented with
Monday - Meatloaf with
Black and White, Miscellaneous. Susan Clarke,
apricot ruffleo which formed gravy, mashed potatoes,
apron effects, fell from buttered spinach, roll, butter,
empire waistlines !'llrked pineapple sUce, Iced' graham
with bows. They carried crackers, mllk.
wicker basket&amp; of orange and
Tuesday - Fried chicken
white dalales, with baby's potato salad, buttered
DISPUTE SETI'LED
breath, and lied In orange broccoli, biacuit, honey,
WALTON
HILLS, Ohio
ribbon.
butter, purple plums, mllk.
BACK AT.SHOP- Adell
(UP!)
The
local dispute
Miss Klm Coyne was the
Wednesday ~ Hot pork Davidson Wbtte hu
that
jhreatened
to cause the
Oowerglrl,wearln8agownof loaf escalloped potatoes returned to her em·
layQff
of
34,000
Ford Motor
·apricot designed llke'thoee of bu~red beets, pear half with ployment with Helen's
Co.
workers
across
the naUon
the bridesmaids. She carried grated cheese, bmd, butter, . Beauty Shop Ia Pomeroy.
wa.i
settled
Friday
when
a wicker basket of oringe and peanut butter cooties, mllk. She, her ~aaband, DADDy,
members
of
United
Auto
white dslstes with. baby's
Thuraday - ·Bated beef aDd llaelr aon, Eric, are
Workers
Local
420
overbrea\h and wore a halo of pattie, tomato sauce, fluffy now mldiDg on Gravel Hill
whelmingly approved a new
baby s breath In her hair.
rice, tale, breod, butter, In Middleport. DiJmy 18
Catch th e happy feeling of comfort as yo11 step Into this
local
contract. Production
Dale ~ served, aa his lemon pudding with vanilla _ employed at Imperial
Nnturnllzcr sling. Just genlly !{lldc ul ong tu u shoe thut's
workers voted 741-to-ltlli for
brother s beat . man and wafer, mllk. ·
Elecllon Co.For aome time
the contract with the WaltOn
beautifully softened wtth padded Insole and kntt
ushers were RiCII and Chris
Friday- Tamale meat pie
tile family waa In Seuth
Hilla
stamping
plant,
and
~
lining. You can ulwuys count on Nut nrultzer
D'Annunzlo, brothero of the buttered peas sliced
Carollaa. •
stmed workers raUfted by a
bride, Sidney 'Barker, aalad bN!ad 'butter canned
~ for comforting fashi on. $
margin of 420-48.
brothir-ln-lsw of the groom, peaches,
Woody !faMa ~ Randy
Choice of beverage served
Plum.
with each meal.
The rin8 beam wu steve
D'Annunzlo, -brOther of the
IN THE
bride.
PILOTS 8TRIItE
' .
The bride's mother wore a · LOS ANGELES (UPJ)
SILVER BRIDGE
pastel tloral jumpeult with a The pilots u~lon ·atruck
matching chiffon twilc white ConUnental Airlines, the
accessories ahd a: wrllt nation's aeventh largest
corsage of aweetl!ea1 roses -carrier, at 12:01 a.m. PDT ·
and baby's llmtb. · '
Saturday and the airline
Open Weaday Ewninp n1 9 PM
The groom's motlJ!!r wu cancelad aU fllghta through
attired In a blue gown with Sunday night.· The ll!rlke by
while aoc:Worlel and •wore a the Airline Pilots ~on
coraage .of llftllhel:rt roaea came at the end of a federally
and baby'a bN!atb.
mandated coolln8 off period
Millie wu presented by thatbeganSept.22. The line's
Rlcharo Ridder, vocalist, and 1,0118 pl\ola voted during the
Mrs. Fugo, oralllllt.
awruner to authorize the
A buffet t1dinner and lltrlke.

tomatO

about.

PIICII (fob. 20·Morch 20) Be
careful what you say today,. Your
!ltatements could be blown out of
proportion and cause you some

Robin R[Je Capehart ·

.
1

Stay away fro.m crowds today.
You're not In the mood ro·r small
ta!k a_
nd could make a bad lmpre!lsion on someone you care

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11)

trip to Ada over the weekend. abroad and IIJ)d ol her ••·
Members were asked to send perlence of being held·captlve
carda to Mro. liNe! Me- for two days aboa...S. llllp
·.Callum who underwent eye during a Middle EUt conruct.
SU1'8ery at Grant Hospital in
Also a gueot at the meetin8
~lumbus. It was noted that wu Mro. Gertrude Zetgler,
Mrs. Ama Hartenbach Is Phlladelphla, Pa. othen
hOme from the hospital. A attending were Mrs. Stella
note wu N!ld from Mrs. Grueser, Mrs. Ruby Grueaer,
Gertrude Mitchell thanking Mrs Mildred PhiWpa, Mrs.
the group for a CO~J~ge Sadl~ Brown, Mrs. Elate
presented her during the Forbes, Mra. Mary Russell,
recent
home c oming Mrs. June Sayre and Ml'll.
provam.
Llllle Starcher.

WHERE'S EVERYONE RUSHING TO?

,....------·-·- --------'-

,,

Your mind won 't be on work .
Mlsta~es could ~e costly.

Guest speaker at the

.~c;tystal_

,,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Do make thiS a day of rest

by Mrs. Dorothy Jarvis, and

a poem, "Tholl8ht for the meeting_ was Mn . Ethel
Day" by Mro. Grueoer.
Grueser of Rock Springs who
Mrs. J arvts reported on her showed film ol her trip

ilver,

.
..

MIDIUPORT, 0.

Partners will be unlucky if yoU're

.Nuptial vows read

SUNDAY
MONTE SHEETS will apeak
at -the Providence Baptist
Chun:h Sunday, 7:30 pJll, ·
Publlc Invited.
REV. JOHN BANK, pastor ol
the Walnut Ridge Church, hal
announced tile . Blanton
Family w!JI alng Sunday ·.
night .a t the chun:h.
lORD ANNIVERSARY ol
the Paint Creek Baptist
Church, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
aervices.
GALLIA COUNTY Riding
Club trail ride at Jack
Camden's
home
In
Evergreen, 12:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
THE BLANTuN Family will
~ Sunday at the Walnut
Ridge Church, 7:30 pJll.' Rev.
Johnny Banks, pastor, Invites .
the public.
·
MONDAY
GALUA CHAPTER OCSEA
(Ohio ClvU Services Employees A.880ctation) Mon·
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Grand
Squares Club Room on
Eaatem Ave.
CUB SCOUT Pack 205 aMual
Halloween party at' St.
Peter's Epl8copal Church,
7:30 · p.m. Prospective
·members and parents
welcome, Costume opUonal.
TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Monday, 9 a.m. at
the Cheshire Baptist Churcli.
TUESDAy
·
SEW AND so Club Tuesday,
7 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Earl Caldwell.
OPEN GATE G de CJ b I
·
ar n u. a
the
Simpson
United
M th·••~ Ch h Tu··•·
.e
"""''
urc
......
7 30 p
G est
k y,
.mKota. uu - .~~a er,
eorge and cLandscaping."
on ""' topic,
"Lawns
All
t
d
1b
mem::~vlt~.r .en ~ u

MINERSVILU:: - World
Community Day, an ob·
servance of Church Women
United, wu announced for
Nov.~ at the Grace ~1
Chun:h In Pomeroy, at the
Wedneaday meetin8 of the
United .M~ . Women o.f
the Minersville Church,
Membert met at the church
lor qulltlng, had a lWlCheon,
and then a program and
bUsineSs meeting In the afternoon . · Mrs. Karl Grueser
opened the meeting with
group sin8in8 of "Showers of
Blessing." There was prayer

d

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another day.

World Co111:munity Day -slated

Coming
Events

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A GOOD PLACE TO SHOP • •
FOR NICE THINGS TO ,

WEAR

�•

4-~The

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Sunday Times-sentinel, Slllllay, Oct. 24, 1976

Miss Smith weds
Arlen Owens II

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.""'i1S6M~J!'JIJIIIJJIII,~~

Community . •.
Charlene
Ii -Corner ByHoeflich
~

'

POMEROY - ~'irst just this reminder "Happy Land" will be presented this afternoon at 3 pm. at
'l'rlnlly Church, and it 'a sure to he a delight.
The·presentation telling of our heritage In song ~nd story
features a cast of 21 sln8ers and Interpreters using flute, ·
dulcimer and reed organ as their accomuanlment.
.The total cost to bring the production to Meigs County is
~ with $2•0 ol that amount helng paid by the Ohio Arts .
Council. Several of -the banks and some organizations have
contributed to the $120 needed locally. You may , however , he
asked todrop a small contribution at the door lf the full amount
hasn't already been raised. The Meigs County Histories\
Society is sponsoring the performance.
BOBBY, SHAWN LOGAN
AMERICAN HANDICRAFTS is coming to Meigs CoWlty
Helen Williams, Sally Lambert and Lois Pauley will be
opening a shop here in about two weeks . .
They'll he occupying the hack room and the basement of
the former Shuler home on West Main .where the Pauleys now
have Nationwide and Strout Really , Not only are there three
owners planning to handle all of the American Handicrafts
usual stock; but. they will be offering classes in a variety of
crafts.
.
TOYS FOR TOTS are needed at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The hospital auxiliary is heading up a drive tif get together
some toys for the children who are hospitalized. These, of
course, need to be new toys. Want to help' You might call Mrs.
Jessie White.
.
RECEIVING a life membership pin at the Ohio General
Baptist Convention came as quite a surprise for Mrs. Nellie
Winston . She was recognized during the Convention held
recently in Columbus for her dedication to the church and
presented .the life membership pin .
APPALACHIAN music is certainly appealing and I hope
you have the opportunity to hear Jennifer Shee.ts' versatile
progra[ll. She's traveling to Columbus perindically to perform
under the Ohio Arts CoWlcll program for elementary schools
there.
However, Monday, 10:20, she will perform at the Pomeroy
Elementary School and on Tuesday, at the same time , at the
Middleport mementary School. While she will not he doing a
full program with a workshop as she doe$ in the Columbus
schools, it will be educational and entertaining. We're sure
that either school would welcome a few visllors, but you might
want to check with Robert Morris, principal.
HERBERT apd Betty Gilkey got a look last week at fall in
the Great Smoky Mountains . The two spent several days
vacationing in Gatlinburg, Tenn . and they returned to Ohio to
.rto. some visiting with relatives.
THIS IS A YEAR of special concern for keeping America
beautiful and as a reminder for some who may get c~ reless,
The Rutland Garden Club has put out anti-litter posters.
UNDA JETI was moved from intensive care Friday and
is now in Room 4()3 at the Holzer Medical Center. She suffered
u heart a ttac~ Monday , Visitors are permitted and she, of
cour!*l, would enjoy cards .
.

COURT TO LISTEN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Supreme Court of Ohio
~' riday agree,d to hear oral
urguments in the appeal of a
law giving the state Board of
Education authority to assign

a.~ademlc school districts to
joint vocational districts. The
case pits the hoard ag~inst
the Eastland Vocational
School District in Franklln
CoWlty. No hearing date was
set.

Boys observe birthdays
POMEROY - The birthdays of Bobby and . Shawn
Logan were observed Oct. 16
with a party at the home of
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dwight Logan. Bobby
was one, and Shawn, two.
A Mickey Mouse theme
was carri ed ·out
hi
the decorations for Ihe
party With Kim Roush
assisting Mrs. Logan. The
cake, a Mickey Mouse
replica, was baked by Mrs. c.
Kuhl, Pomeroy, whose son,
Charles, Is stationed aboard
the "Spruance" at Portsmoulth, Va. with Dwight
(Skip) Logan, Jr., father of
Bobby and Shawn. ·
··· Cake, ice cream and punch
were served to the gue~s.
Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mr . .and

'

\

By Polly Cramer

Rub salt in pots
to remove odor

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - Do you or
any of your readers know how
to remove the smell pf
gasoline from stainless steel
pots and pans ? My "little
angel" used rriy good pots to
catch gasoline leaking from
his minibike. The resulting
smell makes it impossible fqr
me to use them.
JOYANNE.
DEAR JOYANNE - I am
sure you have thoroughly
wasbed . everything the
· , gasoline feU on, so there Is no
danger of a fire from ' a
dropped matcb, gas burner,
etc. Moistened salt will

•

You're heading in the
right direction ...

If you're heading to Commercial .&amp; Savings Bank to
deposit your .money.
Invest your money in an account whiGh pays the maximum
interest. A savings account lets you put money away for
the future, insuring your_savlngs up to $40,000. It's a great
way to save and Commercial &amp; Savings Bank is a great
place to save.

MEMBER FDIC

I

Mrs. Virgil Wamsley; Klm
, and Krista Roush, Gary
Davis, Mrs. Avice BaUey,
Mrs. Sandt Sargent and
Jonathan. Balloons and
lolloPQI!S-Were given as
favors.
Sending gilts were their
great-grandfather, George
Logan, BernlceKlng1Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Milhoan, and
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan,
Scoll and Gary, Topsham,
Maine.
Dwight (Skip) Logan, Jr.
returned to Norfolk Sunday
afternoon and that . evening
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight -Logan,
s,. returned Shawn and
Bobby ·to their home In
Cb~rleston . The chlldr~n
VISited several days before
the party.

P'olly's Pointers

.·

I

remove_tlie odor of gaaoUDe
from one's hands. I would rub
It all over the paas, leave
them for some time and then
wash tborougbly wltb a
strong detergent. Wasblng In
vinegar mfgbt belp, too. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -lam sure
many of the readers have
wondered what to do with outdated linen carendar towels.
Many times they can be
bought very ch ~ aply . at
garage sales, too. I sewed
several together to make a
gay kitchen table cloth. The
number required depends on
the size of the cloth needeil.
They also make nice "slipcovers" for the backs of
kitchen chairs and look very
colorful when used both these
ways. - B.M.C.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with motorists,
especially those wlth long
cars, who do not pull aU the
way into the marked off
parking places In lots. Often a
good part of a car extends out
into the lane. When this
happens on both sides of a
lane one can barely squeeze
through when getting out. I
!)ave seen such lanes so
blocked off that cars could
not get through, but had to
back all the way out.
Everyooe knows that it Is not
easy or safe. - BEATRICE.
DEAR POLLY - Ethel
wanted to know 'how one
should charge lor handmade
articles. I was told by a yam
shop to charge three times
the price of the materia~
involved in the making.. I
believe most people use this
as a basis for figuring such
prices. (Polly's note- Other
readers wrote that they, too,
cbarge,on this same basis.) SUSAN L.
DEAR POLLY - Wben
baking cookies I remove the ·
hot ones from the cookie
sheet and put them on brown
grocery bags. The paper
absorbs ~ny grease, protects
the COWlter top from the hot
trays and the cleanup ls easy.
. I just throw away the paper
with the loose crumbs on 11. ROBERTA .
..
DEAR POLLY - When the
doctor gives me· an ap·
polntment caro, I paper cUp
It to thel'f\onth of the calendar
when it will be needed. 'l'hb
~lendar hangs lnalde the
cupboaro door, where I am
reminded dally of eomln8
appointments. In lhis way
there Is ·no danger of miss~
or forgetting hard-to-get
appointments. All appointments lire ·done the
· same way. -' HELEN.

COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS BANK

,..

COURT STREET

-

SILVER BRIDGE PlAlA

NOW YOU KNOW
fp 1918, at Bahia FeliJ,
Cbile, rain fell on all but 18
dsys of the year. And on those

--•-------•----------~~~~----..1 18 it drizzled!

iACKSON- The Christ
United MethodlJt -Church of
Jactaon wu the setting for
the awruner afternoon wedding of MlBs Bonnie Smith
and Arlen Owens II.
The Rev. Clifton Hatfield
officiated at the open chUfl:h
wedding lleld June 12. The
couple exchanged vows at 3
p.m.
Mlas Smith 18 the 1!a ug!Ur
of Mr. and _Mrs. H-I:ry L.
Smith of Jackson . Mr.
Owens' parents ar• i\lr. and
Mrs. Arlen Owt••· ,.f Rio
Orande.
The weddln8
c was
created by · using a seven
branch candelabra with
white
candles
and
cascading sprays of yellow
daisies, white daisieo, yellow
pompons, while button pompons and bnby's breath. A
matching
;.rrangemenl
covered the altar .and was
centered !lith a large unity
candle with two smaller
caildles on each side.
The double ring ceremony
was preceded by a half hour
of music. Organist Mrs.
Edith Ross of Gallipolis
played "The Bach Prelude,"
~~Clare de Lune" and 11 Love
Story." Soloists were Mr.
Gale Douthitt, Marietta and
Merlyn Ross of Gallipolis.
Mr. Douthitt sang "Annie's
Soog'' and 11·8Qmetin1.es,"
and Mr. Ross' selections in-

c\uded "Love Never Ends,"
"Working Together, Uving •
Together" and "Sunrlae,
Sunset." He also sang the
"Lord's Prayer" as .!:e cou.
pie knelt at the altar during
theceN!ffiOny.
·
The bride, escorted lo the
altar by her father and glveli
In marrUige by her parenl8, ,.
was aljlred in a while gown
fashioned of silk organza
over peau taffeta with a VIctoria neckline· edged in·
Venice lace. The gown
featw·sheer bishop sleeves
endln8 in wide cuffs. A blb
tucked ~ce was edged with
a scalloped Venice lace edged band. A controlled A·Hne
skirt fell from 8 modified empire waisllne ending in a
floWlce. A band nf Venice
lace encircled the hemline "
which extended ' into a semi
cathedral train: Appliqued
Venice lace motifs adorned
the A·line skirt. H~r veil con- .
_slsted of a camelot cap of appllgued Venice lace and tiny
seed pearls holding a mantilla of imported English illusion and matching lace.
She carried a cascade styled bouquet of yellow
sweetheart roses and white
ball pompons accented with
loops of while ribbon and ivy
with green foliage. The bride
observed the tradition of
5Jmething . old, something new, something bor·
· rowed, something blue, and a

Mrs. Ronnie Lee Durst
"·

Mr. and Mrs. Arlen ·Owens II

lucky 'penny In her shoe.
· Serving her sister-In-law as
matron of honor wao Mrs.
Helen Jo Smith of Jackson.
Bridesmaids were Debbie
Bennett, aunt of the groom,
Vinton; Betsy Hughes,
Gallipolis and Jana Prieot,
Marion, both close friends of
U1e couple. The attendants
CORA - .The Cora WSCW Church," Sharon Jeffers; wore gowns of yellow
met In the horrie of Zenia "Old Fashioned Folks." Anna polyester overlayed with
Evans on Oct. 14. Following Mae Morgan, and Sylvia sheer white organza and·emgraee by Sylvia Gilliam, a Gilliam · chose for the bossed with white daisies.
·diMer was served and en- bicentennial -~vent, "The the bodice was fashioned
joyed by !he group,
Passing of The Uttle Red with a scoop nee~ and puffed
The program began with Schoolhouse."
·
sleeves. The gatheN!d skirt,
group singing of "Heavenly
Velma Ellis, accompanied which feU from an empire
Sunllgbt," _accompanied by ·by Anise Wood on the piano, walsUine, was accented with
Regina Akers on the piano. sang, "Nearer My God To an eight inch rufflel The
Biblestudyleader,AnnaMae Thee." Everyone joined in waisUine was trinuned with
· Morgan read scripture from s!J!glng "Happy Birthday" 1o green grosgrain ribbon. They
ll,Pf!ler. Readings Included : Sylvia Gilliam and Regina -wore identical necklsces, a
"~b Daily , Wish," Joan Akers.
gift Of the bride, and white
B~; "A Child Goes To
Many of the members picture .hats . trimmed with
brought old Items for show green ribbons to match their
.
and tell. The group was en- dresses. Each carried a sum~. Q.;. tertained and amused over mer bouquet arrangement
I .I
many of the articles shown. of yellow daisies, white butThe business·. portion of the ton pompons and baby's
meeting was conducted by breath. The flowers were ar.
the president, Gladys Akers. ranged 1n white wicker
Bernice Bode Osol Both the secretary and· fireside baskets accented
. For Sunday, Oct. 24, 1978
treasurer reports were given. Wlth green bows and
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll It) Responding to compassion streamers.
Don't let emotion ru le your of hwnan need, the motion
Julie Wright of Jackson
po&lt;kelbook loday. You could was made by Etta Altizer and · was the flower girl. Her gown
overspend so much you'll blow
ded by Anise Wood th t was fashioned of material
the whole thing.
secon
, a
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) theCoraWSCWpurchasetwo matching that of the
Avoid legal negollallons or ver- gift certificates for Church bridesmaids' gowns. The
bodice was designed with a
bal commitments today. Things Women. United.
.
will not work out to your advanElectton of offtcers was high roWld neck, short puffed
1age.
l)eld. All existing officers, sleeves ·and the skirt was
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) with the exception of the made of many tiers of ruffles.
Feelings could run high on lhe president, will retain their The walsillne was trimmed
Job today. Try not to overreact. offlces for another year. with _green grosgrain ribbon
You could become lrustrated by Gladys Akers has fuUilledher and her white reed 'Princess
dinner lime.
obllgatlons as the Cora styled basket was filled with
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) WSCW president for the past white petals for stro'lfin8 and
Don't depend o.n friends to show two years. Daisy Evans was
the baridle was decorated
you a good t1me today. Your
.
Judgment Is not all that good. una:_wno~ly chosen as the with a small nosegay of
Your trust lri another could be new preBldent. The meeting yeUow daiSies, white button
miSplaced.
closed with
everyone pornp&lt;ins, baby's breath and
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) That lire iepeatlng the WSCW prayer. a white how with streamers.
you started at home yesterday is
The neJ:t meeting ~ be in She wore a halo of baby's
still smoldering. Don't expectthe the home of Fannie Jones. breath and yellow daisies In
lamlly lo obey your every com- Eventofthemonthwlllbethe her hair.
mand today.
.
"Christmas Bazaar."
David Owens of Rio
VIRGO (Aug. 23·8opt. 22) Don't
.

Cora women meet
at Evans home

Ast

·
M
Grap •

put anything In wrlling today and
avoid alt~rlng anything you've
previously agreed to. You'll ta.ke
a loss If you do either.

LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) Others
can't be expected to help with
llnanctal problems today. You'll
have to do so yourself or wait till

Grande served as his
brother's best mail. Ushers
were Greg , Leichisin,
Cleveland, friend of the couple:' Mike Smith, Jackson,
brother of the bride; Thurl
Jay Owens, Rio Grande, Rio
Grande, brother of the
groom.
John Owens of Rio Grande,
brother of the groom, served
as a junior usher.
.
The groom-groomsmen and
father of the bride were attired iii yellow and black · .
tUJedos with yellow ruffled
shirts. The groom's boutonniere was three white
sweetheart roses, and the
groomsmen wore boutonnier~s made of white
.daisies.
. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Smith wore a •
gown of polyester knit In
blending shades of aqua,
orang~ and ivory.
Mrs. Owelu! was attired in
a sleeveless gown , of
polyeoter knit. The Dora!
print of lavender, gold and
orange was ' on a white'
background. Both mothers ·,
wore corsages Of orange
sweetheart roses.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held In the
church fellowship hall. The
bride's table was decorated
with a while tablecloth
centered with a four-tier wed- :
ding cake. , The table :
featured the bridal colors of :
yellow and green. The-cake · •
was topped with the tradl-~:
·Ilona!, mlnlatUN! bride and :.:
groom.
Emnur Jean Arthur, South,
Webster, cousin Of the bride, •
attended the guest register. A:
rehearsal dinner was held at:
the home of the groom's:
parents on Friday evening. ;
FoUowlng a brief Wedding •
trip to Cincinnati; the:
. newlyweds are mldlng at:
Apt. 46, Stone Crest South;
Apts., Jackson. ·
:
•

~------~--------~•

heritage house

SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nor. 22)
starting anything new today.
Better to go It alone, but be certain you're not selfiSh in your approach.

CAPRICORN 4Doc.

22~on.

•
.,

'

18)

..
.,
"
,
"
"'

.J.

•

,,
'L

,,

T~e

domestic scene isn't too
harmonious today. It might be
wise to buy a few things for the
home to pacify the family.

..
1

WINNER
.

Avour ·

OF tSo GIFJ

The Mocassin •••
It just makes.good sense!

WBirthday

.CERTIFM'.Alt-

E111r wondtr lrlily ~this clauit knps comin' ba:k?
The lfiiWtlr is in this easy stepper! Freshly styled witb i

unn01eosaary mental anguish.

Oct. 24, 1871
So11111 aplendiOopportunities will
be offered you thl!l year through

contacts and associates. Your
chanc•s lor success are good If
you exercL"'8 keen judgment.
l NLWSPAPER t-"NTl:RPRISE ASSN, i

ENGAGED-Mr.andMrs. W1111amR. Cspehart,Sr.,
Middleport, are annoWlclng the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Robin Rae, to
Paris Rufford Heos, Cheater, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
· James Albert Heos. The bride-elect is a junior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Meigs High
School and is enrolled at Hocking Technics) School in
Nelsonville. A December wedding is being planned.

Mr.Jiirlan w.n.
,...OJ, Cillo

comfort and ver11tility ·• it'severythinu you could

!l~

l

,..lhtruppen $22

blue (

\I

1

Generation Rap . ~
Hel~n

~

sat;'i

Peddler's Pantry

China,

Sr. Citizens
Ca'--

e

20% OFF ·

-I

=:;;:

NATURALIZE~

Fashion ease you'll
love getting used to ·
, ·
25 99

milk. . '

PLAZA

~1

canl.i

conniG .

,.or want or nttd •. • end MORE!' In

To the place where they've learned to expect the unexpected - the
unusual - the gr':_atest ~ In gifts,
.

LETART, W. Va. - reception were held at the
;;:::::::::::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:~!~~t::~s..~~~~:::.o;:::.':-.·~:=:;:*~:§:::::~:::;~::$1
WttERE ELSE
Katheryn Teresa D'Annunzlo Bridgeport Country Club.
and Roonle 1M Durst were · Mills .Susie Allen and Miss
un)ted in milrrl!'ge 1n a Debbie Plum served the cake
double rin8. cere111ony per- and Miss Ubbo Simmerman
By
and Sue Hottel · ;..
formedat2p.m. on Aug.14 at registered the guests.
6
the Immaculate Conception
The bride 18 a 19'13 graduate
.__State&amp; Third - - - - - - - - - · · Gallipolis. 0 .
Catholic . Church
at of Waahlngton lrvln8 High
Clsrklburg.
School In Clarksburg and
The Second Time Around
The ceremony ,was per- holds a degree in radiologic
RAP :.
formed by Father Emil technology from West
Wben I was in the etghth grade, I got pregnant and gave
•-,
a-'"'-'
by
Fa"·r
Virginia
University
Medical
Do.,... _.,...
w"'
my haby boy up for adopUon. My Immediate family stood by
Larry W. -Dorsch. i
Center.
me,butsomeoftheelderlyrelatlvesstlllavoldme.
Tile bride is the da
. u•hter
The grooin, 8 graduate of
'-... of
......t month, I found I was pregnant once more. Even
Mr. and Mrs. Ben D'Anniii!Zlo Point Pleasant Htgh School,
thon•h J remember soine of the -horrible t(Jings my relatives
of 21 Monroe: Street, Is presently working on his
have decided to keep the baby.
Clarksburg, W. ·Va. and !he master's
degree
in CHU c
·
1 am now a hl~h school senior and feel responsible and
"""""'
H WOMEN
· enoll8h to ,...,..,
•·
-·.. is the son of Mr. and agriculture .eco· nomlcs at · lt'R th
bll t ttUnited
d
secure'
raise tny child, In spite Of the pressure to give
Mrs. Ralph L. Durst of WVU.
mv 1es e pu c 0 a en a him or her up. I need this baby to Jove and care for. Help me
Letart, W. Va.
.
Follo'lfin8 a weddbig trip to ~ o:;:l ar:- J•U wo~ks/: prove to them I'm right, - ,RHONDA
The bride, escorted by her Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Nags
eo Y a
race n
RHONDA :
·
father, was attired 'in a gown · Head, Mr. and Mrs. 'Durot Me 1h 0 d 1s t Ch u r c h ·
I'm sorry: We csn't plead your cause on the lew facts
of sllk organza and cluney will mlde In Morgantown-. ' Registration, 9 ' 30 a.m.; you've given us. You say you're responsible and mature, but
lace, accented with lace
Oilt of town guests were workshop, 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. you've left out some Important details. Such as: •
appliques, with a V·nectline from Ohio Massachusetts RIVERSIDE STUDY Club, 1
Whowillcareforthebabywhlleyouflnlshschool?
and Juliet sleeves. The Michigan, 'North Carolina: p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Who will foot the bllls until you can get a job and wUI be on
neckllnewaaedgedwithlace, Fplorida , niCalilornla ' and :~ ~~t Epling, Sr., 603 your own? Can you saddle reluctant parents with these
1 a.
aswerethesleeves. Froman ennsyva
AMERICAN
LEGION . w&lt;rries?
.
empire walstline fell a cirWho Is the father? Will he help outflnanclally? '
AUJIJiary,
Will motherhood mean as much when 1't shit'·
CUiar lklrl with a·ccents of
11
TUnitd '!1, 1regular
h ·
., to d'1apero,
lace . and rufntng which 1'':01 :~::s: : · · ·
mlee nhag 11 7ue3s0 ay n 1 e twoo'clock feedings, less freedom, fewer dates, and multiple
formed an apron ~feet that
eglon
' ' p.m.
problems?
circled to the back.)l'alstllne.
WEDNESDAY
Andthebigone:.Areyoubelngfalrtothechlld?
Ruffles and lace flouneed the
.1REVIVAL BEGINS Wed·
Talk all these questions over with your parents before you
hemline and swept 10 ,the .
~nuar
nesday at the Morgan Center · tnake a flnan decision. UTHEY think you're right, you won't
chapel train. Her cathedral ·
We s I e y an Church. needanyprooffrom us. - HELEN AND SUE
length vel\ was edged with
GAWPOUS _ The Senior Evangelists, Rev. John Hersmatching lace and fell from a , Citizens Center, located at 220 man and Rev, Theron
csme\ot cap of lace . and Jackson Pike In the County Durham. Services, 7:30
-One Week Le!t in Paul Davies Jewelers Big 30th Anniversary Sale.
pearls.
l
Home Building, Ia open nightly.
What a great way'to buy those special gifts for Christmas at 20 per
The bride wore a illamond Monday throll8h Friday from QUIET DAY of Prayer
cent
off. ·
pendant necklace and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule Wednesday at Grace United
earrings, belonging , to her of activities for lhls week 18: Methodist Church, 9:30 a.m.
-20 per cent off on Loose, Unmounted Dlll!monds ~ . Ail sizes,
paternal grandmother, and
Monday,Oct.25-Phystca\ to 2:30 p.m. All county
carried a bouquet of Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; 0\de women Invited. Brin8 sack
prices and qualities. Then we'll set your diamond on a beautiful piece
sweetheart roses and baby's Tyme Chor Balance of • lunch; beverage will be
Of l~wetry from our extensive ring, pendent, earring , or ile tac
breath, accented with white Florida trip~ due today, 1-3 provided. Nursery available.
mounting collection . €ach diamond has been carefully graded and
satin streamers, tied In love p.m.;
carrys a certified written appraisal to assure you of true value. ·
I
Cakndar
knots.
Tuesday, Oct. 26- Quilting
'
Mlss Mary Madia, cousin of and visiting, 9 a.m.-a p.m.
-20 per cent off on all Noritake Patterns. Thais right! 20 per ceni off
Exhibit for the month of October : Annual antique show •
the bride, wu the ffi!ild of · Wednesday, Oct. 27 featuring Victorian anttqueo from the area.
regi'rdless If Its one piece or an entire set of china, stoneware,
hooor, ·and bridesmald8 were Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
. . . · Gallery hours: Saturdays and Sundays, t unti15 p.m.;
crystal
or stjlinless. Great lor fill -in or replacement . Over 1SO
Mrs. Sharon Barker, sister of Caro Gameo, 1-3 p.m.; Rio
Tuesdays
and
Thursdays,
tO a.m. untll3 p.m., Riverby.
patterns
now on display for your viewing.
·
the groom, Miss Kathy Grande College · Recreation
Oct.
26,
Tuesday,
8
p.m.
F
AC
Trustees
Meeting
Neavln, Mlss Mary Me- u p.m.
'
Riverby.
·
'
-Don't miss this one. Sale ends Sat. Oct. 30th.
Fadden, Mlas Jan CantareW,
Thuraday Oct. 21 - BlrOct.
28,
Thursday,
9
11
a.m.
Christmas
Committee
and
Miao
Scarlett thday party, 1:30 p.m.
River by. ,
· '
McGiumphy. They wore
Frlday,Oct.29-Art~,
Oct. 31, Sunday Z-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop
Identical gowtl.l of ~prlcot 1-a·p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
Making
Christmas decorationa from bread d0118h, Part I Of ~
and ivory volle •print, · The Senioro' eo.op and the
.two part workshop; Part II will be In November. Janet Byers
designed with square Craft Shop Ire open for sales
· and Carolyn Hippensteel, Instructors. Open to the publlc no
necklines and sleeveless at 12:»-1:30.
charge; all materials furnished.
'
404 SEODND AYIHUI • .......,
bodices. 4ce with apricot
The Senior Nutrition
Exhibit for the month of November: Matted photographs
Invited
ribbon Inserts edged the Program serves the following
.._MI!W.I'" AMIAICAH Qau IOCiiTY
by li&gt;Clli photographers; Ama~ur and professional to be
neckllnea and bodices. The t.- meals this week at 12 noon:
judged separately; 5 categories: Nature, Action, Humor and
line atlrts, accented with
Monday - Meatloaf with
Black and White, Miscellaneous. Susan Clarke,
apricot ruffleo which formed gravy, mashed potatoes,
apron effects, fell from buttered spinach, roll, butter,
empire waistlines !'llrked pineapple sUce, Iced' graham
with bows. They carried crackers, mllk.
wicker basket&amp; of orange and
Tuesday - Fried chicken
white dalales, with baby's potato salad, buttered
DISPUTE SETI'LED
breath, and lied In orange broccoli, biacuit, honey,
WALTON
HILLS, Ohio
ribbon.
butter, purple plums, mllk.
BACK AT.SHOP- Adell
(UP!)
The
local dispute
Miss Klm Coyne was the
Wednesday ~ Hot pork Davidson Wbtte hu
that
jhreatened
to cause the
Oowerglrl,wearln8agownof loaf escalloped potatoes returned to her em·
layQff
of
34,000
Ford Motor
·apricot designed llke'thoee of bu~red beets, pear half with ployment with Helen's
Co.
workers
across
the naUon
the bridesmaids. She carried grated cheese, bmd, butter, . Beauty Shop Ia Pomeroy.
wa.i
settled
Friday
when
a wicker basket of oringe and peanut butter cooties, mllk. She, her ~aaband, DADDy,
members
of
United
Auto
white dslstes with. baby's
Thuraday - ·Bated beef aDd llaelr aon, Eric, are
Workers
Local
420
overbrea\h and wore a halo of pattie, tomato sauce, fluffy now mldiDg on Gravel Hill
whelmingly approved a new
baby s breath In her hair.
rice, tale, breod, butter, In Middleport. DiJmy 18
Catch th e happy feeling of comfort as yo11 step Into this
local
contract. Production
Dale ~ served, aa his lemon pudding with vanilla _ employed at Imperial
Nnturnllzcr sling. Just genlly !{lldc ul ong tu u shoe thut's
workers voted 741-to-ltlli for
brother s beat . man and wafer, mllk. ·
Elecllon Co.For aome time
the contract with the WaltOn
beautifully softened wtth padded Insole and kntt
ushers were RiCII and Chris
Friday- Tamale meat pie
tile family waa In Seuth
Hilla
stamping
plant,
and
~
lining. You can ulwuys count on Nut nrultzer
D'Annunzlo, brothero of the buttered peas sliced
Carollaa. •
stmed workers raUfted by a
bride, Sidney 'Barker, aalad bN!ad 'butter canned
~ for comforting fashi on. $
margin of 420-48.
brothir-ln-lsw of the groom, peaches,
Woody !faMa ~ Randy
Choice of beverage served
Plum.
with each meal.
The rin8 beam wu steve
D'Annunzlo, -brOther of the
IN THE
bride.
PILOTS 8TRIItE
' .
The bride's mother wore a · LOS ANGELES (UPJ)
SILVER BRIDGE
pastel tloral jumpeult with a The pilots u~lon ·atruck
matching chiffon twilc white ConUnental Airlines, the
accessories ahd a: wrllt nation's aeventh largest
corsage of aweetl!ea1 roses -carrier, at 12:01 a.m. PDT ·
and baby's llmtb. · '
Saturday and the airline
Open Weaday Ewninp n1 9 PM
The groom's motlJ!!r wu cancelad aU fllghta through
attired In a blue gown with Sunday night.· The ll!rlke by
while aoc:Worlel and •wore a the Airline Pilots ~on
coraage .of llftllhel:rt roaea came at the end of a federally
and baby'a bN!atb.
mandated coolln8 off period
Millie wu presented by thatbeganSept.22. The line's
Rlcharo Ridder, vocalist, and 1,0118 pl\ola voted during the
Mrs. Fugo, oralllllt.
awruner to authorize the
A buffet t1dinner and lltrlke.

tomatO

about.

PIICII (fob. 20·Morch 20) Be
careful what you say today,. Your
!ltatements could be blown out of
proportion and cause you some

Robin R[Je Capehart ·

.
1

Stay away fro.m crowds today.
You're not In the mood ro·r small
ta!k a_
nd could make a bad lmpre!lsion on someone you care

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11)

trip to Ada over the weekend. abroad and IIJ)d ol her ••·
Members were asked to send perlence of being held·captlve
carda to Mro. liNe! Me- for two days aboa...S. llllp
·.Callum who underwent eye during a Middle EUt conruct.
SU1'8ery at Grant Hospital in
Also a gueot at the meetin8
~lumbus. It was noted that wu Mro. Gertrude Zetgler,
Mrs. Ama Hartenbach Is Phlladelphla, Pa. othen
hOme from the hospital. A attending were Mrs. Stella
note wu N!ld from Mrs. Grueser, Mrs. Ruby Grueaer,
Gertrude Mitchell thanking Mrs Mildred PhiWpa, Mrs.
the group for a CO~J~ge Sadl~ Brown, Mrs. Elate
presented her during the Forbes, Mra. Mary Russell,
recent
home c oming Mrs. June Sayre and Ml'll.
provam.
Llllle Starcher.

WHERE'S EVERYONE RUSHING TO?

,....------·-·- --------'-

,,

Your mind won 't be on work .
Mlsta~es could ~e costly.

Guest speaker at the

.~c;tystal_

,,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Do make thiS a day of rest

by Mrs. Dorothy Jarvis, and

a poem, "Tholl8ht for the meeting_ was Mn . Ethel
Day" by Mro. Grueoer.
Grueser of Rock Springs who
Mrs. J arvts reported on her showed film ol her trip

ilver,

.
..

MIDIUPORT, 0.

Partners will be unlucky if yoU're

.Nuptial vows read

SUNDAY
MONTE SHEETS will apeak
at -the Providence Baptist
Chun:h Sunday, 7:30 pJll, ·
Publlc Invited.
REV. JOHN BANK, pastor ol
the Walnut Ridge Church, hal
announced tile . Blanton
Family w!JI alng Sunday ·.
night .a t the chun:h.
lORD ANNIVERSARY ol
the Paint Creek Baptist
Church, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
aervices.
GALLIA COUNTY Riding
Club trail ride at Jack
Camden's
home
In
Evergreen, 12:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
THE BLANTuN Family will
~ Sunday at the Walnut
Ridge Church, 7:30 pJll.' Rev.
Johnny Banks, pastor, Invites .
the public.
·
MONDAY
GALUA CHAPTER OCSEA
(Ohio ClvU Services Employees A.880ctation) Mon·
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Grand
Squares Club Room on
Eaatem Ave.
CUB SCOUT Pack 205 aMual
Halloween party at' St.
Peter's Epl8copal Church,
7:30 · p.m. Prospective
·members and parents
welcome, Costume opUonal.
TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Monday, 9 a.m. at
the Cheshire Baptist Churcli.
TUESDAy
·
SEW AND so Club Tuesday,
7 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Earl Caldwell.
OPEN GATE G de CJ b I
·
ar n u. a
the
Simpson
United
M th·••~ Ch h Tu··•·
.e
"""''
urc
......
7 30 p
G est
k y,
.mKota. uu - .~~a er,
eorge and cLandscaping."
on ""' topic,
"Lawns
All
t
d
1b
mem::~vlt~.r .en ~ u

MINERSVILU:: - World
Community Day, an ob·
servance of Church Women
United, wu announced for
Nov.~ at the Grace ~1
Chun:h In Pomeroy, at the
Wedneaday meetin8 of the
United .M~ . Women o.f
the Minersville Church,
Membert met at the church
lor qulltlng, had a lWlCheon,
and then a program and
bUsineSs meeting In the afternoon . · Mrs. Karl Grueser
opened the meeting with
group sin8in8 of "Showers of
Blessing." There was prayer

d

-.. .
"
•

another day.

World Co111:munity Day -slated

Coming
Events

'

, ,1:

·~::

..

'•

A GOOD PLACE TO SHOP • •
FOR NICE THINGS TO ,

WEAR

�'

&amp;-B-Tbe Sunday nme.sentJnol, Sunclay, Oct. :M, 11176

'

.

. . 7-B-The Sunday 'nmea-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

TODAY'S TREASURES

Social
Calendar

Mr. and Mrs. Tho11UlS E Allie

Double ring ceremony
unites A/lie-Bias

:New ·den leaders announced

.
fJ
. ..

,,. ,,,.»
-~~
.
·
~

~

Sr. Citizens
. Cakndar

u.e

Youth gather

BJJeullameo
Restoring an old car bas
been Ukened to working a

gigaatic jigsaw puzzle. 'l'lle
· older the car ...,. the greater
the challenge.
Tile key to putting it
togethet Is an , owner's
manual and lor the later
· models these are still fairly
easy to come by but older
manuals, · if they can be
found, can be an expensive
asset.
Another tool used in
restoration by old car buffs is
Hemmings Motor News, a
monthly publication thick
with classified ads. With a
copy of Hemmings (or
slmj)ar publications) the
collector-restorer' can spend
nostalgia -filled· ' hours,
tracking down parts or just
soaking in information.
·Hunting a missing part is
often a worldwide search.
One collector found his
missing part in England.
Another, after advertising in
Hemmings, sold and shipped
a part to Africa. The hobby is
not restricted to the United
States. Old car enthusiasts
are found in many, many
countries.
Of course, you can have the
restoration done by a
professional but be prepared
to spend a lot o! time on the
waiting liB! and to pay a
whopping big fee - as much
as $20 to $25 an hour.
Professional restoration can
run into thousands of dollars.
Most old-car enthusiasts
prefer to do it themselves and
count the hours of tedious
tinkering' as one of the
rewards of the ho\lby.
If
are a fanatic for

Cekbrates
birthday

THE PERFECf GIFT

'

'

BIG SAVINGS ON FRIGIDAIRE
'

BAKER FURNITURE

..

~,_--::,----M-icld_le:.:;po_rt-;;~+9 -·_ _ _ _--.J

women . ·

•

··LOCAL FIF'l'H PLACE winners were George
Donovan and Butch Armes both from Meigs County.

"QUALITY ALWAYS':
Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat., 9.7:30
Wednesday-Friday 9:00-9:00, Sunday Closed
.
·
·
992-7034 .
Ohoo
Pomeroy
Pearl Ash 992-33.23, Roger D~vis, 992-76!1

NATURALIZER:.

Shop~)
)· _
_

McCall's, l&lt;wtck-~w.
Simplicity Pattns
·
115 W. Second
Pomtroy

·

._m
__-2;.::284__ Allllro~~ A~~~!!.t!"

,.,.., _ _"_.Ph
__

,

KIDDIE ·SHOPPE
••1 J5Bu

175 N SE COND AVE i MIOOl.EPOf!T. OH .S!bf)

"What Is a widow wilb
cHildren suppoeed to do?" ht
uked. "What is a divorced
lady sufli'O!Ied to do! They do

not have any choloe. They've
got to work."
Mondale cbarged that
women are being fon:td to
!O'k .work :at record ratea
because the admirilstnUon
has been unable to control
inflation and lhe eroaion of a
family's txirchaslng power.
, "Thb fallul'il to ·control
inflation Ia causiJii more anll.
more famillet tO enter tilt
Iabat' market to try to t.ke
eire of themselves, to oend
their ltlda to college or
vocational school, to pay blS
health billa, to try to pay for 1
home," he satd.

THE
UNIFORM CENTER

Tucked Bodice, Deep Waist Band,
Princess B~ck, A-line Skirt, '

%Length, ActiottSieeves, .
Polyester-Nylon Stain Release Fabric~

12300

Size 8-20
• STEVE FINLAW, a member of the Big Bend Bass
Anglers Club had the job of weighing in the fish .

w
cltJ

VO:Ur

WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

Anglers compete
from

for .biggest bass
FIRST PLACE WINNERS of the BASS tournament were l-r, Dan Moorehead &lt;
Marietta and·Gary Tyrell, of Lowell. On tbe right is Bill Grueser, president of the Big Ben.:
Bass Anglers Club of Meigs County, Thetwomen won $112.50 in cash and over $200 in prizes.
'

;Dean Favennan expecting
.new college to make impact
: MIDDLEPORT ~ The
: acting dean of Ohio
· University's College of
: Osteooathic Medicine told
·Middleport - Pomeroy Ro:tarians Friday evening at

help stamp out
cold feet with
the l{EDfiOOSE
Plantation crepe sole. justenough wedge, aide zipper.
Roomy, yet ahaped to give
growing feet the support
and freedom they need.
Rust &amp; Black

15.99 '

1

comfort
Nuturallzer pluccs comfort right
where YOU want Jt ... at VOitf feet.
You11 iove the feel of soft lea ther us
you stride along In this
low-heeled walker ...
· complete with
Nnturulizer,s

Heath United Methodist
Church he expects the imba:a nce in the ratio of doctors
to patients in rural southeastern Ohio to be reduced in
years to come.
Dr. Ger~ld A. Faverrnan
was enthusiastic over the
prospects the college has to
serve southeastern Ohio.
"The avera ge ratio of
doctors to patients in Ohio is.
one doator for each 600
patients. In southeastern
Ohio ills one doctor for about
2,350 patients," Dr. Faverman said.
The dean described the
admission policy of the
college, which started its first
class of 24 future doctors
about a month ago, as one
·designed to Insure that every
qualified applicant in southeastern OKlo will be able to
enter, regardless of financial
ability.
" We are buying our
students microscopes and
medical bags, for example,"
he said, "which is not done in
other medical schools."
Scholarship money is
coming from, among other
sources, the Ohio Osteopathic
Association , which Dr .
Faverman said, "has been
uniquely generous."
He
ex'piained
that
hopefully, southeastern Ohio
students .will prefer to

RACINE - Eighteen pairs
•f • bass anglers launched

their boats last Saturday al
[he Ravenswood Dock to
compete for first prize money
in the first ever Southeastern
Ohio Bass Tournament
sponsored _by the Big Bend
Bass Anglers Club of Meigs
County.
Of the 18 teams, Dan
Moorehead of Marietta and
Gary Tyrell of Lowell, t9ok
first prize money of $112.50
plus over $200 in prizes. Total
prizes amounted to $665.
The pair brought in nine
pounds and 13 ounces ofbass.
Moorehead also copped the
lunker award for the largest
bass caught. All fish had to
come from the Racine pool of
the Ohio River.
Local winners in fifth place
were George Donovan and

practice in southeastern
Ohio.
Tuition in most medical
schools is a minimum of
$5,000 annually. Some are as
high as $15,000. He said he has ·
900 applications (700 of them
from out of the stat.e) to gain
admittance to the OU
medical college .
Dr. Faverman had the
highest praise for the interest
shown by the Ohio ()UR BOARDING HOUSE ·
legislature, •&gt;Y Rep: Ron
James, by Ohio l,lniversity,
and area hospitals O. K,
es peci a lly Ve terans
LOUIE.,
Memorial Hospital ·- in
l'VE.
success of the college.
601
!je said the field of health
MY
services will be greatly ·~­
HE.P..iE.R
panded and improved in
IN THE
future years because of the
GHOEcollege. He expects the local
SOX
I
hospital and doctors to assist
in · training young doctors,
and singled out especially the
cooperation of Drs. John
· Ridgway and Ray R. Pickens
of Veterans Memorial.
"We expect to make a
major impact in southeastern
Ohio," Dr. Faverman said.
His appearance before
Rotary was ar;anged by
progra m chairman Carl
Denison. Acting President
Bob Buck presided. Dr. Carl
Wood of Gallipolis was a
guest. Ladies of the ·church
. served a steak dinner.

Rust&amp;
Black

19 pts. AA Quaity YelloW Mtg...... ·:··· '200.00
26 pis. AA Qual~ Wh~e Mtg........... 1350.00
34 pts. AA Quality While Mtg. ........... 'SOO.OO
49 Pis. AA Quality Wh ~e Mtg. ........... '775.00
50 Pis. AAA (Ge'in) Quality While Mtg. '1425.00
~ rts. AA Oval Cut White Mtg. ......... '800.00
1.02 Pts. AQuality Yellow Mtg......... '1776.00
.79 Pts. AA Quality Yellow Mtg......... '1425.00
.95 PtS. AA
Wh~e
....... '2100;00
Mon . &amp; Fri.

':lOtl/8 p.m .
Tues ., Wed . &amp; Sat.
9:lOtiiS

WhiteSwan
Distributor

H you own or If you are
planning to purchase
savings certificates ...

'\\
?•

.•

with Major Hoople

Available In

.I. I

_366 Second Avelllle, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..... Galipolis, Ohio _ __.

llutch Armes.
,
Bill G,rueser, president of
the local club, termed the
day , 11 8 huge success." He
. said the tournament was the
first stel' in making a bigger
. and better Bass Club.
Contrlbullng donations to
the tournament were Finlaw
Lure Co., Blue Tartan, ProBass $hop, Swartzel Marine,
Bob's Gulf, Shamrock Motel,
Tom Rue Motors, Forest Run .
Cement Block Co., Pat
Mitchell, Kelly Manufacturing, M&amp;R 1 Ellis Sohlo
Station, Sayre Hardlyare,
Humphrey Furniture,
Picken's Hardware, H &amp; R
Firestone Store, Five Points
Grill, Betsy Ross &lt;Bakery,
Crow's Steak House and
Village Trading Post at Oak
Hill.

Thev'll Do It Every Time

beuutlful Ot.

BeHy Ohlinger

housellotds.

Import Designer of Inverted

down to

shoes

specifically Ignored t~e:
milllonJI of women who art
the sole providers for tii'dr

'
"THE Sophisticated
Look"

·Getting

I

suggested male heads ol
·households "are the only
group that really matters" to
the national economy. He
quoted Seidman as 98ying:
" Every one · knows that
women don't work for the
same reasons as men. they
work for a lot of other reasons'
- lf-gratlflcatlon and othe(
reasons. They can't be
counted the same. So eln·
ployment really bn 't the
issue it's been made:"
The audience groaned as
Mondale read thes~ words.
"Who iB Mr. Seidman in
this administration to make
the judgment that women
have"nothlng to contribute to
this economy and this
country?" Mondale asked.
"Who are they to say that
women wbo want to work
can't have jollll?"
Mondole said Seidman

..
OI"FICERSOF THE BIG BEND Bass Ntglers J-i, Jim Crow, vice presidenl, Sill
, · Grueser, 'president and Jim Anderson, secl1!t&amp;ry-treasurer, discuss the action Silturday
afternoon att~e forSt Southeastern Ohio BASS tournament held at Ravenswood Dock. The
6sh had to come from the RacineJ)ool of the Ohio River.
•

and modular homes.
If you are in the market fe~r a
modulil'r home, a house type
doublewide or if you just want to
look at one, you are always wel~ome
at Kingsbury. We feature homes by
Skyline Corp. and Fuqua Homes of
' Ohio, Let us. handle your entire
housing problems, site .preparation,
septic tank, basement, etc, You just
pink up the keys when the house is
. ready for occupancy.
·

Mondale l"rlday seized
upon a quote !roll! White
House economic advisor
Willjam Seidman vlrtwally
discounting .joblessness
·among women .
. ''I ask you If you want a
president with that kind 'Of
advice In the White House?"
Mondale asked some
members of the Ohio
Federation of Democratic
Women. They shouted "No !"
Reading from a speech by
Seidman In Colorado last
Aug. 7, Mondale said the
administration econ omist

•oo

MARGUERITES

'

sam. RANGES-IJKE NEW!
'·

perfection, you -can ~
your car lor the tbrlll of allow
competition, where can are
judged on condition end .
authenticity. Ba81CIIIy, there
are three major clas·
slficatfoos under which
autos may be shown. The
Antique (!llllde before WO),
ProductiOn ' (later models)
and Classics (any of 31
specific makea).
Starting with an ideal of
1,000 as a perfect score,
judges begin looking for the
flsws, deducting points on '
anything that does not
measure up to the standards
of authenticity and . perfect
Cllndltlon. Screws, fasteners,
fabric, jack,, tire pump -au
most be authentic.
If· you thrill to the sport of
racing, you can join other
enthusiasts in .racing old
cars. It's risky, you could
have a wreck, but the sport of
racing the older cars bas an.
exhilaration all Its own,
complete with crash helmelll,
fireproof suits and even pit
crews.
For the most part,
however, collectors are ·
content with hunting for
parts, layishing bours on
restoration to. make the car
roadworlhy until the day they
can put the car to the test.
And the test is olten
grueling, driving · ~cross · the
Utah desert in 120 degree
heat, or negotiating the
mountainous roads of
Yosemite National Park, or
just braving the big city
traffic. As I walked around
.the Model A belonging to a
local collector, I could understand the feeling. For in
my mind's eye, I could
remember the plea from
childhood, "Grandpa, can I
ride in the
seat?"

more letters 515.50. ·
•
Boys' sizes 1 to 5 - 513.50 up to 6 letters
only.
Shirts Not Included

$AVE

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Appealing. to women voters,
Democratic vice pl't'.sidential
candidate Walter Mondale
claims he has found evidence'
that President Ford's administration does not care
about unemployment among

·CQme ·in and see our double wide

;:ti

j

Jobless women no concern to one Ford man

Tinkering not tedious
to old car buffs

SUNDAY
SLUG SHOOT Sunday,
12:30 p.m. at lzaak Walton
cfubbouse . Shoot matchea
will abo be held" und prizes
wm be hams, bacon and
turkeys . . Spo!lliOred by the
J;aalt Walton Leagne.
REV. TERRY BIGGS,
Johna!own, Ohio, speaker for
•
revival services, 7:30 each
evening at Southern Baptist
Chapel, Rt. 1, Shade, Sunday
throUib Wednesday. Pastor
Bobby Elkins welcomes the
pobllc. Sunday school hour
for Oct. 24 and 31 Is 6 p.m.
Wiener roast for youth on
Oct. 30. Special testjmonies
and vocal music , 4uring
revival.
.
IZAAK
WALTON
League .
AWARDS WERE presented at the Thursday night meeting of Cub Seoul Pack 204 at the
slug
and
shot
match
Sunday
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis. Pictured above are some,of" the award winners.
at 12:30 at· the club grounds.
VINTON- Brenda Fay polyester and dacron Which
Prizes
will
be
hams,
bacon,
Bias
became the bride of featured a tan trim. She wore
•
and turkeys.
Thomas Edward Allie . in a a corsage of yellow and·white
MONUA Y
double ring ceremony at 2:30 carnations with a white ribRUTLAND GARDEN Club, p.m. Sept. 18 in the Vinton bon.
7:30 Monday at the Church of Baptist Church.
Mrs. Allie was attired in a
Christ with Mrs. Robert
Pastor Jerry L. Neal of- floor length pastel green
Canaday and Mrs. Roy ficiated at the ceremony. A dress fashioned of crepe with
Snowden, hostesses. In· table was set behind the altar long nylon sleeves. Her corstallation of officers and bulb with two white candles in sage was white and yellow
sale.
gold candle holders, one on carnations with a yellow ribDIRECTORS
of the each side of an open Bible. A bon.
Pomeroy Middleport Lions gold cross behind the Bible
h reception was held at the
Club will meet at 7:30 with pink gladioli in two gold home of the bridegroom's
Monday night at the office of vases on either side com- parents immediately follow"
Norbert Compton.
.
pleted the decorations.
irg the cerefl!ony. Tbe four
BEND 0' the River Garden
The bride is the daughter of tier chocolate cake with
Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Mr. and Mrs: Robert Bias, whit~ icing and yellow ~uses
''the home of Mrs. Andrew Vinton, and the groom's was decorated tiy Mrs. Earl
Cross. Program to be on the parents are Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook. Yellow mints and
theme "Putting Your Garden Waller Allie, Patriot Star Rt. , napkins, puoch and nuts
to Bed for the Winter" with Gallipolis.
were placed on a white
all members participating.
Organist Mrs. Vennie crocheted tablecloth over a
IZAAK WALTON League CastoofVintonpresentedoQe yellow tablecloth. Presiding
regular meeting Monday, 7 haU hour of nuptial' music at the table were Mrs. Walter
p.m. All prospective mem- preceded the ceremony. Her Allie, Mrs. Daniel Bias· and
bers invited to attend.
selection s
included Mrs. Don Pope. Janel WarASKIT was presented by members of Den 2at the Thursday night meeting of Cub Pack
OHIO
ASSOCIATION
"Hawaiian
Wedding
Song," ren of Kanauga registered
204 at the Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis.
PubliO' S~hool Employes, · "Mehl&lt;ly oty~ve ," :·one Day guests.
For a wedding trip · to
Chapter 17 Monday 7:30p.m. at a Tome, PreciOus Lord
in cafeteri~ at Meigs Junior Take My Hand," "Unto! Niagara Falls and Presque
High Middleport
· Then," "Whither Thou Stale Park on Lake Erie in
' TUESDAY
Goes!," and "I Love You Tru- Erie, Pa., the bride changed
into an apricot and green
MEIGS
AREA
Holiness
ly."
New leaders for two dens -· After the Pledge of joyable skit.
print blouse of nylon with a
Association
Tuesday,
7:30
Given
in
marriage
by
her
were announced when Cub Allegiance and the reciting of
It was announced that pack p.m. at the Danville brother,. Dame!, !be brode matching apricot skirt of
Scout Pack 204 held its the Cub Scout Promise it was meetings will be held on the Wesleyan Church. Rev. Lelon was attoredm a gown of white double knit.
monthly meeting at the announced that two dens third Thursday of each month Glasure·is pastor. Rev. Floyd crepe fashioned woth a hogh
They reside at Tri-Couoty
Presbyterian Church .have new leaders. The den at 7 p.m.
.
F,
Shook,
pastor
ofthe
Laurel
waost.
A
v-shaped
necklme
Mobile
Homes on Rt. 160 in
Thursday night . .
mother for Deri I is Mrs.
The new Cub Scouts In Cliff Tree MethodiBt Church was set off woth a ruffle Kerr . .
Ellyson and her assistant Den Pack 204 this year are : guest speaker. Public invited. overlayed with white laee.
The new Mrs. Allie, a 1972
Mother Is Mrs. Stanley. Tbe James Hannon, Patrick
RACINE AMERICAN The long sleeves. were of graduate of North Gallia
Den Mother for Den Ill is Frogle, Christopher Myers, Legion Auxiliary, Post
602 , smgle lace and smgle lace High School, is employed as a
Mrs. Linda Myers and her Todd Slone, Lee Kerr, Kelly , Tueaday at the hall.
.ruffle for the. cuffs. She wore food service aide at .Holzer
7
30
assistant Den Mother is Mrs. Rusk, Matthew O'Dell, Erin Don ti
1
·
d
d
wlute matching shoes and a .Medical Center.
8
Sara Spurlock.
· Stanley, Randy Simpson, D.
ons. 0 poes an san · . gold-plated cameo necklace
Mr. Allie is a 1970 graudate
for the ·
.
Den II, under the leader- L. Ellyson, Brian Newell, wlches or . money
·1 ch
belongmg to her mother. Her of Gallia Academy High
Elect!
n
Da
o
y un eon are 1 t'
.
· .
POMEROY Meigs ship of Den Mother Kay John Johnson, Marvin
T
wo oer veo1 o1 ne1 was waos1 . School and Jackson Man
Senior Citizens Center ac- cameron, presented an en- Pullins, Chris lams, and neede.d bY the Auxooary.
length with a headband of Power employed as a boiler
tlvlties located at the ·
Bruce O'Rourke.
Controbutors should contact white satin with white and maintenance worker at the
or
.
.
Pomeroy Junior High Sch041l
Tbe following awards were Mrs. Leora Young,. 949·2236'
yellow lace trun. She carroed Gallipolis State Institute. He
,
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
received: Silver Arrow, Mark Mrs. Julia Norros. 2' 7•2272 ·
b
l f II
d hit
a member of F.O.E. Aerie
through Friday.
Dillon, One Year Pillll, Mark · HARRISONVlLLE Senior a ouque o ye ow an w e is
2290.
'
Citizens
Club
potluck
and
carnatJ?ns
wolh
pale
yellow
Monday, Oct. 25 - T.B.
Cameron, Gene O'Rourke,
birthday
supper,
6
p,n\,
and
whole
robbons
streammg
Out-of-town
guests
includTalk, Jane Brown, II a.m.;
Kevin Carty, Eric Jones,
ed
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Ernest
T,
Tuesday
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
down
accented
wolh
.
a
tmy
Square Dance, 12:3().2 p.m.
Paul Simon, Rob Fanning,
Phillips and sons of Jackson,
Nellie
Borgan,
Harrisonville.
white
and
sliver
wedding
bell
Tuesday, Oct. 26 - Craft
Paul MacKenzie, and David
and John Gardner of
Sharing, 1().11:30 a.m.; T.B.
Brown; Bobcat badge and SPECIAL MEETING, centeredmtheoouquel. .
Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.
Racine
·Masonic
Lodge
461,
.Mr
s
..
Vo.ckJe
Allie
,
Talk, Jane Brown, 11 a.m.;
pin, ,Bruce O'Rourke, Lee
Tuesday.
Work
in
Sister-on-law.
of
the
7:30p.m.
Chorus, 12:15-2 p.m.
Kerr and Randy Simpson.
MM degree; visitors and brld~groom, Patrool Star Rt.f,
Wednesday, Oct. 27 Refreshments were served
•, -.
members
welcome.
Gallopohs, was matron o
Games, 12:3().2 p.m.; Home
and the meeting adjourned.
honor.
She
wore
a
kmt
gown
Insulation Meet(ng, I p.m. at
REVIVAL AT Mt. Her- of pastel yellow and orange
County EX\ension Office
mon U.B. Church through 1 t . uff d 1
. 'th
Oct. 31 7:3o each eveing·wlth ea urmg P e .s eeves wo
, Thursday, Oct. 28 '•
a rounded neckline and hogh
Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
GALLIPOIJIS - . The
DINNER GIVEN
Rev. Lee Hammond, Po:ts· waist. Sbe wore a yellow hat
Horseshoes~ !2:30p.m.; SingCampaign
Youth Group met
POMEROY - Mrs. c. E. ·mouth, speakmg durmg with an orange and yellow
a-Long, 12:30 p.m.
Thursday
at 6 p.m. with
Stout of Albany, R. D. en· week and Rev. James Leach, ribbon trim. Her small bouFriday, Oct. 29 - Art Class,
Sharon
Hively
leading the
pastor, on Sunday. Gospel , quel of yellow and white carda
1().11:30 a.m.; Movie, 10:45
Lord's
Prayer.
~~~~~~.S~e/
Tones, Chester: s~glng on nations was trimmed with
a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
New and old buSiness was
Oct. 28. Public mvoted.
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
Stanswhite 1ace an d white ro.bbons.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
covered,
a discussion
bury, Columbus; Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Phillip. AUie, Patriot Star _ was led onand
Program, 11 :30 a.m. - 12:30
prayer.
A poem
Mrs. Manning Webster and . RUTLAND FRIENDLY Rl., Galhpohs, served as his
p.m. Monday through
entitled
"Prayer
Changes
HEATHER DAVIS
Mr. and Mrs. Grover ·stout, Gardeners, 7:30 p.m. Wed- brother's best man' Ushers
Friday
Pomeroy;
Mrs. c. w. Stans- nesday at the home of Mrs. included Jerry · Gooldin, Things" was read, and a
Menu For
bury, Mrs. Nellie Vale, Jack Walker, Mam St., Eureka, and Greg Isaacs, circle was formed with
OclZ5-0cU9
everyone thanking_ God for
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rutland. Special guest Vinton.
MONDAY - · Braised beef
Strong of Wilkesvllle· Mr. demonstrator, Reba Mullins,
For her daughter's wed- things He has done.
In mushroom sauce on
The next meeting will be
and Mrs. John Cotterill, and Ja~kson florist who will ding, Mrs. Bias Chose a
noodles, buttered frozen
Oct.
28 at 6p.m. Public in·
Mrs. Evelyn Ward, Athens, present autumn floral design. . pastel blue street length,
mixed vegetables, whipped
vi
ted.
and Mrs. Lucy Thomas and Mrs. Walker to present an short sleeved dress of
gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
Miss Octa Gillogly, Albany. educational exhibit of bulbs · ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"
MIDDLEPORT - Heather
TUESDAY - Baked ham
slice w-raisln sauce, soup Lynn Davis, age one, was The Bernard Allen.· family for fall plantmg. Members to
take box of bulbs for exbeans, mixed fruit salad, honored with a birthday visited in the evening.
change.
tapioca pudding w-whipped party on Oct.~ at her home,
is a personalized jumper for girls, a jumper
topping, comb ...d, butler, 40 Riverview Drive, Midsuit
for boys. Order yours now for that
dleport. The party was given
milk.
special
child in your life. (A great
WEDNESUAY - Country by her mother, Mrs. Dottie
Giftt l
·
Christmas
Davjs.
fried steak, mashed potatoes
Ice
cream,
lemonade
and
a
w-gravy, sliced tomato 98lad,
candied carrots, banana cake Raggedy Ann cake baked by
w-lcing, bread, butter, milk. Mrs. Connie Swisher, were
THURSDAY , - Chicken served . Attending were ·
and dumpllngll, buttered Crystal and Tracy Manley,
frozen mixed vegetables, W. T. and Curtis English,
peach halves on lettuce, Mrs. Bonnie Roush and
chocolate chip · cookies, Shannon, Mickey Davis, and
bread, butter, milk.
Heather's grandparents, Mr.
FRIDAY - Baked liver in and Mrs. John Bryan and
Spanish sauce, hashed brown Mrs. Freda Davis and
pota'toes, buttered peas, daughter, Jeannie. Sending
raisin cobbler, bread, butter, gifts were Michael Davis,
milk.
Heather's father, and Mr.
Coffee, tea ai!d buttermilk and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
served daily.
daughters, Lorain.
Girls' sizes 1 to 6, up. t.o 51etters, $13.50., 6 or

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Ohio Valley Bank 'guarantees you a 7Y4% return
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&amp;-B-Tbe Sunday nme.sentJnol, Sunclay, Oct. :M, 11176

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.

. . 7-B-The Sunday 'nmea-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

TODAY'S TREASURES

Social
Calendar

Mr. and Mrs. Tho11UlS E Allie

Double ring ceremony
unites A/lie-Bias

:New ·den leaders announced

.
fJ
. ..

,,. ,,,.»
-~~
.
·
~

~

Sr. Citizens
. Cakndar

u.e

Youth gather

BJJeullameo
Restoring an old car bas
been Ukened to working a

gigaatic jigsaw puzzle. 'l'lle
· older the car ...,. the greater
the challenge.
Tile key to putting it
togethet Is an , owner's
manual and lor the later
· models these are still fairly
easy to come by but older
manuals, · if they can be
found, can be an expensive
asset.
Another tool used in
restoration by old car buffs is
Hemmings Motor News, a
monthly publication thick
with classified ads. With a
copy of Hemmings (or
slmj)ar publications) the
collector-restorer' can spend
nostalgia -filled· ' hours,
tracking down parts or just
soaking in information.
·Hunting a missing part is
often a worldwide search.
One collector found his
missing part in England.
Another, after advertising in
Hemmings, sold and shipped
a part to Africa. The hobby is
not restricted to the United
States. Old car enthusiasts
are found in many, many
countries.
Of course, you can have the
restoration done by a
professional but be prepared
to spend a lot o! time on the
waiting liB! and to pay a
whopping big fee - as much
as $20 to $25 an hour.
Professional restoration can
run into thousands of dollars.
Most old-car enthusiasts
prefer to do it themselves and
count the hours of tedious
tinkering' as one of the
rewards of the ho\lby.
If
are a fanatic for

Cekbrates
birthday

THE PERFECf GIFT

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BIG SAVINGS ON FRIGIDAIRE
'

BAKER FURNITURE

..

~,_--::,----M-icld_le:.:;po_rt-;;~+9 -·_ _ _ _--.J

women . ·

•

··LOCAL FIF'l'H PLACE winners were George
Donovan and Butch Armes both from Meigs County.

"QUALITY ALWAYS':
Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat., 9.7:30
Wednesday-Friday 9:00-9:00, Sunday Closed
.
·
·
992-7034 .
Ohoo
Pomeroy
Pearl Ash 992-33.23, Roger D~vis, 992-76!1

NATURALIZER:.

Shop~)
)· _
_

McCall's, l&lt;wtck-~w.
Simplicity Pattns
·
115 W. Second
Pomtroy

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__-2;.::284__ Allllro~~ A~~~!!.t!"

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__

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KIDDIE ·SHOPPE
••1 J5Bu

175 N SE COND AVE i MIOOl.EPOf!T. OH .S!bf)

"What Is a widow wilb
cHildren suppoeed to do?" ht
uked. "What is a divorced
lady sufli'O!Ied to do! They do

not have any choloe. They've
got to work."
Mondale cbarged that
women are being fon:td to
!O'k .work :at record ratea
because the admirilstnUon
has been unable to control
inflation and lhe eroaion of a
family's txirchaslng power.
, "Thb fallul'il to ·control
inflation Ia causiJii more anll.
more famillet tO enter tilt
Iabat' market to try to t.ke
eire of themselves, to oend
their ltlda to college or
vocational school, to pay blS
health billa, to try to pay for 1
home," he satd.

THE
UNIFORM CENTER

Tucked Bodice, Deep Waist Band,
Princess B~ck, A-line Skirt, '

%Length, ActiottSieeves, .
Polyester-Nylon Stain Release Fabric~

12300

Size 8-20
• STEVE FINLAW, a member of the Big Bend Bass
Anglers Club had the job of weighing in the fish .

w
cltJ

VO:Ur

WHITE SWAN
UNIFORMS

Anglers compete
from

for .biggest bass
FIRST PLACE WINNERS of the BASS tournament were l-r, Dan Moorehead &lt;
Marietta and·Gary Tyrell, of Lowell. On tbe right is Bill Grueser, president of the Big Ben.:
Bass Anglers Club of Meigs County, Thetwomen won $112.50 in cash and over $200 in prizes.
'

;Dean Favennan expecting
.new college to make impact
: MIDDLEPORT ~ The
: acting dean of Ohio
· University's College of
: Osteooathic Medicine told
·Middleport - Pomeroy Ro:tarians Friday evening at

help stamp out
cold feet with
the l{EDfiOOSE
Plantation crepe sole. justenough wedge, aide zipper.
Roomy, yet ahaped to give
growing feet the support
and freedom they need.
Rust &amp; Black

15.99 '

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comfort
Nuturallzer pluccs comfort right
where YOU want Jt ... at VOitf feet.
You11 iove the feel of soft lea ther us
you stride along In this
low-heeled walker ...
· complete with
Nnturulizer,s

Heath United Methodist
Church he expects the imba:a nce in the ratio of doctors
to patients in rural southeastern Ohio to be reduced in
years to come.
Dr. Ger~ld A. Faverrnan
was enthusiastic over the
prospects the college has to
serve southeastern Ohio.
"The avera ge ratio of
doctors to patients in Ohio is.
one doator for each 600
patients. In southeastern
Ohio ills one doctor for about
2,350 patients," Dr. Faverman said.
The dean described the
admission policy of the
college, which started its first
class of 24 future doctors
about a month ago, as one
·designed to Insure that every
qualified applicant in southeastern OKlo will be able to
enter, regardless of financial
ability.
" We are buying our
students microscopes and
medical bags, for example,"
he said, "which is not done in
other medical schools."
Scholarship money is
coming from, among other
sources, the Ohio Osteopathic
Association , which Dr .
Faverman said, "has been
uniquely generous."
He
ex'piained
that
hopefully, southeastern Ohio
students .will prefer to

RACINE - Eighteen pairs
•f • bass anglers launched

their boats last Saturday al
[he Ravenswood Dock to
compete for first prize money
in the first ever Southeastern
Ohio Bass Tournament
sponsored _by the Big Bend
Bass Anglers Club of Meigs
County.
Of the 18 teams, Dan
Moorehead of Marietta and
Gary Tyrell of Lowell, t9ok
first prize money of $112.50
plus over $200 in prizes. Total
prizes amounted to $665.
The pair brought in nine
pounds and 13 ounces ofbass.
Moorehead also copped the
lunker award for the largest
bass caught. All fish had to
come from the Racine pool of
the Ohio River.
Local winners in fifth place
were George Donovan and

practice in southeastern
Ohio.
Tuition in most medical
schools is a minimum of
$5,000 annually. Some are as
high as $15,000. He said he has ·
900 applications (700 of them
from out of the stat.e) to gain
admittance to the OU
medical college .
Dr. Faverman had the
highest praise for the interest
shown by the Ohio ()UR BOARDING HOUSE ·
legislature, •&gt;Y Rep: Ron
James, by Ohio l,lniversity,
and area hospitals O. K,
es peci a lly Ve terans
LOUIE.,
Memorial Hospital ·- in
l'VE.
success of the college.
601
!je said the field of health
MY
services will be greatly ·~­
HE.P..iE.R
panded and improved in
IN THE
future years because of the
GHOEcollege. He expects the local
SOX
I
hospital and doctors to assist
in · training young doctors,
and singled out especially the
cooperation of Drs. John
· Ridgway and Ray R. Pickens
of Veterans Memorial.
"We expect to make a
major impact in southeastern
Ohio," Dr. Faverman said.
His appearance before
Rotary was ar;anged by
progra m chairman Carl
Denison. Acting President
Bob Buck presided. Dr. Carl
Wood of Gallipolis was a
guest. Ladies of the ·church
. served a steak dinner.

Rust&amp;
Black

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26 pis. AA Qual~ Wh~e Mtg........... 1350.00
34 pts. AA Quality While Mtg. ........... 'SOO.OO
49 Pis. AA Quality Wh ~e Mtg. ........... '775.00
50 Pis. AAA (Ge'in) Quality While Mtg. '1425.00
~ rts. AA Oval Cut White Mtg. ......... '800.00
1.02 Pts. AQuality Yellow Mtg......... '1776.00
.79 Pts. AA Quality Yellow Mtg......... '1425.00
.95 PtS. AA
Wh~e
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Mon . &amp; Fri.

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9:lOtiiS

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_366 Second Avelllle, _ _ _ _ _ _ _..... Galipolis, Ohio _ __.

llutch Armes.
,
Bill G,rueser, president of
the local club, termed the
day , 11 8 huge success." He
. said the tournament was the
first stel' in making a bigger
. and better Bass Club.
Contrlbullng donations to
the tournament were Finlaw
Lure Co., Blue Tartan, ProBass $hop, Swartzel Marine,
Bob's Gulf, Shamrock Motel,
Tom Rue Motors, Forest Run .
Cement Block Co., Pat
Mitchell, Kelly Manufacturing, M&amp;R 1 Ellis Sohlo
Station, Sayre Hardlyare,
Humphrey Furniture,
Picken's Hardware, H &amp; R
Firestone Store, Five Points
Grill, Betsy Ross &lt;Bakery,
Crow's Steak House and
Village Trading Post at Oak
Hill.

Thev'll Do It Every Time

beuutlful Ot.

BeHy Ohlinger

housellotds.

Import Designer of Inverted

down to

shoes

specifically Ignored t~e:
milllonJI of women who art
the sole providers for tii'dr

'
"THE Sophisticated
Look"

·Getting

I

suggested male heads ol
·households "are the only
group that really matters" to
the national economy. He
quoted Seidman as 98ying:
" Every one · knows that
women don't work for the
same reasons as men. they
work for a lot of other reasons'
- lf-gratlflcatlon and othe(
reasons. They can't be
counted the same. So eln·
ployment really bn 't the
issue it's been made:"
The audience groaned as
Mondale read thes~ words.
"Who iB Mr. Seidman in
this administration to make
the judgment that women
have"nothlng to contribute to
this economy and this
country?" Mondale asked.
"Who are they to say that
women wbo want to work
can't have jollll?"
Mondole said Seidman

..
OI"FICERSOF THE BIG BEND Bass Ntglers J-i, Jim Crow, vice presidenl, Sill
, · Grueser, 'president and Jim Anderson, secl1!t&amp;ry-treasurer, discuss the action Silturday
afternoon att~e forSt Southeastern Ohio BASS tournament held at Ravenswood Dock. The
6sh had to come from the RacineJ)ool of the Ohio River.
•

and modular homes.
If you are in the market fe~r a
modulil'r home, a house type
doublewide or if you just want to
look at one, you are always wel~ome
at Kingsbury. We feature homes by
Skyline Corp. and Fuqua Homes of
' Ohio, Let us. handle your entire
housing problems, site .preparation,
septic tank, basement, etc, You just
pink up the keys when the house is
. ready for occupancy.
·

Mondale l"rlday seized
upon a quote !roll! White
House economic advisor
Willjam Seidman vlrtwally
discounting .joblessness
·among women .
. ''I ask you If you want a
president with that kind 'Of
advice In the White House?"
Mondale asked some
members of the Ohio
Federation of Democratic
Women. They shouted "No !"
Reading from a speech by
Seidman In Colorado last
Aug. 7, Mondale said the
administration econ omist

•oo

MARGUERITES

'

sam. RANGES-IJKE NEW!
'·

perfection, you -can ~
your car lor the tbrlll of allow
competition, where can are
judged on condition end .
authenticity. Ba81CIIIy, there
are three major clas·
slficatfoos under which
autos may be shown. The
Antique (!llllde before WO),
ProductiOn ' (later models)
and Classics (any of 31
specific makea).
Starting with an ideal of
1,000 as a perfect score,
judges begin looking for the
flsws, deducting points on '
anything that does not
measure up to the standards
of authenticity and . perfect
Cllndltlon. Screws, fasteners,
fabric, jack,, tire pump -au
most be authentic.
If· you thrill to the sport of
racing, you can join other
enthusiasts in .racing old
cars. It's risky, you could
have a wreck, but the sport of
racing the older cars bas an.
exhilaration all Its own,
complete with crash helmelll,
fireproof suits and even pit
crews.
For the most part,
however, collectors are ·
content with hunting for
parts, layishing bours on
restoration to. make the car
roadworlhy until the day they
can put the car to the test.
And the test is olten
grueling, driving · ~cross · the
Utah desert in 120 degree
heat, or negotiating the
mountainous roads of
Yosemite National Park, or
just braving the big city
traffic. As I walked around
.the Model A belonging to a
local collector, I could understand the feeling. For in
my mind's eye, I could
remember the plea from
childhood, "Grandpa, can I
ride in the
seat?"

more letters 515.50. ·
•
Boys' sizes 1 to 5 - 513.50 up to 6 letters
only.
Shirts Not Included

$AVE

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Appealing. to women voters,
Democratic vice pl't'.sidential
candidate Walter Mondale
claims he has found evidence'
that President Ford's administration does not care
about unemployment among

·CQme ·in and see our double wide

;:ti

j

Jobless women no concern to one Ford man

Tinkering not tedious
to old car buffs

SUNDAY
SLUG SHOOT Sunday,
12:30 p.m. at lzaak Walton
cfubbouse . Shoot matchea
will abo be held" und prizes
wm be hams, bacon and
turkeys . . Spo!lliOred by the
J;aalt Walton Leagne.
REV. TERRY BIGGS,
Johna!own, Ohio, speaker for
•
revival services, 7:30 each
evening at Southern Baptist
Chapel, Rt. 1, Shade, Sunday
throUib Wednesday. Pastor
Bobby Elkins welcomes the
pobllc. Sunday school hour
for Oct. 24 and 31 Is 6 p.m.
Wiener roast for youth on
Oct. 30. Special testjmonies
and vocal music , 4uring
revival.
.
IZAAK
WALTON
League .
AWARDS WERE presented at the Thursday night meeting of Cub Seoul Pack 204 at the
slug
and
shot
match
Sunday
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis. Pictured above are some,of" the award winners.
at 12:30 at· the club grounds.
VINTON- Brenda Fay polyester and dacron Which
Prizes
will
be
hams,
bacon,
Bias
became the bride of featured a tan trim. She wore
•
and turkeys.
Thomas Edward Allie . in a a corsage of yellow and·white
MONUA Y
double ring ceremony at 2:30 carnations with a white ribRUTLAND GARDEN Club, p.m. Sept. 18 in the Vinton bon.
7:30 Monday at the Church of Baptist Church.
Mrs. Allie was attired in a
Christ with Mrs. Robert
Pastor Jerry L. Neal of- floor length pastel green
Canaday and Mrs. Roy ficiated at the ceremony. A dress fashioned of crepe with
Snowden, hostesses. In· table was set behind the altar long nylon sleeves. Her corstallation of officers and bulb with two white candles in sage was white and yellow
sale.
gold candle holders, one on carnations with a yellow ribDIRECTORS
of the each side of an open Bible. A bon.
Pomeroy Middleport Lions gold cross behind the Bible
h reception was held at the
Club will meet at 7:30 with pink gladioli in two gold home of the bridegroom's
Monday night at the office of vases on either side com- parents immediately follow"
Norbert Compton.
.
pleted the decorations.
irg the cerefl!ony. Tbe four
BEND 0' the River Garden
The bride is the daughter of tier chocolate cake with
Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Mr. and Mrs: Robert Bias, whit~ icing and yellow ~uses
''the home of Mrs. Andrew Vinton, and the groom's was decorated tiy Mrs. Earl
Cross. Program to be on the parents are Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook. Yellow mints and
theme "Putting Your Garden Waller Allie, Patriot Star Rt. , napkins, puoch and nuts
to Bed for the Winter" with Gallipolis.
were placed on a white
all members participating.
Organist Mrs. Vennie crocheted tablecloth over a
IZAAK WALTON League CastoofVintonpresentedoQe yellow tablecloth. Presiding
regular meeting Monday, 7 haU hour of nuptial' music at the table were Mrs. Walter
p.m. All prospective mem- preceded the ceremony. Her Allie, Mrs. Daniel Bias· and
bers invited to attend.
selection s
included Mrs. Don Pope. Janel WarASKIT was presented by members of Den 2at the Thursday night meeting of Cub Pack
OHIO
ASSOCIATION
"Hawaiian
Wedding
Song," ren of Kanauga registered
204 at the Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis.
PubliO' S~hool Employes, · "Mehl&lt;ly oty~ve ," :·one Day guests.
For a wedding trip · to
Chapter 17 Monday 7:30p.m. at a Tome, PreciOus Lord
in cafeteri~ at Meigs Junior Take My Hand," "Unto! Niagara Falls and Presque
High Middleport
· Then," "Whither Thou Stale Park on Lake Erie in
' TUESDAY
Goes!," and "I Love You Tru- Erie, Pa., the bride changed
into an apricot and green
MEIGS
AREA
Holiness
ly."
New leaders for two dens -· After the Pledge of joyable skit.
print blouse of nylon with a
Association
Tuesday,
7:30
Given
in
marriage
by
her
were announced when Cub Allegiance and the reciting of
It was announced that pack p.m. at the Danville brother,. Dame!, !be brode matching apricot skirt of
Scout Pack 204 held its the Cub Scout Promise it was meetings will be held on the Wesleyan Church. Rev. Lelon was attoredm a gown of white double knit.
monthly meeting at the announced that two dens third Thursday of each month Glasure·is pastor. Rev. Floyd crepe fashioned woth a hogh
They reside at Tri-Couoty
Presbyterian Church .have new leaders. The den at 7 p.m.
.
F,
Shook,
pastor
ofthe
Laurel
waost.
A
v-shaped
necklme
Mobile
Homes on Rt. 160 in
Thursday night . .
mother for Deri I is Mrs.
The new Cub Scouts In Cliff Tree MethodiBt Church was set off woth a ruffle Kerr . .
Ellyson and her assistant Den Pack 204 this year are : guest speaker. Public invited. overlayed with white laee.
The new Mrs. Allie, a 1972
Mother Is Mrs. Stanley. Tbe James Hannon, Patrick
RACINE AMERICAN The long sleeves. were of graduate of North Gallia
Den Mother for Den Ill is Frogle, Christopher Myers, Legion Auxiliary, Post
602 , smgle lace and smgle lace High School, is employed as a
Mrs. Linda Myers and her Todd Slone, Lee Kerr, Kelly , Tueaday at the hall.
.ruffle for the. cuffs. She wore food service aide at .Holzer
7
30
assistant Den Mother is Mrs. Rusk, Matthew O'Dell, Erin Don ti
1
·
d
d
wlute matching shoes and a .Medical Center.
8
Sara Spurlock.
· Stanley, Randy Simpson, D.
ons. 0 poes an san · . gold-plated cameo necklace
Mr. Allie is a 1970 graudate
for the ·
.
Den II, under the leader- L. Ellyson, Brian Newell, wlches or . money
·1 ch
belongmg to her mother. Her of Gallia Academy High
Elect!
n
Da
o
y un eon are 1 t'
.
· .
POMEROY Meigs ship of Den Mother Kay John Johnson, Marvin
T
wo oer veo1 o1 ne1 was waos1 . School and Jackson Man
Senior Citizens Center ac- cameron, presented an en- Pullins, Chris lams, and neede.d bY the Auxooary.
length with a headband of Power employed as a boiler
tlvlties located at the ·
Bruce O'Rourke.
Controbutors should contact white satin with white and maintenance worker at the
or
.
.
Pomeroy Junior High Sch041l
Tbe following awards were Mrs. Leora Young,. 949·2236'
yellow lace trun. She carroed Gallipolis State Institute. He
,
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
received: Silver Arrow, Mark Mrs. Julia Norros. 2' 7•2272 ·
b
l f II
d hit
a member of F.O.E. Aerie
through Friday.
Dillon, One Year Pillll, Mark · HARRISONVlLLE Senior a ouque o ye ow an w e is
2290.
'
Citizens
Club
potluck
and
carnatJ?ns
wolh
pale
yellow
Monday, Oct. 25 - T.B.
Cameron, Gene O'Rourke,
birthday
supper,
6
p,n\,
and
whole
robbons
streammg
Out-of-town
guests
includTalk, Jane Brown, II a.m.;
Kevin Carty, Eric Jones,
ed
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Ernest
T,
Tuesday
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
down
accented
wolh
.
a
tmy
Square Dance, 12:3().2 p.m.
Paul Simon, Rob Fanning,
Phillips and sons of Jackson,
Nellie
Borgan,
Harrisonville.
white
and
sliver
wedding
bell
Tuesday, Oct. 26 - Craft
Paul MacKenzie, and David
and John Gardner of
Sharing, 1().11:30 a.m.; T.B.
Brown; Bobcat badge and SPECIAL MEETING, centeredmtheoouquel. .
Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.
Racine
·Masonic
Lodge
461,
.Mr
s
..
Vo.ckJe
Allie
,
Talk, Jane Brown, 11 a.m.;
pin, ,Bruce O'Rourke, Lee
Tuesday.
Work
in
Sister-on-law.
of
the
7:30p.m.
Chorus, 12:15-2 p.m.
Kerr and Randy Simpson.
MM degree; visitors and brld~groom, Patrool Star Rt.f,
Wednesday, Oct. 27 Refreshments were served
•, -.
members
welcome.
Gallopohs, was matron o
Games, 12:3().2 p.m.; Home
and the meeting adjourned.
honor.
She
wore
a
kmt
gown
Insulation Meet(ng, I p.m. at
REVIVAL AT Mt. Her- of pastel yellow and orange
County EX\ension Office
mon U.B. Church through 1 t . uff d 1
. 'th
Oct. 31 7:3o each eveing·wlth ea urmg P e .s eeves wo
, Thursday, Oct. 28 '•
a rounded neckline and hogh
Physical Fitness, 10:45 a.m.;
GALLIPOIJIS - . The
DINNER GIVEN
Rev. Lee Hammond, Po:ts· waist. Sbe wore a yellow hat
Horseshoes~ !2:30p.m.; SingCampaign
Youth Group met
POMEROY - Mrs. c. E. ·mouth, speakmg durmg with an orange and yellow
a-Long, 12:30 p.m.
Thursday
at 6 p.m. with
Stout of Albany, R. D. en· week and Rev. James Leach, ribbon trim. Her small bouFriday, Oct. 29 - Art Class,
Sharon
Hively
leading the
pastor, on Sunday. Gospel , quel of yellow and white carda
1().11:30 a.m.; Movie, 10:45
Lord's
Prayer.
~~~~~~.S~e/
Tones, Chester: s~glng on nations was trimmed with
a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
New and old buSiness was
Oct. 28. Public mvoted.
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
Stanswhite 1ace an d white ro.bbons.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
covered,
a discussion
bury, Columbus; Mr. and
WEDNESDAY
Phillip. AUie, Patriot Star _ was led onand
Program, 11 :30 a.m. - 12:30
prayer.
A poem
Mrs. Manning Webster and . RUTLAND FRIENDLY Rl., Galhpohs, served as his
p.m. Monday through
entitled
"Prayer
Changes
HEATHER DAVIS
Mr. and Mrs. Grover ·stout, Gardeners, 7:30 p.m. Wed- brother's best man' Ushers
Friday
Pomeroy;
Mrs. c. w. Stans- nesday at the home of Mrs. included Jerry · Gooldin, Things" was read, and a
Menu For
bury, Mrs. Nellie Vale, Jack Walker, Mam St., Eureka, and Greg Isaacs, circle was formed with
OclZ5-0cU9
everyone thanking_ God for
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rutland. Special guest Vinton.
MONDAY - · Braised beef
Strong of Wilkesvllle· Mr. demonstrator, Reba Mullins,
For her daughter's wed- things He has done.
In mushroom sauce on
The next meeting will be
and Mrs. John Cotterill, and Ja~kson florist who will ding, Mrs. Bias Chose a
noodles, buttered frozen
Oct.
28 at 6p.m. Public in·
Mrs. Evelyn Ward, Athens, present autumn floral design. . pastel blue street length,
mixed vegetables, whipped
vi
ted.
and Mrs. Lucy Thomas and Mrs. Walker to present an short sleeved dress of
gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
Miss Octa Gillogly, Albany. educational exhibit of bulbs · ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"
MIDDLEPORT - Heather
TUESDAY - Baked ham
slice w-raisln sauce, soup Lynn Davis, age one, was The Bernard Allen.· family for fall plantmg. Members to
take box of bulbs for exbeans, mixed fruit salad, honored with a birthday visited in the evening.
change.
tapioca pudding w-whipped party on Oct.~ at her home,
is a personalized jumper for girls, a jumper
topping, comb ...d, butler, 40 Riverview Drive, Midsuit
for boys. Order yours now for that
dleport. The party was given
milk.
special
child in your life. (A great
WEDNESUAY - Country by her mother, Mrs. Dottie
Giftt l
·
Christmas
Davjs.
fried steak, mashed potatoes
Ice
cream,
lemonade
and
a
w-gravy, sliced tomato 98lad,
candied carrots, banana cake Raggedy Ann cake baked by
w-lcing, bread, butter, milk. Mrs. Connie Swisher, were
THURSDAY , - Chicken served . Attending were ·
and dumpllngll, buttered Crystal and Tracy Manley,
frozen mixed vegetables, W. T. and Curtis English,
peach halves on lettuce, Mrs. Bonnie Roush and
chocolate chip · cookies, Shannon, Mickey Davis, and
bread, butter, milk.
Heather's grandparents, Mr.
FRIDAY - Baked liver in and Mrs. John Bryan and
Spanish sauce, hashed brown Mrs. Freda Davis and
pota'toes, buttered peas, daughter, Jeannie. Sending
raisin cobbler, bread, butter, gifts were Michael Davis,
milk.
Heather's father, and Mr.
Coffee, tea ai!d buttermilk and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
served daily.
daughters, Lorain.
Girls' sizes 1 to 6, up. t.o 51etters, $13.50., 6 or

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Ohio Valley Bank 'guarantees you a 7Y4% return
over a four-year period ... a
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1~1ne .iitmaaY 't'lmes,Sentlnel, SWlday , Oct: 24, 1976

Bucks win,
Gerald hurt

1\.B-Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Suroay, Oct. 24, 1976

...

- -

·~·

~

Q

8t;

z
~
....
1-

... .

11111111

I:);:)

AND AJUMBO BURGER to go, please. This doulile-&lt;lecker is being towed across Hong
Kong's Victoria Harbor to K'Owloon to be used as a display for a new restaurant.

voter.apathy .
high in nation·

SOFA-CHAIR
REFRIGERATORS
GAS RANGES

By CLAY RICHARDS
has signed up 3 million new
United Press InternaUonal
voters.
V.oter apathy is high in this
They point to California ,
bicontennial election year, a where they've signed up
nationwide sur~y shows, but 416,1Xi0new voters--a margin
a Democratic registration greater than that whi~h John
drive and a Republicun Kennedy
and
Hubert
telephone bank get-out{he- Humphrey lost the stale to ·
vote effort may prevent a Richard Nixon in )960 and
tecord low turnout.
1963.
Party officials surveyed
Republicans say their 6,000
nationwide by . UP! sa id telephones nationwide will
voters have been turned off make 10 million calls by
by Watergate and other election day--a $3 million
scandals. They said there is effort to reach voters
lack of enthusiasm for either Ulrge ted as favorable to their
President Ford or Jimmy party.
Carter --along with the Jack
A record 92 million Ameriof emotional issues like cans registered to vote in
Vietnam.
1972, but that dropped to 86
Democrats and million by the start of the
Republicans alike fear the primary season this year. But
turnout may fall below the 55 both parties believe a record
per cent mark or 1972-and number will be eligible by
perhaps for the first time fall Election Day.
below a majority of those of
There are ah estimated !50
voting age,
million Americans of voter
Countering those fears are age, compared with 140
voter registration figures million four years ago.
near or higher than 1972
The only stales showing a
levels in nearly every major decline in voter regislrati,?'! ·
state - with
two
big were New York and
exceptions, California and California and to a small
New York.ln those two states extent, Oklah o ma,
1.5 million voters- many of Pennsylvania, Ne~raska and
them 18 to 21 year olds the District of Columbia.
eligible for th.e ir first
Apathy does not seem ,to be
presidential election in 1972--. a major problem in every
have been stricken from the state. Election and party
rolls.
officials In 20 states- most of
The Democrats have made . them small or medium
a major ·push for voter sized-said they e&lt;pected a
registration this year- good turnout, often spurred
figuring 90 per cent of newly by hot loca I con tests.
registered voters come out on
Those stales where apathy
election day and the vast was not reported a problem
major ity of them vote were : Arizona , Arkansas,
Democratic. The party drive Colorado, Co nnec tic ut,

Black naouun1ers
are fired up
lly JOHN PLATIER
JOHANNESBURG IUPI)
- South African riot squads
Saturday opened fire on black
mourners who turned a
schoolgirl's funeral in the
black ghetto of Soweto into a
demonstration, killing one
bla ck demonstrator and
wounding another.
Assistant p olice

nation's racial unrest Lhat

began June 16 in Soweto and
spread to all major centers.
The crowd ~at hered outside
the home of the dead girl's
parents where they and relatives were mourning. Kriel
named the dead girl as Ann
Kwnalo but he did not know
whether she was a victim of
earlier police action. The
commissioner in charge of funerals for such victims
nationwide riot control, Maj . repeatedly have sparked off
Gen. Dawld Kriel, said the trouble.
police "acted in self defense"
Police arrested 115 demonto ward off a crowd of about
strators on the spot and took
1,000 demonstrators who them off to detention, Kriel
refused to disperse during the said. An hour after the
wake of the black girl's flareup , all was reported
funeral.
quiet and. ·Kr iel said no
Kriel said the incident, in further unrest was. expected
the · heart of the alJ.black in Soweto.
suburb of Soweto 15 miles
Witness reports said the
southwest of Johannesburg, police squads drove up in six
was the worst since mid- cars and began ordering the
September when police last crowd to leave. They said the
reported killing rioters mourners, inside a house, and
during sustained anligovern· persons outside, did not act
ment unrest sweeping South threateningly toward the
Africa.
.
police. They said Miss
The fitality raised to 37:1 Kumalo 's death was not
the number killed in the connected with the unrest.

ZENITH TV·STEREO

• RECLINERS
ELECTRIC RANGE
MICROWAVE RANGES
BOX SPRING &amp; MATTRESS
DISHWASHERS
USED APPLIANCES
DINING ROOM SUITES .

•-'

EASY DOES IT for a
work crew lowering a
section of th e Alaska
pipeline into a trench.
Work on t~ e line, which
will rwt some 800 miles,
·alternately burled and
elevated above th• t ..11dra
from the North Slope oil
fields to Port· Valdez,
continues despite leakage
problems.
Delaware, Hawaii , Kan~as
!Robert Dole's home state ),
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
Massachusetts, Michigan
!Ford's , home
state) ,
Minnesota (Walter Mondaie's
home state), Montana, New
Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, UlBh ,
West Virginia and Wyoming .
Oddly it does seem to be a
problem in Jimmy Carter's
home state of Georgia, where
the turnout was predicted to
be only about 50 per cent ,
compared with the 68 per ce nt
who turned out in 1964 to vote
heavily for Barry Goldwater.
"The people are turned off ,
fed up with politics and
politicians, tired of voting
and being disappointed," said
Herb Harmon , Florida's GOP
executive director .
"I've seen more apathy this
year than ever before," said
Rep. Neal Smith, D-Iowa.
"There's general · apathy
about the election because of
Watergate and various
government activities that
have turned people off," said
Bill Sponsler, executive
director of the Missouri
De mo c rati c S t ate
Committee.
"I don l see the enthusiasm
I saw in '68 or '60 - I don't
think Carter and Ford have
genera ted the enthusias m
that Kennedy and Nixon or
Nixon and Humphrey did ."
More people are telling
Ebna·Turner , who heads the
GOP phone bank· in Reno,
Nev., they are going to vote
for "none of the above"
because "it's the fad this
political season."
When Democra tic sta te
director William Hodge was
asked about apathy in North
Carolina, he sa id : " It's
leading" both Ford and
Carter.

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29

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Mon. thru Sat. 19 til9
Sunday 1 til S

•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - It
was football weather, but for
35,000 e~eited fans, baseball
definitely was still in the air.
A jubilant but orderly
crowd of 35,000 shrugged off.
39 degree temperatures •and
chill winds tAl give the world
champion Cincinnati Reds a
11
red hot" welcome home
Friday.
.
· Baek.from New York. after
sweeping the World Series
from the Yarikees, the Reds
obViowily enjoyed their red
carpet treatment- riding in a
confettlstrewn parade and
being guests of honor at a
rally.
"I couldn't get too excited
last night in New York,"
Reds' second baseman Joe
Morgan told the crowd.
"They (New York fans) were
very uncouth. But coming
back here and ,parading

~

•

around this town makes it
exciting again .
"We have the greatest fans
and the greatest baseball
team in the world, i.• Morgan
added to the delight of the
throng. ·
·
Bundled up In heavy coats,
Reds' players rode in open
jeeps over a mile-and-ball
parade route. The crowd, also
wrapped in winter clothes,
lined the streets to cheer their
heroes and .then waited .
patienJ.!y to hear the players'
comments at a rally at jampacked Fountain Square.
Johnny Bench, decked out
In a broad-brimmed black
hat, led the jubilant fans in a
long cheer off "We're No. 1."
"Thanks for staying with us
through thick and thin,"
Bench, th e Series' Most ·
Valuable Player, told the
crowd. "We'll try lo be back

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

YES

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

YES

Yank boss says

YES

NO

'We'll be hack'

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO ·-

NO

shocked by UJe Reds' easy

NO

triw:nph overtheYan kees buY
Steinbrermer insisted "things
'II b d'ff
t · th
WI
e 1 eren In
e

NO

~
~

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI)
George Steinbrenner, chief
owner of the New York
Yankees , had a message
today for the Ciricinnati' Reds
and the rest ~f the baseball
world:
"We'll be back," predicted
Steinbrenner, whose Yankees
were swept in four games by
the Reds in the World Series,
Bl1d We WOn 't be rookies."
Yankee and American
League Officials were

•

11

s

fi·octs ·figu ...e·s

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

XES

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

10

6

"We jw;t got a taste of the

World Series this time," he
said. "We have no alibi and
We hope Our opponents 0 f the
future W6n't have any when
they lose.
11
We'll be better next
year," he added. "We'll have
more experience and maybe
we'll try harder. Don 't forget
that we won a pennant this
year after finishing anywhere
from 10 t0 11:"games 00t 0 f
first place for years . That's
an accomplishment and our
,players don't have a thing to

•

apologi~efor."

.·

· '

,

. NEW YORK , ( UPI ) World Series (recor ds set' and
tied l by the Cincinnati Reds
and New York Yankees .
·
4 gan.H.&gt; series:
I ndividual:
· Mos t Putout s , L eflfielder .
Ga me
8 - George Foster . Cin . 10 ·
21·76
'
Mos t

Chances

Accept ed .

Leflf lelder . .Gam e
8 - Georg e Fos ter , Cin .
MosT Ass ists . catcher ,
Se rie s
7 ~ Thurman Munson , N .

y

Mo sl Sav eS·, Ser ies
2 ·- Wi l l M c Enaney . Cin .
T eam .
Most DoUbl es , Ser ies
10 - Cincin n at"i
MoST Triples , Ser ies
3 - Cinc inn ati
Most Tr iples, Bolh Teams,
Serie s
• 4 - Cinci nn ati 3, New York
1
Fewes T Sac rif i ces , Both
Tea m s, Series
o- Cinci nnati o, New Yo rk
0
Most Sacr ifice Flies , Both
Tea ms , Ser ies
J - · Cincihnati2, New York

ThW'IJ'Uin Munson, the YanMost Saves, Ser ies
kees ' hero in defeat, agreed
2 - Cincinnati
and history also supports
Most Saves. Both Teams,
Seri es
·
·
Steinbrenner's.. contention
2 - Cl ncinn ali2 , New Y or k
that .the Yankees will be 0
Few.esi Saves, Se r ies
heard from again-soon . ,
0 ..,._ New York
"Mr. Steinbrennerwentout
Fewest Com pl ete Games ,
and bOught a team and that Both Teams, Series
1 - Ci ncinna ti o, f&gt;jew York
made some people mad, " 1.
said Munson, who batted .529
Most"cau~ht Stea l ing , Bo th
· th Se · "W 1 st · f
Teams, Ser 1es
m e r1es. eo m our
,. 7 - · Cincinnali 5, New Yor k
straight
and
that 1s 2.
embarrassing but he didn't
Most Double Pla ys , Both
Teams , Ser ies
kick us when we were down.
10 N ew York 6, Cin ·
ht fact, he looked like a clnnati •·
wiruler in our losing dressing . Se~i~~h es t Ga t e R ece ipts ,
r(Xlm .11

•

•

, Manylosersoffourstralght
Series games have corqe
bakto
k
th b t
C , ran among e es
teams in the game's historY
as follows:
""'
- .1.11e 1963 Yankees · tost
the Series in four straight to
the Los Angeles Dodgers but
Won the pennant the next ·
.

52 .498,416 .69 .
Most Lo ng H it s, Ser ies
17 ""' Cinc innati .
Team -Ser ie s

Oecords5et

,

I '

6 - Th urman Mun son , New
Y orK
Most Sing les, Game
AThu rma n Mun son . New
York 10 21 76
Most Steal s , Serie s
2
Joe Morgan , Ciocinnati
Cesar
Geron im o. Ci n ·
c inna ti
Mo st Double Play s Sl a r ted .

Firs! Ba seman, Seri es
· 1 - Tony Per e1, Cin ci n na ti
Most
Pulouts.
Sec on d
Bas!"ma n, Series
13 Joe Morg an . Cin ·
c innat i
Mos t
Errors ,
Sec ond
Basem an ,· Ser ies
2 -.' Joe Mo r gan , Ci n c innati
Mo st Doubl e Play s St arl ed ,
Th ird Bas em an , Game
2 Gr aig Nettl es, New
York 10· 19 76
Mo s t
Er To r s. Pil c h er .
Seri es
I - Pat Za chry . Cin c innati
Most Doubles , Inning
1- L ou Pinietta , New York
10 16 I 2nd )
Tony Perez , Cincinnati 10.
16 14th !
O:s.car G eronimo , Ci n
cinnati 10.10 ( 7 1 ~ ; 10.21 (9th )
Da n Dr iessen. Cinc innati
10-17 (2nd l ; 10
' Johnn y Bench , Cinc innaTi
10 17 ( 2nd)
,
Fr ed STanley, New YorK 10.
11 O th l
George FOst er , Cin e innat i
10· 19 !2r:~d l
Joe Mo r g an, Cincinnati 10
19 18th }
Pe te Rose , Cinci nnati :r. 21
er st )
Chr is Chambliss. New Y or k
10.21 ( Is! I
,
Dav e Conce pcio n . Ci n
cinnati 10·21 (9th )
M os t T r iples , Inn ing
1 -· Daye Concepcion .
Cin ci nna t i 10 · 16• (3rd l
E ll iot! Maddo x. New Yor k
10-16 !5th)
Johnny Ben c h. Cin c inn ati
16 16 ll&gt;h 1
J rz~orga n , crnci nn a_' .L 10.
17
Mos t Home Runs , Inning
1 -· Joe Mo r gan. Cinc inn ati
10. 16 ( 1st )
Dan · Driessen, Cinci nnat i
1019 ( dlhl
Jirn Mason , .N ew Yor k 10 .19

Most AI Bats , Tota l Series
5,635 New Yo r.k ( 30 series)
O th l
Most Runs. Total Series
Johnn y Be nch , Cinci nnat i
754 N ew York (30 series)
10 21 (4 t h &amp; 9th)
Most Hits, Total Series
Most Sacr i fic e Flies , Inning
1. ~04 N ew York 130 series )1 Gr aig Net lies , N ew
Mo st Long H i ts, Total
York 10· 16 (2nd)
Series
Pete Rose , Cincinneti 10· 16
408 N ew York 130 se ries)
(Jrd )
MOSl Total Ba ses, Total
,Ken Griffey , Cincinnati 10 .
Ser ies
17 I 2nd )
'2, 186 New Yor k (J O series )
Most Hit BaTsmen , Inn ing
Most Sing les , Tot&lt;! ! Series
I :'"· Chris Cha"mbliss, New
996. New Yo rk (30 series)
York 10· 16 ( 7th )
~ost Doubl es , Total Seri es
M ost Caugh r St ea l ing ,
198 - N ew York (30 s.er ies )
Ser ies
•
Most Home Runs. Total
2 - Gt orgc Foster . Cin
series
ci nn aTi
16 4 - N ew Yo rk (30 se ries)
. Mosr Caughr Sl ca 'l ing ,
Most Run s Batted In , Total
Inn ing
se ries
I , Ton y· Perez , Ci nc inn a ti
110 - New York (3 0 se rieSI
1016 ( tst l
Most Sacrifice Flies, Total
M ic key R ivers , New York
Seri es
10 16 (6th )
·
11 - N ew Yo rk { 10 series)
Grio rge Foster , Cinci nnat i
Most Walk s. Tota l Ser ies .10.11 ( 211dl
585 - NeW York (30 se ri es)
Johnny Be nch , Cinci nna ti
Most H it Bats m en , Total
10 -19 ( 4th )
series
Gral g Net tles , New Yor k

- TI)e 1939 Reds lost to the
Yankees in four straight but
· th
won the WorldSe nes enext
year.
- The 1932 Chicago Cubs
.were swept by the Yankees
but essentially the saMe
. team
won the pennant in 1935.
- The 1928Sl. LouisCardl· f
np;ls were Whipped m OUf
straight by tile Yankees but
won , National League
peMants in -1930 and 1931.
- The 1922 Yankees· lost
ilo~t N ~~r~o:o~: ~~ s~~r~~ 10J~J;'h~onccp cion . Ci n
four in a t'OW (one tie) to the Series
cinnatj 10·21 O lh l
New York Giants but in 1923' 885 - New York 130 series&gt; ·
Tea m.
Most Chanc es Accepted , ·
Mo s 1 'se r ie s Lo st
bega n t~ir string of 20 world Tota
l Ser ies
10 - New York
championships through 1962.
6.303 - New· York 30 s~riesl
Mo st J Game Series Los!
't Tig
Mosl Putouts, Tota l Ser ies ·.. 2 • New York
- Th e 1907 Detr01
ers
~.503 - New York {30
Most Caugh J Sl ealing ,
lost four in a row (one Ue ) to series J
Seri 'e s
.
the Cubs but won the
Mosl Assi sts, Total Ser ies
.~
Cincinnat i
. American League pennant
1,798 ••·
New Yor~
fJ P
Fewest Pinc h hillers Used ,
st'r ie s )
.
Sl•ri es
the nert tWO seasons.
Most . Error s, Total Ser ies
0
Cinci nnati
'So, while the Reds staged
1:11
N~w York (30 series)
' ~· ewesr
Pinch r un tru ~
Most Double Play s, T o t~!
used. S~ ri es '
their Victory party Friday Ser ie s
0
Ci nci rinatl 0 New Yo r k.
• night and ~e champagne
t50 - New York 130 ser ieSl G .
.
'wortd .Series
r ew cs t Comple te Games,
Oowfd freely, lhe ambitions
Rec ord Ti ed
~f:r ic~
of the Steinbrenner.Qabe 4 g'ame s.er ies
0
Cincinnati
Paul-Billy
Ma ·rtln
Individual :
Mo s t Pit(h er s U!-ic d . Both
Most H its , Game
Teams , b \)rie s
t.riwnvirate and the gatne's
~ Thur m an Munson , N ew
1.1 \..;
Cll'it:i nna ti 1. New
history suggests that they York 10 2176
Yo c k ,
Mos t Con secut i Ye H its ,
H l&lt;!h &lt;'S I Ba lling A v c ro~~ 11 c ,
haven 't heard the last of t,f1e seri es
"' " r i f",
\

COLUMllUS, Ohio (UPI )Tailback Jeff Logan ran for
175 yards and two second.,)lalf
touchdowns Saturday to lead
eighth·ranked Ohio State to a
24-3 ~lg Ten victory over
Purdue.
The triumph was the fifth
against one loss and a tie for
the Buckeyes, who lost
outstanding sophomore
quarterback Rod Gerald for
the season whtn he suffered
three broken ribs late in the
first period.
Senior Jim Pacenta, who
took over for Gerald, had
tr~uble getting the Ohio Stille
offense rolling during most of
the second and third quarters.

Bul, paced by the running
of the 5-10, 182-pound L~ga.n,
the Buckeyes scored ttu'ee
touchdowns in just over six
minutes after Purdue's Rock
Supan kicked_ ~ Jl·yarq field
gpailo lie the score 3-3 early
in the third Quarter. ·
Logan ran 11 yards up the
middle to cap an 80-yard Ohio
State diive fo r the Buckeyes'
first TD. After fullback Pete
Johnson scored his 12th
touchdown of the year from
the two to make it 17-3, Logan
ran 29 yards to score his
second t~uchdown set up by a
pass interception by defensive end Bob Brudzinski, his
s,econd of.!he day, .

BVDALERO'niGEBJR.
Supan's field goal came
So
the
Yollit.ees'
fiery ma_nager Billy Martin says the Big
after the Boilermakers, now
Red
Machine
from
Cincinnati
is anything but awesom uh ...,
3-4 overall and 2-2 In the Big
Well,
1118Ybe
Mr.
Martin
ahould
consider he and his ill! II club
Ten, recovered Rim Spring's
fwnble of the opening se~!lltd· ·were just lucky ~ be playing such a "GREAT " club as the
half klekoff on the Ohio State Reds . If the current Cin cinnati 'Reds club doesn't go down In
19. And another fumble by history as one of the best ever In ba seball something is wron g, I ·
Logan
which
Purdue know , the lirst thing the Yanks, the American and National
League experts say Is that Ute Reds' pitching is suapect, There
rec~vered on the Ohio State
aren't
any big game winners. There is tiO S3 million-&lt;lollnr
II nearly proved disastrous to
Catfish
Hunter, no $250,000 a-year Tom Seaver, n~ $-175,000
the Buckeyes. B.ut the
Steve
Carleton
, no $150,000 Don Sutton, but when the season
defense held and Supan
ends
with
102
wins
and only 60 defeats in regular season play ,
missed a 27·yarll field goal
three straight victories in the playoffs and an impressive
try.
Gerald, Ohio State's third- World Series championship, someone on the staff must be
1eague rusher and No. 2 getting the ball over the plate. Yes, the Reds•pllching staH at
S(.'&lt;lrer with sili touchdowns, times does not look tha t impressive, but overall, you must
was injured on an option run agree, they get the job done. Ha11ng seven I !).game winners on
when he was tackled from mediocre staff isn 't bad. I agree. Where would the Reds be if
they had a Torn Soaver, Steve Cw-ieton or lUmdy .Jones 1 Who
behind .
knows, maybe sitting at home watching the World S~rles on TV
just like the Mei.s, Phils; and Padres, etc.. etc., etc.
With Don Gullett 's future wwer1I1in, lle&lt;f.ol ' Pr;:sldcnt Bob
· ·Howse til muy have to swing u major &lt;ill al to ~ct a big pitcher to
replace Gullett.
•
Howel'er, knowing Howsam, he will not lt'ade for a pitcher
~f that caliber who could win 20 games annually, but in U1e long
run cost the Reds something else, Pill DE , togeU1erness ond a
strong desire to exL'Cli.
There is no fig htin g among the super star Reds, there ure
no cliques, no malcontent.s and no Riehle, (excuse me) Dick
Aliens. Discipline is the name of the game and two people,
Howsam and fi eld manager Spnrky Anderson, lead In thnt
department
The Cincinnati Reds organization is built IU'Ound discipline,
when the reserves ran out the l~yalty ond d"dlcatlon . It is successful becuuse tite Reds'
clock . '
owners and administrative staff go out of their wuy to help
Michigan now has.- a 7~ their fans . 'Ilteir sponsorship of various fan prom~tlon.• Is a
record, including four wins in major reason why attendance figures at. Riverfront have ;·lsen
a row in conference play.
above all other clubs In the major leagues. The Cincinnati
Indiana, which slipped to 2- organization has excelled in promoting baseball as u fun,
2 in the Big Ten and 3-1 fa mllygnme, devoted lO tile int erest of Its fans through~ut the
overall, never penetrated Ohio, Indiana , West Virglniu and Kentucky areas .
Michigan's 31).yard line .
If you don't believe tlmt , go to Cincinnati some weekend
Leach thr ew only four and see the number of out-&lt;&gt;f-slBte und other than Hamlllon
passes in the ga me but hit on County cars.
all of them. He passed for 103
Better ye t, try to get a model room without reservailons!
y -ut threw only once in
In winning their second straight World Championship , the
the first half - a nine-yard Reds proved again they are a b't'eat ball club . They hit U1e bull
scoring play to Gene Johnson hard, played their usunl sound defense, and got good pitching
for a 21.0 halftime lead.
from starters and relievers, Jack Billingham and Will
Leach's other touchdown McEnaney, two of the pitching dlsappolntment.s during tho
toss was 15 yards to fullback year, both come through in fine fashion.
·
Russell Davis, who also
Some , people said winning the World Sor ies w1'" antiscore.d the first touchdown in climatic compure&lt;! to. the playoff with tho Philadelphia
the opening period from the Phillies . To some degree, especially after watching the
one, climaxing an 88-ya rd Yankees, one would have to agree. The Phlis jllainiy were th~
march.
second best team In baseball this year.
·
Rob Lytle, who gained 175
The only sad thing about wrapping the series up early In
yards in 25 carries, scored New York was not being able to see Ute Rt&lt;ls take it in
Michigan 's second touch- Riverfront. But, after the winter 's snow is metllld by the sprinR
down on alB-yard run and the sun , our heart, mind, and body will return for otlother
other touchdown came on a championship season at Riverfront.
one-ya rd run by Harlan
You can bet this one too will belong to the Reds.
Huckleby in the third period.
LOOSE NOTES- From all Indications Tony Perez, the
Michigan converted an fun-loVing, all-time RBI leader of the Reda may not be wiUt the
Indiana fumble ~nd a pass cluti in 1977. Rumors are flowing that Perez will go to make
interception - first in the room for this year's highly successful designated hitter, Dan
opening period and then in Driessen.
the third - Into touchdowns.
.u that happens, we sincerely ~ope the Reds get equal
Scott Arnett completed five value and wish Tooy every success in lhe world.
of 12 passes for 63 yards for
Being one of lhe so-called "blind me in blue" I mUBt
the Hoosiers but had two comment on Billy Martin's ouster In tim ninth innning of the
throws intercepted.
final game .
Mike Harkrader, a fresh·
Martin, who goes all out to Irritate the opposition and
man tailback who led Indiana wnpires, really let go In the hinth on a pitch called a ball by
to vi cto ries over Norih· home plate ump Bill Deega n, an American League arbitrator,
western and l~wa, was held
Martin's frustration over his team's lack of pluy could
to 65 yards rushing in I~ at· possibly excUBe his madness, but his continued verbal a~use
tempts.
and his act of throwing a baseball at the home plate ump could
It was the seventh straight not be tolerated .
Michigan triumph over InIt Is surprising tha t Marlin lnsted as long as he did after
diana and was witnessed by disputing umpire Deegan 's ancestry.
only 30,416 fans on a cold and
According to first base umpire Bruc'e · (Spanky )
wet day .
·
Froemming, "I threw o ball out of play and Watched it go into
the Yankee dugout. Martin grabbed the ball and threw it back
out on the field at home plate umpire Bill Deegan I told him
we have a riot situation herein New York and he knew it. When
he came out to argue, I told him there was ·a possible riot
sltualloo and he left."
Spanky , at Urnes, may be a little quick on the trigger, but
he co.n~ol s the game like It should be. _
You may recall earlier this year, Froemming threw
second string catcher Bill Plummer out ~f a game at
Montreal after he relieved John 'Bench. It forced Sparky·
Anderson t~putroo kie Joel Youngblood behind the pla te.
Again; congratulations to the world champs and many.
many thanks for the thrills provided ·this season .

Michigan cops
seventh, 35-0 ·

ld erl"es
WJ:or
W 4
U

1

next year. "
Tony Perez, a long time
. homet.lwn favorite, drew the
loudest cheers as he puffed on
a big cigar, tipped his huge
white straw bat and issued a
declaration
in
two
languages.
"We're No. 1/' he yelled ,
then added in his native
Spanish, "Nwnero Uno."
Pete Rose; wearing a long
leather coat over his yellow
turtle neck sweater; asSured
the CincinnatianS, "This is
the baseball capital of the
world, with the greatest fans
of all time.
"It 's a tremendoUs feeling
to parade in this town,"
added Rose. "It's just the
way it ahould be in the
baseball capital"-~"" · Rose also said the fourga me sweep over the
Yankees was not as exciting
as last year's World Series
triumph over Boston that
BLOOMINGTON, IND .
went the full seven games.
"I couldn't get turned on (UP!) - Sophomore qua r·
about the World Series this terback Rick Leach passed
ye'a r ,'' complained Rose. for two touchdowns to spark
"We thought we'd get better top-ranked Michigan to a 35.0
competition than the .Yankees Big Ten victory m•cr Indiana
provided."

Yankees.

future."

ear
,Y
'

Yes!

Rutland has
furnishings for
every room
in the House
except this ONE.

SAVE

YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
ES
ES
ES
ES
ES

ti

Iii

i

~II&amp;. .

MATAGS

8

&gt;;::,

•z

a=

Ill ,

....
~I:

::::»

·. 35,000 fans help Reds
celebrate .'76 crown

Sports
Desk

in steady rain Saturday.
So overwhelming were the
No, !·ranked Wolverines that
they were not forced to punt
until the final minute of play

Ohio Bobcats·
beaten, 20-0
ATHI':NS, Ohio tUPI )- A
stingy Willi am &amp; Mary
defense co mbined with
sophomore
quarterback
Tommy Rozantz, whose 96
rushing yards set up three
touchdo~11 s, to spoil Ohio
University's homecoming 21).
0 Saturday.
It was the first time Ohio
has been shut out at home
since 1965. •
htdians defenders kept con, stant
pressure
on
quarterback Andy Vetter .
They sac ked Ohio signal
callers eight times for 99

FOOTBALL
NFL Standings
United Press Internat ional
America n Confer ence
Ea st
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Ba lti more
5 1 0 .833 183 114
New England 4 2 o .667 172 1'22
Buffal o
7 4 O.J33 t l 5 117
Miami
7 4 0 .333 11 9 130
NY Jcts
15016750172
Central
W. L. T. Pet. pF . PA
Cincinnati
4 2 0 .667 ld4 !!9
Houston
4 2 0 .667 121 76
Clevel and
3 3 0 .SOO 127 170
Pi tt sburgh
2 4 O.J33 1J 1 116
Wesr
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Oakland
5 1 0 .833 130 137
4 2 o .667 143 120
San Diego
Denver
3 J 0 .500 136 57
Kansas City 2 4 0 .J3J 124 178
Tampa Bay o 6 0 .ooo J6 133
National con ference
East
W. L. T . Pet. PF . PA
Dallas
5 1 o .833 ISO as
St. Louis
5 1 0 .833 164 119
Washino ton A 2 Q .667 127 114
Philadelphia 7 •t 0 .333 85 128
NY Giants
0 6 .o .000 70 138
Cent ra l
W. L . T Pet. PF . P A
Min'nesora
5 0 1 .917 121 60
Ch icago
3 ' 3 0 .500 93 72
Gr een Bay
3 3 0 .500 100 130
DeTroiT
2 4 o .J33 87 !14
w est
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Sa n Franc lsc 5 1 U .IIJJ 141 63
LOS Angeles 4 1 I .750 11 5 90
New Or leans 2 4 0 .J33 101 145
Atlanta
1 5 0 .167 M 118
Seattle
l 5 0 .167 98 163
Sunday's Game'S
Baltimor e at N Y Jets
Ct-ti cago at Dallas
Cin.cinnati at H Ouston
Denver al Kan sas City
Detroit at Seatt le
Gr een Bay at Oak land
Los A n t;~ at New Orleans
Miami at Tampa Bay
r.'linnesota at Ph i ~ade lph i a
New England at Buffalo
Pi!1Sburgl1 at N Y Glan !s
San Diego at Cleveland
(On ly games sc heduled )
~v

yards In losses . ..
William &amp; Mary scored
with :44 left in first quarter
when j uni~r fullback Keith
~· imian capped a 71).yard
drive by going over from the
one-yard line.
The visitors, a-.2, scored
again at 11 :01 of the third
period when junior tailback
Jimmy Kruis raced 1~ yards
to make the score 1~.
The last tally of the game
came at 3:16 of the fourth
frame when ~oph o mor~
tailbac k Jeff Vanderbee k
Look the ball in from the twoyard line,
'
Bubcats junior lBilbBck Ar•
nold Welcher, the nation's
ninth-leading rush er, was
held to 31 yards. He didn't see
action in the second half
because of a bruised ankle.
The Bobcats, also 5-2, made
their deepest penetration to
the Indians seven-yard line in
the third quarter, but an
incompiete fourth-down ,pass
gave the ball back to William
&amp; Mary.
Officials called 21 penalties
for 218 yards.

Den Talk

New hunters

laws reviewed

BY GREG BAILEY
POMEROY- As I crawlee) out of bed, shivering with the
cold yet not noticing, I dldn 't even have second thoughts as to
why . It was an hour before daylight, but the antlciplition and
heart{humping excitement made me oblivious to the hour.
My head was full of visions of my traps all holding a
quality catch, attesting to my knowledge of the anbnals I
sought. Deep down inside I knew that some of my traps would
be empty (maybe all of them!) but the eagerness of the first
day of trapping season blinded me from tlie true facts.
Days of biting winds , nearly bare trees, times that the air
Is steel-gray cold, and still, frosty mornings. All point to the
coming winter and the time for trawing. The trapper's life Is a
solitary one, 'but he wouldn't have It any other way. The
solitude is part ~f the intrigue that is keeping this ancient art
alive (and it is an art! ) The old-timer aro any knowledgable
trawer already has hiS traps waxed and prepared for the
coming season . Keep In mind, sp~rtsmen, that the anti people
are picking on Uie trappers. And you trapper, do It right this
year so the anti people won 't have any fuel. Ask permission
from
!he landowners, check y~ur traps regularly , and be
Monday's Games
humane, .
S t. Louis at Wash, night
(Only game sch eduled )
I'd like to call your attention to some new laws this year.
Once again , it seems that some of you need to be reminded that
there is to be absolutely no spotting of deer, The law states, "It
is illegal to cast an artificial light intl) any woodland, farmlot ,
or field from ·a motor vehicle." If y~u do, you 're going to get
"pinched." It 's all rl~t tAl fox call as long as y~u have
permission, have a license, and are abiding by ail laws. .
· NAVY ROUTED
Anpther new law makes It a first degree misdemeanor
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UP!) - when a person who has had his license revoked taketl to the
Pittsburgh tailback Tony field, You could be fined a maximum of $1,000 and six months
Do~sett broke former Ohio in jail.
'
State star
Archie
Griffin's
'
.
.'Those
Of
you
wbo
take
udvantage
of the State's primitive
r
.
..
major college career rushing '. hunts must remember that thi s year It's for bucks only ,
record Saturday when he Another change is that there Is to be noSuroay fox hunting .
rambled 1110 yards and scored
Don't forget to send in your antlerIeos deer appllc,atlons.
three touchdowns to pace the · ·
Congratulatioos to the Big Bend Basa Anglers Club. Their
St'Cond·ranked Panthers to BASS Tournament was a huge success. That remind• me - I
theii· seventh s tra i~ht vic· haven't wet a line for awhile and I'll bet if I sneak to my
tot')! , ' 45.0 rout of Navy.
favorite hole I just might tangle with a lunker. Gone Fishin'!

Saturday's grid scores
United PresS International
New Hamp. 35 Nor theastern

21

'

Penn St. 33 West Virg inia 0

Rutgers 47 Columbia 0
Boslon U . 36 Rhode Island
Boslon Col. 27 Army 10

Br ockp9rt St . 29 Oswego
Br own 28 Holy Cross 18
Connecticu t 28 MasS. 6

0

St . 7 ·

Howar'd 21 N. C. A&amp; T 21
Maryland 30 Duke 3
Richmo nd 13 Furm an 9
VIrginia Tec h 41 Kent St. 14
Virgi nia 18 Wake Forest 17
Ohio ~ o rlher n t3 Cap it ol tl

Miami (Oh io) 9 Bowling
Green 7

Ohio St. 24 Purdue 3
Wi ttenber g 33 Wooster 0
&amp; Mary 20 Ohi~ U.
Fr amingham 20 Boston St .
Harvard 20 Princ e ton 14

St. Peler 's 79 Stony Brook 8 Willi am
St.

Lawr ence 27 Hamilt on 6
Syracuse 24 Temple 16
Villanova 34 Youngstown 14

Western Conn . 9 Coast Guard

0

Yale 21 Penn 7
N. Carolina 12 E , Carolina tO
Notr e Dame 13 S. Carol ina 6

Georg ia Tech 28 Tu lane 16

0

0

Indiana (Pa .) 16 Clarion St .
14

Colg ale 24 Lafay ette 14
Dar tmo uth 35 Cor nell ( NY 1 0
Pittsburg h 45 Navy 0
Tufts 2t Williams 7
VMI 10 Delaware 6

. LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
GYM AND POOL
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Oct. 25 8-!0p.m. College~.
8-10p.m. Open Swim
Oct. 26 8:31).10 p.m. Open Rec.
8:3().190 p.m. Open SWbn
Oct. 27 Z-4 p.m. Senior Citizens Program .
CWSED
· 5-9 p.m. Girls High School Volleyball .
Sectional
Oct. 28 8-10 p.m. College Rec.
CLOSED
Oct. 29 8-10 p.m. Family Rec.Nlght
8-10 p.m. Family
RecreaUon Night
Oct. 3(! I p.m.-IUo Cross-country vs.
CLOSED
Walsh and Cuyahoga
Community College
2 p.m.- Rio Volleyvall vs.
Mt. Vernon Nazarene
u p.m.-Girls High School
I"
Volleyball Sectional
Oct. 31-2-4 p.m. Open Rec .
2-4 p.m. Open SWim
8-10 p.m. College Rec.
11-lO p.m. Open SWbn

'

,.

�',

•

1~1ne .iitmaaY 't'lmes,Sentlnel, SWlday , Oct: 24, 1976

Bucks win,
Gerald hurt

1\.B-Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Suroay, Oct. 24, 1976

...

- -

·~·

~

Q

8t;

z
~
....
1-

... .

11111111

I:);:)

AND AJUMBO BURGER to go, please. This doulile-&lt;lecker is being towed across Hong
Kong's Victoria Harbor to K'Owloon to be used as a display for a new restaurant.

voter.apathy .
high in nation·

SOFA-CHAIR
REFRIGERATORS
GAS RANGES

By CLAY RICHARDS
has signed up 3 million new
United Press InternaUonal
voters.
V.oter apathy is high in this
They point to California ,
bicontennial election year, a where they've signed up
nationwide sur~y shows, but 416,1Xi0new voters--a margin
a Democratic registration greater than that whi~h John
drive and a Republicun Kennedy
and
Hubert
telephone bank get-out{he- Humphrey lost the stale to ·
vote effort may prevent a Richard Nixon in )960 and
tecord low turnout.
1963.
Party officials surveyed
Republicans say their 6,000
nationwide by . UP! sa id telephones nationwide will
voters have been turned off make 10 million calls by
by Watergate and other election day--a $3 million
scandals. They said there is effort to reach voters
lack of enthusiasm for either Ulrge ted as favorable to their
President Ford or Jimmy party.
Carter --along with the Jack
A record 92 million Ameriof emotional issues like cans registered to vote in
Vietnam.
1972, but that dropped to 86
Democrats and million by the start of the
Republicans alike fear the primary season this year. But
turnout may fall below the 55 both parties believe a record
per cent mark or 1972-and number will be eligible by
perhaps for the first time fall Election Day.
below a majority of those of
There are ah estimated !50
voting age,
million Americans of voter
Countering those fears are age, compared with 140
voter registration figures million four years ago.
near or higher than 1972
The only stales showing a
levels in nearly every major decline in voter regislrati,?'! ·
state - with
two
big were New York and
exceptions, California and California and to a small
New York.ln those two states extent, Oklah o ma,
1.5 million voters- many of Pennsylvania, Ne~raska and
them 18 to 21 year olds the District of Columbia.
eligible for th.e ir first
Apathy does not seem ,to be
presidential election in 1972--. a major problem in every
have been stricken from the state. Election and party
rolls.
officials In 20 states- most of
The Democrats have made . them small or medium
a major ·push for voter sized-said they e&lt;pected a
registration this year- good turnout, often spurred
figuring 90 per cent of newly by hot loca I con tests.
registered voters come out on
Those stales where apathy
election day and the vast was not reported a problem
major ity of them vote were : Arizona , Arkansas,
Democratic. The party drive Colorado, Co nnec tic ut,

Black naouun1ers
are fired up
lly JOHN PLATIER
JOHANNESBURG IUPI)
- South African riot squads
Saturday opened fire on black
mourners who turned a
schoolgirl's funeral in the
black ghetto of Soweto into a
demonstration, killing one
bla ck demonstrator and
wounding another.
Assistant p olice

nation's racial unrest Lhat

began June 16 in Soweto and
spread to all major centers.
The crowd ~at hered outside
the home of the dead girl's
parents where they and relatives were mourning. Kriel
named the dead girl as Ann
Kwnalo but he did not know
whether she was a victim of
earlier police action. The
commissioner in charge of funerals for such victims
nationwide riot control, Maj . repeatedly have sparked off
Gen. Dawld Kriel, said the trouble.
police "acted in self defense"
Police arrested 115 demonto ward off a crowd of about
strators on the spot and took
1,000 demonstrators who them off to detention, Kriel
refused to disperse during the said. An hour after the
wake of the black girl's flareup , all was reported
funeral.
quiet and. ·Kr iel said no
Kriel said the incident, in further unrest was. expected
the · heart of the alJ.black in Soweto.
suburb of Soweto 15 miles
Witness reports said the
southwest of Johannesburg, police squads drove up in six
was the worst since mid- cars and began ordering the
September when police last crowd to leave. They said the
reported killing rioters mourners, inside a house, and
during sustained anligovern· persons outside, did not act
ment unrest sweeping South threateningly toward the
Africa.
.
police. They said Miss
The fitality raised to 37:1 Kumalo 's death was not
the number killed in the connected with the unrest.

ZENITH TV·STEREO

• RECLINERS
ELECTRIC RANGE
MICROWAVE RANGES
BOX SPRING &amp; MATTRESS
DISHWASHERS
USED APPLIANCES
DINING ROOM SUITES .

•-'

EASY DOES IT for a
work crew lowering a
section of th e Alaska
pipeline into a trench.
Work on t~ e line, which
will rwt some 800 miles,
·alternately burled and
elevated above th• t ..11dra
from the North Slope oil
fields to Port· Valdez,
continues despite leakage
problems.
Delaware, Hawaii , Kan~as
!Robert Dole's home state ),
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
Massachusetts, Michigan
!Ford's , home
state) ,
Minnesota (Walter Mondaie's
home state), Montana, New
Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, UlBh ,
West Virginia and Wyoming .
Oddly it does seem to be a
problem in Jimmy Carter's
home state of Georgia, where
the turnout was predicted to
be only about 50 per cent ,
compared with the 68 per ce nt
who turned out in 1964 to vote
heavily for Barry Goldwater.
"The people are turned off ,
fed up with politics and
politicians, tired of voting
and being disappointed," said
Herb Harmon , Florida's GOP
executive director .
"I've seen more apathy this
year than ever before," said
Rep. Neal Smith, D-Iowa.
"There's general · apathy
about the election because of
Watergate and various
government activities that
have turned people off," said
Bill Sponsler, executive
director of the Missouri
De mo c rati c S t ate
Committee.
"I don l see the enthusiasm
I saw in '68 or '60 - I don't
think Carter and Ford have
genera ted the enthusias m
that Kennedy and Nixon or
Nixon and Humphrey did ."
More people are telling
Ebna·Turner , who heads the
GOP phone bank· in Reno,
Nev., they are going to vote
for "none of the above"
because "it's the fad this
political season."
When Democra tic sta te
director William Hodge was
asked about apathy in North
Carolina, he sa id : " It's
leading" both Ford and
Carter.

BOTTLE GAS

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. Jl YRS.DEPENDABLE

1

29

Complete Stock Men's

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lor the Deal
ol a Lifetime!

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Silver Bridge Plaza

.,

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Only

Mon. thru Sat. 19 til9
Sunday 1 til S

•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - It
was football weather, but for
35,000 e~eited fans, baseball
definitely was still in the air.
A jubilant but orderly
crowd of 35,000 shrugged off.
39 degree temperatures •and
chill winds tAl give the world
champion Cincinnati Reds a
11
red hot" welcome home
Friday.
.
· Baek.from New York. after
sweeping the World Series
from the Yarikees, the Reds
obViowily enjoyed their red
carpet treatment- riding in a
confettlstrewn parade and
being guests of honor at a
rally.
"I couldn't get too excited
last night in New York,"
Reds' second baseman Joe
Morgan told the crowd.
"They (New York fans) were
very uncouth. But coming
back here and ,parading

~

•

around this town makes it
exciting again .
"We have the greatest fans
and the greatest baseball
team in the world, i.• Morgan
added to the delight of the
throng. ·
·
Bundled up In heavy coats,
Reds' players rode in open
jeeps over a mile-and-ball
parade route. The crowd, also
wrapped in winter clothes,
lined the streets to cheer their
heroes and .then waited .
patienJ.!y to hear the players'
comments at a rally at jampacked Fountain Square.
Johnny Bench, decked out
In a broad-brimmed black
hat, led the jubilant fans in a
long cheer off "We're No. 1."
"Thanks for staying with us
through thick and thin,"
Bench, th e Series' Most ·
Valuable Player, told the
crowd. "We'll try lo be back

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

YES

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

YES

Yank boss says

YES

NO

'We'll be hack'

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO ·-

NO

shocked by UJe Reds' easy

NO

triw:nph overtheYan kees buY
Steinbrermer insisted "things
'II b d'ff
t · th
WI
e 1 eren In
e

NO

~
~

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI)
George Steinbrenner, chief
owner of the New York
Yankees , had a message
today for the Ciricinnati' Reds
and the rest ~f the baseball
world:
"We'll be back," predicted
Steinbrenner, whose Yankees
were swept in four games by
the Reds in the World Series,
Bl1d We WOn 't be rookies."
Yankee and American
League Officials were

•

11

s

fi·octs ·figu ...e·s

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

XES

YES

NO

NO

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

10

6

"We jw;t got a taste of the

World Series this time," he
said. "We have no alibi and
We hope Our opponents 0 f the
future W6n't have any when
they lose.
11
We'll be better next
year," he added. "We'll have
more experience and maybe
we'll try harder. Don 't forget
that we won a pennant this
year after finishing anywhere
from 10 t0 11:"games 00t 0 f
first place for years . That's
an accomplishment and our
,players don't have a thing to

•

apologi~efor."

.·

· '

,

. NEW YORK , ( UPI ) World Series (recor ds set' and
tied l by the Cincinnati Reds
and New York Yankees .
·
4 gan.H.&gt; series:
I ndividual:
· Mos t Putout s , L eflfielder .
Ga me
8 - George Foster . Cin . 10 ·
21·76
'
Mos t

Chances

Accept ed .

Leflf lelder . .Gam e
8 - Georg e Fos ter , Cin .
MosT Ass ists . catcher ,
Se rie s
7 ~ Thurman Munson , N .

y

Mo sl Sav eS·, Ser ies
2 ·- Wi l l M c Enaney . Cin .
T eam .
Most DoUbl es , Ser ies
10 - Cincin n at"i
MoST Triples , Ser ies
3 - Cinc inn ati
Most Tr iples, Bolh Teams,
Serie s
• 4 - Cinci nn ati 3, New York
1
Fewes T Sac rif i ces , Both
Tea m s, Series
o- Cinci nnati o, New Yo rk
0
Most Sacr ifice Flies , Both
Tea ms , Ser ies
J - · Cincihnati2, New York

ThW'IJ'Uin Munson, the YanMost Saves, Ser ies
kees ' hero in defeat, agreed
2 - Cincinnati
and history also supports
Most Saves. Both Teams,
Seri es
·
·
Steinbrenner's.. contention
2 - Cl ncinn ali2 , New Y or k
that .the Yankees will be 0
Few.esi Saves, Se r ies
heard from again-soon . ,
0 ..,._ New York
"Mr. Steinbrennerwentout
Fewest Com pl ete Games ,
and bOught a team and that Both Teams, Series
1 - Ci ncinna ti o, f&gt;jew York
made some people mad, " 1.
said Munson, who batted .529
Most"cau~ht Stea l ing , Bo th
· th Se · "W 1 st · f
Teams, Ser 1es
m e r1es. eo m our
,. 7 - · Cincinnali 5, New Yor k
straight
and
that 1s 2.
embarrassing but he didn't
Most Double Pla ys , Both
Teams , Ser ies
kick us when we were down.
10 N ew York 6, Cin ·
ht fact, he looked like a clnnati •·
wiruler in our losing dressing . Se~i~~h es t Ga t e R ece ipts ,
r(Xlm .11

•

•

, Manylosersoffourstralght
Series games have corqe
bakto
k
th b t
C , ran among e es
teams in the game's historY
as follows:
""'
- .1.11e 1963 Yankees · tost
the Series in four straight to
the Los Angeles Dodgers but
Won the pennant the next ·
.

52 .498,416 .69 .
Most Lo ng H it s, Ser ies
17 ""' Cinc innati .
Team -Ser ie s

Oecords5et

,

I '

6 - Th urman Mun son , New
Y orK
Most Sing les, Game
AThu rma n Mun son . New
York 10 21 76
Most Steal s , Serie s
2
Joe Morgan , Ciocinnati
Cesar
Geron im o. Ci n ·
c inna ti
Mo st Double Play s Sl a r ted .

Firs! Ba seman, Seri es
· 1 - Tony Per e1, Cin ci n na ti
Most
Pulouts.
Sec on d
Bas!"ma n, Series
13 Joe Morg an . Cin ·
c innat i
Mos t
Errors ,
Sec ond
Basem an ,· Ser ies
2 -.' Joe Mo r gan , Ci n c innati
Mo st Doubl e Play s St arl ed ,
Th ird Bas em an , Game
2 Gr aig Nettl es, New
York 10· 19 76
Mo s t
Er To r s. Pil c h er .
Seri es
I - Pat Za chry . Cin c innati
Most Doubles , Inning
1- L ou Pinietta , New York
10 16 I 2nd )
Tony Perez , Cincinnati 10.
16 14th !
O:s.car G eronimo , Ci n
cinnati 10.10 ( 7 1 ~ ; 10.21 (9th )
Da n Dr iessen. Cinc innati
10-17 (2nd l ; 10
' Johnn y Bench , Cinc innaTi
10 17 ( 2nd)
,
Fr ed STanley, New YorK 10.
11 O th l
George FOst er , Cin e innat i
10· 19 !2r:~d l
Joe Mo r g an, Cincinnati 10
19 18th }
Pe te Rose , Cinci nnati :r. 21
er st )
Chr is Chambliss. New Y or k
10.21 ( Is! I
,
Dav e Conce pcio n . Ci n
cinnati 10·21 (9th )
M os t T r iples , Inn ing
1 -· Daye Concepcion .
Cin ci nna t i 10 · 16• (3rd l
E ll iot! Maddo x. New Yor k
10-16 !5th)
Johnny Ben c h. Cin c inn ati
16 16 ll&gt;h 1
J rz~orga n , crnci nn a_' .L 10.
17
Mos t Home Runs , Inning
1 -· Joe Mo r gan. Cinc inn ati
10. 16 ( 1st )
Dan · Driessen, Cinci nnat i
1019 ( dlhl
Jirn Mason , .N ew Yor k 10 .19

Most AI Bats , Tota l Series
5,635 New Yo r.k ( 30 series)
O th l
Most Runs. Total Series
Johnn y Be nch , Cinci nnat i
754 N ew York (30 series)
10 21 (4 t h &amp; 9th)
Most Hits, Total Series
Most Sacr i fic e Flies , Inning
1. ~04 N ew York 130 series )1 Gr aig Net lies , N ew
Mo st Long H i ts, Total
York 10· 16 (2nd)
Series
Pete Rose , Cincinneti 10· 16
408 N ew York 130 se ries)
(Jrd )
MOSl Total Ba ses, Total
,Ken Griffey , Cincinnati 10 .
Ser ies
17 I 2nd )
'2, 186 New Yor k (J O series )
Most Hit BaTsmen , Inn ing
Most Sing les , Tot&lt;! ! Series
I :'"· Chris Cha"mbliss, New
996. New Yo rk (30 series)
York 10· 16 ( 7th )
~ost Doubl es , Total Seri es
M ost Caugh r St ea l ing ,
198 - N ew York (30 s.er ies )
Ser ies
•
Most Home Runs. Total
2 - Gt orgc Foster . Cin
series
ci nn aTi
16 4 - N ew Yo rk (30 se ries)
. Mosr Caughr Sl ca 'l ing ,
Most Run s Batted In , Total
Inn ing
se ries
I , Ton y· Perez , Ci nc inn a ti
110 - New York (3 0 se rieSI
1016 ( tst l
Most Sacrifice Flies, Total
M ic key R ivers , New York
Seri es
10 16 (6th )
·
11 - N ew Yo rk { 10 series)
Grio rge Foster , Cinci nnat i
Most Walk s. Tota l Ser ies .10.11 ( 211dl
585 - NeW York (30 se ri es)
Johnny Be nch , Cinci nna ti
Most H it Bats m en , Total
10 -19 ( 4th )
series
Gral g Net tles , New Yor k

- TI)e 1939 Reds lost to the
Yankees in four straight but
· th
won the WorldSe nes enext
year.
- The 1932 Chicago Cubs
.were swept by the Yankees
but essentially the saMe
. team
won the pennant in 1935.
- The 1928Sl. LouisCardl· f
np;ls were Whipped m OUf
straight by tile Yankees but
won , National League
peMants in -1930 and 1931.
- The 1922 Yankees· lost
ilo~t N ~~r~o:o~: ~~ s~~r~~ 10J~J;'h~onccp cion . Ci n
four in a t'OW (one tie) to the Series
cinnatj 10·21 O lh l
New York Giants but in 1923' 885 - New York 130 series&gt; ·
Tea m.
Most Chanc es Accepted , ·
Mo s 1 'se r ie s Lo st
bega n t~ir string of 20 world Tota
l Ser ies
10 - New York
championships through 1962.
6.303 - New· York 30 s~riesl
Mo st J Game Series Los!
't Tig
Mosl Putouts, Tota l Ser ies ·.. 2 • New York
- Th e 1907 Detr01
ers
~.503 - New York {30
Most Caugh J Sl ealing ,
lost four in a row (one Ue ) to series J
Seri 'e s
.
the Cubs but won the
Mosl Assi sts, Total Ser ies
.~
Cincinnat i
. American League pennant
1,798 ••·
New Yor~
fJ P
Fewest Pinc h hillers Used ,
st'r ie s )
.
Sl•ri es
the nert tWO seasons.
Most . Error s, Total Ser ies
0
Cinci nnati
'So, while the Reds staged
1:11
N~w York (30 series)
' ~· ewesr
Pinch r un tru ~
Most Double Play s, T o t~!
used. S~ ri es '
their Victory party Friday Ser ie s
0
Ci nci rinatl 0 New Yo r k.
• night and ~e champagne
t50 - New York 130 ser ieSl G .
.
'wortd .Series
r ew cs t Comple te Games,
Oowfd freely, lhe ambitions
Rec ord Ti ed
~f:r ic~
of the Steinbrenner.Qabe 4 g'ame s.er ies
0
Cincinnati
Paul-Billy
Ma ·rtln
Individual :
Mo s t Pit(h er s U!-ic d . Both
Most H its , Game
Teams , b \)rie s
t.riwnvirate and the gatne's
~ Thur m an Munson , N ew
1.1 \..;
Cll'it:i nna ti 1. New
history suggests that they York 10 2176
Yo c k ,
Mos t Con secut i Ye H its ,
H l&lt;!h &lt;'S I Ba lling A v c ro~~ 11 c ,
haven 't heard the last of t,f1e seri es
"' " r i f",
\

COLUMllUS, Ohio (UPI )Tailback Jeff Logan ran for
175 yards and two second.,)lalf
touchdowns Saturday to lead
eighth·ranked Ohio State to a
24-3 ~lg Ten victory over
Purdue.
The triumph was the fifth
against one loss and a tie for
the Buckeyes, who lost
outstanding sophomore
quarterback Rod Gerald for
the season whtn he suffered
three broken ribs late in the
first period.
Senior Jim Pacenta, who
took over for Gerald, had
tr~uble getting the Ohio Stille
offense rolling during most of
the second and third quarters.

Bul, paced by the running
of the 5-10, 182-pound L~ga.n,
the Buckeyes scored ttu'ee
touchdowns in just over six
minutes after Purdue's Rock
Supan kicked_ ~ Jl·yarq field
gpailo lie the score 3-3 early
in the third Quarter. ·
Logan ran 11 yards up the
middle to cap an 80-yard Ohio
State diive fo r the Buckeyes'
first TD. After fullback Pete
Johnson scored his 12th
touchdown of the year from
the two to make it 17-3, Logan
ran 29 yards to score his
second t~uchdown set up by a
pass interception by defensive end Bob Brudzinski, his
s,econd of.!he day, .

BVDALERO'niGEBJR.
Supan's field goal came
So
the
Yollit.ees'
fiery ma_nager Billy Martin says the Big
after the Boilermakers, now
Red
Machine
from
Cincinnati
is anything but awesom uh ...,
3-4 overall and 2-2 In the Big
Well,
1118Ybe
Mr.
Martin
ahould
consider he and his ill! II club
Ten, recovered Rim Spring's
fwnble of the opening se~!lltd· ·were just lucky ~ be playing such a "GREAT " club as the
half klekoff on the Ohio State Reds . If the current Cin cinnati 'Reds club doesn't go down In
19. And another fumble by history as one of the best ever In ba seball something is wron g, I ·
Logan
which
Purdue know , the lirst thing the Yanks, the American and National
League experts say Is that Ute Reds' pitching is suapect, There
rec~vered on the Ohio State
aren't
any big game winners. There is tiO S3 million-&lt;lollnr
II nearly proved disastrous to
Catfish
Hunter, no $250,000 a-year Tom Seaver, n~ $-175,000
the Buckeyes. B.ut the
Steve
Carleton
, no $150,000 Don Sutton, but when the season
defense held and Supan
ends
with
102
wins
and only 60 defeats in regular season play ,
missed a 27·yarll field goal
three straight victories in the playoffs and an impressive
try.
Gerald, Ohio State's third- World Series championship, someone on the staff must be
1eague rusher and No. 2 getting the ball over the plate. Yes, the Reds•pllching staH at
S(.'&lt;lrer with sili touchdowns, times does not look tha t impressive, but overall, you must
was injured on an option run agree, they get the job done. Ha11ng seven I !).game winners on
when he was tackled from mediocre staff isn 't bad. I agree. Where would the Reds be if
they had a Torn Soaver, Steve Cw-ieton or lUmdy .Jones 1 Who
behind .
knows, maybe sitting at home watching the World S~rles on TV
just like the Mei.s, Phils; and Padres, etc.. etc., etc.
With Don Gullett 's future wwer1I1in, lle&lt;f.ol ' Pr;:sldcnt Bob
· ·Howse til muy have to swing u major &lt;ill al to ~ct a big pitcher to
replace Gullett.
•
Howel'er, knowing Howsam, he will not lt'ade for a pitcher
~f that caliber who could win 20 games annually, but in U1e long
run cost the Reds something else, Pill DE , togeU1erness ond a
strong desire to exL'Cli.
There is no fig htin g among the super star Reds, there ure
no cliques, no malcontent.s and no Riehle, (excuse me) Dick
Aliens. Discipline is the name of the game and two people,
Howsam and fi eld manager Spnrky Anderson, lead In thnt
department
The Cincinnati Reds organization is built IU'Ound discipline,
when the reserves ran out the l~yalty ond d"dlcatlon . It is successful becuuse tite Reds'
clock . '
owners and administrative staff go out of their wuy to help
Michigan now has.- a 7~ their fans . 'Ilteir sponsorship of various fan prom~tlon.• Is a
record, including four wins in major reason why attendance figures at. Riverfront have ;·lsen
a row in conference play.
above all other clubs In the major leagues. The Cincinnati
Indiana, which slipped to 2- organization has excelled in promoting baseball as u fun,
2 in the Big Ten and 3-1 fa mllygnme, devoted lO tile int erest of Its fans through~ut the
overall, never penetrated Ohio, Indiana , West Virglniu and Kentucky areas .
Michigan's 31).yard line .
If you don't believe tlmt , go to Cincinnati some weekend
Leach thr ew only four and see the number of out-&lt;&gt;f-slBte und other than Hamlllon
passes in the ga me but hit on County cars.
all of them. He passed for 103
Better ye t, try to get a model room without reservailons!
y -ut threw only once in
In winning their second straight World Championship , the
the first half - a nine-yard Reds proved again they are a b't'eat ball club . They hit U1e bull
scoring play to Gene Johnson hard, played their usunl sound defense, and got good pitching
for a 21.0 halftime lead.
from starters and relievers, Jack Billingham and Will
Leach's other touchdown McEnaney, two of the pitching dlsappolntment.s during tho
toss was 15 yards to fullback year, both come through in fine fashion.
·
Russell Davis, who also
Some , people said winning the World Sor ies w1'" antiscore.d the first touchdown in climatic compure&lt;! to. the playoff with tho Philadelphia
the opening period from the Phillies . To some degree, especially after watching the
one, climaxing an 88-ya rd Yankees, one would have to agree. The Phlis jllainiy were th~
march.
second best team In baseball this year.
·
Rob Lytle, who gained 175
The only sad thing about wrapping the series up early In
yards in 25 carries, scored New York was not being able to see Ute Rt&lt;ls take it in
Michigan 's second touch- Riverfront. But, after the winter 's snow is metllld by the sprinR
down on alB-yard run and the sun , our heart, mind, and body will return for otlother
other touchdown came on a championship season at Riverfront.
one-ya rd run by Harlan
You can bet this one too will belong to the Reds.
Huckleby in the third period.
LOOSE NOTES- From all Indications Tony Perez, the
Michigan converted an fun-loVing, all-time RBI leader of the Reda may not be wiUt the
Indiana fumble ~nd a pass cluti in 1977. Rumors are flowing that Perez will go to make
interception - first in the room for this year's highly successful designated hitter, Dan
opening period and then in Driessen.
the third - Into touchdowns.
.u that happens, we sincerely ~ope the Reds get equal
Scott Arnett completed five value and wish Tooy every success in lhe world.
of 12 passes for 63 yards for
Being one of lhe so-called "blind me in blue" I mUBt
the Hoosiers but had two comment on Billy Martin's ouster In tim ninth innning of the
throws intercepted.
final game .
Mike Harkrader, a fresh·
Martin, who goes all out to Irritate the opposition and
man tailback who led Indiana wnpires, really let go In the hinth on a pitch called a ball by
to vi cto ries over Norih· home plate ump Bill Deega n, an American League arbitrator,
western and l~wa, was held
Martin's frustration over his team's lack of pluy could
to 65 yards rushing in I~ at· possibly excUBe his madness, but his continued verbal a~use
tempts.
and his act of throwing a baseball at the home plate ump could
It was the seventh straight not be tolerated .
Michigan triumph over InIt Is surprising tha t Marlin lnsted as long as he did after
diana and was witnessed by disputing umpire Deegan 's ancestry.
only 30,416 fans on a cold and
According to first base umpire Bruc'e · (Spanky )
wet day .
·
Froemming, "I threw o ball out of play and Watched it go into
the Yankee dugout. Martin grabbed the ball and threw it back
out on the field at home plate umpire Bill Deegan I told him
we have a riot situation herein New York and he knew it. When
he came out to argue, I told him there was ·a possible riot
sltualloo and he left."
Spanky , at Urnes, may be a little quick on the trigger, but
he co.n~ol s the game like It should be. _
You may recall earlier this year, Froemming threw
second string catcher Bill Plummer out ~f a game at
Montreal after he relieved John 'Bench. It forced Sparky·
Anderson t~putroo kie Joel Youngblood behind the pla te.
Again; congratulations to the world champs and many.
many thanks for the thrills provided ·this season .

Michigan cops
seventh, 35-0 ·

ld erl"es
WJ:or
W 4
U

1

next year. "
Tony Perez, a long time
. homet.lwn favorite, drew the
loudest cheers as he puffed on
a big cigar, tipped his huge
white straw bat and issued a
declaration
in
two
languages.
"We're No. 1/' he yelled ,
then added in his native
Spanish, "Nwnero Uno."
Pete Rose; wearing a long
leather coat over his yellow
turtle neck sweater; asSured
the CincinnatianS, "This is
the baseball capital of the
world, with the greatest fans
of all time.
"It 's a tremendoUs feeling
to parade in this town,"
added Rose. "It's just the
way it ahould be in the
baseball capital"-~"" · Rose also said the fourga me sweep over the
Yankees was not as exciting
as last year's World Series
triumph over Boston that
BLOOMINGTON, IND .
went the full seven games.
"I couldn't get turned on (UP!) - Sophomore qua r·
about the World Series this terback Rick Leach passed
ye'a r ,'' complained Rose. for two touchdowns to spark
"We thought we'd get better top-ranked Michigan to a 35.0
competition than the .Yankees Big Ten victory m•cr Indiana
provided."

Yankees.

future."

ear
,Y
'

Yes!

Rutland has
furnishings for
every room
in the House
except this ONE.

SAVE

YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
ES
ES
ES
ES
ES

ti

Iii

i

~II&amp;. .

MATAGS

8

&gt;;::,

•z

a=

Ill ,

....
~I:

::::»

·. 35,000 fans help Reds
celebrate .'76 crown

Sports
Desk

in steady rain Saturday.
So overwhelming were the
No, !·ranked Wolverines that
they were not forced to punt
until the final minute of play

Ohio Bobcats·
beaten, 20-0
ATHI':NS, Ohio tUPI )- A
stingy Willi am &amp; Mary
defense co mbined with
sophomore
quarterback
Tommy Rozantz, whose 96
rushing yards set up three
touchdo~11 s, to spoil Ohio
University's homecoming 21).
0 Saturday.
It was the first time Ohio
has been shut out at home
since 1965. •
htdians defenders kept con, stant
pressure
on
quarterback Andy Vetter .
They sac ked Ohio signal
callers eight times for 99

FOOTBALL
NFL Standings
United Press Internat ional
America n Confer ence
Ea st
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Ba lti more
5 1 0 .833 183 114
New England 4 2 o .667 172 1'22
Buffal o
7 4 O.J33 t l 5 117
Miami
7 4 0 .333 11 9 130
NY Jcts
15016750172
Central
W. L. T. Pet. pF . PA
Cincinnati
4 2 0 .667 ld4 !!9
Houston
4 2 0 .667 121 76
Clevel and
3 3 0 .SOO 127 170
Pi tt sburgh
2 4 O.J33 1J 1 116
Wesr
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Oakland
5 1 0 .833 130 137
4 2 o .667 143 120
San Diego
Denver
3 J 0 .500 136 57
Kansas City 2 4 0 .J3J 124 178
Tampa Bay o 6 0 .ooo J6 133
National con ference
East
W. L. T . Pet. PF . PA
Dallas
5 1 o .833 ISO as
St. Louis
5 1 0 .833 164 119
Washino ton A 2 Q .667 127 114
Philadelphia 7 •t 0 .333 85 128
NY Giants
0 6 .o .000 70 138
Cent ra l
W. L . T Pet. PF . P A
Min'nesora
5 0 1 .917 121 60
Ch icago
3 ' 3 0 .500 93 72
Gr een Bay
3 3 0 .500 100 130
DeTroiT
2 4 o .J33 87 !14
w est
W. L. T. Pet. PF . PA
Sa n Franc lsc 5 1 U .IIJJ 141 63
LOS Angeles 4 1 I .750 11 5 90
New Or leans 2 4 0 .J33 101 145
Atlanta
1 5 0 .167 M 118
Seattle
l 5 0 .167 98 163
Sunday's Game'S
Baltimor e at N Y Jets
Ct-ti cago at Dallas
Cin.cinnati at H Ouston
Denver al Kan sas City
Detroit at Seatt le
Gr een Bay at Oak land
Los A n t;~ at New Orleans
Miami at Tampa Bay
r.'linnesota at Ph i ~ade lph i a
New England at Buffalo
Pi!1Sburgl1 at N Y Glan !s
San Diego at Cleveland
(On ly games sc heduled )
~v

yards In losses . ..
William &amp; Mary scored
with :44 left in first quarter
when j uni~r fullback Keith
~· imian capped a 71).yard
drive by going over from the
one-yard line.
The visitors, a-.2, scored
again at 11 :01 of the third
period when junior tailback
Jimmy Kruis raced 1~ yards
to make the score 1~.
The last tally of the game
came at 3:16 of the fourth
frame when ~oph o mor~
tailbac k Jeff Vanderbee k
Look the ball in from the twoyard line,
'
Bubcats junior lBilbBck Ar•
nold Welcher, the nation's
ninth-leading rush er, was
held to 31 yards. He didn't see
action in the second half
because of a bruised ankle.
The Bobcats, also 5-2, made
their deepest penetration to
the Indians seven-yard line in
the third quarter, but an
incompiete fourth-down ,pass
gave the ball back to William
&amp; Mary.
Officials called 21 penalties
for 218 yards.

Den Talk

New hunters

laws reviewed

BY GREG BAILEY
POMEROY- As I crawlee) out of bed, shivering with the
cold yet not noticing, I dldn 't even have second thoughts as to
why . It was an hour before daylight, but the antlciplition and
heart{humping excitement made me oblivious to the hour.
My head was full of visions of my traps all holding a
quality catch, attesting to my knowledge of the anbnals I
sought. Deep down inside I knew that some of my traps would
be empty (maybe all of them!) but the eagerness of the first
day of trapping season blinded me from tlie true facts.
Days of biting winds , nearly bare trees, times that the air
Is steel-gray cold, and still, frosty mornings. All point to the
coming winter and the time for trawing. The trapper's life Is a
solitary one, 'but he wouldn't have It any other way. The
solitude is part ~f the intrigue that is keeping this ancient art
alive (and it is an art! ) The old-timer aro any knowledgable
trawer already has hiS traps waxed and prepared for the
coming season . Keep In mind, sp~rtsmen, that the anti people
are picking on Uie trappers. And you trapper, do It right this
year so the anti people won 't have any fuel. Ask permission
from
!he landowners, check y~ur traps regularly , and be
Monday's Games
humane, .
S t. Louis at Wash, night
(Only game sch eduled )
I'd like to call your attention to some new laws this year.
Once again , it seems that some of you need to be reminded that
there is to be absolutely no spotting of deer, The law states, "It
is illegal to cast an artificial light intl) any woodland, farmlot ,
or field from ·a motor vehicle." If y~u do, you 're going to get
"pinched." It 's all rl~t tAl fox call as long as y~u have
permission, have a license, and are abiding by ail laws. .
· NAVY ROUTED
Anpther new law makes It a first degree misdemeanor
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UP!) - when a person who has had his license revoked taketl to the
Pittsburgh tailback Tony field, You could be fined a maximum of $1,000 and six months
Do~sett broke former Ohio in jail.
'
State star
Archie
Griffin's
'
.
.'Those
Of
you
wbo
take
udvantage
of the State's primitive
r
.
..
major college career rushing '. hunts must remember that thi s year It's for bucks only ,
record Saturday when he Another change is that there Is to be noSuroay fox hunting .
rambled 1110 yards and scored
Don't forget to send in your antlerIeos deer appllc,atlons.
three touchdowns to pace the · ·
Congratulatioos to the Big Bend Basa Anglers Club. Their
St'Cond·ranked Panthers to BASS Tournament was a huge success. That remind• me - I
theii· seventh s tra i~ht vic· haven't wet a line for awhile and I'll bet if I sneak to my
tot')! , ' 45.0 rout of Navy.
favorite hole I just might tangle with a lunker. Gone Fishin'!

Saturday's grid scores
United PresS International
New Hamp. 35 Nor theastern

21

'

Penn St. 33 West Virg inia 0

Rutgers 47 Columbia 0
Boslon U . 36 Rhode Island
Boslon Col. 27 Army 10

Br ockp9rt St . 29 Oswego
Br own 28 Holy Cross 18
Connecticu t 28 MasS. 6

0

St . 7 ·

Howar'd 21 N. C. A&amp; T 21
Maryland 30 Duke 3
Richmo nd 13 Furm an 9
VIrginia Tec h 41 Kent St. 14
Virgi nia 18 Wake Forest 17
Ohio ~ o rlher n t3 Cap it ol tl

Miami (Oh io) 9 Bowling
Green 7

Ohio St. 24 Purdue 3
Wi ttenber g 33 Wooster 0
&amp; Mary 20 Ohi~ U.
Fr amingham 20 Boston St .
Harvard 20 Princ e ton 14

St. Peler 's 79 Stony Brook 8 Willi am
St.

Lawr ence 27 Hamilt on 6
Syracuse 24 Temple 16
Villanova 34 Youngstown 14

Western Conn . 9 Coast Guard

0

Yale 21 Penn 7
N. Carolina 12 E , Carolina tO
Notr e Dame 13 S. Carol ina 6

Georg ia Tech 28 Tu lane 16

0

0

Indiana (Pa .) 16 Clarion St .
14

Colg ale 24 Lafay ette 14
Dar tmo uth 35 Cor nell ( NY 1 0
Pittsburg h 45 Navy 0
Tufts 2t Williams 7
VMI 10 Delaware 6

. LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
GYM AND POOL
DATE-GYMNASIUM
POOL
Oct. 25 8-!0p.m. College~.
8-10p.m. Open Swim
Oct. 26 8:31).10 p.m. Open Rec.
8:3().190 p.m. Open SWbn
Oct. 27 Z-4 p.m. Senior Citizens Program .
CWSED
· 5-9 p.m. Girls High School Volleyball .
Sectional
Oct. 28 8-10 p.m. College Rec.
CLOSED
Oct. 29 8-10 p.m. Family Rec.Nlght
8-10 p.m. Family
RecreaUon Night
Oct. 3(! I p.m.-IUo Cross-country vs.
CLOSED
Walsh and Cuyahoga
Community College
2 p.m.- Rio Volleyvall vs.
Mt. Vernon Nazarene
u p.m.-Girls High School
I"
Volleyball Sectional
Oct. 31-2-4 p.m. Open Rec .
2-4 p.m. Open SWim
8-10 p.m. College Rec.
11-lO p.m. Open SWbn

'

,.

�•

'

2-C-'lbe Sundav Tim..,&lt;;ent in•l Sundav, Oct 24, 1976

.'

Eagles roll over Wildcats
GREG BAILEY
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Eagles picked up
their $0C0nd win in a row
Friday night to celebrate
their homecoming by
trouncing the Waterford
Wildcats :JG-15.
The outcome of the contest
was never In doubt as the
Eagles took a qulck· ll-0 lead
in the first quarter and didn't
let the visitors score until the
last stanza With the secohd
squad playing.

• Fullback Dave Mills broke
loose on a 35-yard jaunt early
in the period and then
quarterback Bob McClure
shot away for a 13-yanl
gallop. Steve Hauber kicked

both utras.
In the second period McClure again found daylight as
he scampered for a 11-yard
touchdown run, and then
halfback Joe Kuhn did
likewise on a 211 yard i'un.
Again Hauber booted boll!

raced into the endzone for two
points on this play Friday. Defensive player attempting tackle is Hannan Trace's Tim
Caldwell (35 ). Others'UJ photo arc Ron McCoy (78), Frank Mooney (32) and Jeff Halley 155) .

THIESS GETS TWO - North Gallia's Mark Thiess

{!I)

ntru. Eastern's first team. Dan Spencer, Russell Starplayed the first period ancf cher, and Mike Smith)
ooly part of that second opened up .big hol&lt;ll for the
canto.
Eastern backs u the offense
The only otiJ!,r Eagle points picked up 254 yards and then
came in the last quarter when thla week they enabled the
Randy Keller tac~'ed a Eagle runners to accumulate
Wildcat in the end zone for a 295 chunks of turf.
two-point IBfety. Once again
Rushing leader for the
it was the offensive line that . night was Kulm as he picked
played a big role in the Eagie - up T1 yards in seven carries.
win. ,
·
K!!Vin Barton got 58 in eight
Last week the Unernen, rushes, Mills got tii in three,
(Bruce RUfle, Ra'ndy Boston, and McClure got 65 in six. The
Rusty Wigal, John Evans, Eagles also got 43 yards in
the air on 2 of 9 whil~ picking
up 12 first downs compared to
the WUdcata'IO. The Eagle
defense held the visitors to
just 116 yards on the ground
while giving up 36in the air.
The Eagles had to punt only
three tiines for 90 yards and
they lost their only fumble.
Waterford lost both their
fumbles.
The Eagles are now 4-3 on

'

the year and seem to be
Improving with each game.
They'll be b\I.IY thla week in
practlce gearing up for a
showdown Saturday !l'lth
rival Southern, allo at 4-3 on
the year. Thill yearly cluh II
always a cro~euer, and
although both teams own
Identical records; when these
two schools: .meet, recorda
don't ~!In a ~:
Scoure by quarters :

Waterfdr~

Eastern

0 0 0 1.5.- IS
.14 14 o· 2- 30

ScoriiHI :
E85 t ern
M lll-5, 356 Yi!lrd r un , Hauber
kick . McCl ure . 13 y&lt;l , run.
Hauber kick . McClure. 41 yd .
run . Hauber kick . Kuhn . 28 Yd
H~uber

run ,

ki ck . KeiiE!r ,

safety . Waterford - Tu c ker ,
'l yd . run , :rucker eiCtras .
Car te r , 10 yd . run, Carter

kick .

Dept .
Pas si ng
Ud\. PlUin g

Rush ing

Total Yds

Punts
flenaltles

First downs
Fumbles. los t

E

W

2-9

J.6

43
2Sl
29l
• HO
80

36
116
152
5 ~ 1 52

~~

J. J

REPUBLICAN

COUNTY COMMISSIONER

Pirates jolt Wildcats
VINTON - Bouncihg back
from a 22-14loss last'week to
Ironton St. Joe , Coach John
Blake's varsity put 52 points
on the scoreboard the first
half then watched from the
sidelines as North Gallia
rolled to a 66.0 SV AC victory
over hapless Hannan Trace.
Mike Casey, junior running
back and speedster Fred
Logan, combined for five
touchdowns. Casey scored on
runs of 75, six and four yards
while Logan added a W-yard
m run and a 51-yard pass
reception from quarterback
Mark Theiss.
Casey opened the game
with his 7&amp;-yard run. Later
durtng the first period, Logan
caught his !il-yard l&gt;ass,
Logan rambled 20 yards and ·
Casey got his other short
ID's.
...
In the second period, David
Scott scored on a 15 yard run
following a blocked puP!.
Brei Tackett caught a 34-yard
pass from Theiss for the final
~ortng of the first half.
North Gallia's second unit
led by the rw&lt;ning of Bill
Luckadoo
n tH!
Mart y
Glassburn scored 1! more
points In the third stanza .
Both crossed the goa lline on
10 yard runs.
Hannan Trace, which could
not get its offense moving,
never got close to scoring.
Offensively, Casey led NG
with 125 yards in 11 carries.
Theiss had 94 yards in five
attempts, Logan 47 yards in
three tries and Luckadoo, 64
yards in 10. carries.
Waugh, seni or
Jim
fullback, paced the Wildcats
with 86 yards rushing.
On defense, Luckactoo, Ron
Plants and Tackett were
cited for their efforts. North
Gallia jumped back into a
first place tie with Ky~er

cfeek with a 44! record.
Hannan Trace fell to 0+1.
The Pirate~ host Hannan ,
W. Va. Friday. Hannan Trace
goes to Southwestern.
S TA.TISTIC S
, Dep t .

HT NG

Fi r st dow n s
Y d s r u&lt;;h in n

7

I •I

Q7

·1? (.

0

Yd s. pa ssi n9
Total .,.ardage

97

Passes a l! empted
Passes c ompleted

142
568

"0
95
Inter ceptio ns
Pu mb l es
4' 02
F-u m bl es l ost
4
0
Pe nalized
2·20 9.85
By qua r t ers :
Hannan Tr a ce o 0 o 0- 0
North G alli a
28 24 I &lt;~ 0- 66

CO L UM BUS (U PI I
Her e,.,
ho w th l' top t ea ms i n th e U P I

Ooa ru of Co aches' h igh schoo l
foo t ba ll poll Hir ed in w eekend

ac tion

Class A

1. Bhl ck Ri ver de l eatcd Nor
w a lk 51. Paul 20. 19
2. 1\r linq ton dcfb.atc

·
e1psic 27

0
J . Sandu s ky S!. Mary s

tav s

J

bu s

Huron ~ at u r d ay .
11
- 1\J t f ton de fea ted Co i1J

CASEY SCRAMBLES - North Gallia 's Mike Casey (25) scrambles for a touchdown
against Hannan Trace in SVAC cootest Friday. Others in this Bruce Gabriel photo are Fred
Logan 112), Rick Clary (90), Ron McCoy (78) and Scott Gibson (12).

'i'ounys rown Cardinal Mooney
dcteat ~ d Struthe rs J.r a
.1. Gahanna Lin co ln defeated
Wr5!ervill e South 1-16
~ Pr ince lon defeated Fair f ield
7
b .zan esvi ll E.'

to s t

ta

Upper

Ar l tngton 7 1 3

7

Elyria w.3s lied b',' Sandusk·y

""Mass1
8
Wa ls h Jesu i t def eated
t1 on Jackson
0
~ la w

2&lt;~

C'· ro ve 35 0
5 Cl a rk Southeastern acteali&gt;d
Jamest own GreenC\I ICV.' 30 2 1
0 Care y defeat ed Syc amor e

9 Cen!e'r vitlc def eated Xen ia
35 0
.
10
North Cant on Hoover
defea ted Dovl•r 42 \3

Youth - Experience - Farmer . Life Time
County Resident.
Your Vote will be appreciated Nov. 2.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Drug laws, forty hours in Federal Drug laws, forty
hours in Riot Control, forty hour s' in Criminal

lnvest!gation , and also t~rtv hours in the New Ohio
Revised Code, which I· have helped to instruct here in
Galli a County.

Having the supervisory background at Rio Grande
College f~ fifteen years and

the law

enforcement

tha~

I can mak e a good Sheriff if' I am
elect~ . I have served on the North Ga.llia School Board
before consolidation. t have also coached uttte league
baseball for . five years and also work with ·our local
Church youth gro.up. I believe that we need someone
who can work with our young people ; after aiL they are
our future leaders of tomorrow.
,

.I have heard several promises

from

other

candidates for the office of Sheriff of Galli a County and
if elected to' the oft ice of Sheriff, I will be a full time
Sheriff, elected by t~e people, to serve all the people of
Gallia County; not just part ot the people. I will a!so
apply for Federal Funds to return the Taxpayers'
money back to Gallia County. I will make ctecisi·ons
which I can live with myself, and do the best job 1 can
with what moneY the Department ha s to operate with .
·Contrary to rumors I am in no way related to the

present Sheriff of Gatlla Countv.
Your vote.and support will be greatly appreciated .
Sincerely ,
Ray Roberts

Aztecs.

The Tilans, 2-2-1 on tile
year, lost to the Aztecs 59-14
last season. San Diego
gobbled up 562 yards in total
offense in earning the win.
San Diego is 4-1 on the year
and beat Pacific 21-15 last
week.
·

Southern rips·
Vikings, 48-0
mere 62 yards rushing, and
they completed only two of 15
aerials for a meager nine
yards. Brown led the Tornados on defense as he had II
tackles.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UP!)
- For the first time in the
four
years
of
the
International Race of
Champioos series, Richard
Petty has qualified for the
final event at· Daytona
International Speedway next
February.
He will be competing
against such .drivers . as
Buddy
Baker,
Cale
Yarborough and David
PearsoP. ·

•
• ·. MODULAR HOMES . :
:
By Whitman .and Travelo
:
! ··························~
•

.
!.
:
:
•

These Homes Qualify For Erection
in the City of -GaHipolis.
Call or Stop In Today
.

&amp;~~~

By Quarters
sou thern

sV

'

.

GOOD QUALITY LUMP COAL FOR SALE
·YOU MAY BOY FROM ABUCKETFUl TO 1000 TONS
I,.OAD FROM CONVEYOR BELT- NO WAITING

JAYMAR

· o o o o- o

Sc Oring : ' H ill, 20 yd . ru n;
Be so. 4 'I'd . run , Boso exl ras ;
Hill ; 3l ·vd . run •. Boso extras ;
Hill , 36 yd . run , Cui1diff kklo. ;
Boso. 1 yd . run ., Cundiff kick ;
Brown. 44 yd . interception ;
Hendricks. 1 yd . run .

Rus hing

· ·

QuikDriJl

Yards pass

1·25 5·25
lOS dO

Pen allies

ROUTE 1 ·

CHESHIRE, OHIO

..
TELEPHONE 614-992-5639

See Jim St11tsor Joe Gilts

O.lllpolls, Ohio

*··········~···············

SALE PRICE

• Put removes from htHit! for
easy clennlnu find oven or filti!JI'·

2to8
cup

• Low-umtl heHI h rHW lms 5

diH11nmt Mtltinys, ur you can set
the dial in between se ttings for
fulll i"lll!lt'

11

uf sln·&lt;:ooklng

temperatures.

Poinh

Greenf ield
Rock Hill

71

' .

77

Jackson ·

87

Chesapeake

107

Vincent ·Warr en

11 4
122

Wheelersburg

200

Sheridan
Ironton

164

Coal Grove
M i nford

TayWr, Smith &amp; '/'ayWr

214

Top runner - Tim Hiller .
brand , Greenfield . McClain ,
.

35

Marietla

65

WEEKLY
SPECIALS

86
1.43

SALE PRICE

SQUA'Rf SANDWICHES IN LESS ·
THAN TWO MINUTES

SOLID

••

1500 Lb.

.CRUSH
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WITH - 1 •

COUPLING
1250 ·Lb~

100 Fl. 'Rolls 4"

CRUSH

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SlWER &amp; DIWN

$22"

SAL I!

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Galalizld 28"x&amp;O"
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Set includes eight eoch : cup, saucer ,
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bowl . Creamer, SUOCW' with lid , round
plo tter ond vegetdble bow~ ore also
Included. Off·white wit h brown tones .
Ovenproof, detergent·sofe ond color·
fest.

get first
-,

wtiOu YIAI LONG

'

(UP!) - Chtls Evert won
ae\'en of the firsl eight games.
and then held off Virginia
Wade, &amp;.!-, 11-4, Saturday .to
reach the finals of the 100,1100
Inaugural Tennis Tour- ,
narnent.
I•

SALE PRI CE

9!7

..J

.

SALE PRICE

3288
ANCHOR HOCKNG16 PIECE

.INSTANT DRAWER ORGANIZERS

Mr. Friendly

both, workshop or nursery. Beige.

9" X3"

9" I 6"

REG . 49• ·

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15"x3"
REG . 69'

15" 16"
REG. 1.19

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C HWt

Plastic orgonizers interlock easily, ore oVoilable in four sires. For kikhen,

la~-a-wa~ ·now!

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Oil·bosed
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Harvest-Ambfr Flr'e·King ovenwore with earthy
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custard cups with plostlc covers, 3 wood spOOns
Ontl 9" pie plofe, one 11,1 qt, utility dish crrw:
5" x 9" loaf pan end 1111 qt. covered cosW: role.
5 veor worronty whtn used as lndltoted.

SALE,PRICE

Alumirtum

-

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cameros cr&gt;d oalc~otors.

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Full ground, hllth · polished · •
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10", t2" "'d· I&lt;" beech·
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convenient side lock . Great

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I

HARDMAN'S HOM·E CENTER

GAINS FINAl.'!

· . WICARlMI

~

WAVERLY- The Wellston
Golden Rockets posted their
first SEOAL victory of the
season Friday night as they
topped the host Waverly

'

i'ALM SPRINGS, CALIF.

Jt

45 PlECE SERVICE FOR 8
IRONSTONE DINNERWARE

Round and square 5ondwich cooking area.
Cover locks for , no-spotter c.ookinQ;
grease troy catches the runoff. Top con·
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~~~~srl;~os~:g e;~~:k ~~

••n••••· ..
..............

~~

COOKS ROUND HAMBURGERS 0,

Cox,

league play to' 25.
Waverly,
a
feared
baaketball power, last won an
SEOAL loothaU game in 1972
when they bung a M-7 loss on
the Wellston Golden Rockets.
Friday night Wellston's
Chris Miller returned a·Tiger
punt 52 yarda for a first
quarter touchdown with the
PAT ldck falling.
Early in the second period
Waverly's Kevin Silcott
tackled Curtis Jayjohn in the
end zone for a two !&gt;oint
safety.
Jayjohn came back later
and scored on a 15 yard run to
put Wellston on top 12-2 at
halftime.
The Tigers struck in the
fourth quarter when Loren
· weeter hit Jeff Noble with an
18 yard m pass with a
conversion run no good.
Jayjohn put the game away
for the Bockets with a seven
yard TD run late in the
contest,
The winners chalked up
seven first downi, 242 yards
on the grolDid, and failed on
their only pass attempt.
Waverly netted II first
doWIII, had 127 yards rushing,
·and connected ,on four of 18
passes for 49 yards with three
· picked off' by. the Boeke!
defenders.
Score by quarters: .
Wellston
8 6 0 6-,-18
Waverly
0 2 0 6- 8

lemporary design . Includes 8

eoch , cooler, beveragl! ond on·
the·roth

"LinLE MAC" FAST COOKER

44

Larry

£usf to hold, sculptured side·
wol ponem ior o cosuol, con ·

...U.MILTON BEACH

Points

Lan caster
Athens

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APOLLO GLASS SET

[. ibbcy
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223

Rockets·

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8 five-ounce cups tn only
6 Mt minutes!

loop win

OC.TOBER
. 25-26-27-28-29

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FAsT 'N FREslt'"

45620

{Located three miles south of Middleport on State Route 1 at MeigsGallia County Line)
.

9

Team

Ch i llicothe, 10 : 30,

0

f.J

208

265
Hu'nt ington -Ross
· 275
Top runner - Mark Har .
ner , Bloom South Webster ,
11 ; 09 .

Ch illicothe
Logan
Top runner -

Open 7:00 a,m. to 7:00p.m: Monday thru Friday

o.o

Fumbles . lo st
Punts , av .

Lynchburg -Clay
Oak H ill

SALE PRICE

Coffeemaker

CLASS AAA

s sv

386 /17
0 ·2 2- 15

Pass in'g

206

Fairfield

Team

COAL COMPANY

6 10 \4 12- AB

Department

18&lt;t
188

I

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138
140
178

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45

Peebles
Crooksv ille

10: 56.

i+ MOBILE HOMES INC. i
: Phone 446-9340

I

CtusAA

"

SAN DIEGo . (UPf) - Cal
Sta te Fullerton will be
looking for revenge tonight
when the Titans travel to San
Diego State to visit the

OUR BIG FAU SALE IS NOW GOING ON! OUR CIRCULARS
YOU'LL FIND SOMETHING FOR .EVERYONE AT SUPER SAVINGS!
ARE IN THE MAIL

60
100

Ross .Southeast ern

L

~0

BANKAMERICARD

Points

west 'Union
Z~ne T.r ace
Adena

PAUL D. NIDAY

How top teams
fared Friday

completed 262 hours in Basic Law Enforcement
training. In addition to this , I have also completed
forty hours in Search and Seizure, forty hours in State

I

RIO GRANDE - Bloom
South Webeler, Greenfield
McClain and Lancaster
Cllptured CJas.ot A, AA and
AM Sectional Crou Country
tiU~ here Saturday.
.
·Bloom South Webster
taWed ~ poihta for·the CJas.ot ·
A honon. Greenfield had 71 in
the AA event while Lancaster
totaled 35 points in the AM
meet.
Mark Hamer, Bloom South
Webster, was the top CJas.ot A
l'Wlller with a lime of 11:011.
Tim Hllterbrand, GreenfieldMcClain, was tbe top AA
l'Wlller with a 10:56 effort.
Larry Cox, with a 10:30
performance, topped all AAA
runners.
The top four Class A and
AA teams, plus 12 top
l'Wlllers not.members of the
top four.tealfts, will advance
to the district meet, to be held
Oct. 29 at Carroll, Ohio.
Teams from southeastern,
central and eastern sectionals will take part in the
meet, slated to begin at 11
a.m.
The top two teams in Class
AAA action advance to
district competllioo, plus s!J:
rurmers not on the .top teams.
Here are Saturd~y·s
results:
Bloom South Webster

Cindy 13, Kathy 12, and Cherie 7. We also have a 19
year old boy Mike Wills, and he is employed at
Krogers.
I have been employed at Rio Grande College since
February 1959. At the present time I am Director of
Facilities a·t the College, and I also held the position of
Commander of the Ba sic Law Enforcement class
recently at Buckeye Hills Career Center at Rio
Grande.
I ~«ended Hocking Technical College where I

'

I

Team

RAY ROBERTS

J.

10
2 ·2

Name cross
country
wrnners

CLASS A

BY GREG BAILEY
Mohawk 54 t2
RACINE - Behind the
7 Newark Catholic &lt;!cl eat ed
running and scoring of
Watkins Memorial Ill
·
8 Woodsfie ld defeat ed ByE-sville
seniors AI Hill and Steve Boso
Meadowbrook 19 t .t
THISTLEDOWN
the Southern Tornados had a
Y Nrwco mer sto wn lost
to
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio bright Homecoming Friday
Garaw av r. ll
10. Ridgemont defeat ed Ben
(UP!) - Reason to Dare won
night as they blasted the
ia min Lo gnn 19 1~
the
featured ninth race at Symnles Valley Vikings 48-0.
,
Cl ass AA
.
I. St. Marys M em or ial dofe ated Thistledown Fri~ay by runHill led the way as he broke
Wapa ko ne ta ~ o
ning the rnile and 40 yards in away on long runs to score
7
New
Le )(ington d ef ea ted
I:44 Hi. Whistler's Father three touchdowns for a total
Sheridan 38 0
3.. Co lumhus·, Watter son play s was ~econd and Full Green
of 18 points and 125 yards in
ColU mbus Wehrle Saturda y
seven carries. Boso tallied
.1.
Shelby lO St IO Upper was third.
Sandusky 21 0
The winner, ridden by An- two TO's and four extra
5 A lo.ron St . Vi ncent pla ys
tonio
Graell, paid $6.40, $4.80 poipls while leading all
Warren Wes\crn ~ eser \le S&lt;1tur
day
and $3.
rushers with a big 214 yards
6 Huron pl ays Sr~nd us ky St
The
9-2-5
tenth
race
trifecla
and
29 carries.
Mar ys Satu rd ay
of Double Learned, B.
7 Urbana de f e ~ted Bell e fo n
It was a close game for the
t a ine 19 8
Battery and Full Treatment first quarter of action as the
B. Ironton def eat ed Jac kson 31
returned $9,312.30 to five Tornados were out in front
9 Broolo.v itle defe.lled Ger ma n ticket holders. The 3-3 daily
only 6-0 when the gun went
town Vall ey Vi ew JO 0
double of Boxwood Road and off. That score came on a 26tO Rea ding del l• ate d Lock lan d
IJO
Game Tim was worth $201.80.' yard break-away by the
Class AAA
speedy Hill.
1. Cmcirmat i Moell er defeated
Cind nnari Roger Bacon 20 o
But in the second canto the
WS ANGELES (UPII 1
Findlay pla'l'~ Mansfiel d
Hosts
started moving and
Senior Saturday
George Foreman, the top. Boso went over from the four
ranked challenger lor the and Hill had long runs of 31
vacant world heavyweight and 36 yards to put the game
boxing title, .has signed a out of reach at 22.0 at halflong-term agreement with time.
ABC Sports for his
The second half was anprofessional activities in and ticlimactic, · but the big
Candidate For
out of the boxing ring, it was · highlight was a «-yard pass
Ga Ilia County
announced Friday.
interception by Joe Broim
Sheriff
The agreement gives ABC who found paydirt before the
exclusive rights to televise Vikings caught up.
Dear Vottr :
Foreman's future bouts and
•Southern amassed li total of
My name is Ray Roberts ana 1would like to take a
calls
on Foreman lo serve as 386 yards on th~ night, but
few minutes of your tlme and let you know a little about
an expert commentator oo they didn't pick up any
myself and why I have decided to run for SheriH of
boxing telecasts and other yardage in the air. They had
Galli a County.
network programs.
I am 36 years of age, the son of Darrell and Mary
punt only once, and that
Foreman already has had to
Roberts. I am the only child. I was born and raised in
was
for 25 yards.
experience · as
a
Gallia County, and attended grade schOOl at Centenary
The
Vikings were held to a
and high school at Gallia Academy . I am married to
commentator, working at the
Joanne "Wickline" Roberts and have three daughters,
Montreal Olympics.

training, I feel

50

!.C.....'nle SUnday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 24, !118

"MORE THAN A
LUMBER YARD"
The Friendly One

RT. 2 BYPASS
\

POINT PUASANT
'·

''

'.
'

�•

'

2-C-'lbe Sundav Tim..,&lt;;ent in•l Sundav, Oct 24, 1976

.'

Eagles roll over Wildcats
GREG BAILEY
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Eagles picked up
their $0C0nd win in a row
Friday night to celebrate
their homecoming by
trouncing the Waterford
Wildcats :JG-15.
The outcome of the contest
was never In doubt as the
Eagles took a qulck· ll-0 lead
in the first quarter and didn't
let the visitors score until the
last stanza With the secohd
squad playing.

• Fullback Dave Mills broke
loose on a 35-yard jaunt early
in the period and then
quarterback Bob McClure
shot away for a 13-yanl
gallop. Steve Hauber kicked

both utras.
In the second period McClure again found daylight as
he scampered for a 11-yard
touchdown run, and then
halfback Joe Kuhn did
likewise on a 211 yard i'un.
Again Hauber booted boll!

raced into the endzone for two
points on this play Friday. Defensive player attempting tackle is Hannan Trace's Tim
Caldwell (35 ). Others'UJ photo arc Ron McCoy (78), Frank Mooney (32) and Jeff Halley 155) .

THIESS GETS TWO - North Gallia's Mark Thiess

{!I)

ntru. Eastern's first team. Dan Spencer, Russell Starplayed the first period ancf cher, and Mike Smith)
ooly part of that second opened up .big hol&lt;ll for the
canto.
Eastern backs u the offense
The only otiJ!,r Eagle points picked up 254 yards and then
came in the last quarter when thla week they enabled the
Randy Keller tac~'ed a Eagle runners to accumulate
Wildcat in the end zone for a 295 chunks of turf.
two-point IBfety. Once again
Rushing leader for the
it was the offensive line that . night was Kulm as he picked
played a big role in the Eagie - up T1 yards in seven carries.
win. ,
·
K!!Vin Barton got 58 in eight
Last week the Unernen, rushes, Mills got tii in three,
(Bruce RUfle, Ra'ndy Boston, and McClure got 65 in six. The
Rusty Wigal, John Evans, Eagles also got 43 yards in
the air on 2 of 9 whil~ picking
up 12 first downs compared to
the WUdcata'IO. The Eagle
defense held the visitors to
just 116 yards on the ground
while giving up 36in the air.
The Eagles had to punt only
three tiines for 90 yards and
they lost their only fumble.
Waterford lost both their
fumbles.
The Eagles are now 4-3 on

'

the year and seem to be
Improving with each game.
They'll be b\I.IY thla week in
practlce gearing up for a
showdown Saturday !l'lth
rival Southern, allo at 4-3 on
the year. Thill yearly cluh II
always a cro~euer, and
although both teams own
Identical records; when these
two schools: .meet, recorda
don't ~!In a ~:
Scoure by quarters :

Waterfdr~

Eastern

0 0 0 1.5.- IS
.14 14 o· 2- 30

ScoriiHI :
E85 t ern
M lll-5, 356 Yi!lrd r un , Hauber
kick . McCl ure . 13 y&lt;l , run.
Hauber kick . McClure. 41 yd .
run . Hauber kick . Kuhn . 28 Yd
H~uber

run ,

ki ck . KeiiE!r ,

safety . Waterford - Tu c ker ,
'l yd . run , :rucker eiCtras .
Car te r , 10 yd . run, Carter

kick .

Dept .
Pas si ng
Ud\. PlUin g

Rush ing

Total Yds

Punts
flenaltles

First downs
Fumbles. los t

E

W

2-9

J.6

43
2Sl
29l
• HO
80

36
116
152
5 ~ 1 52

~~

J. J

REPUBLICAN

COUNTY COMMISSIONER

Pirates jolt Wildcats
VINTON - Bouncihg back
from a 22-14loss last'week to
Ironton St. Joe , Coach John
Blake's varsity put 52 points
on the scoreboard the first
half then watched from the
sidelines as North Gallia
rolled to a 66.0 SV AC victory
over hapless Hannan Trace.
Mike Casey, junior running
back and speedster Fred
Logan, combined for five
touchdowns. Casey scored on
runs of 75, six and four yards
while Logan added a W-yard
m run and a 51-yard pass
reception from quarterback
Mark Theiss.
Casey opened the game
with his 7&amp;-yard run. Later
durtng the first period, Logan
caught his !il-yard l&gt;ass,
Logan rambled 20 yards and ·
Casey got his other short
ID's.
...
In the second period, David
Scott scored on a 15 yard run
following a blocked puP!.
Brei Tackett caught a 34-yard
pass from Theiss for the final
~ortng of the first half.
North Gallia's second unit
led by the rw&lt;ning of Bill
Luckadoo
n tH!
Mart y
Glassburn scored 1! more
points In the third stanza .
Both crossed the goa lline on
10 yard runs.
Hannan Trace, which could
not get its offense moving,
never got close to scoring.
Offensively, Casey led NG
with 125 yards in 11 carries.
Theiss had 94 yards in five
attempts, Logan 47 yards in
three tries and Luckadoo, 64
yards in 10. carries.
Waugh, seni or
Jim
fullback, paced the Wildcats
with 86 yards rushing.
On defense, Luckactoo, Ron
Plants and Tackett were
cited for their efforts. North
Gallia jumped back into a
first place tie with Ky~er

cfeek with a 44! record.
Hannan Trace fell to 0+1.
The Pirate~ host Hannan ,
W. Va. Friday. Hannan Trace
goes to Southwestern.
S TA.TISTIC S
, Dep t .

HT NG

Fi r st dow n s
Y d s r u&lt;;h in n

7

I •I

Q7

·1? (.

0

Yd s. pa ssi n9
Total .,.ardage

97

Passes a l! empted
Passes c ompleted

142
568

"0
95
Inter ceptio ns
Pu mb l es
4' 02
F-u m bl es l ost
4
0
Pe nalized
2·20 9.85
By qua r t ers :
Hannan Tr a ce o 0 o 0- 0
North G alli a
28 24 I &lt;~ 0- 66

CO L UM BUS (U PI I
Her e,.,
ho w th l' top t ea ms i n th e U P I

Ooa ru of Co aches' h igh schoo l
foo t ba ll poll Hir ed in w eekend

ac tion

Class A

1. Bhl ck Ri ver de l eatcd Nor
w a lk 51. Paul 20. 19
2. 1\r linq ton dcfb.atc

·
e1psic 27

0
J . Sandu s ky S!. Mary s

tav s

J

bu s

Huron ~ at u r d ay .
11
- 1\J t f ton de fea ted Co i1J

CASEY SCRAMBLES - North Gallia 's Mike Casey (25) scrambles for a touchdown
against Hannan Trace in SVAC cootest Friday. Others in this Bruce Gabriel photo are Fred
Logan 112), Rick Clary (90), Ron McCoy (78) and Scott Gibson (12).

'i'ounys rown Cardinal Mooney
dcteat ~ d Struthe rs J.r a
.1. Gahanna Lin co ln defeated
Wr5!ervill e South 1-16
~ Pr ince lon defeated Fair f ield
7
b .zan esvi ll E.'

to s t

ta

Upper

Ar l tngton 7 1 3

7

Elyria w.3s lied b',' Sandusk·y

""Mass1
8
Wa ls h Jesu i t def eated
t1 on Jackson
0
~ la w

2&lt;~

C'· ro ve 35 0
5 Cl a rk Southeastern acteali&gt;d
Jamest own GreenC\I ICV.' 30 2 1
0 Care y defeat ed Syc amor e

9 Cen!e'r vitlc def eated Xen ia
35 0
.
10
North Cant on Hoover
defea ted Dovl•r 42 \3

Youth - Experience - Farmer . Life Time
County Resident.
Your Vote will be appreciated Nov. 2.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Drug laws, forty hours in Federal Drug laws, forty
hours in Riot Control, forty hour s' in Criminal

lnvest!gation , and also t~rtv hours in the New Ohio
Revised Code, which I· have helped to instruct here in
Galli a County.

Having the supervisory background at Rio Grande
College f~ fifteen years and

the law

enforcement

tha~

I can mak e a good Sheriff if' I am
elect~ . I have served on the North Ga.llia School Board
before consolidation. t have also coached uttte league
baseball for . five years and also work with ·our local
Church youth gro.up. I believe that we need someone
who can work with our young people ; after aiL they are
our future leaders of tomorrow.
,

.I have heard several promises

from

other

candidates for the office of Sheriff of Galli a County and
if elected to' the oft ice of Sheriff, I will be a full time
Sheriff, elected by t~e people, to serve all the people of
Gallia County; not just part ot the people. I will a!so
apply for Federal Funds to return the Taxpayers'
money back to Gallia County. I will make ctecisi·ons
which I can live with myself, and do the best job 1 can
with what moneY the Department ha s to operate with .
·Contrary to rumors I am in no way related to the

present Sheriff of Gatlla Countv.
Your vote.and support will be greatly appreciated .
Sincerely ,
Ray Roberts

Aztecs.

The Tilans, 2-2-1 on tile
year, lost to the Aztecs 59-14
last season. San Diego
gobbled up 562 yards in total
offense in earning the win.
San Diego is 4-1 on the year
and beat Pacific 21-15 last
week.
·

Southern rips·
Vikings, 48-0
mere 62 yards rushing, and
they completed only two of 15
aerials for a meager nine
yards. Brown led the Tornados on defense as he had II
tackles.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UP!)
- For the first time in the
four
years
of
the
International Race of
Champioos series, Richard
Petty has qualified for the
final event at· Daytona
International Speedway next
February.
He will be competing
against such .drivers . as
Buddy
Baker,
Cale
Yarborough and David
PearsoP. ·

•
• ·. MODULAR HOMES . :
:
By Whitman .and Travelo
:
! ··························~
•

.
!.
:
:
•

These Homes Qualify For Erection
in the City of -GaHipolis.
Call or Stop In Today
.

&amp;~~~

By Quarters
sou thern

sV

'

.

GOOD QUALITY LUMP COAL FOR SALE
·YOU MAY BOY FROM ABUCKETFUl TO 1000 TONS
I,.OAD FROM CONVEYOR BELT- NO WAITING

JAYMAR

· o o o o- o

Sc Oring : ' H ill, 20 yd . ru n;
Be so. 4 'I'd . run , Boso exl ras ;
Hill ; 3l ·vd . run •. Boso extras ;
Hill , 36 yd . run , Cui1diff kklo. ;
Boso. 1 yd . run ., Cundiff kick ;
Brown. 44 yd . interception ;
Hendricks. 1 yd . run .

Rus hing

· ·

QuikDriJl

Yards pass

1·25 5·25
lOS dO

Pen allies

ROUTE 1 ·

CHESHIRE, OHIO

..
TELEPHONE 614-992-5639

See Jim St11tsor Joe Gilts

O.lllpolls, Ohio

*··········~···············

SALE PRICE

• Put removes from htHit! for
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2to8
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diH11nmt Mtltinys, ur you can set
the dial in between se ttings for
fulll i"lll!lt'

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uf sln·&lt;:ooklng

temperatures.

Poinh

Greenf ield
Rock Hill

71

' .

77

Jackson ·

87

Chesapeake

107

Vincent ·Warr en

11 4
122

Wheelersburg

200

Sheridan
Ironton

164

Coal Grove
M i nford

TayWr, Smith &amp; '/'ayWr

214

Top runner - Tim Hiller .
brand , Greenfield . McClain ,
.

35

Marietla

65

WEEKLY
SPECIALS

86
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SQUA'Rf SANDWICHES IN LESS ·
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get first
-,

wtiOu YIAI LONG

'

(UP!) - Chtls Evert won
ae\'en of the firsl eight games.
and then held off Virginia
Wade, &amp;.!-, 11-4, Saturday .to
reach the finals of the 100,1100
Inaugural Tennis Tour- ,
narnent.
I•

SALE PRI CE

9!7

..J

.

SALE PRICE

3288
ANCHOR HOCKNG16 PIECE

.INSTANT DRAWER ORGANIZERS

Mr. Friendly

both, workshop or nursery. Beige.

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SALE,PRICE

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I

HARDMAN'S HOM·E CENTER

GAINS FINAl.'!

· . WICARlMI

~

WAVERLY- The Wellston
Golden Rockets posted their
first SEOAL victory of the
season Friday night as they
topped the host Waverly

'

i'ALM SPRINGS, CALIF.

Jt

45 PlECE SERVICE FOR 8
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Round and square 5ondwich cooking area.
Cover locks for , no-spotter c.ookinQ;
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••n••••· ..
..............

~~

COOKS ROUND HAMBURGERS 0,

Cox,

league play to' 25.
Waverly,
a
feared
baaketball power, last won an
SEOAL loothaU game in 1972
when they bung a M-7 loss on
the Wellston Golden Rockets.
Friday night Wellston's
Chris Miller returned a·Tiger
punt 52 yarda for a first
quarter touchdown with the
PAT ldck falling.
Early in the second period
Waverly's Kevin Silcott
tackled Curtis Jayjohn in the
end zone for a two !&gt;oint
safety.
Jayjohn came back later
and scored on a 15 yard run to
put Wellston on top 12-2 at
halftime.
The Tigers struck in the
fourth quarter when Loren
· weeter hit Jeff Noble with an
18 yard m pass with a
conversion run no good.
Jayjohn put the game away
for the Bockets with a seven
yard TD run late in the
contest,
The winners chalked up
seven first downi, 242 yards
on the grolDid, and failed on
their only pass attempt.
Waverly netted II first
doWIII, had 127 yards rushing,
·and connected ,on four of 18
passes for 49 yards with three
· picked off' by. the Boeke!
defenders.
Score by quarters: .
Wellston
8 6 0 6-,-18
Waverly
0 2 0 6- 8

lemporary design . Includes 8

eoch , cooler, beveragl! ond on·
the·roth

"LinLE MAC" FAST COOKER

44

Larry

£usf to hold, sculptured side·
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...U.MILTON BEACH

Points

Lan caster
Athens

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45620

{Located three miles south of Middleport on State Route 1 at MeigsGallia County Line)
.

9

Team

Ch i llicothe, 10 : 30,

0

f.J

208

265
Hu'nt ington -Ross
· 275
Top runner - Mark Har .
ner , Bloom South Webster ,
11 ; 09 .

Ch illicothe
Logan
Top runner -

Open 7:00 a,m. to 7:00p.m: Monday thru Friday

o.o

Fumbles . lo st
Punts , av .

Lynchburg -Clay
Oak H ill

SALE PRICE

Coffeemaker

CLASS AAA

s sv

386 /17
0 ·2 2- 15

Pass in'g

206

Fairfield

Team

COAL COMPANY

6 10 \4 12- AB

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18&lt;t
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138
140
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Crooksv ille

10: 56.

i+ MOBILE HOMES INC. i
: Phone 446-9340

I

CtusAA

"

SAN DIEGo . (UPf) - Cal
Sta te Fullerton will be
looking for revenge tonight
when the Titans travel to San
Diego State to visit the

OUR BIG FAU SALE IS NOW GOING ON! OUR CIRCULARS
YOU'LL FIND SOMETHING FOR .EVERYONE AT SUPER SAVINGS!
ARE IN THE MAIL

60
100

Ross .Southeast ern

L

~0

BANKAMERICARD

Points

west 'Union
Z~ne T.r ace
Adena

PAUL D. NIDAY

How top teams
fared Friday

completed 262 hours in Basic Law Enforcement
training. In addition to this , I have also completed
forty hours in Search and Seizure, forty hours in State

I

RIO GRANDE - Bloom
South Webeler, Greenfield
McClain and Lancaster
Cllptured CJas.ot A, AA and
AM Sectional Crou Country
tiU~ here Saturday.
.
·Bloom South Webster
taWed ~ poihta for·the CJas.ot ·
A honon. Greenfield had 71 in
the AA event while Lancaster
totaled 35 points in the AM
meet.
Mark Hamer, Bloom South
Webster, was the top CJas.ot A
l'Wlller with a lime of 11:011.
Tim Hllterbrand, GreenfieldMcClain, was tbe top AA
l'Wlller with a 10:56 effort.
Larry Cox, with a 10:30
performance, topped all AAA
runners.
The top four Class A and
AA teams, plus 12 top
l'Wlllers not.members of the
top four.tealfts, will advance
to the district meet, to be held
Oct. 29 at Carroll, Ohio.
Teams from southeastern,
central and eastern sectionals will take part in the
meet, slated to begin at 11
a.m.
The top two teams in Class
AAA action advance to
district competllioo, plus s!J:
rurmers not on the .top teams.
Here are Saturd~y·s
results:
Bloom South Webster

Cindy 13, Kathy 12, and Cherie 7. We also have a 19
year old boy Mike Wills, and he is employed at
Krogers.
I have been employed at Rio Grande College since
February 1959. At the present time I am Director of
Facilities a·t the College, and I also held the position of
Commander of the Ba sic Law Enforcement class
recently at Buckeye Hills Career Center at Rio
Grande.
I ~«ended Hocking Technical College where I

'

I

Team

RAY ROBERTS

J.

10
2 ·2

Name cross
country
wrnners

CLASS A

BY GREG BAILEY
Mohawk 54 t2
RACINE - Behind the
7 Newark Catholic &lt;!cl eat ed
running and scoring of
Watkins Memorial Ill
·
8 Woodsfie ld defeat ed ByE-sville
seniors AI Hill and Steve Boso
Meadowbrook 19 t .t
THISTLEDOWN
the Southern Tornados had a
Y Nrwco mer sto wn lost
to
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio bright Homecoming Friday
Garaw av r. ll
10. Ridgemont defeat ed Ben
(UP!) - Reason to Dare won
night as they blasted the
ia min Lo gnn 19 1~
the
featured ninth race at Symnles Valley Vikings 48-0.
,
Cl ass AA
.
I. St. Marys M em or ial dofe ated Thistledown Fri~ay by runHill led the way as he broke
Wapa ko ne ta ~ o
ning the rnile and 40 yards in away on long runs to score
7
New
Le )(ington d ef ea ted
I:44 Hi. Whistler's Father three touchdowns for a total
Sheridan 38 0
3.. Co lumhus·, Watter son play s was ~econd and Full Green
of 18 points and 125 yards in
ColU mbus Wehrle Saturda y
seven carries. Boso tallied
.1.
Shelby lO St IO Upper was third.
Sandusky 21 0
The winner, ridden by An- two TO's and four extra
5 A lo.ron St . Vi ncent pla ys
tonio
Graell, paid $6.40, $4.80 poipls while leading all
Warren Wes\crn ~ eser \le S&lt;1tur
day
and $3.
rushers with a big 214 yards
6 Huron pl ays Sr~nd us ky St
The
9-2-5
tenth
race
trifecla
and
29 carries.
Mar ys Satu rd ay
of Double Learned, B.
7 Urbana de f e ~ted Bell e fo n
It was a close game for the
t a ine 19 8
Battery and Full Treatment first quarter of action as the
B. Ironton def eat ed Jac kson 31
returned $9,312.30 to five Tornados were out in front
9 Broolo.v itle defe.lled Ger ma n ticket holders. The 3-3 daily
only 6-0 when the gun went
town Vall ey Vi ew JO 0
double of Boxwood Road and off. That score came on a 26tO Rea ding del l• ate d Lock lan d
IJO
Game Tim was worth $201.80.' yard break-away by the
Class AAA
speedy Hill.
1. Cmcirmat i Moell er defeated
Cind nnari Roger Bacon 20 o
But in the second canto the
WS ANGELES (UPII 1
Findlay pla'l'~ Mansfiel d
Hosts
started moving and
Senior Saturday
George Foreman, the top. Boso went over from the four
ranked challenger lor the and Hill had long runs of 31
vacant world heavyweight and 36 yards to put the game
boxing title, .has signed a out of reach at 22.0 at halflong-term agreement with time.
ABC Sports for his
The second half was anprofessional activities in and ticlimactic, · but the big
Candidate For
out of the boxing ring, it was · highlight was a «-yard pass
Ga Ilia County
announced Friday.
interception by Joe Broim
Sheriff
The agreement gives ABC who found paydirt before the
exclusive rights to televise Vikings caught up.
Dear Vottr :
Foreman's future bouts and
•Southern amassed li total of
My name is Ray Roberts ana 1would like to take a
calls
on Foreman lo serve as 386 yards on th~ night, but
few minutes of your tlme and let you know a little about
an expert commentator oo they didn't pick up any
myself and why I have decided to run for SheriH of
boxing telecasts and other yardage in the air. They had
Galli a County.
network programs.
I am 36 years of age, the son of Darrell and Mary
punt only once, and that
Foreman already has had to
Roberts. I am the only child. I was born and raised in
was
for 25 yards.
experience · as
a
Gallia County, and attended grade schOOl at Centenary
The
Vikings were held to a
and high school at Gallia Academy . I am married to
commentator, working at the
Joanne "Wickline" Roberts and have three daughters,
Montreal Olympics.

training, I feel

50

!.C.....'nle SUnday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 24, !118

"MORE THAN A
LUMBER YARD"
The Friendly One

RT. 2 BYPASS
\

POINT PUASANT
'·

''

'.
'

�•

4-C-'Ibe Sunday 'flnlee.SenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

Blue Devils edge Marauder~,
gain four-way tie for .first
proximately !,5ot chilled II in the fourth.
speclaton looked po. The
GaUlpolls appeared to have
contest wao played In 3Z. the game "loeked up" after
degree temperature.
Fullback Brlllll Mink picked
Neigher team threatened lri up a lint down oo the GAllS
tbe first stanza. Meigs ad- 38wlth ooly 1:55 remaining In
vani:ed to GaUls's 37 early In ·the coilteaL· ·
..
tbe second period before the
On the next play, however,
drive bogged down. Just the baU popped out of Wall's
before Intermission, GAHS hand on a sweep left. Alert
marched to Meigs' 31, but the Rick George p()unced on the
rugged MHS defense stil- , loose pigskin on the GAHS 29
fened and gained possession with I :33 showing on the
with 34 seconds left in the clock ..OAHS was penalized 15
hall.
yards on the play. That gave
Keith Jackson returned the Marauders a first down
Dave Blake's second hall on GaUia 's 14.
kickoff from his own 1$\o the
Steve Randolph, 145-i&gt;ound
GAHS 26.
senior tailback, cracked the
With senior taUback Dennis GAHS line for gains of five,
Salisbury leading the attack, three, two and then c~ashed
Gallipolis marched 74 yards over !roll! the four .\'f'il.lt 33
topaydirt. The.acore came on seconds left to make' it 8-6.
a ll·yard strike over' the
On the extra points atmiddle from QB Terry Wall tempt, QG George Gtim
to end Mike Staggs witli 8:05 roll~d to his right, spotted lejt
left in the period. WaU then end Dan Granda! In the endDefem;e was the name of raced around right end for zone, and threw. GAllS safety
the game Friday u •P" the two-point conver~lon to Terry WaU came out of
i
give GaUia an 8-0 advantage. nowhere and tipped· the baU
It appeared that was the away, preserving the slim
Ohio High School
way the game was going to Blue Devil lead.
Football Re ~ ulls
end after Meigs stopped a
Flake attempted aq onsides
Uni1ed Press Internat iOnal
All iance 39 Sal em 7
GAHS drive on the MHS 28 in kickoff. GAHS tackle and coAmanda Clearcreek 40 Bern e
the third and another Blue captain Kent Shawver fell on
Union "IJ
Devil drive on \be Marauder the ball on the Gallipolis 49.
Ash rand 20 Woo st er 1J
As htab ula Harbor l A MadiSon
W•ll ran two sneaks to end
the game.
Bed f ord 7 Willoughb y S 6
lle lt aire St. Johns 26 Han
Coach Moore called the
nibal R IV er _1 6
Meigs
defensive unit "a real
Bellbrook 28 Nor t hridge 6
Bex ley 9 New Albany 9
gutty bunch" as the
Blufft On 35 Co l . Gro ve 0
Marauders forced four
Br ecKsvi lle 15 Ind epen d ence
GaUipolis turnovers (three
8
Bryan 7 Montpelier 0
lost fwnbles and a pass inBuckeye S 2A Mart ins Ferry
AL L GAMES
21
Tea m
W L T P OP , terceptlon) . The Blue Devils
Cadiz 7 Je ft er so n Union 6
Gallipoli s
6 I 0 96 62 also had five costly penalties
Canlon M cK intey 39 Canton
Ironton
6 I 0 146 70
totaling 55 yards.
Tim k en 0
Logan
4 3 0 144 49
Chesapeake 38 Maysville Ky
Coach Chancey praised
Ch ill icothe
4 3 0 72 118
0
•
Jact&lt;.son
34 096 127
Ray
Willford, 195-pound
(i n Eld er 20 Cin Zavie r 0
At h ens
3 4 0 49 96
senior
tackle, Dink Keonedy,
F inne y low n 13 Ci n
Cin
Meigs
2 -505394
Greenhill s 0
We ll ston
1 5 0 76 97 145-pound sophomore corCi n LaS afl e 14 Cin Pur ce ll li
Roc k Hil l
25 065139
nerback aod Steve Randolph,
Cin Prin cetq n 20 Fai rfield 7
Coal Grove
160 89167
Cib Readin g 1&lt;~ Cin .L ock land
Waver I \I
0 7 0 30 179 defensive halfback, for !heir
Non -SEOAl res.u Its:
outslandlng play Friday.
Cin
Sy camore
19
Cin
Chillicothe
14
Marion
Mar iemon t 6
Franklin 0
For the first time this year,
Cl n Withi"ow HI Cin w esJer n
Oak. H i ll 32 Rock H ill 6
opponents
sacked GAHS
H ills 7
Sou th Point 17 Coa l Grove 7
Ci n Wyoming 16 Cin · N
quarterback_ Wall on more

POMEROY - Gallipolis
edged Meigs 8-6 i.n the
annual
Ma.rauders
homecoming contest here
Friday night.
Coa~h Willard (Buddy )
Moore's Blue Devils, afler a
scoreless fltst hall, took the
third quarter kickoff and
marched 74 yards to paydirt
In nine plays, added the twl&gt;polnt conversion, then held
off a last-second comeback
· effort by Coach Charles
Chancey's lads to post their
sixth win in seven starts this
fdll.
The victory left Gallipolis
In a four-way tie for first
place in the Southeastern
Ohio Athietlc League stan- .
dings with Ironton, Logan
and Athens. All have Identical 3-1 loop marks.
Meigs dropped to 2-5 on the
year and 1-3 Inside the
SEOAL.
.
~

,_-

,.

MARAUDER Tim Thomas (41 ) awaiiS pass while Blue Devil defender Dan Sickles I 421
closes in dW'ing Friday's GAHS-Meigs grid battle at Marauder Stad1um m Pomeroy, GAHS
won, 8.-6.

'

Grid
standings

Coll ege Hill 0
Cla ir m ont North ea stern 11
a·atavia 6
Cle Ben 27 Loui sville Aquinas

0

'

Clear Creek 40 Ber .n e Un ion

13

PUSHED OUT-OF-BOUNDS - Gallipolis Quarterback Terry Wall 110) who threw a
touchdown pass and scored the game's whming points on a lWOiJoinl conversion run, is
shoved out of hounds on the 20 yard line by Meigs' Rich George (32) on ground beneath
official.

Clearvie w 41 Wellington 0
&lt;; lo11 er le at 40 T r iwa"y 30
Cot Bishop Ready 52 C,o t St
Cha rl es 0
Col Broo khav en 21 Br iggs 0
Col E 34 Co l N 8
Col Westla nd :n Delaware 8
Coldw.Jter 11 Minster 0
Co lon el
Cr awfor d
21
Rive rdat e· J3
Co l umbia 6 Buckeye 2
Co l umbiana H McD onald 1
Cos ho.cton 9 Madison 0
cu .y ahoga F all s 311 Stow 0
Day C .J 28 Greenfield ·Mc Cla in 20
Day Meadowdale 56 Fai r v iew
8
Day W r ig ht 20 Day Dun ba r 14
Defiance 28 Van wert 16·
Delpho s St. John 's 6 Ce l ina o . ·
Dublin 14 Grandview 8
Ea stern JO wa te rford 15
Eastlake N 7 Mentor 7 li e
Ea to n 30 Preble Sh awnee 0
Ed ison 31 Greenwich SCent o

SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T P OP
Logan
3 1 0 - 109 29
Gallipolis
3 1 o Jil 'J7
Athe n s
3 I o 4Y 42
Ir onton
3 1 0 90 42
Jackso n
2 2 o 61 57
Meigs
1 J 0 20 36
We tt ston
I 3 0 21 57
Wa ver l y
0 .l 0 8 104
TOTALS
16 16 . 0. 394 . 394
Friday's results :
Gallipol is 8 Meigs 6
Iron ton 32 JackSon 21
Logan 31 A th en s 7
Wells ton 18 Wave r ly 8
Oct . 29 games :
A1he n s at Wel ls ton
Gallipo lis at J a cKson
M ei g s at Logan
'Waver l y at Ironton
Gr ov e City at Ch il lico th e
Che sape ak e at Rock Hill
Oct. JO game :
Co al GroVe a1 tren ton St . Joe

Woll
19 23 1.2
rd Ioas in tbe first rotiilllli
•• 201 4.1
stanza. Wood sacked the
1Meio•l
Meigs signal-caner Jor a slx- ~~~r,:;.,on
Tc~ v~/s~6
yardlO&amp;!Iintbesecondperlod Randolph
IJ 46 3.s
aod Dan Sickles and Mike coolS
J
s 1.6
1 ' 11 ' 11
. Wigglesworth nabbed Gwn · T. Thomas
Gum
s . Ja ·3.6
for a 10-yard loss in the final .. Totals
3o " 1.2
quarte.r .

lndivldu·a.l Passing
1Gallipolis)
Player
C-A I Yg

Gallipolis dominated the
Td
game's statistics. GAllS wall
• ·6 1 32 1
4·6 I 32 1
picked up 16 first downs .to Toflls
1Meio•
Meigs four. The GaUIBns had Player
C-1 1 H Td
233 total yards, 201 rushing in ¥~1~ 1 ,
: :~ ~
~
48 trips and 32 passing as
wau connected on four of six
aerials with one Interception,
Team Statistics
a 13-yard steal by Ken Young
Department
G M
In the ilecond period. GAllS .
Fiist downs
16
_.
con\,roUed the ball, running 54 -Yardsrushing
242 108
plays to Meigs 34.
Lost. rushing
41 41
Net rushing
201 67
Sallibury paced GaUlpolls' Pass
attempfS
6 4
crouod attaek with 107 yards Complelins
4
1
0
1
In te rc epted bY
In · Ill trips. Mink added 71 Yards
passing.
32 ·4
yards In 11 earilts.
Total yards
233 63
54 34
Dan Buffington had 45 Pl ays .
~u·rn yardage
12 51
yards in eight trips for Meigs. Re
Fumbles
5
J
steve Randolph added 46 LOst fumbles ·
3
1
Pun ts
3-89 7-215
yards In 13 attempts.
Penalt ies
5-55 1-5
Friday, GaUipolls plays at
Recovered enemy fumbles :
- K . Yo un g, Randolph
Jackson. Meigs will travel to Meigs
and R . George . GAHS - T .
Logan.
. Jones .
·scoring : GAH S - Staggs,
Here's Friday's statistics:

:!

:·:· :,::: ::;;.

Name Brand FurnRure and
Appliances At The Milt Reasonable

Prices P!Dble . .

·:

::
.:·:

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of two and three yards in the ' ,·'.',·
first stanza. Steady Allen
Stewart got back-to-back :-:
sacks totaling 10 yards in the
second period.
In the third stanza, Ray
Willford and Dave Blake had
back-t1&gt;-back sacks totaling
·15 yards on the lanky GAHS
signal-caller.
GaUipolis got to QB George
Gum on three occasions.
Senior co-captain and tackle
Mike Wood caught Gum for a .·.·

BAKER FURNITURE
M
::::

underinsulatecl·
attic.
6" of attic insulation is the
very minimum you should
have, say most energy con·
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If you have less than that,
you're wasting something
besides our country's
energy: Your money!
Good reason to take a ruler
up into your attic and check
the thickness of your .
insulation.
. To make it easier to add
insulation, our salesmen
are ready with all the a~vice
and how-to help you'll need .
And a wide selection of
quality Johns-Manville insu·
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your needs. Come in soon!

FOJ«!:JTT
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

GALLIPOLIS - South
Point defeated GaUipolis and
Jackson to take the
triangular match at GAHS
Thursday evening;
'fhe Angels got off to an
early 5 point lead In the first
game behind Spiker Tina
Nibert but the Angels fell Into
many mistakes allowing
South Point a 10-5 lead when
the Angels took Iinne out to
regroup. The South Point gals
poured it on with good· serving to defeat GAHS 15~ .
The second game was close
as the game was tled,.6 times
throughout the contest. South
Point took the second game
and match 16-14 to bring their
season record to 18-0. The
Angels now stand at 12-4..
Karen Sprague led the
Angela at the service line and
had a good night at the net.
The Angels hitters were led
by Tina Nibert and Barbara
Edeinnann.
The GAHS varsity's JV
defeated Jackson. The JV .
won In two straight gllllles lii7 and 15-1 behind serving
leaders Valerie Finley and
Kinn Betz. The varsity won lii8, lii-11 with Barb Edelmann
and Ginny Young leading the
acorlng.
South' Point defeated
Jackson IIHI, lii-12 in the final
• matcb.
GAllS travels to WeUston
Monday for varsity 's JV
competitjon. The Angels host
Waverly on Thursday,
September 28 at 6:'30 (a
change due lo sectional
clearing) for their last season
game.

'14

·carolina
Lumber.
&amp;
S~pply
Co.Joh••·M·~"·
312 6TH STREET
.
675.1160
' POINT PLEASANT I
~

· STORE HOURS: MON ..fRI. 8 to 5 SAT. 8-12

.

We carry energy-sav1ng, money-sav1ng Insulation by Johns-Manville.

II Il.~ I'
W. u

Hard ing Nor thern 36 Me.
Comb 1
Hicks vi ll e 241 Edg erton 0
H illiard 47 Whiteha ll 14
Howland 16 Boardman 0
Hubbar d 24 Campbell 8
Indian Va tt ey N 28 S1r asbur g
12
Jeff erson 47 Gr and Valley 6
Johns town 40 North ridge 0
Ken t Roosevelt 33 Nordon la 6
Lak e Cath 12 Lora in Cath 0
Lak eview 34 La Bra e 0
Lak ewood Sl Edward 10
Par ma Padua 6
Lancaster 6 Gro11e Ci ty 6 tie
L emc;H'l ~ M onroe AB
0Mfor d
Tallowanda B
L iber ty Union AD Mi lle r sport
8 .
L iberty Bento n 13 Van Bure n
10
L icking Hts 27 Lak ewood 0
L icki ng Va l ley 20 Granville 14
L irn a. Bath 30 Ke n to n 0
L ima Shawnee 8 Lima Ce n t
Cath 7
Lor ai n King
12 Mario n
H iHding 0
M ansfield Malabar 3 N
Philad elphi a 0
Massi llon 21 Bar ber ton 0
Mec han icsbul'g 16 F airbank s
9
.
Miami T race 46 Circ'leville 8
Miam isbu r g
21
Da yton
Norlhmonl 17
Middl etown 10 Lima Sr 0
Midvi ew 28 Ve rm il ion 0
Monroev i ll e 13 New L.on don 8
Mor gan 21 Ma\' sv ~! l e 0

Wahama's rteord dropped
to S-3 with an open date giving
them a much needed
breather before it.s remaining
two encounters with Buffalo
and Sisterville.
Dept.
First downs
Yards rushing
Yaras pass ing
Tolal yards

Passes'( A

wa

GIRLS

WI ·

3 3

Intercep tions
0
0
Fumbl es lost"
4 1 1,0
Pun 1s a11 er age
386360
Return yardage
118 124
Penalti es
10 55
By q~ ar t ers :
Waham~
o 6 o a-. 14
Wint leld
1 14 1 14- 42 .
Wah - Kevl n
Ru sh ing
Roush 11 4 1, l&lt;en Hllnkinson
6 30, Jim Oli11er 4 24 , Tim
Thompso n 5 16, Jack Sm ith 4
II, Tim R ic kard 1 3. M i ke
Go ldsberry 6 lJII l Win . Ross Burks 19 193, Art Do l in
11 89, Greg Sch 1 rt~l ngrr 5 H .
Ji mmy Tr ibble 10 1, H arry
Wa llace 3 "7, Ch arl ie Tr ibb le
I 6. Robb ie Dicken s l ( I)
Receivi ng Wah . Tim
Di'l11iS 5 61 , Tim Sayr e 2 93,
Creg lll esslng I 15. Win .- :--:
Ros s Bu rk,s 1 3 1 H arry
Wa llac e 1 24, Stevt:' Duff ie ld
I ·15.
Pas~l(lg ·~
Ji nlm v Tr ib ble
3 3, Mike Go ldsberr y 8· 14 ,
Ke n Hankinson 0 - ~ .

·C ould Vote •••

..

,,'.

\

VOTE·

DANNER

N elsonlli ll e York 17 Belpr e 7
N ew Br em en 7 Ansonia 6
N ew Concord Glenn 21 Tr i
Valley 7
N ew L exing ton' 18 Sheridan 0
N ew Richmond ·7 Bethel 0
'"Newark 26 Marietta 14
Newark Ca t h 8 Watk ins
Memor ia.! 7
NorwalK 7 Bellevue 0
Norwood 21 Cin A nderson 6
Orange 14 Chagrin Fa ll s 7
Philo 42 R ivcr View B
Port smo uth JS Ashla nd Ky 15
Sh enan doah 26 Barnesv ill e 0
Southeastern 36 Greenvi ew 2 1
Spri n gfie ld Jeff e-rs on 78
Cres tv iew 0
·
·u pper Arlington 2 1 Za nesvi ll e

Rachel and Becky Would
Vote For Their Daddy!!

3

Upper Sa ndu sky 2 1 Shel by 0
Urba na 19 Bellefontaine 8
U t ica 16 Health 0
Valley Fo rge 14 Gar f ie ld
Heights 0
Vanda lia Bulle r 12 Tecumse h

·-----------------------

8

Ve r sailles 14 Cov ing ton 0
w Branch 34 Liberty 74
w Je tl cr son 41 Ol en tangy 12
W Lak e 14 M.edina 6
W Musk ingum 8 Cr ooksv i ll e 0
w atnut Hill s 12 Cin Taft 6
Wa lsh Jesuit 24 Jac k son 0
War r en
Ha r d ing
20
Yo ung s town Raven 6
War r ensvi ll e 24 Cu y a hoga
Hei ghts 0
Way ne T ra ce 18 · Delph os
Jefferson 14
Waynesville 16 K ings 14
Waynesville
Go s h en
JB
R lv er si d e a
Wellsville ·20 St Clairsvill e 12
West Liberty Sa lem 48 T ria d0
Worthinglon 28 Ml Ver non 14
Youngstown
Moon ey
34
Str uthers 0
Z an esvi ll e Ro secr an s 2 1
Miller 10

VIrginia.

IF THESE

1'2
18
8.1 328
169
70
25 1 . 398
8 16

Unlveralty of Muucb~~~etll , .

Syracue, Harvll'd and Well

Your ·opportunity

WOLVERINE"
6" WELT l'«lRK BOOT
• Pebble l"lu10d cowhide
leather
• Weh conslruction
• Cushion insole and steel
shanh arch support
• Oil resistant neoprene sole
and heel

CARL'S

To Elect A Fully
Qualified ~olld Cltlzenll

xl

LLOYD E. DANNER

County Commissioner

SHOE STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

Pd . for by the Democratic
Executive Committee
I'

l

The Republican Candidate
Jan. 2 Term.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidill•·ies of the Consolidating domestic and foreign
of the

~ ubsidiaries

.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
or Gallipolis

BAGS DOE -Gene Ellis, Middleport, brought down
this doe with a bow and arrow on Oct. 19, on his father's
farm at Leading Creek. The doe weighed 175 pounds field
dnessed.
·

charter number 136
National Bank Region Nwnber4
of Gallipolis in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1976
published in ·response to call made by Comptroller of the CurreQcy,'under title '
12, United States Code, Section 161.

...

Ill
Ill

Ill
Ill

c

•

ASSETS
Cashandduefrom hanks ...... , ........ . . . ........... . , . ..... $3,211,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .......... .. ... . .. . ...... . ... ..... ... . 1,599,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Govt.
·
agencies and corps ............... . ........ . ........ . .......... 300,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ..... , , , , ~ .... .... 3,341,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ... .. ... ....... , .... , ... ...... 125,000.00
Federal Reserve stock anq corporate stock .. .... .... . . , . •....... . . 36,000.0()
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ..... ... ... .. ......... ... .. ....... 2,600,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .. . ..... . . 10,214,000.00
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses .... . .. .......... 113,000.00
Loans, Net. .. .......... .. . , , , , . , , , , ... . . , , , , , , .. , , ....... . 10,101,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises .. . .. .. , , , , , , . ... .. .. ... 252,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises . , , ... , , , , , , .. , ..... . .. 10,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . .................... . .. ...... .. .. .. .... ... $21,575,000.00
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps . . ... ... .... $4,679,000.00
Tinne and savings deposits of individuals,
.
prtnshps., and corps..... .. .. .. ..... , , .. , ....... ; .. .. .. .. .. . 12,623,000.00

Ill

.--.-....
Ill

II

-.c..

...

Go to work
in quality
'Outdoorsman .. , work
shoes for workmen . Quality

built to stay "on duty"

when

you' re

"on

:!

-cca.

u

~ -

2

dutyn .

Designed to keep you
comfortable all day ... and
deliver t~e kind of long
wear you exPKt for your
work shoe dollars~

Deposits o!United States Government . . ......... , , ... , , . . .. .. .. , , 170,000.00
Deposits or States and political subdivisions . .. ..... , .. . ......... 1,696,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks ........... ......... . . ... . , ....... .. 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .... .. ..... ...... . , .......... .. .. .. 107,000.00
TOTALDOMESTICDEPOSI:J'S .. . .... ..... .. . ......... ... . ... 19,280,000.00
Total demand deposits . .. .. ... .. .. . . ............... 6,657,000 . ~
Total time and savings deposits ...... .. ... .. ....... 12,623,000.00
Federal funds purchased andseourities sold
.
under agreements to repurchase ............. . , ......... ....... 100,000.00
Otberllabilities ........ ... ...... . . .. . . . ,, . ....... , ,,, ......... . 27,000.00
TOTALLIABIUTIES
(expluding subordinated notes and debentures; .. ... ..... ... .. $19,407,000.00
Preferred stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,000
b. No. shares outstanding 1,000
(par value ) ...... . , ......... 100,000.00
Surplus ................................ ..... .. . , . ........ . .. 1,100,000.00
Undivided profits .. .. .. ..... , .. .. ....... ...... . , , , , , , , ; , . , .. , .. 939,000.00
. Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves ................. 29,000.00
TOTA,LEQUITY CAPiTAL ........ . , . ....... , ................ 2,168,000.00
TOTALLIABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL., , ,,, , .. ,., .. .. $21,575,000.00
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date:
Cashandduefromhanks .... ... , .... . , ....... .. . ... .. ... ... $3,502,000.00
Fed. funds sold and secUPities
purchased under agreements to reseU .. . , , .... .. .. , .. ... ..... , 2,17~,000. 00
Total loans ,,,,, , ,, .. ,, .. ,, .. ,, .. ,, ., , ,, . ...... . .. .. . .. .... 11,200,000.00
Total deposits ....................... . . . .......... , , . .. .... 19,225,000.00
Fed. funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase . .... . ' ... '' ..... '' ...... i 142,000.00
I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vice President of the above-named bank, do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition i's true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
•
MarlinG. Kerns

Mon . &amp; Fri.9 :30 tlt8p .m.
• TIH!S. Wed. Sol .

9:JOtillp.m .

'

'

Ripley'_s junior halfback,
Mitch Carmichael, was the
leading baU lugger, cracking
for 64 yards in 14 cracks. For
PPHS , Rocky Goodnite
bolted and hafnmered for 47
in II holts. Rocky also intercepted a pass.
Jerry Ochletree, Viking
quarterback, caUed a clever
game and hit 7-for-17 passes
for 93 yards. His last
desperate heave, in the last
seconds, was picked off by
Jolm Withers. It was Jolm's
fourth interception of the
season. Trailing 0-6, the
Vikings started a push from
their own six where a Howard
punt had placed them in
adeep hole. But they clinnbed
out of that hole. It took them
15 plays to get down to PP 15;
with Carmichael's 24 yard
dash and 10 yard pass to
Jimmy Ball the blg gainers ..
Then Ball climaxed a 94
yard drive when he burst
over his 'right guard Blld
headed the last 15 into
paydirt. Gordy Ball kicked
true and Ripley led 7~ . with
I :02 left on the third period
clock. The Big Blacks had the
ball lor only live plays in that
perfod.
Only about five minutes
remained In the game when
PP began to put it together.
Howard hit Roush lor 12.
Howard nailed Roush for 22.
Howard speared Roush for 17
to the V Only about five
minutes remained in the
game when' Point began to
put it together. Howard hit
Roush for 12. Howard nailed
Roush for 22. Howard
speared Roush lor 17 to the
Viking 34. Ripley stiffened
and pushed PP back to the 40.

A VOTE FOR
JAMES BAILEY ·
·IS A VOTE FOR
HONESTY,'
DEPENDABILITY,
EXPERIENCE

95

·

high school scores

score."

3-way match

(We also carry
Johns-Manville's Water
Heater Insulation Kit to help
you insulate your home's ··
· No.2 energy user for JUSt

PAIR

Silver Bridge Plaza
Mon. thur Sat. 10til9
Sunday I til S

··: ··:·:::·:.

yOur home's No.1
energy

•

Except for a 39 yai-d burst ,
by sophomore running back
Kevin Roush , Wahama 's
ground attack was virtually
non-existent , as th ey
managed only 84 yards on 37
carries for a slim 2.2 average
per carry .
A fine performance was
turned out by young subbing
quarterback Ken Hankinson,
who carried the ball only .six
times and · yet was Wahama
second leading' rusher with 30
yards.
Defensive standouts once
again for the White Falcons
were: Brett Holbrook who
had 16 tackles follo wed
clo!jely by Tim Sayre with 13
defensive blows. However,
the awesome ground atta ck
proved too much for the
locals, as they gave up their
biggest point deficit of the
season.

girls claim

Shoes Not As Illustrated

. .*.

Point nips
Ripley, 14-7

standout by fa r was senior
middle guard Mike Cook who
stands at 6'4" and weighs 225
pounds. The young Cook
helped hold Wahama's
running attack to a mere 84
yards on tbe evening.
If some bright spots can be
found , it would have to be
Tim Davis' finest per(ormance of the Season, as he
nabbe~· five . aerials for 61
yards' to keep . the Falcons'
offensive hopes alive. Tim
Sayre managed to grab two
spectacular passes for 93
yards.
However, it was Davis who
managed both Wahama
touchdowns via the ann of
senior quarterba ck Mike
Goldsberry. He also ran for a
two point conversion; scoring
all14 points for the Bend area
team.

played Nov. Ill and 'II In
The toiii'!WIIfnt
lncludu ttallll from tbt
~lngfleld .

South Point

like what
you see! .

FOR PLAY
OR DRESS

$897

Then a big break on a pass
interference
play on Ripley
SIX POIN'I'S - Seni;r Geff Gabritsch (&amp;\) is shown
and
a
penalty
that moved the
closing his haod around ·a pass from Quarterback Jeff
ball
to
the
25.
HoUand that ended up accounting for Point Pleasant's
Swann pickect up one yard
flfst iouchdown. The pass covered 44 yards.
and Holland zinged another
12-yarder to Roush to the 12.
Goodnlte then slammed for
eight big ones to the four, and
Swann punched to the one. It
said :39 on the clock when
Holland submarined for the .
score. It was a hair-raising
79-yard inarch in 16 plays.
Scott Howard turned the right
corner for th e two-point
RIPLEY - Visiting Pt. good football team in the conversion and the locals
free.
Pleasant retained the Old stale . They have scored wer.e home
ST AT ..ST ICS'
Oaken Bucket here Friday against all their opponents in Dept .
PP R
9
1-3
night by sUpping past the losing eight straight games, First downs
71 \ 41
Net ya rds rush
Vikings 14-7 in the final 39 mainly because they have Passes
5· 1A 7-17
2
I
seconds of play.
Int er cep ted by
consistently fumbled within Yards
93
103
passing
The battle, dominated by the 11)-yard line.
17J 234
Scrimma ge ya r ds
Ripley's defense, was the 44th
63
25
Friday night, as the hall Retu rn ya r dage
·0
2
renewal of the trophy rivalry, was ending and Point Fumbles
0
2
Fumbles lost
It marked ·tbe lOth straight clinging to a 8-0 lead, the Punt s. , var ds ave. 5-30 .4 4-27
20
35
win for Point Pleasant in the Vikings were within spitting Pe nalty yard s
50
62
Offens ive pla ys
series and left the Big Blacks distance of a touchdown when
By quart ers :
0 b 0 8- 14
with a commanding 37-M they fumbled again. This Big B ta cks
Ripley
0070- 7
winning edge.
Iinne OQ the PPIIS three!
Sco ri ng :
It was played in hone- Petey Sommer recovered.
p pH s - Gelf Gabr itsch 40
pass from Jeff Holland [k irk
chilling weather and the Ripley had driven 61 yards to 'fai
led).
temperature was- down to 33 ·get there.
Ripl ey - Jim Ba ll 15 r un
or d y Bal l ki ck ) .
degrees when QB Jeff
It was a Holland to Geff (GPPH
S ~e ff Holland 1
HoUand burrowed over from Gabritsch pass at the 5:09 sneak
(S coll ~oward run )
\be one lor.the winning touch- .point in the second quarter
down to clinnax a 16-play 79- that was .good for a 40-yard .
yard sustained drive.
touchdown and a narrow 8-0
Co.ach Steve Stoffel's halftime lead. The conversion
valiant Vikings must be the kick failed.
unluckiest 1 most frustrated,
The plucky Big Blacks are
squared on tbe season at 4and-4 with two to go.
Coach Steve Safford, who
tails it like it is, said grimly at
the conclusion: "We got the
beja~bers kicked out of us
tonight. But I'll take a . win
any Iinne, no matter the
&lt;

LITTLE BOYS 10 to BIG BOYS 7

LEATHER
Su11day Only
UPPER

/:

Insulate

CANCELLED
GALLIPOLIS - Saturday's GAllS-Meigs reserve
football game scheduled on
Memorial Field was cancelled at thl!'request of Meigs.

OXFORDS

·:·::

BAKER PRESENTS -

SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
I UPI) - Springfield College
will host the Athletes In
Action USA basketball team
al Memorial Field House
Nov. 3. Athletes in Action is
led by former UCLA star
Ralph Drollinger.

BEULAH PARK
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPI)
- Flashy Go ·More, a 3-yearold brown gelding, set a 440yard . record of :21.80 in
winning tHe All-American
Quarter Horse Congress
Derby at Beulah Park
Friday.
,
The odds-on favorite came
with a rush on the outside to
win by a neck. Owner James
Reece took hom~ . $7,603.50, .
The regular thoroughbred ·
feat'lfe was II'On by ·Scotch
and Irish, which overtOok
lronlrunning Scott Alan In the
late stages of the race . The
winner retw-ned $42.80.
The
9-7-3
trifecta
combination returned
$9,853.50 to four palrons.

:-;:::

.,

:_.=·.:
.'
__ :.'.
_ :_.·'

'

RANDOLPH PICKS UP GAIN - Meigs tailback Steve Randolph (15 ) right, picked up .•
gain on this play before being brought down by Gallia 's Mike Staggs (80 ). In background 1s
Gallia's Tom Jones (29). R!lndo!ph paced MHS ball carriers with 16 ya rds in 13trips aga msl
the Blue Devils.
·

11 -yard pass from We ll, 8 :05 ,
th i rd (Wal t. run &gt;. Me igs Ra ndolph, 4-ya rd run , 0:33
fourth fpass tail ).
Score by quarters :
Ga llipoli S
0 0 a 0--'- 8
Meigs
o 0 0 6- 6

iNDIVIDUAL NET '
VAROS RUSHING
(GallipoliU
Tcb Yg Avg.
Player
11 71 6.A
Mink
18 107 5.9
Salisbury

~:;rg;w~ndoc~~~;•:..r:o\~~
along with Wheeler. Thomas
over, you'll
snagged Wall twice for losses

Glouster Tr imbl e 28 Yel low
Springs 14
Goshe n 18 Amelia 14
Gr ee nv i ll e 15 carlisle 8
Groveport 14 R eyno ld sbu rg
14 tie
Ham ilton Taft 7 Hamitton
Garf ie ld o

BY RANDY CLARK
WINFIELD - Coach Len
McCoy and his Winfield
Generals moved one step
closer to a state AA footbaU
play off berth Friday night by
routing the Wahama White
Falcons in a
42-1!
· Home comilig celebration
victory.
The Putnam County school
ruled up 328 yards on -the
f ground led by senior runnfug ·
back Ross Burks with 193
yards in 29 carries. In addition, Burks added a
thrilling 85 yard kick-off
return for one of his three
touchdowns on the evening.
Winfield's defe nsi ve

sevep-ya

•••

El ida 20 0 1tawa Glandorf 13
Elyria a· Sa ndu sky 8 lie
Fed eral Hoc kin g 26 Vin ton Cy
12&lt;;)
.
Fort Frye 23 Warren 13
Fran kli n 19 Madison Bu lle r
12
Franklin H ts 13 Hamiflon
Twp . 7
Fr em on t Ross 14 Lora in Sr . JJ
Frontier Local 14 Ca ldwell 8
Gahahna
Lincoln
14
westervi lle S 6
Geneva
22
As ht abu l a
Edgewood 0
Girard 117 Pain esv il le Harvey

Falcons bombed, 42-14

SPRINGFIE LD, Mus .
iUPI )- The BuketbiU HaU
of Fame Tt!K)ff Tournament,
which jn the pllt hu feetued
sucb stars aa Julius !!:rvlng
and Robert Parish, will be

Thursda '!9 :30 till2 nQOn

'•

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of
resources and liabilities. We delare that It has been examined by us, and lo the
best of OUI' knowledge and belief is true and correcl.
E. E. Null
Jolm E. Halliday - Directors
Russell D. Wood
.

'•

,, .

�•

4-C-'Ibe Sunday 'flnlee.SenUnel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

Blue Devils edge Marauder~,
gain four-way tie for .first
proximately !,5ot chilled II in the fourth.
speclaton looked po. The
GaUlpolls appeared to have
contest wao played In 3Z. the game "loeked up" after
degree temperature.
Fullback Brlllll Mink picked
Neigher team threatened lri up a lint down oo the GAllS
tbe first stanza. Meigs ad- 38wlth ooly 1:55 remaining In
vani:ed to GaUls's 37 early In ·the coilteaL· ·
..
tbe second period before the
On the next play, however,
drive bogged down. Just the baU popped out of Wall's
before Intermission, GAHS hand on a sweep left. Alert
marched to Meigs' 31, but the Rick George p()unced on the
rugged MHS defense stil- , loose pigskin on the GAHS 29
fened and gained possession with I :33 showing on the
with 34 seconds left in the clock ..OAHS was penalized 15
hall.
yards on the play. That gave
Keith Jackson returned the Marauders a first down
Dave Blake's second hall on GaUia 's 14.
kickoff from his own 1$\o the
Steve Randolph, 145-i&gt;ound
GAHS 26.
senior tailback, cracked the
With senior taUback Dennis GAHS line for gains of five,
Salisbury leading the attack, three, two and then c~ashed
Gallipolis marched 74 yards over !roll! the four .\'f'il.lt 33
topaydirt. The.acore came on seconds left to make' it 8-6.
a ll·yard strike over' the
On the extra points atmiddle from QB Terry Wall tempt, QG George Gtim
to end Mike Staggs witli 8:05 roll~d to his right, spotted lejt
left in the period. WaU then end Dan Granda! In the endDefem;e was the name of raced around right end for zone, and threw. GAllS safety
the game Friday u •P" the two-point conver~lon to Terry WaU came out of
i
give GaUia an 8-0 advantage. nowhere and tipped· the baU
It appeared that was the away, preserving the slim
Ohio High School
way the game was going to Blue Devil lead.
Football Re ~ ulls
end after Meigs stopped a
Flake attempted aq onsides
Uni1ed Press Internat iOnal
All iance 39 Sal em 7
GAHS drive on the MHS 28 in kickoff. GAHS tackle and coAmanda Clearcreek 40 Bern e
the third and another Blue captain Kent Shawver fell on
Union "IJ
Devil drive on \be Marauder the ball on the Gallipolis 49.
Ash rand 20 Woo st er 1J
As htab ula Harbor l A MadiSon
W•ll ran two sneaks to end
the game.
Bed f ord 7 Willoughb y S 6
lle lt aire St. Johns 26 Han
Coach Moore called the
nibal R IV er _1 6
Meigs
defensive unit "a real
Bellbrook 28 Nor t hridge 6
Bex ley 9 New Albany 9
gutty bunch" as the
Blufft On 35 Co l . Gro ve 0
Marauders forced four
Br ecKsvi lle 15 Ind epen d ence
GaUipolis turnovers (three
8
Bryan 7 Montpelier 0
lost fwnbles and a pass inBuckeye S 2A Mart ins Ferry
AL L GAMES
21
Tea m
W L T P OP , terceptlon) . The Blue Devils
Cadiz 7 Je ft er so n Union 6
Gallipoli s
6 I 0 96 62 also had five costly penalties
Canlon M cK intey 39 Canton
Ironton
6 I 0 146 70
totaling 55 yards.
Tim k en 0
Logan
4 3 0 144 49
Chesapeake 38 Maysville Ky
Coach Chancey praised
Ch ill icothe
4 3 0 72 118
0
•
Jact&lt;.son
34 096 127
Ray
Willford, 195-pound
(i n Eld er 20 Cin Zavie r 0
At h ens
3 4 0 49 96
senior
tackle, Dink Keonedy,
F inne y low n 13 Ci n
Cin
Meigs
2 -505394
Greenhill s 0
We ll ston
1 5 0 76 97 145-pound sophomore corCi n LaS afl e 14 Cin Pur ce ll li
Roc k Hil l
25 065139
nerback aod Steve Randolph,
Cin Prin cetq n 20 Fai rfield 7
Coal Grove
160 89167
Cib Readin g 1&lt;~ Cin .L ock land
Waver I \I
0 7 0 30 179 defensive halfback, for !heir
Non -SEOAl res.u Its:
outslandlng play Friday.
Cin
Sy camore
19
Cin
Chillicothe
14
Marion
Mar iemon t 6
Franklin 0
For the first time this year,
Cl n Withi"ow HI Cin w esJer n
Oak. H i ll 32 Rock H ill 6
opponents
sacked GAHS
H ills 7
Sou th Point 17 Coa l Grove 7
Ci n Wyoming 16 Cin · N
quarterback_ Wall on more

POMEROY - Gallipolis
edged Meigs 8-6 i.n the
annual
Ma.rauders
homecoming contest here
Friday night.
Coa~h Willard (Buddy )
Moore's Blue Devils, afler a
scoreless fltst hall, took the
third quarter kickoff and
marched 74 yards to paydirt
In nine plays, added the twl&gt;polnt conversion, then held
off a last-second comeback
· effort by Coach Charles
Chancey's lads to post their
sixth win in seven starts this
fdll.
The victory left Gallipolis
In a four-way tie for first
place in the Southeastern
Ohio Athietlc League stan- .
dings with Ironton, Logan
and Athens. All have Identical 3-1 loop marks.
Meigs dropped to 2-5 on the
year and 1-3 Inside the
SEOAL.
.
~

,_-

,.

MARAUDER Tim Thomas (41 ) awaiiS pass while Blue Devil defender Dan Sickles I 421
closes in dW'ing Friday's GAHS-Meigs grid battle at Marauder Stad1um m Pomeroy, GAHS
won, 8.-6.

'

Grid
standings

Coll ege Hill 0
Cla ir m ont North ea stern 11
a·atavia 6
Cle Ben 27 Loui sville Aquinas

0

'

Clear Creek 40 Ber .n e Un ion

13

PUSHED OUT-OF-BOUNDS - Gallipolis Quarterback Terry Wall 110) who threw a
touchdown pass and scored the game's whming points on a lWOiJoinl conversion run, is
shoved out of hounds on the 20 yard line by Meigs' Rich George (32) on ground beneath
official.

Clearvie w 41 Wellington 0
&lt;; lo11 er le at 40 T r iwa"y 30
Cot Bishop Ready 52 C,o t St
Cha rl es 0
Col Broo khav en 21 Br iggs 0
Col E 34 Co l N 8
Col Westla nd :n Delaware 8
Coldw.Jter 11 Minster 0
Co lon el
Cr awfor d
21
Rive rdat e· J3
Co l umbia 6 Buckeye 2
Co l umbiana H McD onald 1
Cos ho.cton 9 Madison 0
cu .y ahoga F all s 311 Stow 0
Day C .J 28 Greenfield ·Mc Cla in 20
Day Meadowdale 56 Fai r v iew
8
Day W r ig ht 20 Day Dun ba r 14
Defiance 28 Van wert 16·
Delpho s St. John 's 6 Ce l ina o . ·
Dublin 14 Grandview 8
Ea stern JO wa te rford 15
Eastlake N 7 Mentor 7 li e
Ea to n 30 Preble Sh awnee 0
Ed ison 31 Greenwich SCent o

SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T P OP
Logan
3 1 0 - 109 29
Gallipolis
3 1 o Jil 'J7
Athe n s
3 I o 4Y 42
Ir onton
3 1 0 90 42
Jackso n
2 2 o 61 57
Meigs
1 J 0 20 36
We tt ston
I 3 0 21 57
Wa ver l y
0 .l 0 8 104
TOTALS
16 16 . 0. 394 . 394
Friday's results :
Gallipol is 8 Meigs 6
Iron ton 32 JackSon 21
Logan 31 A th en s 7
Wells ton 18 Wave r ly 8
Oct . 29 games :
A1he n s at Wel ls ton
Gallipo lis at J a cKson
M ei g s at Logan
'Waver l y at Ironton
Gr ov e City at Ch il lico th e
Che sape ak e at Rock Hill
Oct. JO game :
Co al GroVe a1 tren ton St . Joe

Woll
19 23 1.2
rd Ioas in tbe first rotiilllli
•• 201 4.1
stanza. Wood sacked the
1Meio•l
Meigs signal-caner Jor a slx- ~~~r,:;.,on
Tc~ v~/s~6
yardlO&amp;!Iintbesecondperlod Randolph
IJ 46 3.s
aod Dan Sickles and Mike coolS
J
s 1.6
1 ' 11 ' 11
. Wigglesworth nabbed Gwn · T. Thomas
Gum
s . Ja ·3.6
for a 10-yard loss in the final .. Totals
3o " 1.2
quarte.r .

lndivldu·a.l Passing
1Gallipolis)
Player
C-A I Yg

Gallipolis dominated the
Td
game's statistics. GAllS wall
• ·6 1 32 1
4·6 I 32 1
picked up 16 first downs .to Toflls
1Meio•
Meigs four. The GaUIBns had Player
C-1 1 H Td
233 total yards, 201 rushing in ¥~1~ 1 ,
: :~ ~
~
48 trips and 32 passing as
wau connected on four of six
aerials with one Interception,
Team Statistics
a 13-yard steal by Ken Young
Department
G M
In the ilecond period. GAllS .
Fiist downs
16
_.
con\,roUed the ball, running 54 -Yardsrushing
242 108
plays to Meigs 34.
Lost. rushing
41 41
Net rushing
201 67
Sallibury paced GaUlpolls' Pass
attempfS
6 4
crouod attaek with 107 yards Complelins
4
1
0
1
In te rc epted bY
In · Ill trips. Mink added 71 Yards
passing.
32 ·4
yards In 11 earilts.
Total yards
233 63
54 34
Dan Buffington had 45 Pl ays .
~u·rn yardage
12 51
yards in eight trips for Meigs. Re
Fumbles
5
J
steve Randolph added 46 LOst fumbles ·
3
1
Pun ts
3-89 7-215
yards In 13 attempts.
Penalt ies
5-55 1-5
Friday, GaUipolls plays at
Recovered enemy fumbles :
- K . Yo un g, Randolph
Jackson. Meigs will travel to Meigs
and R . George . GAHS - T .
Logan.
. Jones .
·scoring : GAH S - Staggs,
Here's Friday's statistics:

:!

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·:

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of two and three yards in the ' ,·'.',·
first stanza. Steady Allen
Stewart got back-to-back :-:
sacks totaling 10 yards in the
second period.
In the third stanza, Ray
Willford and Dave Blake had
back-t1&gt;-back sacks totaling
·15 yards on the lanky GAHS
signal-caller.
GaUipolis got to QB George
Gum on three occasions.
Senior co-captain and tackle
Mike Wood caught Gum for a .·.·

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Good reason to take a ruler
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And a wide selection of
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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

GALLIPOLIS - South
Point defeated GaUipolis and
Jackson to take the
triangular match at GAHS
Thursday evening;
'fhe Angels got off to an
early 5 point lead In the first
game behind Spiker Tina
Nibert but the Angels fell Into
many mistakes allowing
South Point a 10-5 lead when
the Angels took Iinne out to
regroup. The South Point gals
poured it on with good· serving to defeat GAHS 15~ .
The second game was close
as the game was tled,.6 times
throughout the contest. South
Point took the second game
and match 16-14 to bring their
season record to 18-0. The
Angels now stand at 12-4..
Karen Sprague led the
Angela at the service line and
had a good night at the net.
The Angels hitters were led
by Tina Nibert and Barbara
Edeinnann.
The GAHS varsity's JV
defeated Jackson. The JV .
won In two straight gllllles lii7 and 15-1 behind serving
leaders Valerie Finley and
Kinn Betz. The varsity won lii8, lii-11 with Barb Edelmann
and Ginny Young leading the
acorlng.
South' Point defeated
Jackson IIHI, lii-12 in the final
• matcb.
GAllS travels to WeUston
Monday for varsity 's JV
competitjon. The Angels host
Waverly on Thursday,
September 28 at 6:'30 (a
change due lo sectional
clearing) for their last season
game.

'14

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~

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.

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II Il.~ I'
W. u

Hard ing Nor thern 36 Me.
Comb 1
Hicks vi ll e 241 Edg erton 0
H illiard 47 Whiteha ll 14
Howland 16 Boardman 0
Hubbar d 24 Campbell 8
Indian Va tt ey N 28 S1r asbur g
12
Jeff erson 47 Gr and Valley 6
Johns town 40 North ridge 0
Ken t Roosevelt 33 Nordon la 6
Lak e Cath 12 Lora in Cath 0
Lak eview 34 La Bra e 0
Lak ewood Sl Edward 10
Par ma Padua 6
Lancaster 6 Gro11e Ci ty 6 tie
L emc;H'l ~ M onroe AB
0Mfor d
Tallowanda B
L iber ty Union AD Mi lle r sport
8 .
L iberty Bento n 13 Van Bure n
10
L icking Hts 27 Lak ewood 0
L icki ng Va l ley 20 Granville 14
L irn a. Bath 30 Ke n to n 0
L ima Shawnee 8 Lima Ce n t
Cath 7
Lor ai n King
12 Mario n
H iHding 0
M ansfield Malabar 3 N
Philad elphi a 0
Massi llon 21 Bar ber ton 0
Mec han icsbul'g 16 F airbank s
9
.
Miami T race 46 Circ'leville 8
Miam isbu r g
21
Da yton
Norlhmonl 17
Middl etown 10 Lima Sr 0
Midvi ew 28 Ve rm il ion 0
Monroev i ll e 13 New L.on don 8
Mor gan 21 Ma\' sv ~! l e 0

Wahama's rteord dropped
to S-3 with an open date giving
them a much needed
breather before it.s remaining
two encounters with Buffalo
and Sisterville.
Dept.
First downs
Yards rushing
Yaras pass ing
Tolal yards

Passes'( A

wa

GIRLS

WI ·

3 3

Intercep tions
0
0
Fumbl es lost"
4 1 1,0
Pun 1s a11 er age
386360
Return yardage
118 124
Penalti es
10 55
By q~ ar t ers :
Waham~
o 6 o a-. 14
Wint leld
1 14 1 14- 42 .
Wah - Kevl n
Ru sh ing
Roush 11 4 1, l&lt;en Hllnkinson
6 30, Jim Oli11er 4 24 , Tim
Thompso n 5 16, Jack Sm ith 4
II, Tim R ic kard 1 3. M i ke
Go ldsberry 6 lJII l Win . Ross Burks 19 193, Art Do l in
11 89, Greg Sch 1 rt~l ngrr 5 H .
Ji mmy Tr ibble 10 1, H arry
Wa llace 3 "7, Ch arl ie Tr ibb le
I 6. Robb ie Dicken s l ( I)
Receivi ng Wah . Tim
Di'l11iS 5 61 , Tim Sayr e 2 93,
Creg lll esslng I 15. Win .- :--:
Ros s Bu rk,s 1 3 1 H arry
Wa llac e 1 24, Stevt:' Duff ie ld
I ·15.
Pas~l(lg ·~
Ji nlm v Tr ib ble
3 3, Mike Go ldsberr y 8· 14 ,
Ke n Hankinson 0 - ~ .

·C ould Vote •••

..

,,'.

\

VOTE·

DANNER

N elsonlli ll e York 17 Belpr e 7
N ew Br em en 7 Ansonia 6
N ew Concord Glenn 21 Tr i
Valley 7
N ew L exing ton' 18 Sheridan 0
N ew Richmond ·7 Bethel 0
'"Newark 26 Marietta 14
Newark Ca t h 8 Watk ins
Memor ia.! 7
NorwalK 7 Bellevue 0
Norwood 21 Cin A nderson 6
Orange 14 Chagrin Fa ll s 7
Philo 42 R ivcr View B
Port smo uth JS Ashla nd Ky 15
Sh enan doah 26 Barnesv ill e 0
Southeastern 36 Greenvi ew 2 1
Spri n gfie ld Jeff e-rs on 78
Cres tv iew 0
·
·u pper Arlington 2 1 Za nesvi ll e

Rachel and Becky Would
Vote For Their Daddy!!

3

Upper Sa ndu sky 2 1 Shel by 0
Urba na 19 Bellefontaine 8
U t ica 16 Health 0
Valley Fo rge 14 Gar f ie ld
Heights 0
Vanda lia Bulle r 12 Tecumse h

·-----------------------

8

Ve r sailles 14 Cov ing ton 0
w Branch 34 Liberty 74
w Je tl cr son 41 Ol en tangy 12
W Lak e 14 M.edina 6
W Musk ingum 8 Cr ooksv i ll e 0
w atnut Hill s 12 Cin Taft 6
Wa lsh Jesuit 24 Jac k son 0
War r en
Ha r d ing
20
Yo ung s town Raven 6
War r ensvi ll e 24 Cu y a hoga
Hei ghts 0
Way ne T ra ce 18 · Delph os
Jefferson 14
Waynesville 16 K ings 14
Waynesville
Go s h en
JB
R lv er si d e a
Wellsville ·20 St Clairsvill e 12
West Liberty Sa lem 48 T ria d0
Worthinglon 28 Ml Ver non 14
Youngstown
Moon ey
34
Str uthers 0
Z an esvi ll e Ro secr an s 2 1
Miller 10

VIrginia.

IF THESE

1'2
18
8.1 328
169
70
25 1 . 398
8 16

Unlveralty of Muucb~~~etll , .

Syracue, Harvll'd and Well

Your ·opportunity

WOLVERINE"
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• Pebble l"lu10d cowhide
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• Oil resistant neoprene sole
and heel

CARL'S

To Elect A Fully
Qualified ~olld Cltlzenll

xl

LLOYD E. DANNER

County Commissioner

SHOE STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

Pd . for by the Democratic
Executive Committee
I'

l

The Republican Candidate
Jan. 2 Term.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidill•·ies of the Consolidating domestic and foreign
of the

~ ubsidiaries

.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
or Gallipolis

BAGS DOE -Gene Ellis, Middleport, brought down
this doe with a bow and arrow on Oct. 19, on his father's
farm at Leading Creek. The doe weighed 175 pounds field
dnessed.
·

charter number 136
National Bank Region Nwnber4
of Gallipolis in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1976
published in ·response to call made by Comptroller of the CurreQcy,'under title '
12, United States Code, Section 161.

...

Ill
Ill

Ill
Ill

c

•

ASSETS
Cashandduefrom hanks ...... , ........ . . . ........... . , . ..... $3,211,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .......... .. ... . .. . ...... . ... ..... ... . 1,599,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Govt.
·
agencies and corps ............... . ........ . ........ . .......... 300,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ..... , , , , ~ .... .... 3,341,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ... .. ... ....... , .... , ... ...... 125,000.00
Federal Reserve stock anq corporate stock .. .... .... . . , . •....... . . 36,000.0()
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ..... ... ... .. ......... ... .. ....... 2,600,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .. . ..... . . 10,214,000.00
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses .... . .. .......... 113,000.00
Loans, Net. .. .......... .. . , , , , . , , , , ... . . , , , , , , .. , , ....... . 10,101,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises .. . .. .. , , , , , , . ... .. .. ... 252,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises . , , ... , , , , , , .. , ..... . .. 10,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . .................... . .. ...... .. .. .. .... ... $21,575,000.00
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps . . ... ... .... $4,679,000.00
Tinne and savings deposits of individuals,
.
prtnshps., and corps..... .. .. .. ..... , , .. , ....... ; .. .. .. .. .. . 12,623,000.00

Ill

.--.-....
Ill

II

-.c..

...

Go to work
in quality
'Outdoorsman .. , work
shoes for workmen . Quality

built to stay "on duty"

when

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"on

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2

dutyn .

Designed to keep you
comfortable all day ... and
deliver t~e kind of long
wear you exPKt for your
work shoe dollars~

Deposits o!United States Government . . ......... , , ... , , . . .. .. .. , , 170,000.00
Deposits or States and political subdivisions . .. ..... , .. . ......... 1,696,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks ........... ......... . . ... . , ....... .. 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .... .. ..... ...... . , .......... .. .. .. 107,000.00
TOTALDOMESTICDEPOSI:J'S .. . .... ..... .. . ......... ... . ... 19,280,000.00
Total demand deposits . .. .. ... .. .. . . ............... 6,657,000 . ~
Total time and savings deposits ...... .. ... .. ....... 12,623,000.00
Federal funds purchased andseourities sold
.
under agreements to repurchase ............. . , ......... ....... 100,000.00
Otberllabilities ........ ... ...... . . .. . . . ,, . ....... , ,,, ......... . 27,000.00
TOTALLIABIUTIES
(expluding subordinated notes and debentures; .. ... ..... ... .. $19,407,000.00
Preferred stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,000
b. No. shares outstanding 1,000
(par value ) ...... . , ......... 100,000.00
Surplus ................................ ..... .. . , . ........ . .. 1,100,000.00
Undivided profits .. .. .. ..... , .. .. ....... ...... . , , , , , , , ; , . , .. , .. 939,000.00
. Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves ................. 29,000.00
TOTA,LEQUITY CAPiTAL ........ . , . ....... , ................ 2,168,000.00
TOTALLIABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL., , ,,, , .. ,., .. .. $21,575,000.00
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date:
Cashandduefromhanks .... ... , .... . , ....... .. . ... .. ... ... $3,502,000.00
Fed. funds sold and secUPities
purchased under agreements to reseU .. . , , .... .. .. , .. ... ..... , 2,17~,000. 00
Total loans ,,,,, , ,, .. ,, .. ,, .. ,, .. ,, ., , ,, . ...... . .. .. . .. .... 11,200,000.00
Total deposits ....................... . . . .......... , , . .. .... 19,225,000.00
Fed. funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase . .... . ' ... '' ..... '' ...... i 142,000.00
I, Marlin G. Kerns, Executive Vice President of the above-named bank, do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition i's true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
•
MarlinG. Kerns

Mon . &amp; Fri.9 :30 tlt8p .m.
• TIH!S. Wed. Sol .

9:JOtillp.m .

'

'

Ripley'_s junior halfback,
Mitch Carmichael, was the
leading baU lugger, cracking
for 64 yards in 14 cracks. For
PPHS , Rocky Goodnite
bolted and hafnmered for 47
in II holts. Rocky also intercepted a pass.
Jerry Ochletree, Viking
quarterback, caUed a clever
game and hit 7-for-17 passes
for 93 yards. His last
desperate heave, in the last
seconds, was picked off by
Jolm Withers. It was Jolm's
fourth interception of the
season. Trailing 0-6, the
Vikings started a push from
their own six where a Howard
punt had placed them in
adeep hole. But they clinnbed
out of that hole. It took them
15 plays to get down to PP 15;
with Carmichael's 24 yard
dash and 10 yard pass to
Jimmy Ball the blg gainers ..
Then Ball climaxed a 94
yard drive when he burst
over his 'right guard Blld
headed the last 15 into
paydirt. Gordy Ball kicked
true and Ripley led 7~ . with
I :02 left on the third period
clock. The Big Blacks had the
ball lor only live plays in that
perfod.
Only about five minutes
remained In the game when
PP began to put it together.
Howard hit Roush lor 12.
Howard nailed Roush for 22.
Howard speared Roush for 17
to the V Only about five
minutes remained in the
game when' Point began to
put it together. Howard hit
Roush for 12. Howard nailed
Roush for 22. Howard
speared Roush lor 17 to the
Viking 34. Ripley stiffened
and pushed PP back to the 40.

A VOTE FOR
JAMES BAILEY ·
·IS A VOTE FOR
HONESTY,'
DEPENDABILITY,
EXPERIENCE

95

·

high school scores

score."

3-way match

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PAIR

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Mon. thur Sat. 10til9
Sunday I til S

··: ··:·:::·:.

yOur home's No.1
energy

•

Except for a 39 yai-d burst ,
by sophomore running back
Kevin Roush , Wahama 's
ground attack was virtually
non-existent , as th ey
managed only 84 yards on 37
carries for a slim 2.2 average
per carry .
A fine performance was
turned out by young subbing
quarterback Ken Hankinson,
who carried the ball only .six
times and · yet was Wahama
second leading' rusher with 30
yards.
Defensive standouts once
again for the White Falcons
were: Brett Holbrook who
had 16 tackles follo wed
clo!jely by Tim Sayre with 13
defensive blows. However,
the awesome ground atta ck
proved too much for the
locals, as they gave up their
biggest point deficit of the
season.

girls claim

Shoes Not As Illustrated

. .*.

Point nips
Ripley, 14-7

standout by fa r was senior
middle guard Mike Cook who
stands at 6'4" and weighs 225
pounds. The young Cook
helped hold Wahama's
running attack to a mere 84
yards on tbe evening.
If some bright spots can be
found , it would have to be
Tim Davis' finest per(ormance of the Season, as he
nabbe~· five . aerials for 61
yards' to keep . the Falcons'
offensive hopes alive. Tim
Sayre managed to grab two
spectacular passes for 93
yards.
However, it was Davis who
managed both Wahama
touchdowns via the ann of
senior quarterba ck Mike
Goldsberry. He also ran for a
two point conversion; scoring
all14 points for the Bend area
team.

played Nov. Ill and 'II In
The toiii'!WIIfnt
lncludu ttallll from tbt
~lngfleld .

South Point

like what
you see! .

FOR PLAY
OR DRESS

$897

Then a big break on a pass
interference
play on Ripley
SIX POIN'I'S - Seni;r Geff Gabritsch (&amp;\) is shown
and
a
penalty
that moved the
closing his haod around ·a pass from Quarterback Jeff
ball
to
the
25.
HoUand that ended up accounting for Point Pleasant's
Swann pickect up one yard
flfst iouchdown. The pass covered 44 yards.
and Holland zinged another
12-yarder to Roush to the 12.
Goodnlte then slammed for
eight big ones to the four, and
Swann punched to the one. It
said :39 on the clock when
Holland submarined for the .
score. It was a hair-raising
79-yard inarch in 16 plays.
Scott Howard turned the right
corner for th e two-point
RIPLEY - Visiting Pt. good football team in the conversion and the locals
free.
Pleasant retained the Old stale . They have scored wer.e home
ST AT ..ST ICS'
Oaken Bucket here Friday against all their opponents in Dept .
PP R
9
1-3
night by sUpping past the losing eight straight games, First downs
71 \ 41
Net ya rds rush
Vikings 14-7 in the final 39 mainly because they have Passes
5· 1A 7-17
2
I
seconds of play.
Int er cep ted by
consistently fumbled within Yards
93
103
passing
The battle, dominated by the 11)-yard line.
17J 234
Scrimma ge ya r ds
Ripley's defense, was the 44th
63
25
Friday night, as the hall Retu rn ya r dage
·0
2
renewal of the trophy rivalry, was ending and Point Fumbles
0
2
Fumbles lost
It marked ·tbe lOth straight clinging to a 8-0 lead, the Punt s. , var ds ave. 5-30 .4 4-27
20
35
win for Point Pleasant in the Vikings were within spitting Pe nalty yard s
50
62
Offens ive pla ys
series and left the Big Blacks distance of a touchdown when
By quart ers :
0 b 0 8- 14
with a commanding 37-M they fumbled again. This Big B ta cks
Ripley
0070- 7
winning edge.
Iinne OQ the PPIIS three!
Sco ri ng :
It was played in hone- Petey Sommer recovered.
p pH s - Gelf Gabr itsch 40
pass from Jeff Holland [k irk
chilling weather and the Ripley had driven 61 yards to 'fai
led).
temperature was- down to 33 ·get there.
Ripl ey - Jim Ba ll 15 r un
or d y Bal l ki ck ) .
degrees when QB Jeff
It was a Holland to Geff (GPPH
S ~e ff Holland 1
HoUand burrowed over from Gabritsch pass at the 5:09 sneak
(S coll ~oward run )
\be one lor.the winning touch- .point in the second quarter
down to clinnax a 16-play 79- that was .good for a 40-yard .
yard sustained drive.
touchdown and a narrow 8-0
Co.ach Steve Stoffel's halftime lead. The conversion
valiant Vikings must be the kick failed.
unluckiest 1 most frustrated,
The plucky Big Blacks are
squared on tbe season at 4and-4 with two to go.
Coach Steve Safford, who
tails it like it is, said grimly at
the conclusion: "We got the
beja~bers kicked out of us
tonight. But I'll take a . win
any Iinne, no matter the
&lt;

LITTLE BOYS 10 to BIG BOYS 7

LEATHER
Su11day Only
UPPER

/:

Insulate

CANCELLED
GALLIPOLIS - Saturday's GAllS-Meigs reserve
football game scheduled on
Memorial Field was cancelled at thl!'request of Meigs.

OXFORDS

·:·::

BAKER PRESENTS -

SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
I UPI) - Springfield College
will host the Athletes In
Action USA basketball team
al Memorial Field House
Nov. 3. Athletes in Action is
led by former UCLA star
Ralph Drollinger.

BEULAH PARK
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPI)
- Flashy Go ·More, a 3-yearold brown gelding, set a 440yard . record of :21.80 in
winning tHe All-American
Quarter Horse Congress
Derby at Beulah Park
Friday.
,
The odds-on favorite came
with a rush on the outside to
win by a neck. Owner James
Reece took hom~ . $7,603.50, .
The regular thoroughbred ·
feat'lfe was II'On by ·Scotch
and Irish, which overtOok
lronlrunning Scott Alan In the
late stages of the race . The
winner retw-ned $42.80.
The
9-7-3
trifecta
combination returned
$9,853.50 to four palrons.

:-;:::

.,

:_.=·.:
.'
__ :.'.
_ :_.·'

'

RANDOLPH PICKS UP GAIN - Meigs tailback Steve Randolph (15 ) right, picked up .•
gain on this play before being brought down by Gallia 's Mike Staggs (80 ). In background 1s
Gallia's Tom Jones (29). R!lndo!ph paced MHS ball carriers with 16 ya rds in 13trips aga msl
the Blue Devils.
·

11 -yard pass from We ll, 8 :05 ,
th i rd (Wal t. run &gt;. Me igs Ra ndolph, 4-ya rd run , 0:33
fourth fpass tail ).
Score by quarters :
Ga llipoli S
0 0 a 0--'- 8
Meigs
o 0 0 6- 6

iNDIVIDUAL NET '
VAROS RUSHING
(GallipoliU
Tcb Yg Avg.
Player
11 71 6.A
Mink
18 107 5.9
Salisbury

~:;rg;w~ndoc~~~;•:..r:o\~~
along with Wheeler. Thomas
over, you'll
snagged Wall twice for losses

Glouster Tr imbl e 28 Yel low
Springs 14
Goshe n 18 Amelia 14
Gr ee nv i ll e 15 carlisle 8
Groveport 14 R eyno ld sbu rg
14 tie
Ham ilton Taft 7 Hamitton
Garf ie ld o

BY RANDY CLARK
WINFIELD - Coach Len
McCoy and his Winfield
Generals moved one step
closer to a state AA footbaU
play off berth Friday night by
routing the Wahama White
Falcons in a
42-1!
· Home comilig celebration
victory.
The Putnam County school
ruled up 328 yards on -the
f ground led by senior runnfug ·
back Ross Burks with 193
yards in 29 carries. In addition, Burks added a
thrilling 85 yard kick-off
return for one of his three
touchdowns on the evening.
Winfield's defe nsi ve

sevep-ya

•••

El ida 20 0 1tawa Glandorf 13
Elyria a· Sa ndu sky 8 lie
Fed eral Hoc kin g 26 Vin ton Cy
12&lt;;)
.
Fort Frye 23 Warren 13
Fran kli n 19 Madison Bu lle r
12
Franklin H ts 13 Hamiflon
Twp . 7
Fr em on t Ross 14 Lora in Sr . JJ
Frontier Local 14 Ca ldwell 8
Gahahna
Lincoln
14
westervi lle S 6
Geneva
22
As ht abu l a
Edgewood 0
Girard 117 Pain esv il le Harvey

Falcons bombed, 42-14

SPRINGFIE LD, Mus .
iUPI )- The BuketbiU HaU
of Fame Tt!K)ff Tournament,
which jn the pllt hu feetued
sucb stars aa Julius !!:rvlng
and Robert Parish, will be

Thursda '!9 :30 till2 nQOn

'•

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of
resources and liabilities. We delare that It has been examined by us, and lo the
best of OUI' knowledge and belief is true and correcl.
E. E. Null
Jolm E. Halliday - Directors
Russell D. Wood
.

'•

,, .

�,- '
~unaay,

M:-The .SUnday Ttmes.senunet,

uct.

~4. 1~1•

Spartans stop -Bobcats, 28 to 7

Sooners ·are
upset, 31-24
Taylor scored on a six-yard
NORMAN, OKLA. (UPI) Terry Miller rushed for 159 run and wingback Ricky
yards, including a 72-yard Taylor caught a five-yard
pass from
touchdown ~ gallop, and touchdown
Charlie
. Oklahoma State scored its quarterba c k
first victory over Oklahoma Weatherbie, who did not play
in 10 years Saturday, up- ur.iil mldw'ay into the third
selling the .fifth -ranked quarter. Weatherbie and Skip
Taylor also hooked up on .a
Sooners 31·24 . .
Abby Daigle .kicked three two:poinl .conversion.
Ok lahoma's Elvis Peacock
field goals for .the Cowboys,
hilling form 25, 35 and 46 ·reeled off the longest scoring
yards. RuMing back Skip run in the wild offensive
battle, an 84-yarder. The
Sooners also scored on a 37·
yard run by fullback Jim
Culbrea th and one a 21-yard
· run wiih an intercepted
fumble by tackle Richard
Wash . U. (Mo.I 11 Rochester. Murray. Ewe Von Schamann
kicked a 27-yard field goal lor
u. 0
Florida 20 Tennessee 18
Oklahoma.
Hamp. lnsl. 38 Virgin ia St . 36
The big eight conference
Alabama 24 Louisvi lle J
victory
was only the
Auburn 31 Ftor'tdll St . 19
Cowboy's third victory
N. c.'S!. 38 Clemson 11
Wa sh. &amp; Lee 16 Sewanee I J against Oklahoma during the
W. Ken.t ucky 10 E. Kenl4cky
past 30 years.

Saturday's

ALBANY - For the third
straight year, COBch Dave
Snipes' Aleunder Si&gt;artaris
proved to be too much for the
SVAC champion Kyger Creek
Bobcats. ,
Led by' ~ard-rUMing junior
tailback Paul Moore, the
Spartans snapped the Bobcats' unbeaten streak here
.Friday night, 28-7.
· Ove.r the past . three
seasons, Kyger Creek ·has
beenunheaten going Into the
big clash with Alexander. The
Bobcats have come up on the
short end each time. The last
KC victory over · a Spartan
team came in 1972. In 1973,
the squads fought lo a 21-21

grid scores

6
Mi chigan ·Js Indiana 0
M ichigan St. 31 Ill inois 23

No.

M ic higan

Mi chigan 13
Bald .- Wal lace

41

Cent .

il3

Ohio

Wesleyan 7

Da yton 17 Toledo 14
Hope 28

Adr ian 21

John Carroll 19 Th iel 18

Kansas 24 Kansas St. 14
Kenyon 10 Gro ve 'Ci ty 6
Mari etta 20 Mount Union 7

Otterbein 17 Den isdn 7
Way ne 51. J I Saginaw Va ll ey

14

Wash. and Jeff . 2.1 Hira_m 7
W. M ichigan 31 Marsha ll 21
Ok lahoma St. 31 Oklahoma 24

KSU CLOBBERED
BLACKSBURG, Va . (UPI )
- Virg inia Tech quarterbacks Mitch Barnes and
David Lamie passed for three
touchdowns and 189 yards
Saturday as the Gobbl ers
clobbered Kent State 42-H at
homecoming
in
La ne
Stadium.

Devils ninth:
after initW
round Friday

Irish

cop o5th
VIctory

Notre Dame, now 5-l, took
the opening kickoff and drove
80 yards for a touchdown,
with quarterback Rick Slager
hitting fullback Willard

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Financing available witl'l wavier of .finance cha rges

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SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES
Phone 4l8-1630

I

tie at Cheshire.
play dead. The officials ,
The bigger Spartans placed the ball at the 25. ~·our
dominated most of the game plays later, Steve Ba.td Inusing a controlled ground tercepted a Green· lS! In the
· game along. with a stingy end zone and returned it to
rock·ribbed defense. The the 14 where h? wa• hit hard
Spartan secondary picked off and fumbled with Alexander
three interceptions and recovering .
recovered two fumbles.
Two plays later, Green hit
Kyger Creek took · the ·John Theiss for a 10 vard
oP.ning kic~olf from Its 33 to touchdown. Jim King's "~lot ,
the () before a third down . his first of lour on the night
pass was Intercepted by . was good.
Byron Green at the AHS 15.
Kyger Creek began iis best
Alexander began moving snstalned drive of the night
,on the smaller Bobcat marching from Us 26 to the
defense. Green rambled Spartan 21 before being
downli~)d on what looked like slopped on downs.
a 511 yard TD run, but an
Alexander quickly 'fuoved
inadver:tent whistle ble~ the the ball uplield where Moore
broke looae on his first big

Penn State
blanks WVU

By DAN HOSE
MORGANTOWN , W.Va .
( UPI ) - Sophomore quarterback Chuck Fusina's aerial
mastery tore apa rt the
nation's lea(lj!lg pass defense
Saturday by throwing lor 261
yards and two touchdowns to
COLUMBUS - Coach John spark Penn State 10 a 33-()
Milhoan 's Ga llipolis Blue victory over West Virginia .
Devils were ninth in a field of
The 195-pound Fusina
11 teams seeking the 1976
Class AA golf championship
Of Ohio · here following the
first 18 holes of play Friday .
GAHS fired a 373 Friday,
placing ahead of Utica which
had a 377 and Lorain
Catho lic, whi ch shot a 381.
Shelby led the AA field with a
I
333 alter one round of action .
Mike McGhee, Middletown
Madison and Ed Beach ,
Coshocton, shared medalist
COLUMBIA , S. C. (UPI) honors after 18 holes with a Twelfth-ranked Notre Dame
79.
scored a touchdown and a
field goal in the first nine
minutes of play then held off
·upset-minded South Carolina
Saturday , 13-6, before a
·sellout crowd which Included
resident Ford and scouts for
four bowl games.
.The Irish were on the
defensive most of the second
half but limited the
Gamecocks to only a field
goa1 and thereby tied the
NCAA record for holding
opponents without a touch·
down for 20 consecutive
quarters. The old record was
~=~~y the 194li Notre Dame

so Ferguson T0-20
Goodcondltlon
55 Allis Chalmers A·C

7-C-'lbe Sunday Tlmea-Senlinel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

gainer of the night, a 54-yard
jaunt.
F.ollowlng another .jl&amp;SS
Interception by Green ,
Alexander reached the
scoreboard again in the
second quarter on a 2!i yard
run by Moore.
In the final minutes of the
first half, the Spartans were
knocking at the door again
but had to settle for a 32,yard
field goal attempt by King ·
which fell short.
Kyger Creek's attempt to
dent the scoreboard drew
more frnslralion in the third
quarter as a Bobcat drive
was stopped by three straight
penalties, an ineligible
receiver downfield, holding,

snd motion. The series ended
on another pus interception
tbia ooe by Tim Wboten at the
29 ..
Four playa later, quar·
terback Green went In from
three-yards out for the score.
The Bobcats put on a
sustained drive in the final
minutes of the game which
ended on an eishl·yard TD
recepliOO by junior end Roger
. di ·
d L
,
Spaul ng . Ran y ucas
kick ciltthe final score to 28-7.
Moore led Alexander's
offenae with 136 yards in 17
•
carrtes.
.,

Marcus

Geiger:'"'." the

talented junior speedster for
the Bobcats, was held to his
lowesloutputoftheseason,83
...

.County agent's Your Wayne National Forest
corner

yards, but that wu enouch to
place him over the 1,000 yard
mark tbia season.
·Todd Taylor, another quick
Bobcat back, bad 58 yards
rushing.

By John C. Rtce
COIIDiy E:lt. Agent, Al!rfculture

'

Kyger Creek 6-1 wlil bolt
Symmes Valley Friday.
Aleunder lJ now &amp;4-1 this
season. with ita only blemiah
being a U tie at Glouster.
STATISTICS
Department
KC . A

· Flrsl Dqwn•
·. u ·· t6 ·
Yards Roshlng
211 298
Yards
Passino
a 34
Total Yardege
225 332
Passes Atlempted
9 8
Passes comple led
1 l
r
ons
l
3
1 1
1
Fnu~~fls
2 o
Fum bles Lost
2 0
Penalized
7-65 2·30
ev Quarters '
KC
o o o 7- 7
&gt;

Ale)( .

7 \4 7 0- 2B

Logan.shocks Jlulldogs

ATHENS
Speedy
tailback Harold Peppers
completed IS of 24 passes scored four touchdowns
against a Mountaineer pass Friday night as the Lagan
defense which yielded an Chieftains toppled the Athens
average 59.3 yards per game Bulldogs !rom their unand was No. 1 in last week's defeated SEOAL status with
NCAA statistics.
a surprising 31·7 victory.
Fusina's 261 yards was the
Taking advantage of six
third largest passing yardage Athens fumbles, t\VO inl&lt;ltal in Penn Stale history . tercepted passes, and one
His passing set up all the . blocked punt the Chieftains
Sl'Oring for Penn State, which rallied from a 7~ halftime
won irs fourth sttraighl game ·deficit to cram 25 second half
· for a 4-3 record , West points on the scoreboard
Virginia, shutout at home for enroute to their third league
the first time since 1963, is win.
now 3-4.
·
The Bulldogs entered the
Penn Stale surged to a 19-0 contest leading the loop with
lead in the first " quarter, a perfect 3.() mark and scored
starting when linebacker Neil first when Neil Berberick,
Hulton recovered a Dwayne playing at quarterback .
Woods' fumble at the West
Virginia 45. Fusina then fired
. a nine-yard pass to tailback
Steve Geise and hit tight end
Mickey Shuler with a 15-yard
pass lor ·touchdowns in the
JACKSON - Led by
opening period.
Penn ·.State shutout West . fullback Rick Howard's four
Virginia ,for the second touchdowns the Ironton
straight year and limited the Tigers staged a brilliant
Mountaineers to 187 total fourth period rally Friday
yards before a sellout night to down stubborn
homecoming day crowd .
Jackson 32-2IIn a key SEOAL

scored on a five yard run with
John Sehantzenback's kick
putting AHS on top 7&lt;1 with
I:08 remaining in the first
period.
Peppers tallied the first of
his lour touchdowns on a one
yard blast with 1: 10
remaining in the half but a
conversion run failed and
Athens took a 7~ lead to the
locker room at l)alftime.
The Logan defense took
ovor In the · second hall,
setting up three touchdowns,
with Peppers going over from
the two yard line with 3:04
left, and then following a pass
interception, he struck again
one minute later on a seven
yard scamper.

Scott Gasser, who has
edged out former starting
quarterback, Jeff Smith, as
Lagan's quarterback then hit
end Mark Armstrong with a
seven yard TD pass and Jeff
Lee Smith kicked the extra
point with 28 seconds left In
the t)llrd period to give Logan
a 25-7 lead.
Peppers salted the contest
away in the final period with
8:49 left with a five yard
scoring run to close out the
scoring as the Chiefs now
share firsl'place with Ironton,
Athens, and Gallipolis.
Logan's high powered
offense with Gasser at the
controls, rolled Up 13 first
downs,IBI yards rushing, and
connected on three of eight

passes lor 51 yards.
Athens was limited to four
first downs, 82 yards on the
ground, and one of live paBBes
for 23 yards.
The Bulldogs fumbled the
cold football sir times,
loaing II twice, saw two
passes Intercepted, and bad
one punt blpcked.
.
Lagan played the entire
game without a penalty while
Athens was tagged five times .
.lor 38 yards.
Peppers finished with 118
carries good lor 58 yards
while Berherlck had 35 in ·.
eight tries lor Athens.
Score by quarters:
Logan
0 6 19 6-31
Athens
7 0 0 II- 7

1ron t0 n comeback tops Jackson

Cavs

•

Wln
•

onenzng
r
contest

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI)
- Austin carr says "the
name of the game is to win"
imd the former Notre Dame
star demonstrated how to do
Browner on a nine·yard pass it Friday night.
for ihe tally . Slager hit key
Carr, playing in his first
completions of 24 and 18 season opening game in three
yards on the drive.
years, came of the bench 1&lt;1
Five· minutes later, the flip in 18 poinl.'l including a
Irish scored again on a 37· sizzling eight of nine from the
yard field goal by Dave field to spark the Cleveland
Reeve, whose kick was the . cavaliers to a 100..95 NBA
22nd of his career setting a victory over the Chicago
Notre Dame school record . . Bulls before 19,783 cheering
fans.
"I carne out of the game
Maryland routs
without any knee problem. I
really don't care whether I
Duke 30 to 3
start or come off the bench. I
!eel real good and was happy
DURHAM, N.C. (UPf )
to get in 24 minutes of playing
Quarterback Mark Manges time, " said Carr while
threw two touchdown passes holding an ice pack oo his
lo tight end Bob Raba and right knee.
scored another on a one-yard
Cleveland fans also got
keeper Saturday to pace their first look at Chicago
seventh-ranked Maryland in center Artis Gilmore, who
a 30-3 rout of Duke in an played the last five years in
Atlantic Coast Conference lhe defunct American
game.
Basketball Assocla tion.
·· Maryland, undefeated in Gilmore, who hit on four of
seven games a~d HI In the his first five shots In the fil].t
ACC, was aided by Blue Devil period, finished with 21 points
mistakes, converting a pass and 18 rebounds...
·
interception and a Duke
The ·7-loot-2
center
fumble into two of Its three connected on nine of 18 from
first-half scores.
the iield and· thre~ of four
Duke, 3·3·1 overall and 1-1-1 from the foul line.
in the conference, scored only
"We made a couple of key
on s first half field goal. mistakes and there were sure
Three Blue Devil drivers in more fans and enthusiasm
. the second half ended with · · here than I saw in pre..season
Maryland interceptions.
action," Gilmore said.
The Terrapins have now
The score was tied 13 times
won 18 consecutive ACC in the first half before the
games and are in a solid Cavs, with carr tossing in
position to repeat as con· eight second perlnd points,
ference (•hampions.
grabbed li41-IO halftime lead.
The Bulls went ahead 43-41 on
Bob Lave's three-point play
STREAK EXTENDED
with only 30 secortds gone in
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. the third perfnd and the score
J . (UPI) - Mark Lassiter · was tied four more times
scored three touchdowns before Bobby Smith's 15Sa turday to lead undefeated footer with six seconds left in
Rutgers to a 47.() viltory over the third stanza put
Columbia ' extending the Cleveland ahead lo stay 70-68.
nation 's longest winning
Norm van Uer, who topped
· streak in maj or college lhe Bulls with 26 points
football to 14 games.
Including 11 in the third
period, thought a goaltending call on Gibiiore with
YALE 21, PENN 7
28 seconds left in the third
PHfLADELPHIA itJPIJ Juni or hallback John ~riod was the turning point
Pagliaro ripp~d the Penn· of the game.
''BUI the real ·key to the
sylvania line for 187 yards in
cavs
vicLOry was their ability
33 caJTies and scored all
to
gel
a lui of second efforl rethree Yal e touch&lt;iown s
boun~s."
Van l.ier said. "You
~al urda)' to ca rry thr Elis to
a 21-i Ivy League victory have w &lt;'olllrul the boards
and i hl' hall 1 n win .,t1
over the Quak er""

showdown.
Jackson's great tailback, yards with Davis adding the
The victory enabled the . David P. Davis, returned to kick with 5:32 left.
Tigers to join Athens, action Friday but only to kick Haner scored again with
Gallipolis, and Logan in a 4- extra points as · he is I :07left on a 22 yard run and
way heap at the top of the recovering from a sprained Davis' kick made it 21-20
leag~e standings, all with 3·1
ankle suffered in the Wellston entering the final quarter.
Howard accounted lor both
records.
contest last week. It is
Irontoo
touchdowns In the
reported that he will be well
fourth
quarter
oo a two yard
and healthy to play against
run
with
6:13
left and hit
Gallipolis this week In the top
again
from
the
three yard
SEOAL contest.
line
In
the
final
seven
seconds
Ironton quarterback Kenny
of
play,
as
a
conversion
run
Crawford gave JHS the lead
and
pails
!ailed
following
with just 23 seconds left In the
.
first period when he raced 77 each score.·
Howard finished the con·
yards on an option play to
score with Davis toeing the test with 121 yards on ~
carries while Juan Thomas
conversion lor a 7-ll lead.
.
added 100 yards In 14 at· •
Howard
tallied
the
first
of
and denied that he had done
· .'
his lour \D's with 9:44 tempts.
anything illegal.
·
Crawford
topped
the
:
Benson's father said the remaining in the second Jackson rushers ·with eight ;
Indiana star,was offered a job period ·on a one yard blast carries lor 89 yards with Josh ,
.on Hancock's farm if he at· with a conversion pass no Jenkins adding 77 and Hiller •
tended Kentucky . Benson good.
~
Just over three minutes 76.
declined to specifically
The
winners
netted
15
first
;
discuss the matter, except to later Howard again bulled downs, 235 yards rushing, and ;
say "the only thing I know of over from the one with the EP hit live of seven passes for 61 •
was the flight on a private pass failing. ·
With 4:06 showing quar- yards with one picked off. •
plane for my lather."
The Ironmen rolled up 11 :
terback
Mike Brown went in
LaGarde and Batton told
first downs, 238 yards on the :
from
the
one
and
Juan
the NCAA they were offered
ground, and connected on one .
jobs at Claiborne Farm if Thomaa ran the two point of four aerials fo• 22 yards ~
conversion
to
put
Ironton
on
they signed with Kentucky
with one Intercepted.
but each Sllid he saw nothing lop 20-7 at halftime.
Score by uuarters:
•
Jackson roared back In the
illegal with the offer.
Ironton.
b
20
0
12--32
:
. Both
Dawkins
and third period with fullback Jackson
7 0 14 11-21 :
Willoughby said they' Paul Haller ranunlng two
cooperated with the NCAA
investigation but ·did not
elaborate.
Cliff Hogan, Kentucky
athletic director, refused to
comment on the inEqually
home in the
vestigation.

NCAA ·to probe

UK recruiting

~

LEXINGTON, · Ky. (UPI)
- The Naljonal Collegiate
Athletic Association has
asked officials at the
University of Kentucky to
answer allegations of
recruiting violations in attempting to sign at least five
star basketball prospects in
the past four years, the
Louisville Courier-Journal
reported in today's editions.
The newspaper said the
NCAA investigation has
centered on job offers to
prospective players if they
attended
Kentucky, trans·
.
portation of a prospect's
parent to the school ~nd in·
volVement of "overzealous
boosters" In recruiting.
The players, none of whom
ever played for Kentucky,
were Kent Benson, an In·
diana University aenior, Tom
LaGarde, a senior at the
University of North Carolina,
Dave Bailon, a junior at
Notre Dame, Bill (Poodle)
Willoughby, a player with the
NBA '· Atlanta Hawks and
Darryl Dawkins of the
Philadelphia 76ers, The
Courier-Journal said.
Kentucky head basketball
coach Joe Hall said he was
OXFORD, OHIO (UPI) - .
told not to comment on the Senior tallback Rob Car·
allegations but he said he did penter rambled for 14li yards,
not believe the charges would Including a 61-yard gallop
result in the Kentucky that set up a touchdown, to
basketball program being spark previously winless
placed on probation.
Miami of Ohio to a 9-7 upset
. The newspaper said an victory over Mid-American
NCAA rule against trans- Conference leader Bowling
porting relatives or friends of Green In a rain-drenched
a prospective student-athlete homecoming game Saturday.
to visit a campus was ap- Miami sophomore quarter·
paren!lY violated when. the back Bob MaxWell tossed
.college Dew Benson and his a 10-yard TD pass to 6-loot~
father to Lexington from sophomore tight end Paul
their home in New Castie, Warth and Norm Trowbridge
Ind., on a private plane April kicked a 39-yard field goal to
8, 1973.
stake the Redskins to a 9.()
The other main concern of 'first-quarter lead.
Bowling Green, held
the investigation apparently
involves alleged job offers to scoreless the first three
Benson, LaGarde and Batton periods, finally managed a
by Set~ Hancock, a Paris, touchdown in the final
Ky ., horse Iarmer .who quarter on Mark Miller's twrr
describes himself as a yard quarterback sneak, but
Kentucky !an, the Courier the Falcons blew two oppoltunities to wln the game .in
said.
T,he investigation is . the closing minu)es.
reportedly an outgrowth of a.'l
NCAA probe involving the
llAVISSPARKS'BAMA
University of Kentucky
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI)
football program.
· - Halfback Johnny Davis
Hancock, owner of the ran lor 86 yards and a touch·
Claiborne farm, said he was down Saturday which
questioned by the NCAA last sparked sluggish AIRbama to
winter. He confirmed that he a 24·3 win over unheralded
had offered jobs to prospects Louisville.

POMEROY - Feeder calf prices are strengthening
somewhat as shown bythe last feeder calf sale.
The sale results from the October 14 sale at Athens shows
the following : high choice steers weighed an average of S53
pounds and averaged $33.25 per hundrec!weight ; choice steers
averaged 485 pounds and brought $33.65; high good steers
averaged 508 pounds and brought $32.20; with steers gr~ding
~ood we(ghtng 5al pounds and averaging $27.6 per hundred·
weight Four hundred and forty-three steers were sold as
graded steers .with an overall average of 521 powids and
brought ~2. 13.
.
Heifers averaged overall 51&gt; cents less per pound for an
overall average of $26.68. The average weight on 396 heifers
w.S 4li1 pounds. Price by grades were : high choice $27.06
'
weighing
407 pounds; choice $28.03 weighing 493 lbs .; high
IN CLASS - Bill Marrah consults with instructor
good
$25.81
weighing 427 pounds ; and $24.78 for good heifers
Fred Edelman, seated, In the adult Educa tion class at the
weighing 199 pounds.
Buckeye Hills car-eer Center.
Each year there Is a Ieeder calf round-up in Columbus.
This sale is the showcase lor Ohio Ieeder calves and provides a
source of feeder calves lor 4-H and FF A boys and girls for
market steers. The results of this sale were as follows :
Slxty.flve prime steers averaged $85 per cwt., 71 high
choice steers averaged $58 per cwl., and 119 choice steers
averaged $42 per cwt., ranging from $34 to $76 per hundre&lt;l .
Eighteen prinle heifers in the sale averaged $:11 per cwt.;
16 high choice heifers avera.iJ.ed $42 per cwt. ; and 17 choice
RIO GRANDE - Local tending the class at Buckeye heifers averaged $29 per cw. and rariged from $26 to $39 per
adults enrolled in the Adult Hills Career Center each hundred pounds.
Education Fall Session are Tuesday and Thursday
being taught the fun· ~ening from 6 p.m. to 10
damentals of Industrial . p.m. Classes started on mately 275,000 professional new headquarters he based In
Safety. The seminar consists October 5 and will conclude cattlemen in all segments Denver, with offices in
or individuals representing on October 28, 1976. The in- and areas of the beef cattle Omaha and Washington. The
various Industrial plants in structor Is Fred Edlemann. industry, which alone repre- president and first vice
this area.
Adults enrolled in the sents about one-fifth of all presiden~ of the new group
Topics of study include: s~minar are: Richard·Brown, farm marketing cash would cmlinue 1&lt;1 be working
cattlemen.
.
accident
costs ,
cir- Floyd Chambers, Eugene receiptS .·
The
respective
ANCA
and
In
a
joint
stall!ment,
the
cumstances of accidents, Harris, Charles Huber,
NLF
A
boards
of
direcwrs
two
groups
said
the
purpose
prevention of accidents, job William Ma rrah, Daniel
safety, plant Inspection, Neal, Erewanna Plants, Jeff met just before the Kansas of the new organiUIUon would
electrical hazards, first aid, Poleyn, Dale ·Randolph, ·City announcement, and be to :
- Represent arid speak for
good housekeepin g, Harry VanVranken, Ottls while they did not formally
approve
.
the
coosolidation,
all
cattlemen nationally on
materials handling, safety Young, James Smith, Charles
equipment, storage, machine Sibley, James Ferrell and reaction was generally public and economic affairs.
favorable.
- Create and maintain lbe
guarding, and fire protection. Dwayne Lang.
Playing
key
roles
In
the
economic
and political
f:ifteen students are atformulation of initial merger climate that will give
'
plans were ANCA president individual members the
Wray Finney of Fl. Cobb, opportunity 1&lt;1 earn optimum
Okla.; NLF A president Don returns on their Investments
Hunter of CenlervUie, S.D.; within the free enterprise
Gordon Van Vleck of SYstem.
Plymouth, calif., and Millm
~ Provide members with
Brown of Mt. Pleasant, Mich . . economic information and .
Van Vleck and Brown are . other services that can help
immediate past presidents of them
improve · their
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A step this week in Kansas City · the ANCA and NLFA management decisions.
new single national beef with a nnouricement of , respectively.
In particular, 'tbe groups
cattle organization is being preliminary plans for the
The ANCA currently has said they both "favor
formed to -give ·-cattlemen merger.
individual members and 4li freedom from government
If the final plans are affiliated state cattle and 14 intervention with
the
more clout In government
approved by the boards and natlonat' breed associations. livestock induslry's com·
and political affairs.
Although talks toward con- membership of both groups,
Founded in 1898 with a petitive market system."
"With Increasing pressures
solidation of the American the nation's beef caltle largely western membership,
National Cattlemen's industry will be represented ANCA spread nationwide on the industry, it is
Association and the National by a single national over the years as a result of imperative that cattlemen
Livestock Feeders spokesmai\, - the National industry developments . have more clout in
ANCA is now headquartered government and political
Association have been Cattlemen's Association affairs," they said. "There is
underway for almost a year , beginning next September. in Denver.
It would represent approxiThe NLF A, organ~ed in a need for a stronger; !!lOre
the joint venture took a giant
1946, represents livestock unified representation of
producers ahd feeders In 20 cattlemen as a commodity
states;
with
primaty group."
concentration In the north
F'inal consolidstion plans
central region, an area with are scheduled to be presented
55 per cent of the fed cattle to the ANCA and Nl)' A
marketed annually.
boards about Jan. 1, and If
Based in Omaba, the group approved,
would
he
has nine state·aflillated fuhmitted to the m"l''bershlp
associations.
pf each association in
Under the coosolldatlon, February.
the new association would
Although the merger would
have 52 affiliated state not oe&lt;:~~r formally until Sepassociations and the 14 tember, both groups plan 1&lt;1
national breed asSOciations. maintain a close working
A 10-member study relationship
in
the
committee recommended the meantime.

By T. Allan Woller
District Ranger
IRONTON - Wild, hall wild Bnd
not so wild dogs are still a problem
in southeast Ohio. I have cited cases
in past columns about the effect of
dogs and cats on wildlife
populatioos. Now, according ' to an
article that appeared in last
Sunday's Colwnbus Dispatch feral
packs are having a considerable
Impact on domestic 'livestock ,
particularly sheep:
Unknown to many, Ohio bas
more sheep per square mile than
any other state. Although hogs and
cattle have been victims, Robert
Hunk of the Mid States Wool
Growers Association says sheep are
the main target because they are
easier to kill.
The Dispatch article reporled
that In Hocking County a pack of
dogs struck a flock of sheep for the
thir(\ lime in as many weeks leaving
a total o( seven sheep dead.
According IAJ the report, wild
dog packs a~e 1lrnilar In behavior to
wolf packs. Feral dog packs usually
have a leader and other members of
the
pack
have
specific
responsibilities.
Studies of wolf packs in
Northern Minnesota bear witness to
their intelligence and sophisticated
hunting methods. Tracks In the snow
told a story of three wolves
approaching an island in mid winter
from the down-wind side. Upon
reaching the' island, the pack
separated, one rematnin~ at the

dog

Adult-Ed classes are

in progress in Gallia

Cattlemen want
more ·clout

can make you

~.!!~!«~~~~!''''''"''
,
&lt;\)
This MF 255 was: sg450

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COMPARABLE SAVINGS
ON AU OTHER MODELS

CHECK THESE REASONS
FOR BUYING NOW.

vr Fall Discounts In Effect
vrBeat Next Price Increase
(Due approx. Nov. 1; 1976)

.vr Income Tax Credit For Farm
ECJJipment Investment

This offer applies to tractor models 364 ·
through ·1466. This does neil include the new
86 series tractors. Flexible financing plans
are available through lnternationar
Harvester Credit Corp.

. vr Attractive MF Financing available
.,

"
;L.

with wavier of finance charges until
March 1, 1977

SHINN'S
TRACTOR SALES
.=LEO:N::..,..__
PHO_N_E_45_&amp;-_16_30_....;.;,;W•...;.VA;.;;.•.....

point, the other two circling the
island where they look up watch .
The first wolf ll)en "drove" the
island, flushin g a deer oullo the two
wolves in waiting. Scratch one deer ,
I have no quarrel with wolves
killing to eat. It's part of the natural
scene that's been golng on for tens or
thousands of years. Nor am I trying
to equate the hunting skills of a wolf
with those ' of a pack or wild dogs
even though evidence indicates
there may be similarities. And
please don't infe r that I'm U!lting a
cheap shot at dog owners who
responsibly control the actions of
their pels and hunting companions.
There is how ever. a basi c '
distinction that should be made. A
wollltills to eat and a pack of semi
wild dogs, often including a few
"pel.'l" allowed to ro!\m fr ee, kill for
fun.
The Carlos Avery Game Refuge
north of Minneapolis reporled
nearly lOll deer killed in one winter,
all by dog packs. Some carcasSes
had been fed upon but many were
just killed and left.
A friend of mine in northern
Wisconsin reported finding his small
house dog with four others al tackln~
an already half dead fawn .
The house pet was covered
with
blood
as he join·
ed the shark • like fr enzy of
atlack. The dog was killed on U1e
spot because, like dogs that chose
cars, It is virtually impossible to
break them or it.
'
To bring the situation closer to

for that compa ny 's new
development aiOtig the Ohio
ltiver at Lakin. The water
problems consist of disposal
of water along each side or
the road with waterways and
pipe to safely carry the water
to nn outlet al the river's
edge.
seepage w a~ suspected.
We helped Albort Spu•lock
When we saw the pond
recently, It appeared that the of Tribble with some farm
work has proven successful pla nning. The main thing thai
bocausc the pond wns ulmost the Spur locks were Interested
In wus the devolopmenL of
full of water.
Okey R. King of SCS has theh· la.nd for grassland
been assisting l&gt;itkin Stohl. production lor livestock ·use
Hospital with solhc Willer unct water dcvohipmcnt. The· ;
management probl ems in water development would
spring •
connccUorl with .!I road bclng cons ist of a
built by Appalachian Power development In the pasture
Company as an ·UCt;ess road field.

Spring development near

completion on Green ·farm
By John Cooper
Soli Cons. Service
POINT PLEASANT
James and Fred Green of
Upland are nearing com·
pletion on a spring
development on their farm.
The development of this
spring consisted of laying 23;5

lay of the Jand
feet of 4-inch plaslic pipe to
collect water from two spring
seeps.
The depth of the ditch
varied from two feet to four
feel in order to have a constant drop in the line from the
top end to the bottom end.
The four-inch plastic pipe will
d•scharge water into a
concrete .collection basin and
from there it will be carried
to a waterin~ trou~h with 1y,.
inch solid pipe. The 500·gallon
concrete watering tank is
being constructed as the
water supply ·for the
livesto ck. Ollie Nowlin
assisted in digging the ditch
with his backhoe.
Recently we visited the R.
R. Stranahan farm near
Waterloo, and looked at the
farm pond thai Mr.
Stranahan rebuilt in July. He
rebuilt
the
pond
because previously it had
leaked and was not holding
water well . The rec&lt;in·

slruclion consisted of cutting
a core trench on the upper
sidl!of the fill down into solid
earih and repacking the core
trench with clay material.
Other clay material was
moved and .. packed over the
field up as high as the water
level and on each side where

O.em
•
engmeers

PURINA
FIELD 1 N FARM
' DOG MEAL

plan seminar
HUNTINGTON - Th.e Tri·
State Section of the American
Institute
of · Chemical
Engineers will be sponsoring
a seminar on Wednesday,
Oct.. 27 to be held at the
Marhull University
Memorial Student Center
from 4 to 9 p.m. with dinner
from 6 to 7 p.m.
Dr. Marvin Mills, a leading
expert on occupational safety
and Instructor at Marshall
University, will lead a. panel
of specialists in a discussion
of OSHA regulations. J .
Dannemiller at (614) 532-3420
Ext. 313 should be notified by
Monday, . Oct. 25, if at·
tendlince Is planned.

-Complete· IJ!nd
balanced
nutrition
- ~eked by 50
years of Purina
research
dogs
-Taste
really like
-Economically
priced

For

Agriculture and
our community
By Bryson R. (Bud) CaJter
Gallla County Extension Agent
GALUPOI.JS - II you need a tobacco preils, then stop by
the Extension Office and ask to see a copy of plan no. 735-9A,
which is a one..tlck wall-type tobacco press of wood
construction .
·
I have about lour copies of this plan available at the
· Elllension Office and if we run out we can order more from the
University of Kentucky. Cost olthe plan is 25c.
•
DON'T forget the Graded Feeder Calf SBie sponsored by
the Southeaatern Ohio Beef cattle Improvement Association
and the Ohio Valley Livestock Co., which will be held this week
· on Thursday, October 28 at 8:00p.m. at the stockyards here at
Gallipolis.
If you have any questions about selling on the sale then
please contact our office, Tommy Joe Stewart, Clarence
Johnson, .lack Miller or Denver Yoho.
EVERY THREE YEARS, generally, is often enough 1&lt;1
lake soil tests . on farm fields. But, arinual tests are
recommended where ~eavy rates of fertilizer have been
applied in intensive cropping programs.
Fall, usually soon after harvest, is the best time to take soil
samples. The soil is normally not too wet to dig and the results
of the samples submitted lor testing in the fall are back in
plenty or lime to plan next year's spring planting.
Sample to the same. depth that you normally plow on the
cropland and aboutt-51nches on meadows. Take a number of
samples from the field and mix these . together. Then bring
about I pint or a coffee can of soil to the Extension Office so
that we may sent It 1&lt;1 the University for testing. The fee for .:Oil
testing is $2.t)(J'and we'll also need some information about1he
crops you plan to grow and liming hlJtory of the field.
How do you del ermine when to give a dairy cow a one-way
1ruck rlde.lrom your farm' It is because she got mast.ltis again
from 1he umpteenth time, or maylk hec~use she kicked you or
switched you with a wet tail once too often'! Well, dairy science
extension specialists at the Ohio /)tate Universlly have
developed a 10-poim culling guide to aid you in deciding which
t"ws •o cull. If four l•r more of the following IQ questinns arc
un~wrred " yes" for any row, il strongly indira tes she shlluld
be ··ulh•il.
- I~ protlun ion 25 pel' Cl:'ru ur morP lwl11\\ hPI'd HVl'raw···
- lH she a thnmir masti lis rast&gt;?
Will sh{' he dry ·4 months nr mnre''
I

your

ht~~llh.

- Is she a hard milker ?

regutorlv .

-

Does she have a nervous or underslrable disposition?
Are good replacements available1
Is she below the herd's average body type?
Is she timid?
- Is the price of beef good 7
- ·Is space needed for fresh heifers'

Reach for the
protection
that serves
your animals
best.
'

dcig "s

feed PurinA

dog foods ond 111
your veterinarian

J. D. North Produce Co.
Galli polio, Ohio

Vine Street

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TERRAMYCIN 500cc
Reg . 55.60
•5.35 ea.

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Ea.

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.,

home, some hunters In the Hanging
Rock area o! the W~yne investigated
the continuous barking of several
dogs. They discovered a mature
buck deer with a full set of antlers at
bay in a strip mine pond, It's back to
a high wail. The buck was so
exhausted, even the sight and smell
Of humans would npt summon
energy to run ,
In another case, .a Fore&amp;U'Y
Technician discovered .. a Utter of
wild pups In Gallia. County. !heY
were whelped under the rotted ruins
of an old homesite, miles from
habitation - obvlo~siy wild because
the mother disappeared like a ghost
at hi s approac h. Th e Incident
happe ned in Gallia Count y.
l wish I knew the answer to a
very touchy s u~jecl. ft 's been said in
U1e hill cotmU'y of southeast Ohio
"tnke my car, take my wile, but U!ke
my dog and you're In big trouble ."
A.~ a farm boy who Is now charged
with managing the natural
rcS()urc&lt;'s on n turge chunk of public
lund, I feel tl strong responsibility
for wildlife und un equally strong
empathy fur the famters' plight.
If those who dump a dog or cat in
the country, or those who let theirs
run free with no control, really
wtderstood what can result, the
problem would bo nearly resolve'&lt;!.
There are various types of animal
shelters available to take care of
unwanted pets. Aclive •upport of a
slrong dog warden program helps
too.
Do you know where your dug or
cat Is right now '/

..

�,- '
~unaay,

M:-The .SUnday Ttmes.senunet,

uct.

~4. 1~1•

Spartans stop -Bobcats, 28 to 7

Sooners ·are
upset, 31-24
Taylor scored on a six-yard
NORMAN, OKLA. (UPI) Terry Miller rushed for 159 run and wingback Ricky
yards, including a 72-yard Taylor caught a five-yard
pass from
touchdown ~ gallop, and touchdown
Charlie
. Oklahoma State scored its quarterba c k
first victory over Oklahoma Weatherbie, who did not play
in 10 years Saturday, up- ur.iil mldw'ay into the third
selling the .fifth -ranked quarter. Weatherbie and Skip
Taylor also hooked up on .a
Sooners 31·24 . .
Abby Daigle .kicked three two:poinl .conversion.
Ok lahoma's Elvis Peacock
field goals for .the Cowboys,
hilling form 25, 35 and 46 ·reeled off the longest scoring
yards. RuMing back Skip run in the wild offensive
battle, an 84-yarder. The
Sooners also scored on a 37·
yard run by fullback Jim
Culbrea th and one a 21-yard
· run wiih an intercepted
fumble by tackle Richard
Wash . U. (Mo.I 11 Rochester. Murray. Ewe Von Schamann
kicked a 27-yard field goal lor
u. 0
Florida 20 Tennessee 18
Oklahoma.
Hamp. lnsl. 38 Virgin ia St . 36
The big eight conference
Alabama 24 Louisvi lle J
victory
was only the
Auburn 31 Ftor'tdll St . 19
Cowboy's third victory
N. c.'S!. 38 Clemson 11
Wa sh. &amp; Lee 16 Sewanee I J against Oklahoma during the
W. Ken.t ucky 10 E. Kenl4cky
past 30 years.

Saturday's

ALBANY - For the third
straight year, COBch Dave
Snipes' Aleunder Si&gt;artaris
proved to be too much for the
SVAC champion Kyger Creek
Bobcats. ,
Led by' ~ard-rUMing junior
tailback Paul Moore, the
Spartans snapped the Bobcats' unbeaten streak here
.Friday night, 28-7.
· Ove.r the past . three
seasons, Kyger Creek ·has
beenunheaten going Into the
big clash with Alexander. The
Bobcats have come up on the
short end each time. The last
KC victory over · a Spartan
team came in 1972. In 1973,
the squads fought lo a 21-21

grid scores

6
Mi chigan ·Js Indiana 0
M ichigan St. 31 Ill inois 23

No.

M ic higan

Mi chigan 13
Bald .- Wal lace

41

Cent .

il3

Ohio

Wesleyan 7

Da yton 17 Toledo 14
Hope 28

Adr ian 21

John Carroll 19 Th iel 18

Kansas 24 Kansas St. 14
Kenyon 10 Gro ve 'Ci ty 6
Mari etta 20 Mount Union 7

Otterbein 17 Den isdn 7
Way ne 51. J I Saginaw Va ll ey

14

Wash. and Jeff . 2.1 Hira_m 7
W. M ichigan 31 Marsha ll 21
Ok lahoma St. 31 Oklahoma 24

KSU CLOBBERED
BLACKSBURG, Va . (UPI )
- Virg inia Tech quarterbacks Mitch Barnes and
David Lamie passed for three
touchdowns and 189 yards
Saturday as the Gobbl ers
clobbered Kent State 42-H at
homecoming
in
La ne
Stadium.

Devils ninth:
after initW
round Friday

Irish

cop o5th
VIctory

Notre Dame, now 5-l, took
the opening kickoff and drove
80 yards for a touchdown,
with quarterback Rick Slager
hitting fullback Willard

42" Snow/Darer Blade

OCTOBER USED
EQUIPMENTSALE

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With plow, mower, MQ blade, very good condition $2195

U International 300

With plow, disc, and mower, vfry good condit ion' S3195"
58 Milssey Fergu~n so Gas

Good condition

1129l

61 Maney Ferguson T0-35 Gas
New engine, new pa int, very good condition
62 Massey F.erauson 50 Diesel

S27 50

Good condition

12995

68 Case 430 DieSel

Very Good condition

13650

70 Massey Ferguson IJS Gas
Newf lres. newpalnt,llkenew

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71 Massey Ferguson 130 Diesel

Like new condition

11800

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53850

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until March 1. 1977.

SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES
Phone 4l8-1630

I

tie at Cheshire.
play dead. The officials ,
The bigger Spartans placed the ball at the 25. ~·our
dominated most of the game plays later, Steve Ba.td Inusing a controlled ground tercepted a Green· lS! In the
· game along. with a stingy end zone and returned it to
rock·ribbed defense. The the 14 where h? wa• hit hard
Spartan secondary picked off and fumbled with Alexander
three interceptions and recovering .
recovered two fumbles.
Two plays later, Green hit
Kyger Creek took · the ·John Theiss for a 10 vard
oP.ning kic~olf from Its 33 to touchdown. Jim King's "~lot ,
the () before a third down . his first of lour on the night
pass was Intercepted by . was good.
Byron Green at the AHS 15.
Kyger Creek began iis best
Alexander began moving snstalned drive of the night
,on the smaller Bobcat marching from Us 26 to the
defense. Green rambled Spartan 21 before being
downli~)d on what looked like slopped on downs.
a 511 yard TD run, but an
Alexander quickly 'fuoved
inadver:tent whistle ble~ the the ball uplield where Moore
broke looae on his first big

Penn State
blanks WVU

By DAN HOSE
MORGANTOWN , W.Va .
( UPI ) - Sophomore quarterback Chuck Fusina's aerial
mastery tore apa rt the
nation's lea(lj!lg pass defense
Saturday by throwing lor 261
yards and two touchdowns to
COLUMBUS - Coach John spark Penn State 10 a 33-()
Milhoan 's Ga llipolis Blue victory over West Virginia .
Devils were ninth in a field of
The 195-pound Fusina
11 teams seeking the 1976
Class AA golf championship
Of Ohio · here following the
first 18 holes of play Friday .
GAHS fired a 373 Friday,
placing ahead of Utica which
had a 377 and Lorain
Catho lic, whi ch shot a 381.
Shelby led the AA field with a
I
333 alter one round of action .
Mike McGhee, Middletown
Madison and Ed Beach ,
Coshocton, shared medalist
COLUMBIA , S. C. (UPI) honors after 18 holes with a Twelfth-ranked Notre Dame
79.
scored a touchdown and a
field goal in the first nine
minutes of play then held off
·upset-minded South Carolina
Saturday , 13-6, before a
·sellout crowd which Included
resident Ford and scouts for
four bowl games.
.The Irish were on the
defensive most of the second
half but limited the
Gamecocks to only a field
goa1 and thereby tied the
NCAA record for holding
opponents without a touch·
down for 20 consecutive
quarters. The old record was
~=~~y the 194li Notre Dame

so Ferguson T0-20
Goodcondltlon
55 Allis Chalmers A·C

7-C-'lbe Sunday Tlmea-Senlinel, Sunday, Oct. 24, 1976

gainer of the night, a 54-yard
jaunt.
F.ollowlng another .jl&amp;SS
Interception by Green ,
Alexander reached the
scoreboard again in the
second quarter on a 2!i yard
run by Moore.
In the final minutes of the
first half, the Spartans were
knocking at the door again
but had to settle for a 32,yard
field goal attempt by King ·
which fell short.
Kyger Creek's attempt to
dent the scoreboard drew
more frnslralion in the third
quarter as a Bobcat drive
was stopped by three straight
penalties, an ineligible
receiver downfield, holding,

snd motion. The series ended
on another pus interception
tbia ooe by Tim Wboten at the
29 ..
Four playa later, quar·
terback Green went In from
three-yards out for the score.
The Bobcats put on a
sustained drive in the final
minutes of the game which
ended on an eishl·yard TD
recepliOO by junior end Roger
. di ·
d L
,
Spaul ng . Ran y ucas
kick ciltthe final score to 28-7.
Moore led Alexander's
offenae with 136 yards in 17
•
carrtes.
.,

Marcus

Geiger:'"'." the

talented junior speedster for
the Bobcats, was held to his
lowesloutputoftheseason,83
...

.County agent's Your Wayne National Forest
corner

yards, but that wu enouch to
place him over the 1,000 yard
mark tbia season.
·Todd Taylor, another quick
Bobcat back, bad 58 yards
rushing.

By John C. Rtce
COIIDiy E:lt. Agent, Al!rfculture

'

Kyger Creek 6-1 wlil bolt
Symmes Valley Friday.
Aleunder lJ now &amp;4-1 this
season. with ita only blemiah
being a U tie at Glouster.
STATISTICS
Department
KC . A

· Flrsl Dqwn•
·. u ·· t6 ·
Yards Roshlng
211 298
Yards
Passino
a 34
Total Yardege
225 332
Passes Atlempted
9 8
Passes comple led
1 l
r
ons
l
3
1 1
1
Fnu~~fls
2 o
Fum bles Lost
2 0
Penalized
7-65 2·30
ev Quarters '
KC
o o o 7- 7
&gt;

Ale)( .

7 \4 7 0- 2B

Logan.shocks Jlulldogs

ATHENS
Speedy
tailback Harold Peppers
completed IS of 24 passes scored four touchdowns
against a Mountaineer pass Friday night as the Lagan
defense which yielded an Chieftains toppled the Athens
average 59.3 yards per game Bulldogs !rom their unand was No. 1 in last week's defeated SEOAL status with
NCAA statistics.
a surprising 31·7 victory.
Fusina's 261 yards was the
Taking advantage of six
third largest passing yardage Athens fumbles, t\VO inl&lt;ltal in Penn Stale history . tercepted passes, and one
His passing set up all the . blocked punt the Chieftains
Sl'Oring for Penn State, which rallied from a 7~ halftime
won irs fourth sttraighl game ·deficit to cram 25 second half
· for a 4-3 record , West points on the scoreboard
Virginia, shutout at home for enroute to their third league
the first time since 1963, is win.
now 3-4.
·
The Bulldogs entered the
Penn Stale surged to a 19-0 contest leading the loop with
lead in the first " quarter, a perfect 3.() mark and scored
starting when linebacker Neil first when Neil Berberick,
Hulton recovered a Dwayne playing at quarterback .
Woods' fumble at the West
Virginia 45. Fusina then fired
. a nine-yard pass to tailback
Steve Geise and hit tight end
Mickey Shuler with a 15-yard
pass lor ·touchdowns in the
JACKSON - Led by
opening period.
Penn ·.State shutout West . fullback Rick Howard's four
Virginia ,for the second touchdowns the Ironton
straight year and limited the Tigers staged a brilliant
Mountaineers to 187 total fourth period rally Friday
yards before a sellout night to down stubborn
homecoming day crowd .
Jackson 32-2IIn a key SEOAL

scored on a five yard run with
John Sehantzenback's kick
putting AHS on top 7&lt;1 with
I:08 remaining in the first
period.
Peppers tallied the first of
his lour touchdowns on a one
yard blast with 1: 10
remaining in the half but a
conversion run failed and
Athens took a 7~ lead to the
locker room at l)alftime.
The Logan defense took
ovor In the · second hall,
setting up three touchdowns,
with Peppers going over from
the two yard line with 3:04
left, and then following a pass
interception, he struck again
one minute later on a seven
yard scamper.

Scott Gasser, who has
edged out former starting
quarterback, Jeff Smith, as
Lagan's quarterback then hit
end Mark Armstrong with a
seven yard TD pass and Jeff
Lee Smith kicked the extra
point with 28 seconds left In
the t)llrd period to give Logan
a 25-7 lead.
Peppers salted the contest
away in the final period with
8:49 left with a five yard
scoring run to close out the
scoring as the Chiefs now
share firsl'place with Ironton,
Athens, and Gallipolis.
Logan's high powered
offense with Gasser at the
controls, rolled Up 13 first
downs,IBI yards rushing, and
connected on three of eight

passes lor 51 yards.
Athens was limited to four
first downs, 82 yards on the
ground, and one of live paBBes
for 23 yards.
The Bulldogs fumbled the
cold football sir times,
loaing II twice, saw two
passes Intercepted, and bad
one punt blpcked.
.
Lagan played the entire
game without a penalty while
Athens was tagged five times .
.lor 38 yards.
Peppers finished with 118
carries good lor 58 yards
while Berherlck had 35 in ·.
eight tries lor Athens.
Score by quarters:
Logan
0 6 19 6-31
Athens
7 0 0 II- 7

1ron t0 n comeback tops Jackson

Cavs

•

Wln
•

onenzng
r
contest

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI)
- Austin carr says "the
name of the game is to win"
imd the former Notre Dame
star demonstrated how to do
Browner on a nine·yard pass it Friday night.
for ihe tally . Slager hit key
Carr, playing in his first
completions of 24 and 18 season opening game in three
yards on the drive.
years, came of the bench 1&lt;1
Five· minutes later, the flip in 18 poinl.'l including a
Irish scored again on a 37· sizzling eight of nine from the
yard field goal by Dave field to spark the Cleveland
Reeve, whose kick was the . cavaliers to a 100..95 NBA
22nd of his career setting a victory over the Chicago
Notre Dame school record . . Bulls before 19,783 cheering
fans.
"I carne out of the game
Maryland routs
without any knee problem. I
really don't care whether I
Duke 30 to 3
start or come off the bench. I
!eel real good and was happy
DURHAM, N.C. (UPf )
to get in 24 minutes of playing
Quarterback Mark Manges time, " said Carr while
threw two touchdown passes holding an ice pack oo his
lo tight end Bob Raba and right knee.
scored another on a one-yard
Cleveland fans also got
keeper Saturday to pace their first look at Chicago
seventh-ranked Maryland in center Artis Gilmore, who
a 30-3 rout of Duke in an played the last five years in
Atlantic Coast Conference lhe defunct American
game.
Basketball Assocla tion.
·· Maryland, undefeated in Gilmore, who hit on four of
seven games a~d HI In the his first five shots In the fil].t
ACC, was aided by Blue Devil period, finished with 21 points
mistakes, converting a pass and 18 rebounds...
·
interception and a Duke
The ·7-loot-2
center
fumble into two of Its three connected on nine of 18 from
first-half scores.
the iield and· thre~ of four
Duke, 3·3·1 overall and 1-1-1 from the foul line.
in the conference, scored only
"We made a couple of key
on s first half field goal. mistakes and there were sure
Three Blue Devil drivers in more fans and enthusiasm
. the second half ended with · · here than I saw in pre..season
Maryland interceptions.
action," Gilmore said.
The Terrapins have now
The score was tied 13 times
won 18 consecutive ACC in the first half before the
games and are in a solid Cavs, with carr tossing in
position to repeat as con· eight second perlnd points,
ference (•hampions.
grabbed li41-IO halftime lead.
The Bulls went ahead 43-41 on
Bob Lave's three-point play
STREAK EXTENDED
with only 30 secortds gone in
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. the third perfnd and the score
J . (UPI) - Mark Lassiter · was tied four more times
scored three touchdowns before Bobby Smith's 15Sa turday to lead undefeated footer with six seconds left in
Rutgers to a 47.() viltory over the third stanza put
Columbia ' extending the Cleveland ahead lo stay 70-68.
nation 's longest winning
Norm van Uer, who topped
· streak in maj or college lhe Bulls with 26 points
football to 14 games.
Including 11 in the third
period, thought a goaltending call on Gibiiore with
YALE 21, PENN 7
28 seconds left in the third
PHfLADELPHIA itJPIJ Juni or hallback John ~riod was the turning point
Pagliaro ripp~d the Penn· of the game.
''BUI the real ·key to the
sylvania line for 187 yards in
cavs
vicLOry was their ability
33 caJTies and scored all
to
gel
a lui of second efforl rethree Yal e touch&lt;iown s
boun~s."
Van l.ier said. "You
~al urda)' to ca rry thr Elis to
a 21-i Ivy League victory have w &lt;'olllrul the boards
and i hl' hall 1 n win .,t1
over the Quak er""

showdown.
Jackson's great tailback, yards with Davis adding the
The victory enabled the . David P. Davis, returned to kick with 5:32 left.
Tigers to join Athens, action Friday but only to kick Haner scored again with
Gallipolis, and Logan in a 4- extra points as · he is I :07left on a 22 yard run and
way heap at the top of the recovering from a sprained Davis' kick made it 21-20
leag~e standings, all with 3·1
ankle suffered in the Wellston entering the final quarter.
Howard accounted lor both
records.
contest last week. It is
Irontoo
touchdowns In the
reported that he will be well
fourth
quarter
oo a two yard
and healthy to play against
run
with
6:13
left and hit
Gallipolis this week In the top
again
from
the
three yard
SEOAL contest.
line
In
the
final
seven
seconds
Ironton quarterback Kenny
of
play,
as
a
conversion
run
Crawford gave JHS the lead
and
pails
!ailed
following
with just 23 seconds left In the
.
first period when he raced 77 each score.·
Howard finished the con·
yards on an option play to
score with Davis toeing the test with 121 yards on ~
carries while Juan Thomas
conversion lor a 7-ll lead.
.
added 100 yards In 14 at· •
Howard
tallied
the
first
of
and denied that he had done
· .'
his lour \D's with 9:44 tempts.
anything illegal.
·
Crawford
topped
the
:
Benson's father said the remaining in the second Jackson rushers ·with eight ;
Indiana star,was offered a job period ·on a one yard blast carries lor 89 yards with Josh ,
.on Hancock's farm if he at· with a conversion pass no Jenkins adding 77 and Hiller •
tended Kentucky . Benson good.
~
Just over three minutes 76.
declined to specifically
The
winners
netted
15
first
;
discuss the matter, except to later Howard again bulled downs, 235 yards rushing, and ;
say "the only thing I know of over from the one with the EP hit live of seven passes for 61 •
was the flight on a private pass failing. ·
With 4:06 showing quar- yards with one picked off. •
plane for my lather."
The Ironmen rolled up 11 :
terback
Mike Brown went in
LaGarde and Batton told
first downs, 238 yards on the :
from
the
one
and
Juan
the NCAA they were offered
ground, and connected on one .
jobs at Claiborne Farm if Thomaa ran the two point of four aerials fo• 22 yards ~
conversion
to
put
Ironton
on
they signed with Kentucky
with one Intercepted.
but each Sllid he saw nothing lop 20-7 at halftime.
Score by uuarters:
•
Jackson roared back In the
illegal with the offer.
Ironton.
b
20
0
12--32
:
. Both
Dawkins
and third period with fullback Jackson
7 0 14 11-21 :
Willoughby said they' Paul Haller ranunlng two
cooperated with the NCAA
investigation but ·did not
elaborate.
Cliff Hogan, Kentucky
athletic director, refused to
comment on the inEqually
home in the
vestigation.

NCAA ·to probe

UK recruiting

~

LEXINGTON, · Ky. (UPI)
- The Naljonal Collegiate
Athletic Association has
asked officials at the
University of Kentucky to
answer allegations of
recruiting violations in attempting to sign at least five
star basketball prospects in
the past four years, the
Louisville Courier-Journal
reported in today's editions.
The newspaper said the
NCAA investigation has
centered on job offers to
prospective players if they
attended
Kentucky, trans·
.
portation of a prospect's
parent to the school ~nd in·
volVement of "overzealous
boosters" In recruiting.
The players, none of whom
ever played for Kentucky,
were Kent Benson, an In·
diana University aenior, Tom
LaGarde, a senior at the
University of North Carolina,
Dave Bailon, a junior at
Notre Dame, Bill (Poodle)
Willoughby, a player with the
NBA '· Atlanta Hawks and
Darryl Dawkins of the
Philadelphia 76ers, The
Courier-Journal said.
Kentucky head basketball
coach Joe Hall said he was
OXFORD, OHIO (UPI) - .
told not to comment on the Senior tallback Rob Car·
allegations but he said he did penter rambled for 14li yards,
not believe the charges would Including a 61-yard gallop
result in the Kentucky that set up a touchdown, to
basketball program being spark previously winless
placed on probation.
Miami of Ohio to a 9-7 upset
. The newspaper said an victory over Mid-American
NCAA rule against trans- Conference leader Bowling
porting relatives or friends of Green In a rain-drenched
a prospective student-athlete homecoming game Saturday.
to visit a campus was ap- Miami sophomore quarter·
paren!lY violated when. the back Bob MaxWell tossed
.college Dew Benson and his a 10-yard TD pass to 6-loot~
father to Lexington from sophomore tight end Paul
their home in New Castie, Warth and Norm Trowbridge
Ind., on a private plane April kicked a 39-yard field goal to
8, 1973.
stake the Redskins to a 9.()
The other main concern of 'first-quarter lead.
Bowling Green, held
the investigation apparently
involves alleged job offers to scoreless the first three
Benson, LaGarde and Batton periods, finally managed a
by Set~ Hancock, a Paris, touchdown in the final
Ky ., horse Iarmer .who quarter on Mark Miller's twrr
describes himself as a yard quarterback sneak, but
Kentucky !an, the Courier the Falcons blew two oppoltunities to wln the game .in
said.
T,he investigation is . the closing minu)es.
reportedly an outgrowth of a.'l
NCAA probe involving the
llAVISSPARKS'BAMA
University of Kentucky
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI)
football program.
· - Halfback Johnny Davis
Hancock, owner of the ran lor 86 yards and a touch·
Claiborne farm, said he was down Saturday which
questioned by the NCAA last sparked sluggish AIRbama to
winter. He confirmed that he a 24·3 win over unheralded
had offered jobs to prospects Louisville.

POMEROY - Feeder calf prices are strengthening
somewhat as shown bythe last feeder calf sale.
The sale results from the October 14 sale at Athens shows
the following : high choice steers weighed an average of S53
pounds and averaged $33.25 per hundrec!weight ; choice steers
averaged 485 pounds and brought $33.65; high good steers
averaged 508 pounds and brought $32.20; with steers gr~ding
~ood we(ghtng 5al pounds and averaging $27.6 per hundred·
weight Four hundred and forty-three steers were sold as
graded steers .with an overall average of 521 powids and
brought ~2. 13.
.
Heifers averaged overall 51&gt; cents less per pound for an
overall average of $26.68. The average weight on 396 heifers
w.S 4li1 pounds. Price by grades were : high choice $27.06
'
weighing
407 pounds; choice $28.03 weighing 493 lbs .; high
IN CLASS - Bill Marrah consults with instructor
good
$25.81
weighing 427 pounds ; and $24.78 for good heifers
Fred Edelman, seated, In the adult Educa tion class at the
weighing 199 pounds.
Buckeye Hills car-eer Center.
Each year there Is a Ieeder calf round-up in Columbus.
This sale is the showcase lor Ohio Ieeder calves and provides a
source of feeder calves lor 4-H and FF A boys and girls for
market steers. The results of this sale were as follows :
Slxty.flve prime steers averaged $85 per cwt., 71 high
choice steers averaged $58 per cwl., and 119 choice steers
averaged $42 per cwt., ranging from $34 to $76 per hundre&lt;l .
Eighteen prinle heifers in the sale averaged $:11 per cwt.;
16 high choice heifers avera.iJ.ed $42 per cwt. ; and 17 choice
RIO GRANDE - Local tending the class at Buckeye heifers averaged $29 per cw. and rariged from $26 to $39 per
adults enrolled in the Adult Hills Career Center each hundred pounds.
Education Fall Session are Tuesday and Thursday
being taught the fun· ~ening from 6 p.m. to 10
damentals of Industrial . p.m. Classes started on mately 275,000 professional new headquarters he based In
Safety. The seminar consists October 5 and will conclude cattlemen in all segments Denver, with offices in
or individuals representing on October 28, 1976. The in- and areas of the beef cattle Omaha and Washington. The
various Industrial plants in structor Is Fred Edlemann. industry, which alone repre- president and first vice
this area.
Adults enrolled in the sents about one-fifth of all presiden~ of the new group
Topics of study include: s~minar are: Richard·Brown, farm marketing cash would cmlinue 1&lt;1 be working
cattlemen.
.
accident
costs ,
cir- Floyd Chambers, Eugene receiptS .·
The
respective
ANCA
and
In
a
joint
stall!ment,
the
cumstances of accidents, Harris, Charles Huber,
NLF
A
boards
of
direcwrs
two
groups
said
the
purpose
prevention of accidents, job William Ma rrah, Daniel
safety, plant Inspection, Neal, Erewanna Plants, Jeff met just before the Kansas of the new organiUIUon would
electrical hazards, first aid, Poleyn, Dale ·Randolph, ·City announcement, and be to :
- Represent arid speak for
good housekeepin g, Harry VanVranken, Ottls while they did not formally
approve
.
the
coosolidation,
all
cattlemen nationally on
materials handling, safety Young, James Smith, Charles
equipment, storage, machine Sibley, James Ferrell and reaction was generally public and economic affairs.
favorable.
- Create and maintain lbe
guarding, and fire protection. Dwayne Lang.
Playing
key
roles
In
the
economic
and political
f:ifteen students are atformulation of initial merger climate that will give
'
plans were ANCA president individual members the
Wray Finney of Fl. Cobb, opportunity 1&lt;1 earn optimum
Okla.; NLF A president Don returns on their Investments
Hunter of CenlervUie, S.D.; within the free enterprise
Gordon Van Vleck of SYstem.
Plymouth, calif., and Millm
~ Provide members with
Brown of Mt. Pleasant, Mich . . economic information and .
Van Vleck and Brown are . other services that can help
immediate past presidents of them
improve · their
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A step this week in Kansas City · the ANCA and NLFA management decisions.
new single national beef with a nnouricement of , respectively.
In particular, 'tbe groups
cattle organization is being preliminary plans for the
The ANCA currently has said they both "favor
formed to -give ·-cattlemen merger.
individual members and 4li freedom from government
If the final plans are affiliated state cattle and 14 intervention with
the
more clout In government
approved by the boards and natlonat' breed associations. livestock induslry's com·
and political affairs.
Although talks toward con- membership of both groups,
Founded in 1898 with a petitive market system."
"With Increasing pressures
solidation of the American the nation's beef caltle largely western membership,
National Cattlemen's industry will be represented ANCA spread nationwide on the industry, it is
Association and the National by a single national over the years as a result of imperative that cattlemen
Livestock Feeders spokesmai\, - the National industry developments . have more clout in
ANCA is now headquartered government and political
Association have been Cattlemen's Association affairs," they said. "There is
underway for almost a year , beginning next September. in Denver.
It would represent approxiThe NLF A, organ~ed in a need for a stronger; !!lOre
the joint venture took a giant
1946, represents livestock unified representation of
producers ahd feeders In 20 cattlemen as a commodity
states;
with
primaty group."
concentration In the north
F'inal consolidstion plans
central region, an area with are scheduled to be presented
55 per cent of the fed cattle to the ANCA and Nl)' A
marketed annually.
boards about Jan. 1, and If
Based in Omaba, the group approved,
would
he
has nine state·aflillated fuhmitted to the m"l''bershlp
associations.
pf each association in
Under the coosolldatlon, February.
the new association would
Although the merger would
have 52 affiliated state not oe&lt;:~~r formally until Sepassociations and the 14 tember, both groups plan 1&lt;1
national breed asSOciations. maintain a close working
A 10-member study relationship
in
the
committee recommended the meantime.

By T. Allan Woller
District Ranger
IRONTON - Wild, hall wild Bnd
not so wild dogs are still a problem
in southeast Ohio. I have cited cases
in past columns about the effect of
dogs and cats on wildlife
populatioos. Now, according ' to an
article that appeared in last
Sunday's Colwnbus Dispatch feral
packs are having a considerable
Impact on domestic 'livestock ,
particularly sheep:
Unknown to many, Ohio bas
more sheep per square mile than
any other state. Although hogs and
cattle have been victims, Robert
Hunk of the Mid States Wool
Growers Association says sheep are
the main target because they are
easier to kill.
The Dispatch article reporled
that In Hocking County a pack of
dogs struck a flock of sheep for the
thir(\ lime in as many weeks leaving
a total o( seven sheep dead.
According IAJ the report, wild
dog packs a~e 1lrnilar In behavior to
wolf packs. Feral dog packs usually
have a leader and other members of
the
pack
have
specific
responsibilities.
Studies of wolf packs in
Northern Minnesota bear witness to
their intelligence and sophisticated
hunting methods. Tracks In the snow
told a story of three wolves
approaching an island in mid winter
from the down-wind side. Upon
reaching the' island, the pack
separated, one rematnin~ at the

dog

Adult-Ed classes are

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Cattlemen want
more ·clout

can make you

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COMPARABLE SAVINGS
ON AU OTHER MODELS

CHECK THESE REASONS
FOR BUYING NOW.

vr Fall Discounts In Effect
vrBeat Next Price Increase
(Due approx. Nov. 1; 1976)

.vr Income Tax Credit For Farm
ECJJipment Investment

This offer applies to tractor models 364 ·
through ·1466. This does neil include the new
86 series tractors. Flexible financing plans
are available through lnternationar
Harvester Credit Corp.

. vr Attractive MF Financing available
.,

"
;L.

with wavier of finance charges until
March 1, 1977

SHINN'S
TRACTOR SALES
.=LEO:N::..,..__
PHO_N_E_45_&amp;-_16_30_....;.;,;W•...;.VA;.;;.•.....

point, the other two circling the
island where they look up watch .
The first wolf ll)en "drove" the
island, flushin g a deer oullo the two
wolves in waiting. Scratch one deer ,
I have no quarrel with wolves
killing to eat. It's part of the natural
scene that's been golng on for tens or
thousands of years. Nor am I trying
to equate the hunting skills of a wolf
with those ' of a pack or wild dogs
even though evidence indicates
there may be similarities. And
please don't infe r that I'm U!lting a
cheap shot at dog owners who
responsibly control the actions of
their pels and hunting companions.
There is how ever. a basi c '
distinction that should be made. A
wollltills to eat and a pack of semi
wild dogs, often including a few
"pel.'l" allowed to ro!\m fr ee, kill for
fun.
The Carlos Avery Game Refuge
north of Minneapolis reporled
nearly lOll deer killed in one winter,
all by dog packs. Some carcasSes
had been fed upon but many were
just killed and left.
A friend of mine in northern
Wisconsin reported finding his small
house dog with four others al tackln~
an already half dead fawn .
The house pet was covered
with
blood
as he join·
ed the shark • like fr enzy of
atlack. The dog was killed on U1e
spot because, like dogs that chose
cars, It is virtually impossible to
break them or it.
'
To bring the situation closer to

for that compa ny 's new
development aiOtig the Ohio
ltiver at Lakin. The water
problems consist of disposal
of water along each side or
the road with waterways and
pipe to safely carry the water
to nn outlet al the river's
edge.
seepage w a~ suspected.
We helped Albort Spu•lock
When we saw the pond
recently, It appeared that the of Tribble with some farm
work has proven successful pla nning. The main thing thai
bocausc the pond wns ulmost the Spur locks were Interested
In wus the devolopmenL of
full of water.
Okey R. King of SCS has theh· la.nd for grassland
been assisting l&gt;itkin Stohl. production lor livestock ·use
Hospital with solhc Willer unct water dcvohipmcnt. The· ;
management probl ems in water development would
spring •
connccUorl with .!I road bclng cons ist of a
built by Appalachian Power development In the pasture
Company as an ·UCt;ess road field.

Spring development near

completion on Green ·farm
By John Cooper
Soli Cons. Service
POINT PLEASANT
James and Fred Green of
Upland are nearing com·
pletion on a spring
development on their farm.
The development of this
spring consisted of laying 23;5

lay of the Jand
feet of 4-inch plaslic pipe to
collect water from two spring
seeps.
The depth of the ditch
varied from two feet to four
feel in order to have a constant drop in the line from the
top end to the bottom end.
The four-inch plastic pipe will
d•scharge water into a
concrete .collection basin and
from there it will be carried
to a waterin~ trou~h with 1y,.
inch solid pipe. The 500·gallon
concrete watering tank is
being constructed as the
water supply ·for the
livesto ck. Ollie Nowlin
assisted in digging the ditch
with his backhoe.
Recently we visited the R.
R. Stranahan farm near
Waterloo, and looked at the
farm pond thai Mr.
Stranahan rebuilt in July. He
rebuilt
the
pond
because previously it had
leaked and was not holding
water well . The rec&lt;in·

slruclion consisted of cutting
a core trench on the upper
sidl!of the fill down into solid
earih and repacking the core
trench with clay material.
Other clay material was
moved and .. packed over the
field up as high as the water
level and on each side where

O.em
•
engmeers

PURINA
FIELD 1 N FARM
' DOG MEAL

plan seminar
HUNTINGTON - Th.e Tri·
State Section of the American
Institute
of · Chemical
Engineers will be sponsoring
a seminar on Wednesday,
Oct.. 27 to be held at the
Marhull University
Memorial Student Center
from 4 to 9 p.m. with dinner
from 6 to 7 p.m.
Dr. Marvin Mills, a leading
expert on occupational safety
and Instructor at Marshall
University, will lead a. panel
of specialists in a discussion
of OSHA regulations. J .
Dannemiller at (614) 532-3420
Ext. 313 should be notified by
Monday, . Oct. 25, if at·
tendlince Is planned.

-Complete· IJ!nd
balanced
nutrition
- ~eked by 50
years of Purina
research
dogs
-Taste
really like
-Economically
priced

For

Agriculture and
our community
By Bryson R. (Bud) CaJter
Gallla County Extension Agent
GALUPOI.JS - II you need a tobacco preils, then stop by
the Extension Office and ask to see a copy of plan no. 735-9A,
which is a one..tlck wall-type tobacco press of wood
construction .
·
I have about lour copies of this plan available at the
· Elllension Office and if we run out we can order more from the
University of Kentucky. Cost olthe plan is 25c.
•
DON'T forget the Graded Feeder Calf SBie sponsored by
the Southeaatern Ohio Beef cattle Improvement Association
and the Ohio Valley Livestock Co., which will be held this week
· on Thursday, October 28 at 8:00p.m. at the stockyards here at
Gallipolis.
If you have any questions about selling on the sale then
please contact our office, Tommy Joe Stewart, Clarence
Johnson, .lack Miller or Denver Yoho.
EVERY THREE YEARS, generally, is often enough 1&lt;1
lake soil tests . on farm fields. But, arinual tests are
recommended where ~eavy rates of fertilizer have been
applied in intensive cropping programs.
Fall, usually soon after harvest, is the best time to take soil
samples. The soil is normally not too wet to dig and the results
of the samples submitted lor testing in the fall are back in
plenty or lime to plan next year's spring planting.
Sample to the same. depth that you normally plow on the
cropland and aboutt-51nches on meadows. Take a number of
samples from the field and mix these . together. Then bring
about I pint or a coffee can of soil to the Extension Office so
that we may sent It 1&lt;1 the University for testing. The fee for .:Oil
testing is $2.t)(J'and we'll also need some information about1he
crops you plan to grow and liming hlJtory of the field.
How do you del ermine when to give a dairy cow a one-way
1ruck rlde.lrom your farm' It is because she got mast.ltis again
from 1he umpteenth time, or maylk hec~use she kicked you or
switched you with a wet tail once too often'! Well, dairy science
extension specialists at the Ohio /)tate Universlly have
developed a 10-poim culling guide to aid you in deciding which
t"ws •o cull. If four l•r more of the following IQ questinns arc
un~wrred " yes" for any row, il strongly indira tes she shlluld
be ··ulh•il.
- I~ protlun ion 25 pel' Cl:'ru ur morP lwl11\\ hPI'd HVl'raw···
- lH she a thnmir masti lis rast&gt;?
Will sh{' he dry ·4 months nr mnre''
I

your

ht~~llh.

- Is she a hard milker ?

regutorlv .

-

Does she have a nervous or underslrable disposition?
Are good replacements available1
Is she below the herd's average body type?
Is she timid?
- Is the price of beef good 7
- ·Is space needed for fresh heifers'

Reach for the
protection
that serves
your animals
best.
'

dcig "s

feed PurinA

dog foods ond 111
your veterinarian

J. D. North Produce Co.
Galli polio, Ohio

Vine Street

Terramycin
Injectable
Solution

Com biotic~

-

......
- . '

IH4 w

-~

SPECIALS

•

COM BIOTIC 1OOcc
Reg. 53.25

3.00

1

'

'2,85 Each Case Loh
'

TYi.AN 200 100cc
Reg. $10.36
1 8.00

'9.25

ea.

Eoch Case Loh

TERRAMYCIN 500cc
Reg . 55.60
•5.35 ea.

pna

4

Combiotic®

Ea.

ss.oo Each Case Lots ·

.,

home, some hunters In the Hanging
Rock area o! the W~yne investigated
the continuous barking of several
dogs. They discovered a mature
buck deer with a full set of antlers at
bay in a strip mine pond, It's back to
a high wail. The buck was so
exhausted, even the sight and smell
Of humans would npt summon
energy to run ,
In another case, .a Fore&amp;U'Y
Technician discovered .. a Utter of
wild pups In Gallia. County. !heY
were whelped under the rotted ruins
of an old homesite, miles from
habitation - obvlo~siy wild because
the mother disappeared like a ghost
at hi s approac h. Th e Incident
happe ned in Gallia Count y.
l wish I knew the answer to a
very touchy s u~jecl. ft 's been said in
U1e hill cotmU'y of southeast Ohio
"tnke my car, take my wile, but U!ke
my dog and you're In big trouble ."
A.~ a farm boy who Is now charged
with managing the natural
rcS()urc&lt;'s on n turge chunk of public
lund, I feel tl strong responsibility
for wildlife und un equally strong
empathy fur the famters' plight.
If those who dump a dog or cat in
the country, or those who let theirs
run free with no control, really
wtderstood what can result, the
problem would bo nearly resolve'&lt;!.
There are various types of animal
shelters available to take care of
unwanted pets. Aclive •upport of a
slrong dog warden program helps
too.
Do you know where your dug or
cat Is right now '/

..

�..
1-D-Tbe &amp;ulday Timel&amp;olinel, lklnday, Oct. 24, 1976

.

Both candidates promise support
WASHINGTON tUPI) Both President Ford and
Jirruny Carte~: are pledging to
do better by small business if
elected; according to side-by.
lllde statements appearing in
the current National Small
Business Association
newsletter.
A s\U'vey of &lt;'Ongressional
candidates by th~ lobby also
showed "a clear majority"
agrees with Its positions.
Carter said small business'
waning fortunes, compared
to big business, is "the result
of cumulative federal' mismanagement" and "the
Nixon-Ford administration
ecnoiU'ages big business and
contributes increasingly to
inefficient goverrunent and

economic concentration ."
Ford said lnOation, due to
"above ali else deficit
spending by the federal
goven\ment" is "the No. 1
destroyer of jobs and small
business.
"I pledge an ali-&lt;Jut effort to
G af nd
create
a
business
1
SWEDEN'S royal couple, King Car XVI ust a ·
environment wherein small
Queen Silvia, dress up for an official photograph. The 311- ' business has a better cchance
.. . year&lt;~id moo arch and his German-Brazilian commoner
to grow and prosper," he
• wife were married last June.

added.
Carter said, " kl president ,
fwill see illat small business
has a strong voice in · the
White House and personally
work lO stimulate a neW wave
of scientific and techoological
creativity which will create
Ford said "the most lmpor·
IJint thing l'can do for small
business · is to curb
inflallon ,"
Carter agreed with the
lobby position supporting a
"statisti cal yardstick
formula to measure th e
relative growth of small
business in relationship to
other sectors of the
economy."
Ford called for a "top ID
bottom overhaul" of federal ·
regulatory activities and "the
paperwork burden" imposed
on small businesses. He
mentioned legislation that
· ''would guarantee the
systematic r~xaminatlon
and reform of all federal
regulatory activities within
the next folD' years." ·
Carter,
noting
his
background
as
a

.,

•

REALISTIC

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FOR

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23 CHANNEL

NAVAHO BASE

about midweek, would drop
what ll calls its "reailstic
ads," which include a TV spot
of Georgians do.wngrading
Carter,
their
former
govemor.
Carter's

campaign

advertising director, Gerald
Rafshoon, said his camp has
been wondering "who those
people were/' and some
recommended going to
Michigan ID film the same
kind of pitch against Ford. He
said he rejected illat because
"that kind of advertising
turnS people oft"
Carter himself comfemned
Ford's use of a newspaper ad .
showing a Newsweek cover
photo of Ford alongside a
Playboy cover featuring a
seductive woman and an
. EGYPT'S President
invitation to read lhe
Anwar
S{tdat II resumlng
blockbuster Carter interview
diplomatic
relatiollll with
Inside.
Syria,
in
the
deep freete
A Ford spokesman said .
since
Egypt's
Sinal
that ad was a "one-shot deal"
disengagement
agreement
and wouldn't be run again.
Vemon Jordan, executive , ~lh lsr~ela year ago. The
decision
to reopen
director of the Urban League,
embassies
in
Cairo and
told Ford he had no right to
Damascus
was
reached at
use a picture of himself with a
an
Arab
smnmit
session In
group of black leadersSaudi
Arabia,
convened
to
.incinding Jordan-in a camdeal
wllh
Lebanon
'•
clvli
paign ad that claims Fqrd
war.
champions minority rights.
were drastically scaled down The Ford camp agreed to use

Industrial
production
.
"

~head of Soviet target

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LOCOM

00

By GERARD WUGHRAN
MOSaJW (UPI) - The
Soviet Union is ahead of its
.target
for
industrial
production in 1976, but far
short of performances in
previous years, according to
official figures released
Saturday.
· Tass, quoting figures from
ille Central Statistics Board,
said the increase of industrial
output in illelast nine months
was 4.6 per cent over the
same period last year,
against a targeted Increase of
4:3 per' cent.
,It said production of key
Items such as oil, electricity,
Coal and ·steel aU exceeded
plarmed figures .
.Western experts noted
, however that the 1976 targets

•
11,000 APPLY
"ATHENS - More than
9·,~ businesses in Ohio have
agreed to participate In tile
Golden Buckeye Card
discount program for senior
'citizens 65 years of age and
older, with a total exceeding
312,000 persons having applied for their carda. According · to Marvin W. McDargh, area coordinator for
the immediate southeastem
0iuo area, over 11,000 senior
Citizens have applied In the
counties of Athens, Meigs,
;!locking, Perry, Morgan,
Noble,
Monroe
and
Washington with a total of 378
. participating merchants in
thls area:

A'PiliP

••

against

previous

years,

apparently 'because of the
disastrous 1975 grain harvest.
According to official
figures, industrial production
went up 8 per cent in 1974 and
7,5 per cent in 1975.
"'!'he nine-month pian for
sales
of
products,
Improvement in labor and
production efficiency 11nd
production. of key items has
been over-reached," Tass
said.

a~~e~:~~~:~ign,onthe

businessman's ) back."
Ford said his administration
He also said the Ford "Is firmly dedicated to the
administration "has failed to idea that free competitons is
vigorously enforce the . vital to the health of the
existing anti trim laws" to the American economy and has
detrlmll'n l nf !'m'1~11 hu·si~S!'I . acted vigorously to promote

new businesses ... ''

Campaign in l~st week
By HOWARD FlEWS
is circulating a cartoon
· WASHINGTON (l)PI) showing Carter in a pulpit,
Wjlen the slakes are so highthe Bible in one hand and
Ieee world leadership,
Playboy in the other.
prestige, paironage, $200,1100
The rough stuff started in
~- year pius expenses-the
the candidates' campaign
last week of a close speeches -Carter saying
presidential race can be Ford had been "brain·
el!J)ected to gel rough, if not washed'' about Eastern
&lt;!ownright dirty.
Europe, Sen. Robert Dole
·:·The signs pointed that way calling Carter "a peanut,"
Saturday, The candidates and so on - but it has shifted
pointed ateach other.
now to campaign advertising.
',President Ford scolded
Jimmy · Carter in Friday's
Carter's camp has been
debate because Carter's run- griping the most.
ning mate, Sen. Walter Mon·
Democratic National
dale, had said the chairman . Chairman Robert Strauss
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, · claims the Republicans plan
Gen. George Brown, was an advertisement t\181 would
unfit to · be "sewage be "the most vicious attack
Commissioner."
.
ever made at . the highest
After the debate, Carter level of political activity."
predicted that " a major
A spokesman for the Presiportion of Mr. Ford's dent Ford Conunittee denied
advertising lxldget will be that and said, to the contrary,
spent on personal attacks on "we expect to end up the
me and my family." His campaign on a high note ."
aides alleged the Ford camp
He said the Ford campaign,
'

businessman , •ailed for
"completely reforming OW'
federal regulaiDry agencies,
their reporting requirements
and Lax laws to get the
~overnrilent off his (the

/11!11

that cause."
Both said they would make
sure small business gets a
"fair share" of govemmem
contract work.

i ·tnfintl

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1976

VOL ll NO. 39

President asks for support
By DONAW UMBRO
RALEIGH , N.C. (UPIJ President Ford Saturday
IU'ged Americans to give him
"a mandate" for a full four
years, saying he had restored
faith and trust, In tl)e White
House and kept the United
States at peace .
Ford barnstormed his way
through three Southern states
before flying to southern
California late Saturday.
At the same Ume, his
campaign manager, Stuait
Spencer, announced he plans
a 14 million "saturation ..
televis1on
advertising
camp!lign because "the race
is very close.
"I think it Is going to be
decided iri the last weekend,
the last lour days in the cam·
paign," Spencer said.
Ford told several thousand
supporters on the lawn of the
state capital in Richmond,
Va., that his policies have
"restored faith and trust in
the White House.
"My administration has
been open, candid and
forthright. Give me your
mandate lor four years ... and
I won't let you down."
Ford stressed repeatedly
that "riot a singie.American
boy is lighting on foreign soil
and I intend to keep it that
way."
The President flew to Ra·
leigh, N.C., for a motorcade
through the State Fair
Ground and a rally before
flying on to Columbia, S.C.,
where he was to attend the
. University of South Carolina
vs . Notre Dame football
game and another rally at the
governor's mansior,.
Earlier, Spencer said he
planned al least five half·
hour statewide television
programs that will begin in
California on Sll1Jday and

show up later in Illinois,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, New
York and possibly Texas;
pius eight five-minute radio
specials between n~w and
election day.
He said the Ford campaign
wiD have apenl a tntal of $12
million on media advertlsin~.

of which all but 14 mJUion has
been spent so far.
Ford got a boist erous
. recepilon from thousands of
visitors at the North Carolina
State fair Ground Are!Ul .
In Richmond, he said, "I
stand on your side for
limitin g federal spending,

maintaining our mllitur)'
strength and keeping the
United Stoles at P"'"'" In tho
world .
"I need yoW' help , Can l
l'tmnt on y()ur

Sup~&gt;orl

in

Novemb&lt;or ?"
The crowd respooxled afllr·
matively.

Captain tried
to warn vessel
By PETER M. ZOLLMAN
NEW O~LEANS (UPI) The captain olthe Norwegian
tanker Frosta said Saturday
the pilot aboard his vessel
tried in vain to warn the
ferryboat George Prince
moments before the two
vessels collided in the
Mississippi River .
"He was standing with hiS
radio," said Capt, · Kjell
Slatten of Elne, Norway, the
master of the Froata since
1971' and ille first witness to
testify before a Coast Guard
board
of
officers
investigating the crash.
"He was trying, trying,
trying," Slatten said of the
pilot, identified by the Coast
Guard lis Nick F. Colombo.
"The pilot was also giving
dangerous (warning) blasts
on hia whistle."
The · collision Wednellday
capsized the ferryboat · an~
killed its crew and all but 18
of ,the dozens of paosengers
aboard. The exact.number of
passengers was not ·knowu
but authorities said the death

toll may exceed 100.
Thirty4wo bodies had been
recovered by midday
Saturday, Salvage crews ulso
reirieved from the muddy
rlverbottom 20 cars and other
vehicles which tumbled .
overboard.
Crews pf divers, working
more by feel than sight in the
murky water, searched
around the clock for .bodies
and cars.
There was no mpjor
damage aboard ille tanker.
Slatten said he heard
several" routine whistle
signals and saw the ferryboat
toward the right hank. of the
river ~s his ship approched
the ferry crossing at
Destrehan, La ,, 30 mile s
upriver from New Orleans.
"I thought It was normal,"
he said.
But moments later the
ferryboat closed in on the.
freighter, Slatten sold .
"This lhlng was just
coming straight .over and we
had absolutely nothing more
to do at that time. Then we

were. just standing, and you
could feel II was a long lime .
And then we eould f•oel the
collision ,"
Slatten said ho saw the
ferry come to !)te surfaee
upside dowu and he watched
a cur flouting In the river.
"I didn't see any lives," he
said. "I ran over to the port
side, but I couldn 't see any
people."
The Coast Guurd lnvestiga.
tion, expected to lust at least
a week, was head''!! by Renr
Adm, Wayne E. Caldwell .
The pilot and other crewmen
from the Frosla, survivors
from the George Prince and
witnesses who saw th e
collision from the bank were
expected ID teslify.

Five lives lost
br collision

LEI~IC, Ohio (UPIJ
Five teenagers were· killed
early saturday In an auto
collision at the intersection ol
two Putnam County roads
northwest of Leipsic~
boosting the Ohio weekend
toll lo at least eight. ·
Joseph P. Kennedy Ill, 23The Highway Patrol said
year-&lt;Jid son of Bobby, heads one car northbound on County
the campaign. That was ho.w l!Amd II went through a stop
Teddy broke into polities on sign and hll an auto going
. 1960 -~orklng on his down County Rood E, killing
brothers .presidential everybody In the two
campaign.
vehicles·.
Polls show Kennedy an
The a·ccident occurred
.easy winner, but no one told . about 12:05 a.m. one mile
his 41-year-&lt;Jld opponent who north of Ohio 613. The High·
. is president of the world's way Patrol said it .was
largest famlly-owned . unknown where the youngdrapery manufacturing firm . sters might have been or
Robertson blames Kennedy were going.
for industry fleeing MassaKilled were Marilyn
ch,~lts.
Verhoff, 18, Continental, and
He never held another job Dennis M. Lammers, 18,
In his llle until he was elect~ Leipslc,the drivers, and their
to the United States Senate, · passengers, Tomy Lammers,
Roherlson said in frustration . 15, Leipsic; Mary Lou Niese,
"Does he get it ~use his 16, Leipsic; and Mary Kay
name Is Kennedv .
Hermiller, 16, Ottawa.

k
d f·
Kennedy loo s towar uture .

other hand, blasted Carter for
a TV ad that claims only 32 By STEWART POWELL
Senate, J:(emedy says.
per cent of American homes
BOSTON (UP!) _ Sen.
The Jot-year senate veteran
are owned by their occupant, Edward M. Kennedy:s cam· announced two years ago a
The Natiooal Association of paign for a third full 'Senate "firm,
final
and
Realtors and Carla HiUs, term has all the trappings of unconditional" decision to
secretary of Housing and . a fut\U'e run for the While bypass the presidential race.
Urban Development, said House.
His announcement sparked
that was patently false and
The
Mass.a chusetts the free-for:.Sil among
demanded the ad be Democrat, now 44, has liberals that saw Jimmy
withdrawn.
unleashed a statewide Carter emerge with the
crusade for a Senate seat nomination.
observers feel has been sale
"It was a decision for this .
all along. Loyalists view the election," Kennedy !Did UPI
.
.
effort as fresh evidence when asked if the decision
Kennedy's presidential was a choice for Ule. "I don't
dreams are not dead.
really plan very far into the
"We
always
work
hard,"
future."
HONG
KONG
(UPI)
NEW YORK (UP!j'- The
Kennedy is _watching the
Republican candidate for Army-led demonstrators in ' Kennedy said last week as he
swept
through
a
string
of
1976
pre.&gt;tdenUai campaign
Shanghai
described
the
Congress' 1n Rep. Bella Al&gt;suburban
communities
south
from
the sidelines, a far
widow
of
Mao
Tse-twig
and
zug's old district on
Manhattan's Weal Side three other purged radical of Boston. "That's the only different role th.an he had in
jumped to his. death from a leaders as "something filthy way 1 koow how. "
window of his eighth-floor and contemptible like dog's
apartment according to a dung," the official New China
Coletta s~hool for the
witneSI!, police said Friday, News Agency said today.
The agency also quoted the handicapped, a seven-yearA police spokesman, Sgt.
Michael McAuliff, said a . demonstrators in China's old boy hugged him around · COLUMBUS (UPI) _ Gov.
witness whom he refused to largest city as saying the the waist. Kennedy brushed James A. RHodes, who has
sandy bair and ordered state budget cuts
Id entify
saw Bernard purge of the folD' radicals the child's
him close.
Ploscowe, 35, sitting on the "has removed this time bomb pulled
"Hi, Kennedy • how are totaling 3 per cent during the
window sill of his aparbnent and liquidated a big bane you?" asked the youngster. past year, reportedly has
Thursday barefoot aod inside olD' party."
granted a total ol ~.818
NCNA, quoting demon· "You're one oI the good . amually in pay Increases 'to
wearing only a T-ohirt and
ones."
.slacks. "Then he jumped/' strators, said the "antlparty
The scale of his campaign 84 of his top administrative
McAulllf said. The candidate, clique" - the .radicals - against a modest GOP chai· officials in July.
who lived alone, was "show their true colors lenge from businessman
Scripps
Howard
pronounced dead on arrival before the mirror of in- Michael Robertson appears Newspapers said that mOll of
vincible Marxism • Leninism
at St. Luke's Hospital.
lme• be d he bord 0f the raises went to department
'' yon t
ers
directors and their depuUes
. ,
McAulllf said Ploscowe's • Mao Tse-tung Thought, and aMassachusetts.
finally
become
apartment door was double- have
"A strong showing is At least one raise exceeded
bolted. No note was found, 110mething filthy and con· obviously helpful'' in the $7,1100, and fi~e others topped
temptibie like dog's dung."
McAuliff said.
$6,1100 aMually.
.

GOP candidate Mao's widow

takes own life like dog dung

Dur~g::"st:Ust~~~y·~;:

1968 and 1972.
"I have iiodicated that If
Mr . Caner asked me, I'd
travel the country with him,"
Kennedy said. .
.
But the lonner Georgia
governor has not·asked.
"That'shisdecisionandwe
respect It," Kennedy IIBid.
The Kennedy campaign
resembles In many ways the
White. House ~lves of his
brothers in the 1980s. A potent
blend of family, money and
magtc·has been aerved to the
state's 3mJllion voters. And it
serves as 8 political training
ground
for
younger
Kennedys.
Caroline Kemedy Ill-year·
old daughter of J~hn, bas
stumped for her uncle.

Rh.0 des·' people r·m·sed

Africans shaken

·

The newspaper group said

the largest single pey increase went to Trans·
portation Director Richard
D. Jackaon, whose Alary was
boosted from $32,011 to
f,'l9,083. His department allo
received the lar&amp;est share of
lhe increa~~e~, u 21 penona
will get raises ·totaling

ft2,038.

.

• The salary ol Richard L.
Krablch, bead olthe Depart·
ment of Administrative
Servlcel, wu .railed $6,85e to
$41,00¥ annually.

Directors of taxation, ·
development, envtrOIIJlltmal
protection and liquor got pay
raises of $6,427 each, and wlll
make f35,059 aMuaily.
Ayear ago Rhodes ordered
a 2 per cent state s)iending
cut, and two weeks ago added
another I per cent reduction
because of the need to
provide extra money to such
programs as Medicaid. S~
montha ago Rhodes also had
said his top advisers would
forego raises because ol the
financial squeeze. a

by total eclipse
DAR ES SALAAM, Tan·
·zanla (UP!) - A total ecUpse

of the sun watched by
millions of superstitiqus
Africans and by llclentlsta
from around the world, today ,
swept across central Africa
and the Indian Ocean.
''The corona was brilliantly
visible," said British sclential
David Magee. "We had a
crystal clear view of the
ecUpse" which experts said
would be the !sst total ·eclipse
visible from land this eentury• .

Issue 7 wo.uld make effecting ~hanges in the Ohio Constitution easier

"

• EDiToR'S NOTE: Thla II
ille fillll ill a lel'le1 of 10
illlpalebeo by UP! Sllltebo. .
lleporten Lee Leounl llld "
~.R. Kimmhoo detailing tbe
.lil11e1 load coa-teots 011 illllo'•
Nov. 2 ballot. Today'• arttele
OlXplalDa state luae 1, oae of
four co.aatltalloa-al
·-..dmai! placed 011 tbe
ballot by Oblollll for Utility
Rdorm.

-

J

'

l,

; By LEE LEONARD
UP! Stalftuue Repwter
aJLUMBUS(UPI) -Slate
lsaue 1 changes the require.

. I

ments
for
placing
constitutional amendments,
referenda and Initiatives oo
the Ohio ballot.
Balllcally, it eases therequirements for constitutional
amendments and referenda
on existing laws, and
simplifies the process for
Initiating a pill before the
General Assembly by popular
vote.
Although lasue 7 IS not
dlrecUy related to utility
reform; it was' placed oo the
ballot by Ohioana for Utility
Reform lOUR) along. -wiill
)

three utility-related issues. and
the
44-eounty
And it Is opposed by requirement would be
atizens f« Safe, Lower Cost waived.
· Electricity, the same utilityThe proposed amendment
laborbusiness coalition also would reduce . from
fighting the other three . 164,1100 to 100,000 the number
issues.
of signatures 'required ' to
OUR had to C!htain 307,1100 . place on the ballot a
slgnatiU'eS - ,10 per cent of · referendum on an existing
the vote for governor In 1974 law. The referendum would
-flU!\ at least 44 counties to have to be taken within 90
get
its
proposed days of enactment of a law.
conslitutiooal amendments Appropriations, tax levies
on the ballot.
and emergency laws could
If ls•ue 7 passes, the not be submitted to
signature requirement would referenda .
be reduced to a flat 250,1100
The number ol signat\U'es
."
"'

·required to Initiate a bill .
before the General Alsembly
would -be increued from
about 92,000 to 150,000.
However, If the leglalature
fails to act on the bill within
fourmontha,lhe bill would be
automatically submJtted to
the voters without requiring
petitioners to get anot~•
92,000 signatures, as under
the ·current ConaUtuUoo.
Issue 7 illso simplifies
procedures for obtaining
signatures and collecting·
petitions, and providel for
clear explanations , and
summaries of ballot issues.

It provides that no law
propolled by Initiative Dilly
have more than one aubject ·
and forbids the governcr to
veto a law approved by the .

voten .
. Proponents of I11ue 7,
including OUR and Cornman
Cause, a cllizeN' lobby, say
Ollie has the mOlt strict
requirements ol any state on
initiative and referendum
procedure~, and that they
should be eued.
Opponents say Issue 7
would "undo.rmlne
repreaeniJIUve government"

••
'

and clutier the ballot with
Issues each election at an
lncrealed cOlt.
Qnunon Cause argued that
the cOil of placing an iuue on
the ballot Ia about $150,1100, or
two cents per voter.
Secreta')' ol State Ted W.
Brown said he has no
objection to the Initiative and
referendum changes, but
opposes the provision which
makes It easier to gel
con.Ututianal amendment&amp;
on lhe brDot.
CSLCE, the .uWtty4ttbor·
'business coalilian, says Issue

..

'

7Would allow "one area ol the
state to control !he laws o1 all
Ohio" by elbninatlon of the
u-·county signature' •
requirement.
•
CSI.CE alao says It would
pennit "frivolous" li!Stles to
be placed on the ballot by
"any splinter group or groups
ol radicals."
Issue 7 · is similar to a
recommendation of the Ohio
Conttitullonal Revision Com· ·
mlsolon which the General
Assembly did not send to the
·:
ballot.
,.
Nut: Leglslalare

�..
1-D-Tbe &amp;ulday Timel&amp;olinel, lklnday, Oct. 24, 1976

.

Both candidates promise support
WASHINGTON tUPI) Both President Ford and
Jirruny Carte~: are pledging to
do better by small business if
elected; according to side-by.
lllde statements appearing in
the current National Small
Business Association
newsletter.
A s\U'vey of &lt;'Ongressional
candidates by th~ lobby also
showed "a clear majority"
agrees with Its positions.
Carter said small business'
waning fortunes, compared
to big business, is "the result
of cumulative federal' mismanagement" and "the
Nixon-Ford administration
ecnoiU'ages big business and
contributes increasingly to
inefficient goverrunent and

economic concentration ."
Ford said lnOation, due to
"above ali else deficit
spending by the federal
goven\ment" is "the No. 1
destroyer of jobs and small
business.
"I pledge an ali-&lt;Jut effort to
G af nd
create
a
business
1
SWEDEN'S royal couple, King Car XVI ust a ·
environment wherein small
Queen Silvia, dress up for an official photograph. The 311- ' business has a better cchance
.. . year&lt;~id moo arch and his German-Brazilian commoner
to grow and prosper," he
• wife were married last June.

added.
Carter said, " kl president ,
fwill see illat small business
has a strong voice in · the
White House and personally
work lO stimulate a neW wave
of scientific and techoological
creativity which will create
Ford said "the most lmpor·
IJint thing l'can do for small
business · is to curb
inflallon ,"
Carter agreed with the
lobby position supporting a
"statisti cal yardstick
formula to measure th e
relative growth of small
business in relationship to
other sectors of the
economy."
Ford called for a "top ID
bottom overhaul" of federal ·
regulatory activities and "the
paperwork burden" imposed
on small businesses. He
mentioned legislation that
· ''would guarantee the
systematic r~xaminatlon
and reform of all federal
regulatory activities within
the next folD' years." ·
Carter,
noting
his
background
as
a

.,

•

REALISTIC

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8 TRACK

FOR

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23 CHANNEL

NAVAHO BASE

about midweek, would drop
what ll calls its "reailstic
ads," which include a TV spot
of Georgians do.wngrading
Carter,
their
former
govemor.
Carter's

campaign

advertising director, Gerald
Rafshoon, said his camp has
been wondering "who those
people were/' and some
recommended going to
Michigan ID film the same
kind of pitch against Ford. He
said he rejected illat because
"that kind of advertising
turnS people oft"
Carter himself comfemned
Ford's use of a newspaper ad .
showing a Newsweek cover
photo of Ford alongside a
Playboy cover featuring a
seductive woman and an
. EGYPT'S President
invitation to read lhe
Anwar
S{tdat II resumlng
blockbuster Carter interview
diplomatic
relatiollll with
Inside.
Syria,
in
the
deep freete
A Ford spokesman said .
since
Egypt's
Sinal
that ad was a "one-shot deal"
disengagement
agreement
and wouldn't be run again.
Vemon Jordan, executive , ~lh lsr~ela year ago. The
decision
to reopen
director of the Urban League,
embassies
in
Cairo and
told Ford he had no right to
Damascus
was
reached at
use a picture of himself with a
an
Arab
smnmit
session In
group of black leadersSaudi
Arabia,
convened
to
.incinding Jordan-in a camdeal
wllh
Lebanon
'•
clvli
paign ad that claims Fqrd
war.
champions minority rights.
were drastically scaled down The Ford camp agreed to use

Industrial
production
.
"

~head of Soviet target

C.B .

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LOCOM

00

By GERARD WUGHRAN
MOSaJW (UPI) - The
Soviet Union is ahead of its
.target
for
industrial
production in 1976, but far
short of performances in
previous years, according to
official figures released
Saturday.
· Tass, quoting figures from
ille Central Statistics Board,
said the increase of industrial
output in illelast nine months
was 4.6 per cent over the
same period last year,
against a targeted Increase of
4:3 per' cent.
,It said production of key
Items such as oil, electricity,
Coal and ·steel aU exceeded
plarmed figures .
.Western experts noted
, however that the 1976 targets

•
11,000 APPLY
"ATHENS - More than
9·,~ businesses in Ohio have
agreed to participate In tile
Golden Buckeye Card
discount program for senior
'citizens 65 years of age and
older, with a total exceeding
312,000 persons having applied for their carda. According · to Marvin W. McDargh, area coordinator for
the immediate southeastem
0iuo area, over 11,000 senior
Citizens have applied In the
counties of Athens, Meigs,
;!locking, Perry, Morgan,
Noble,
Monroe
and
Washington with a total of 378
. participating merchants in
thls area:

A'PiliP

••

against

previous

years,

apparently 'because of the
disastrous 1975 grain harvest.
According to official
figures, industrial production
went up 8 per cent in 1974 and
7,5 per cent in 1975.
"'!'he nine-month pian for
sales
of
products,
Improvement in labor and
production efficiency 11nd
production. of key items has
been over-reached," Tass
said.

a~~e~:~~~:~ign,onthe

businessman's ) back."
Ford said his administration
He also said the Ford "Is firmly dedicated to the
administration "has failed to idea that free competitons is
vigorously enforce the . vital to the health of the
existing anti trim laws" to the American economy and has
detrlmll'n l nf !'m'1~11 hu·si~S!'I . acted vigorously to promote

new businesses ... ''

Campaign in l~st week
By HOWARD FlEWS
is circulating a cartoon
· WASHINGTON (l)PI) showing Carter in a pulpit,
Wjlen the slakes are so highthe Bible in one hand and
Ieee world leadership,
Playboy in the other.
prestige, paironage, $200,1100
The rough stuff started in
~- year pius expenses-the
the candidates' campaign
last week of a close speeches -Carter saying
presidential race can be Ford had been "brain·
el!J)ected to gel rough, if not washed'' about Eastern
&lt;!ownright dirty.
Europe, Sen. Robert Dole
·:·The signs pointed that way calling Carter "a peanut,"
Saturday, The candidates and so on - but it has shifted
pointed ateach other.
now to campaign advertising.
',President Ford scolded
Jimmy · Carter in Friday's
Carter's camp has been
debate because Carter's run- griping the most.
ning mate, Sen. Walter Mon·
Democratic National
dale, had said the chairman . Chairman Robert Strauss
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, · claims the Republicans plan
Gen. George Brown, was an advertisement t\181 would
unfit to · be "sewage be "the most vicious attack
Commissioner."
.
ever made at . the highest
After the debate, Carter level of political activity."
predicted that " a major
A spokesman for the Presiportion of Mr. Ford's dent Ford Conunittee denied
advertising lxldget will be that and said, to the contrary,
spent on personal attacks on "we expect to end up the
me and my family." His campaign on a high note ."
aides alleged the Ford camp
He said the Ford campaign,
'

businessman , •ailed for
"completely reforming OW'
federal regulaiDry agencies,
their reporting requirements
and Lax laws to get the
~overnrilent off his (the

/11!11

that cause."
Both said they would make
sure small business gets a
"fair share" of govemmem
contract work.

i ·tnfintl

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1976

VOL ll NO. 39

President asks for support
By DONAW UMBRO
RALEIGH , N.C. (UPIJ President Ford Saturday
IU'ged Americans to give him
"a mandate" for a full four
years, saying he had restored
faith and trust, In tl)e White
House and kept the United
States at peace .
Ford barnstormed his way
through three Southern states
before flying to southern
California late Saturday.
At the same Ume, his
campaign manager, Stuait
Spencer, announced he plans
a 14 million "saturation ..
televis1on
advertising
camp!lign because "the race
is very close.
"I think it Is going to be
decided iri the last weekend,
the last lour days in the cam·
paign," Spencer said.
Ford told several thousand
supporters on the lawn of the
state capital in Richmond,
Va., that his policies have
"restored faith and trust in
the White House.
"My administration has
been open, candid and
forthright. Give me your
mandate lor four years ... and
I won't let you down."
Ford stressed repeatedly
that "riot a singie.American
boy is lighting on foreign soil
and I intend to keep it that
way."
The President flew to Ra·
leigh, N.C., for a motorcade
through the State Fair
Ground and a rally before
flying on to Columbia, S.C.,
where he was to attend the
. University of South Carolina
vs . Notre Dame football
game and another rally at the
governor's mansior,.
Earlier, Spencer said he
planned al least five half·
hour statewide television
programs that will begin in
California on Sll1Jday and

show up later in Illinois,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, New
York and possibly Texas;
pius eight five-minute radio
specials between n~w and
election day.
He said the Ford campaign
wiD have apenl a tntal of $12
million on media advertlsin~.

of which all but 14 mJUion has
been spent so far.
Ford got a boist erous
. recepilon from thousands of
visitors at the North Carolina
State fair Ground Are!Ul .
In Richmond, he said, "I
stand on your side for
limitin g federal spending,

maintaining our mllitur)'
strength and keeping the
United Stoles at P"'"'" In tho
world .
"I need yoW' help , Can l
l'tmnt on y()ur

Sup~&gt;orl

in

Novemb&lt;or ?"
The crowd respooxled afllr·
matively.

Captain tried
to warn vessel
By PETER M. ZOLLMAN
NEW O~LEANS (UPI) The captain olthe Norwegian
tanker Frosta said Saturday
the pilot aboard his vessel
tried in vain to warn the
ferryboat George Prince
moments before the two
vessels collided in the
Mississippi River .
"He was standing with hiS
radio," said Capt, · Kjell
Slatten of Elne, Norway, the
master of the Froata since
1971' and ille first witness to
testify before a Coast Guard
board
of
officers
investigating the crash.
"He was trying, trying,
trying," Slatten said of the
pilot, identified by the Coast
Guard lis Nick F. Colombo.
"The pilot was also giving
dangerous (warning) blasts
on hia whistle."
The · collision Wednellday
capsized the ferryboat · an~
killed its crew and all but 18
of ,the dozens of paosengers
aboard. The exact.number of
passengers was not ·knowu
but authorities said the death

toll may exceed 100.
Thirty4wo bodies had been
recovered by midday
Saturday, Salvage crews ulso
reirieved from the muddy
rlverbottom 20 cars and other
vehicles which tumbled .
overboard.
Crews pf divers, working
more by feel than sight in the
murky water, searched
around the clock for .bodies
and cars.
There was no mpjor
damage aboard ille tanker.
Slatten said he heard
several" routine whistle
signals and saw the ferryboat
toward the right hank. of the
river ~s his ship approched
the ferry crossing at
Destrehan, La ,, 30 mile s
upriver from New Orleans.
"I thought It was normal,"
he said.
But moments later the
ferryboat closed in on the.
freighter, Slatten sold .
"This lhlng was just
coming straight .over and we
had absolutely nothing more
to do at that time. Then we

were. just standing, and you
could feel II was a long lime .
And then we eould f•oel the
collision ,"
Slatten said ho saw the
ferry come to !)te surfaee
upside dowu and he watched
a cur flouting In the river.
"I didn't see any lives," he
said. "I ran over to the port
side, but I couldn 't see any
people."
The Coast Guurd lnvestiga.
tion, expected to lust at least
a week, was head''!! by Renr
Adm, Wayne E. Caldwell .
The pilot and other crewmen
from the Frosla, survivors
from the George Prince and
witnesses who saw th e
collision from the bank were
expected ID teslify.

Five lives lost
br collision

LEI~IC, Ohio (UPIJ
Five teenagers were· killed
early saturday In an auto
collision at the intersection ol
two Putnam County roads
northwest of Leipsic~
boosting the Ohio weekend
toll lo at least eight. ·
Joseph P. Kennedy Ill, 23The Highway Patrol said
year-&lt;Jid son of Bobby, heads one car northbound on County
the campaign. That was ho.w l!Amd II went through a stop
Teddy broke into polities on sign and hll an auto going
. 1960 -~orklng on his down County Rood E, killing
brothers .presidential everybody In the two
campaign.
vehicles·.
Polls show Kennedy an
The a·ccident occurred
.easy winner, but no one told . about 12:05 a.m. one mile
his 41-year-&lt;Jld opponent who north of Ohio 613. The High·
. is president of the world's way Patrol said it .was
largest famlly-owned . unknown where the youngdrapery manufacturing firm . sters might have been or
Robertson blames Kennedy were going.
for industry fleeing MassaKilled were Marilyn
ch,~lts.
Verhoff, 18, Continental, and
He never held another job Dennis M. Lammers, 18,
In his llle until he was elect~ Leipslc,the drivers, and their
to the United States Senate, · passengers, Tomy Lammers,
Roherlson said in frustration . 15, Leipsic; Mary Lou Niese,
"Does he get it ~use his 16, Leipsic; and Mary Kay
name Is Kennedv .
Hermiller, 16, Ottawa.

k
d f·
Kennedy loo s towar uture .

other hand, blasted Carter for
a TV ad that claims only 32 By STEWART POWELL
Senate, J:(emedy says.
per cent of American homes
BOSTON (UP!) _ Sen.
The Jot-year senate veteran
are owned by their occupant, Edward M. Kennedy:s cam· announced two years ago a
The Natiooal Association of paign for a third full 'Senate "firm,
final
and
Realtors and Carla HiUs, term has all the trappings of unconditional" decision to
secretary of Housing and . a fut\U'e run for the While bypass the presidential race.
Urban Development, said House.
His announcement sparked
that was patently false and
The
Mass.a chusetts the free-for:.Sil among
demanded the ad be Democrat, now 44, has liberals that saw Jimmy
withdrawn.
unleashed a statewide Carter emerge with the
crusade for a Senate seat nomination.
observers feel has been sale
"It was a decision for this .
all along. Loyalists view the election," Kennedy !Did UPI
.
.
effort as fresh evidence when asked if the decision
Kennedy's presidential was a choice for Ule. "I don't
dreams are not dead.
really plan very far into the
"We
always
work
hard,"
future."
HONG
KONG
(UPI)
NEW YORK (UP!j'- The
Kennedy is _watching the
Republican candidate for Army-led demonstrators in ' Kennedy said last week as he
swept
through
a
string
of
1976
pre.&gt;tdenUai campaign
Shanghai
described
the
Congress' 1n Rep. Bella Al&gt;suburban
communities
south
from
the sidelines, a far
widow
of
Mao
Tse-twig
and
zug's old district on
Manhattan's Weal Side three other purged radical of Boston. "That's the only different role th.an he had in
jumped to his. death from a leaders as "something filthy way 1 koow how. "
window of his eighth-floor and contemptible like dog's
apartment according to a dung," the official New China
Coletta s~hool for the
witneSI!, police said Friday, News Agency said today.
The agency also quoted the handicapped, a seven-yearA police spokesman, Sgt.
Michael McAuliff, said a . demonstrators in China's old boy hugged him around · COLUMBUS (UPI) _ Gov.
witness whom he refused to largest city as saying the the waist. Kennedy brushed James A. RHodes, who has
sandy bair and ordered state budget cuts
Id entify
saw Bernard purge of the folD' radicals the child's
him close.
Ploscowe, 35, sitting on the "has removed this time bomb pulled
"Hi, Kennedy • how are totaling 3 per cent during the
window sill of his aparbnent and liquidated a big bane you?" asked the youngster. past year, reportedly has
Thursday barefoot aod inside olD' party."
granted a total ol ~.818
NCNA, quoting demon· "You're one oI the good . amually in pay Increases 'to
wearing only a T-ohirt and
ones."
.slacks. "Then he jumped/' strators, said the "antlparty
The scale of his campaign 84 of his top administrative
McAulllf said. The candidate, clique" - the .radicals - against a modest GOP chai· officials in July.
who lived alone, was "show their true colors lenge from businessman
Scripps
Howard
pronounced dead on arrival before the mirror of in- Michael Robertson appears Newspapers said that mOll of
vincible Marxism • Leninism
at St. Luke's Hospital.
lme• be d he bord 0f the raises went to department
'' yon t
ers
directors and their depuUes
. ,
McAulllf said Ploscowe's • Mao Tse-tung Thought, and aMassachusetts.
finally
become
apartment door was double- have
"A strong showing is At least one raise exceeded
bolted. No note was found, 110mething filthy and con· obviously helpful'' in the $7,1100, and fi~e others topped
temptibie like dog's dung."
McAuliff said.
$6,1100 aMually.
.

GOP candidate Mao's widow

takes own life like dog dung

Dur~g::"st:Ust~~~y·~;:

1968 and 1972.
"I have iiodicated that If
Mr . Caner asked me, I'd
travel the country with him,"
Kennedy said. .
.
But the lonner Georgia
governor has not·asked.
"That'shisdecisionandwe
respect It," Kennedy IIBid.
The Kennedy campaign
resembles In many ways the
White. House ~lves of his
brothers in the 1980s. A potent
blend of family, money and
magtc·has been aerved to the
state's 3mJllion voters. And it
serves as 8 political training
ground
for
younger
Kennedys.
Caroline Kemedy Ill-year·
old daughter of J~hn, bas
stumped for her uncle.

Rh.0 des·' people r·m·sed

Africans shaken

·

The newspaper group said

the largest single pey increase went to Trans·
portation Director Richard
D. Jackaon, whose Alary was
boosted from $32,011 to
f,'l9,083. His department allo
received the lar&amp;est share of
lhe increa~~e~, u 21 penona
will get raises ·totaling

ft2,038.

.

• The salary ol Richard L.
Krablch, bead olthe Depart·
ment of Administrative
Servlcel, wu .railed $6,85e to
$41,00¥ annually.

Directors of taxation, ·
development, envtrOIIJlltmal
protection and liquor got pay
raises of $6,427 each, and wlll
make f35,059 aMuaily.
Ayear ago Rhodes ordered
a 2 per cent state s)iending
cut, and two weeks ago added
another I per cent reduction
because of the need to
provide extra money to such
programs as Medicaid. S~
montha ago Rhodes also had
said his top advisers would
forego raises because ol the
financial squeeze. a

by total eclipse
DAR ES SALAAM, Tan·
·zanla (UP!) - A total ecUpse

of the sun watched by
millions of superstitiqus
Africans and by llclentlsta
from around the world, today ,
swept across central Africa
and the Indian Ocean.
''The corona was brilliantly
visible," said British sclential
David Magee. "We had a
crystal clear view of the
ecUpse" which experts said
would be the !sst total ·eclipse
visible from land this eentury• .

Issue 7 wo.uld make effecting ~hanges in the Ohio Constitution easier

"

• EDiToR'S NOTE: Thla II
ille fillll ill a lel'le1 of 10
illlpalebeo by UP! Sllltebo. .
lleporten Lee Leounl llld "
~.R. Kimmhoo detailing tbe
.lil11e1 load coa-teots 011 illllo'•
Nov. 2 ballot. Today'• arttele
OlXplalDa state luae 1, oae of
four co.aatltalloa-al
·-..dmai! placed 011 tbe
ballot by Oblollll for Utility
Rdorm.

-

J

'

l,

; By LEE LEONARD
UP! Stalftuue Repwter
aJLUMBUS(UPI) -Slate
lsaue 1 changes the require.

. I

ments
for
placing
constitutional amendments,
referenda and Initiatives oo
the Ohio ballot.
Balllcally, it eases therequirements for constitutional
amendments and referenda
on existing laws, and
simplifies the process for
Initiating a pill before the
General Assembly by popular
vote.
Although lasue 7 IS not
dlrecUy related to utility
reform; it was' placed oo the
ballot by Ohioana for Utility
Reform lOUR) along. -wiill
)

three utility-related issues. and
the
44-eounty
And it Is opposed by requirement would be
atizens f« Safe, Lower Cost waived.
· Electricity, the same utilityThe proposed amendment
laborbusiness coalition also would reduce . from
fighting the other three . 164,1100 to 100,000 the number
issues.
of signatures 'required ' to
OUR had to C!htain 307,1100 . place on the ballot a
slgnatiU'eS - ,10 per cent of · referendum on an existing
the vote for governor In 1974 law. The referendum would
-flU!\ at least 44 counties to have to be taken within 90
get
its
proposed days of enactment of a law.
conslitutiooal amendments Appropriations, tax levies
on the ballot.
and emergency laws could
If ls•ue 7 passes, the not be submitted to
signature requirement would referenda .
be reduced to a flat 250,1100
The number ol signat\U'es
."
"'

·required to Initiate a bill .
before the General Alsembly
would -be increued from
about 92,000 to 150,000.
However, If the leglalature
fails to act on the bill within
fourmontha,lhe bill would be
automatically submJtted to
the voters without requiring
petitioners to get anot~•
92,000 signatures, as under
the ·current ConaUtuUoo.
Issue 7 illso simplifies
procedures for obtaining
signatures and collecting·
petitions, and providel for
clear explanations , and
summaries of ballot issues.

It provides that no law
propolled by Initiative Dilly
have more than one aubject ·
and forbids the governcr to
veto a law approved by the .

voten .
. Proponents of I11ue 7,
including OUR and Cornman
Cause, a cllizeN' lobby, say
Ollie has the mOlt strict
requirements ol any state on
initiative and referendum
procedure~, and that they
should be eued.
Opponents say Issue 7
would "undo.rmlne
repreaeniJIUve government"

••
'

and clutier the ballot with
Issues each election at an
lncrealed cOlt.
Qnunon Cause argued that
the cOil of placing an iuue on
the ballot Ia about $150,1100, or
two cents per voter.
Secreta')' ol State Ted W.
Brown said he has no
objection to the Initiative and
referendum changes, but
opposes the provision which
makes It easier to gel
con.Ututianal amendment&amp;
on lhe brDot.
CSLCE, the .uWtty4ttbor·
'business coalilian, says Issue

..

'

7Would allow "one area ol the
state to control !he laws o1 all
Ohio" by elbninatlon of the
u-·county signature' •
requirement.
•
CSI.CE alao says It would
pennit "frivolous" li!Stles to
be placed on the ballot by
"any splinter group or groups
ol radicals."
Issue 7 · is similar to a
recommendation of the Ohio
Conttitullonal Revision Com· ·
mlsolon which the General
Assembly did not send to the
·:
ballot.
,.
Nut: Leglslalare

�2--0-'lbe Sunday Tim~tinel, SUnday, Oct. 24, 1976

:::::::::;:;:;.::::;;::::::~;::~::::::::::::.-;::::::!:~::::;:::~~::::::

Electoral College .'has no walls'
Sy ROBERT BENJAMIN

W:..SiflNGTON (UP! J ( ~ o Nov. 2, the American
people will elect a · new
vresident.
That statement, however 1

is not literally true.
'/be American people will,
Indeed, be voting for a
president. B~l their votes
actually will establish that
q •1rennhll lnstiti!tion of
flnti:lr.ican

politics ,

the

E.lectoral College.
1\nd it will be the Electoral
College whose vole will
certify the next president.
The Electoral College has
. no walls, although its critics
I"IY it is a wall between the
voters and the president they
ore supposed Ill be electing.
It is a sy!!lem. provided for

EXTt:NDED OUTLOOK

Menday througb W&lt;doeaclay, clla11&lt;t of abewen
Moaday add maiDJy lD
nortbust Tuesday. Fair
, Wed..Uy. Hlgbs In the
IO.aadlow5t1Mow; aad
Tuesdoy,udj.athe50saod
low M1 Wedaesaay. Lows
bi the 30s nod low to..

in the, Constitution, under Libertarian party candidate. College and became th~ 23rd
which each state has votes
It will take 270 of the 538 American Rresidenl.
equsl to the total of Its electoralvotesatstakeNov. 2
The elections of 19\6, 194ll,
coogresslonal delegation for either President Ford or 1960 and 1968 were so close
Its two senawrs plus all its Jimmy carter to become that a tiny swing in certain
. representatives. ·
president.
·
states could have given the
Alter the popular vote election , the elecwrs named by vo~lifo~;! h~o~e ~::· ~~~ pr~i=~k~h~h~ ~~:~ had ::;:::::;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::w.:::&lt;W.:;:;:&gt;;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:::::;::
each state's legislature ·will Pennsylllllnia 27, Jllinois and more popular and electoral
cast their votes for the winner Texas 26 each, Ohio 25, votes than either Hubert
of their state's popular voteMichigan 21, and New Jersey Humphrey or George
alihough there Is nothing In and Florida 17 each, · The Wallace. But be did not have
the Constitution that forces minimum is three, held by more popular votes than the
them Ill do that.
Alaska, Delaware, Nevada, other two combined; and
In 1972, for example, · North Dakota , Vermont, Walla ce got 46 electoMI
Richard Nixon won 520 Wyoming and the District of votes.
elecwral votes according to Columbia.
Wallace's third-party
the popular vote count.
Article
II
of the success showed it is possible
. But whn the electors ''met" Constitution established the that nobody might win
in their state capitals Dec. 18, electoral system . It was enough electoral votes to PORTLAND, Maine (UP!)
Nixon Jell short of that wtal changed somewhat in 1804 by become prE(iident.
- Two men were arrested
because one Republican the 12th Amendment, but the --..In·· that case, the Satli.rday and charged with
elector voted for a basic idea of the Founding Constitution provides for the the shooting death of Anne
Fathers remains: To keep House of Representatives to Payson Holt, 79, the sister-inpower with the states in a elect the president, as law of the tate owner of the ·
federal system, wmake each happened in 1824 when John New York Mets baseball
state count for something in Quincy· Adams took office team.
the selection of a president. even though Andrew Jackson · Mrs. Holt was killed in the
Every presidential election won the popular vote. .
bedroom of her Fa!mQuth
year, critics note that the ~· In )876, Samuel Ttlden home 2% weeks ago.
electoral system may put Into oulpolled Rutherfo.rd B. Deputy Attorney General
office the popular-vote loser, .Hayes but was &lt;Jhe short of Richard Cohen said Leon
independents, clutched their if that candidate wins the the necessary 185 electoral Frederick Rich, 29, of South
votes. Alter confusion about Portllind, was arrested in a
bloody marys and coffee cups right states.
This year, Ford could get eligibility of so~e electors, a car about 12:30 a.m. and
and crowded into line to get In
fewer tAltal votes than carter spectalcommtssoon volm~ oo . charged with criminal
a few words with Ford.
Ford, who arrived at (he in the popular election but party hnes gave Republican homicide in the second
mansion well beyond still win the presidency. The Hayes the 19th prestdency, 8 degree.
About an hour later,
midnight after the debate in independent candidacy of to 7.
With a Democratic Edward Byron Austin, 32, of
Williamsburg, appeared Eugene McCarthy may be a
Congress, carter would be Portland, was arrested and
rested and relaxed as he fa ctor.
Polls
show
McCarthy
~xpected to win a sho.wdown charged with third degree ·
stood in the hallway of the
elegant mansion . There was a getting 5 per cent of the m the House, but crtttcs say criminal homicide, Cohen
lot of autographing and popular vote and he says he only the only legtttmale salp . .
picture taking as party hopes to be on the ballot in 40 elec.Uon ts electton by popular Mrs ~ Holt was the sister of
.
banker Charles Shipman
leaders and other Virginia states . If he gets his 5 per vote.
Ford notes that he never Payson and the' sister-in~aw
pols, including former Gov. cen t, it most likely would he
was elected Ill the presidency of Joan Witney PaysOn, late
William Tuck, a Democrat, at Carter's expense.
Thus,
carter
could
win
big
'" the hrsl place, and owner of the Mets.
stood in neat rows with Ford
in
tbe
South,
lose
some
key
suggests
he would need a She was found by her
for photographs.
northern
,
industrial
states
by
popular
mandate.
to pursue housekeeper who heard shots
Former Alexandria mayor
Marshal Beverley squeezed an eyelash to Ford, and lose hos goals wnh some and summoned police. She
into the receiving line at the the electoral vote although he assuranc.e of achieving · died several hours later at
Maine Medical Center.
last moment and clipped a wins the popular vQte by, say, them.
Should he lose the popular Mrs . . Holt's family had
hatchet and fire hat clasp 2 million votes.
In 1888, Benjantin Harrison vote and still win in the offered a $5,1100 reward for
onto Ford's gray and blue lie,
shook the President's hand got 100,000 fewer popular electoral college, another ~t- information leading to the
vigorously and told him he votes than Grover Cleveland tempi can be expected lo.ktll arrest and conviction of h~r
killers.
had just become an honorary but won in the Electoral that institution.
member of the Friendship
Fire Co.
Beverley's enthusiasm was
unabashed. "I know Jerry

·Shooting
suspects

arrested

Ford· prepares for la~t
week of ·:ciunpaign tour
lly KAREN T. RYPKA
RICHMOND, Va. (UP!) He didn 't have much sleep
following the last debate, but
President Ford began the
first day of his final
campaign tour Saturday with
energetic ride On an

nn

cxcerclse bicycle in the
Virginia Governor's
Mansion .

The bicyCle belongs wGov.
.Mills E. Godwin 's wife, Ka·
lherine, who pedals it the
e&lt;)uivalent of three miles a
day. Ford left a note for Mrs.
Godwif\Saying he was better
at sprinting, and: "l couldn't

make the three miles ."
As a prelude to a final
campaign journey
of
thousands of miles, Ford
greeted more than 100 slate
politicians

invited

to

breakfast at the mansion.
Ford declined an offer to
eal in advance with the
Godwlns and instead ate his
Virginia ham and biscuits
iilonc in the same bedroom

that has provided a night's
rest for the Marquis de
Lafayette and Wins ton ·
lllurchill.
The local politicians, whom

TOM TJED.E

real well/' he said. 11 1 liVed

right near him in Alexandria
before he moved over 1to the
White Hou.•e). "He's a _great
lhe governor' s staff was guy, a wonderful President.
careful to point out included He lived in my town. I was
11epub\icans. Democrats and mayor there."

--------------------------Letters of oplllion are welcomed. They should be

300words long (or be o~bject to ,..duclion !!)'
I the editor) and mll8t be signed with llle signee's ad·
I dreso. Names may he withheld upon publlcadon.
!lowever, oo requC!It, names will be dlscl01ed. Lelten
1
1 should be in ·good taste, addret1slng 1Jo0es, nol per·
1 110uallliC11.
IC!islhan

l.
l
I

I

I
I
I

j)~ .

•

.

••• ?Jtt. Fdl/h: r;;.;::::;

l

Frank Hill, on how it is ...
near Sir:
. Back In 1930 when I was an eighlh grade student in city
sehool I started visiting the local Library ut every oppoctunity.
I loved to scan the old newspapers of bygone years. In
those days the old Tribunes and Journals were very large and
bulky and bound in book fot:m. Tnday one can see the old
Tribunes back to the year 1895 on mlcr&lt;Hilrn which is much
better.
'
Being a lover of history, I also researched many books that
are stili available. If one were a history fiend such as I, they
need but go to the Library ' and ask for such books as:
Hardesty's Atlas, W. G. Sibley's French 500, Historical
Collections of Ohio (2 vols.) by Henry Howe, and if a Civil War
bug, Whitelaw Ried's, "Ohio in the Civil War."
Many hundreds of you folks have told me aU summer long
how much you enjoy my humble efforts of presenting some of
Utis history weekly in this newspaper under the title, "This is
how it was ... " Tbe local library and the fine staff there
deserve much credit for many of the articles which have
appeared. For nearly SO years I have enjoyed a grand
relationship here during my research .
I feel tbst we should aU vote yes for the upcoming renewal
of the Ubrary Leyy which will in no way mean an iucrease In
tnxes.
See you all at the polis next month. - Frank Hill,
Galllpolis, Oct. Z'i, 1976.

AND~

WOODBURY, Conn. ( UPI)
- Artiit Robert Templetoo
smiles when he thlnlut of a
portrait he painted of Jimmy
Carter
because
the
Democratic presidential
candidate did not. Templeton
likes it that way.
"We've bad so much of the
$!11ile. I lhought, 'Let's give
the ·smile a chance to rest.
There's. mlJI'e to this man
than the smile and the 'smile
sometimes almost verges on
the clown which I dm'tlilre,"'
Templeton said.
Templeton has painted portraits of Lyndon JOhnson,
Hubert Humphrey, George
Romney, Ralph Abernathy
and ftrmer CoMecticut Gov.
John Dempsey.
He went to Plains, Ga. to
draw two pastels each of
Carter and his wife,
Rosalynn, during a sitting
held after church Qll a Sunday
at the carU!m' horne. The
portraits were commissioned
by a national magazine,
which plans to publish them
in Janusry.
"Carter was completely
relaxed. Amy came in with a
18rge bowl of blueberries and
she passed those aroWld. I
expected Carter to be a llttle
moce Southern folksy, but
there isn't a lot of that y'all
business. He's an executive.
He's very effective, very
ariiculate and he was
businesslike."
Templeton said he tried to
portray Carter as a potential
president.
"He reminds me more of
John Kennedy than of anyone
else - not because of his
lopks - but because of his
control. He has that cool,
quiet; selfpossessed cootrol
that Kennedy had."
When Templeton painted
Humphrey's portrait, he had

smocked dress wllh intrteate:
Rower emlroidery.
The painting was CIIIIIDils.:
sioned In 1971 by ~ =
carter as a surprtae birthday;::
gift lor her hw!band, wbo:
wrote Templeton • IWOiltlgehandwrilt.en thank-you letter ·.•
While Templeton drew:
Carter seated on a brick waD··
near the Georgia black plne1:
aro111d his home, he . told:
CarU!r the subjects of
portraits usually send him:. ·
typewritten letters, not notes;:
written by hand.
"Carter told me, 'I remem·;;
bered that you had stood at:.:
your easel and used . YOU~:: '
hand to create this portrait ofAmy and the least I could
'was to answer ln kind,"':
Templeton said.
:
How does a portrait'artlat:::
. assess the Carters?
" If ·Carter becomes :
. president, the enUre tribe will..:
mask:''
, be interesting becauseTempleton says portrait lhey're not in th_e mold.:
artists lend t~ be good judges They're different, lhey are .
of character because they are not flashy, they do not do a lot:
prof~ional observers of the of oohing and ahhlng, lhey:
human face. To read a face, don't throw excited sentencesat you. Thetre quiet an
he looks first at the eyes.
'
:
"I don't say I'm 100 per solid."
Mrs. Rosalynrr€arter-.:.;
cent right, but I'm coovinced
of lhis: Everything about you "She's pretty. She comes 00::,
is right out there. It's there as a soft, low-spokeJ~c•
belle,
buC:
for the person who's Southern
perceptive enough to read · underneath she's very;:

to make a slmlllar decision
about
the
Minnesota
senator's famous smile.
"I let him smile because I
tried tq do him without the
smile and something just died
In him. He's a performer and
a very gOOd one. The smile is
port of his performance. If
you talte the smile away, you
get less lhan you expeCt."
As a portr•tt artist,
Templeton tiles to make a
statement on canvas instead
of palnUng a mask. H~aws
the subject _In a slttlng and
then completes the portrait in
his studio, nestled in the
rolling Utchlield Hills.
"You letlhe subject make
Ute statement lhrough - his
face ftr you, but you have to
decide what you want him to
say about himself. You don't
want to end up wilh him
saying nothing about himself
and with just a welli&gt;llinted

it." '

'

Full

~

So doing, he received shell
With the Dole Campaign-It fragments in the shoulder
was only a brief moment lit and several cracked ver·
Robert Dole's exhausting bid tebrae. He spent39 months in
for the vice presidency. But it repair, much of it wrapped in
was nice. The candidate !fas a cast from neck to trunk.
His rtght arm is now only
in Newark, N. J. riding in a
pc!rade, When some men in slightly withered, but vi.r·
the !!lreet hoisted a large tually useless. He can use the
poster drawing or a twisted elbow as a paperweight, and
hand which contained this tbe curled hand to hold light .
crude but tender inscription : · objects. otherwise, he has
"A four-letter word for Bob one arm, and therefore must
spent 30 minutes to an hour
Dole is Guts !"
It may have been the getting dressed , must ask for
nonpsrtisan tribute of this assistance In some of his
electric season. Each of the dining habits, and must
principal candidates ha s endlessly guard against Ute
admirable qualities, for exuberant voter who tries to
grab him for a well-meaning
exampl~ each of them Is a
small-town American with but painful handshake.
Three decades after
quite humble beginnings, but
receiving
his wounds, Dole
the junior senator from
still
suffers
from pain. Not
Kansas is also 110methlng of a
terribly,
he
says, but oe·
spiritual inspiration. He is a
casionally.
He
thinks it's a
handicapped citizen, crippled
· if you will, and one does not matter of improper ·cir·
have to be Republican to culaUon. For Instance he
feels cold weather more than
appreciate his courage.
The·story of his disability is · he'd like. Aides say he must
py now familiar to those who. sometimes take mild
· have followed the news of the · painkillers.
Beyond these brief com·
hustings. When he was 2J,and
ments,
neither Dole nor his
a World War II infantryman
staff
talk
at length about the
in Italy, Dole led a charge
disability.
Apparently they do
against an angry ,German
not
want
to appear to· be
machine-gun emplacement.

As with apples, favorable
weather conditions In the
western states offset poor
LTops caused by poor weather
In eastern and central states.

AGREEMENT REACHED
CLEVELAND {UP!) ~ A
tentative agreement was
reached Saturday afternoon
in 'the six-week-old strike by
teachers against Cuyahoga
County's II schools for the
mentally retarded. The
teachers. repo·esented by the
Association · of Cuyahoga
County Teachers of the·
Trainable
Retarded,
scheduled a ratification
meeting for 3 p.m. Sunday.
The Cuyahoga County Board
of Mental Retardation
scheduled a !PCclal meeting
for 5:30 p,m. 'Monday for Ute
same pUQlOSe.

SWINGING SINGLES SCENE in Milwaukee, Wis.,
has a new member. David McKellar modified a seat on his
backyard swing set to accommodate Muffin, his bulldog.
Why' He swears that Muffin enjoys it.

'I

75 Dart Swinger
Custom

"

vinyl roof.

KANAUGA, OHIO

Public Sale

.. 4

This is the sale of the personal propertv of the estate of

.75 Granada Ghia

the tale Mary Pork of

vinyl roof

$4095

~ ·---~~--~~--------~

7 Pontiac Gran Am.
Priced to sell!! Loaded!!
Extra Nice!!
•

:

O! Cqllector

1.1~11',1.}"

_Dodge

" Household and Mic."

AVTHORIZED DEALERS

pans, cedar chest , boo ks, puzzles, filt . for Kirbey
sweeper, leather overnight bag, rugs . linens,
Christmas decorations, Singer sewing machine with
~nch , ottoman , ca nes, barometer, potty cha ir, wash
tubs, shovels, ha nd saws, step ladders, 5 firep lace
fron~ , and m isc . to numerous lo mention .

I

3 speed, 14,000 miles. We
. sold this one new!!

"No responsible for accidents or loss of pr!]perty ''
lunch
·
Terms : Cash
Lawrence Donohue
Dan Smith ' James Carnahan

THE FULL SIZE CARl

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
· GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

$3895

SAVE

742 -3048

BUY THESE .AT WHOLESALE:
1974 CAPRICE CLASSIC-air cond., power steering
1974 FORD LTD..:.air power steering
1973 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill-power steering, air cond.

-

.....
-

1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA-power steering, air

~

Chrysler·Plymout~ before you buy your next
AurOMOBJ:!.E. Over 40nice clean late models to choose from.

Mioke sure you stop at Gallipolis

RENDIN6 PLeAS FOR.
HE!..D AND CLIMI!I
UP ON M'ol BA ~ ~ ~

..

GALLIPOLIS·
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUT
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

.446·3273

:1639 EASTERN AVE.

DON'T MISS THEMI

Lamps, magazine ra cks, chair·s , radio, metal twl_n bed ,
2 pc. bedroom suite , Hoover sweeper, dishes, pots and

74 Duster"

.

North Third Ave. in

Grape rocker and 6 chairs, 2 pc. Wlllit cherry bedroom
suite, marble top stand; empire couch, walnut dropleaf table, 2 Boston rockers. stand . clank bottom
chairs, wi c"er baskets and stand, sewing rockers, Seth
Thomas mantle clock, sideboard,. china -closet , table
with captain and s chairs, wlckei rocker, chest of
drawers, cut, green and some good glassware, silver ·
tea set, constitution book ends, yan lty , stool and chair,
wing chair, picture i ram e;:i. typewr iter with loWer and
up per keys, sew ing stooL old cook books, 2 oil lamps
and jewelry .

4 Qoor, A/C, AIM radio

$3495

371

Middleport, Ohio.

"An.tiqu~

4 Door, A.C.; power steering,
• radio.

~·

milking sympathy. Dole
occasionally makes light of
the Injury, telling once that
he hoped to be vice president
because it is an inside job
with no heavy lifting;
otherwise, as he should, he
minimizes the probl~m.
perhaps thankful, con·
siderlng war, that it is no
worse.
And yet throughout his
eight years in Congress, and
also during this campaiga, he
has hoped others in similar
circumstances might benefit
from his example. During the
Republican convention he
conspicuously used a sign·
language translator during
his podluro remarks. Last
month he showed up at a Miss
Wheelchair American
pageant. And he has told
1e ad l n g Ph Y sic a I
rehabilitation officials,
politics notwithstanding, to
"use me this election, use me
any way you can."
Such use could be con·
siderable, particularly if Dole i.mu: oRl'IIAN ANNiE
'
wins In November. Milton
LITTLE
O·RPRAIII AIIIIIIII\-TB&amp; 'I'ILLAG&amp; B!.ACiiiBiiliP
Kahn, director of the
Federation of Handicapped
(New York), reminds that
when Franklln Roosevelt
served as president from a
wheelchair, his influence on
rehabilitation services was
immel!surable. He Inspired
the March of Dimes cam·
paign against polio, for one
thing, leading to medical
research and immunization.
It Ia unarguably a bit
unfortunate that the one in 11
Americans who bsve some
kind of disability must watt
for a high leader to
popularize their problems,
but at this things are better
than they once were for the
· handicapped. In Caesar's day
the crippled were thrown
over cliffs. Native Americans
often left the deformed
behind on the trail. And even
now the "village ldiota" of
Anyplace, U.S.A., may be
cripples who with early help
might have lived wholly
better lives.
&amp;i this is why Bob Dole is
Inspirational. He reminda 118
that with help and fortitude
the handicapped are not so
sad as neglect would bsve it.
Once, as he haa said, "My
primary Interest was how
well I could do on a basketball
floor (and) whether I could
catch a football." Then be
was injured and his friends
helped him to overcome hl.s
loss. "I learned io understand
that I wsa very fortWI8te. It's
ablllty tliat counts, not
dlaabllity.It'showwe act and
perfonn."
Rlght you are, Bob Dole.
The poster in Newark said it
all.
l ·

SMITH HONDA SALES
Rt. 7

SATURDAY, OCT. 30, 1976 9:00 A.M.

I

BJ' Tom Tiede

NOW •2995

A.C., P.S., t•pe deck.

P.S., tape deck.

.. top f all the extras!

Amy: "She's a fantasti~
little girl. Amy doesn't reaUy.
lm~w she coUld be someone":
different, someone special!'
She's a typieal Americmt;
Southern child. She isn' too
affected at all."
~
Carter: "I left the meeting:;,
with him thinking, hoi(;
animated."
During carter's sitting, the unusual it is that this coun~
former Georgia governor with all its faults and all i~
talked about a portrait sirife can keep cO!nlng up":
Templeton did of Amy with people of that caliber 10;
:
CarU!r. whO was 90ct.19, in a run for president."

A~L' ~IG' H T• MIZ PITIFUl.. !
KIIIOCI&lt;:: OFf THE ~eART·

SELF CONTAINED
171Jz FOOT
TRAVEL TRAILER
LIST $3747

2-74 Monte.. Carlos

Tllt wheel , cruise. A. C.,

A Door, l()w miles, vinyl

When you sit for
Templeton, he keeps you
awake and talking. "I've had
the experience of asking
someone to be quiet in a niee
way and lhey just die. The
spirit goes out of the picture
so I try to keep them

CAPrAIN ~MV

73 ()Ids Cutlass
Supreme

75 Ch!JSier.
Newport

do:

.

PROWLER

• l PLYMOUTH DUSTER

• 2-VOLA~E • 2 dOOIS

See The '77 Dodges

NEW 1976

SAVE ON THESE 1976 LEFTOVERS

hla:

strong."

SPECIAL

ovER 15
Size 1977
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHS IN STOCK!!

~

•

Apple crop is smaller
, WASIDNGTON (UPI) The 1976 United states apple
crop was forecast Tuesday at
18 per cent smaller than a
year ago, although the
domestic pear output was
predicted to be slightly iJl..
creased, ·
Statistics released by ·
USDA's Foreign Agricultural
Service forecast the domestic
apple harvest at 2.8 million
tons. It said the small crop
was Rreclpitated by adverse
weather conditions in central
and eastern states.
U. S. exports were an·
ticlpated to be lower than a
year ago when ·there was a
record crop.
The FAS predicted the
United States pear crop
would be 2 per cent higher
than a year ago, although the
total for the Northern
Hemisphere would remain
virtually
unchanged
..
;j
I

By JANE

J·D-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, &amp;mday, Oct . 24, 1976

Dole an lnS:pl·:tPOohon
for handicapped
u

1
1
1

·

Carter wasn't smiling

----

949-2033

949·2708

POLAROID SNACK .
SHAH KNOCKS KHADAFY
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) NEW YORK (UPI) - The
A
bank robbery $uspect wok
Shah of Iran believes that
a
Polaroid
print as his blue
Libyan national leader
plate
special
Thursday .
1\ioammad Khadafy is crazy.
Court
officials
say Fred
"He's crazy. No doubt , the
Hale
Hu.
b
ands
Jr.
grabbed
man
is
absolutely
Lhe
picture
,
prosecution
irresponsible and crazy/' the
shah told CBS · interviewer evidence, and ate it .
Husbands took his snack at
Mike Wallace.
a pretrial hearing for an Aug.
Asked his opinion of the
Palestinians, the shah ~id, 20 robbery of $13,897.
"It was a picture of him/'
"Our good Palestlman
one
witness said. "He took it
friends must know that there
·
off
the
table where it was
is a limit to where they can go
spread
out with other
aild bully the world ... by
evidence
and
bit off the head .
te r r orism
and
Then
he
just,
gulp, swallowed
blackmailing."
it. "

Ch~rlie

Webster, Buster Sprague, Don Harden, Tom Norris.

The ca.rs ll•ted below have exceptionally
low mileage. Previous ~wnen names
'

'

are available. Mileage Is verified•
100% Warranty.

1976 BUICK
CENTURY

r.-~~~----------~·
•

~-

Public Auction

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

Located one mile east of Rodney on Rt. 35,
turn on Watson Rd. Watch for Auction signs.

62 Fur ·b earing
mammals
64 Steamship
1 " Ship olthe
desert "
labbd
65P&lt;irlof " tobe"
6 Bouts
66 Vut lhrong
1 I Stimulated
67Bury
18 Angry
69 Soeak tool ishly
19 Repu t!le
7 1 Coolin g dev1ce
20 Di sc usses
73 Chooses
23Werm
74 Steak su dden ly
24 Ma ture
76 Consol ation
26 Ceremony
79 Woman 's name
27 Delirium
tremens (abbr .) 81 Greek. leiter
82 Hindu cymbals
29 Growing ou t ol
84 ·Pertainin\j tO
3001d n amelor
punishmenl
Thailand
85 Widow
3 1 The swee t ~op
87 Artificial atioy
32 Perm lt
33 Above (poet .l
90 Englishmen
92 Wooden vessel
34 Be b orne
93 Fille t
35 Tra dod tor
95 Enc om ium
money
97 Toward the
36 Comely
mouth
. 38 Irritate
98 Pronoon
40 Guido's high
99 N\')le ol scale
note
10 l Goin
4 1 L1nger
10 3 Japanese
"2Twist
staoesman
"3qm b
104 River in Siberia
45 Eu tual es
105 Boer mug
"6 Roman gods
108 Time Per iod
4 7 Go by water
1 10 Pawl s
4B Tele
112 Reach ac ross
49 Core
113 Beverage
5 i Favor it es
114 Com pass o.oint
52 Atop
115
Woman 's nam e
53 Cover
5 4 Plays on words 117 8r ls tles
55 Make amen ds 118 Pl'lrt of shoe
119 Fren ch house of
l&lt;&gt;&lt;
fashion
57 Female rull
120 Teuton1c de ity
58 Part olllower
12 1 Soap plant
60 Unit of
.123 Edge
Portu guese
124 Mounltt ln lak e
currency (pl.l
12 5 Challenge
6 1 The su n

.

Listing In P.art: 2 Hot water tanks, kitchen cabinet,
stone jags, old radio, folding chairs, fruit iars, wringer
type washer, old 5 leg table, 2 small heflters, pie safe,
step ta.dder, John Deere 2 row corn planter, large corn
sheller, John Deere corn pic;ker, cut-oH saw, 2 Ford
pu. llies, Jo~n Deere 14'' drag type plows, John Qeere
cultiva'tors; JOhn Deere Model B tractor, John Deere
No. 9 mower, John Deere manure spreader, New
Holland baler Model 66, New Idea rake, hay elevator
and motor, farm wagon , 2 rolls barbed wire, front end
loader for Ford tractor, pony harness and collars,
scrap iron-and miscellaneous.
' ·
Terms Cash ·
Lunch will be served

Owner W. S. Fanning

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
Dilry I Alban
Oak Hill, Ohio

Not responsible for accidents

88Ch0 iceoarl
t6Comp a ss~o l nt
&amp;9 WillY remarks
17 Symbo l l or
9 0 ElC IS1
dysprOSIUm
91 A state l !lbbr I
2 1 Altar screen
94 Hin de1
22 Benz ol
96 Pr oceed
der ivallve
98 Roman road
23Swordhandle
99 Told
250blaln
100 Hermit
27 Str ikes out
t
02 Ner ve networks
28L ock so l ha ll
104 Unlocked
30 Oiri
3 1WIIdbul l aloo t 105 Wil d OllJm
106 Sluggishrless
India
33 AQlJatiC memmllt107 Sea nymphs
35 Uec tared ·
109PosillveJ:Jole
11 1 An onymous
36 Wooden pinS
t 4 2Domes ti ca t e ~
3 7 Per1ods ot 11me I 12 Wllhered
143 Giant sla1n by
11 J Ventilates
39 HI! llghlly
Athena
1 t 6Pries l' s
41 La m ent
144 O riginat es
vestment
&lt;12 Prohl bil s,
1~6Roc~
118 Oetes l
44i\varlce
148 Depefl
11 9 Ti!le olrespect
4781id geter m
ti\ 9B ' xe s
122 Cooj u nc t ion
48 Han d bag
I SO Ta ut
49 Woman ' g name 12 4 Most
15 t Proofreader's
domestica ted
50 For mer Russian
m&lt;trk
125 Eat
ru lers
126
Pill
5 4Ufllto! Sp anlsh
DOWN
12 8 Handle
c urren c~
130 Uncooked
55 Oecilys
1 17 -year loc ust
56 SailinQ ... assels 131 Women 's name
2 Rugged
132 Resol~e
59 Jury
mou nta in cres t
135 Preposition
60 Pari Ill play
3 Woman s
137 Shallow vess els
61 Symb ol lor l 1n
n1ckname
T38 Distr ict in
· 63 Food list}
4 Fren ch l or
German~
6B Prrnoun
· s.ul'f'lmer ..
140Mala~c oln
67 Eds ts
5 French ar11cle
14 2 Measure ol
68San e
6 Ba k er's pr odu ct
wefgh1
70Wooly
7Papermea sure
7 1 Eve1green t.ree 14 3E d ib te seed
a likely
144 Centimeters
7:2 E~IS 1
9 Earth goddess
(abbr I
T3 F ollo~ing li rst
tO Designa ted
14 5 Prm t er:s
75 Sponso1
1 I Grapp led
me asu re
77 Veh ic le
12Pronoun
TB An 11ere d an lma 14 7 Sym b ol for
.13 Nobl eman
tellur ium
. 80 Baseba lll eam
14·Ch inose woigt'lt
14 8 Lower case
83 GrMIU SfJ OI
(var .J
(abbr .)
66 C;mies
15 Walk un steadilY

Choice morsel
lnlla1e
Goals
Comb form
br is tle
133 Fren ch l or
" su mmer
124 Pretix lhree
136 C110 01ed
137 Eve rgr een tree
138 De11 se
139 Pretix· down
140Ai thatt ime
141 Fema le sheep

SOLD NEW IN JULY
2 seater:•. arr, J,.(?PQ miles

'5495

1975
MUSTANG II

1975 DODGE

12.~ Prel111 ' be lore

I 2"7
129
131
132

'

'5295

SUNDA Y, D&lt;;t.' 24. 1976

OCTOBER 30 AT 10:30 A.M.

Kenneth Swain.
Gallipolis, Ohio

4 Dr., air, 10,600 miles.
This person trades every
year.

1976 CHEV. IMP-AlA
STA. WAGO"

CORONET CUSTOM

Automatic, air cond., 5,000
miles .

2 Dr . hdtp., air cond., 3,000

1975 AMX PACER X

1974 MGB-GT

cond.,
miles.

·automatic, air
AM- F M, 7,000

miles. ,

4295

4 speed, 24,000 miles, new
radials.

•3995
MODEL CARS

'

Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse Around

•

PUBLIC SALE

'

OCTOBER 30, 1976
SATURDAY 11:01 A.M.

Having sold the farm lhe following will be 501d at the
residence located on Athens County Twp. Rd. ~oo. Take
'St. Rt. so east from Athens to Guysville. Pick up St. Rl.
319 to Co. Rd. 48, ·go north· for 2 miles and turn east on

Twp. Rd. soo for a mile.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTABLES: Sideboard (Oijk, lap

robe, qulits, tia~ke'ts, pictures a'nd fra ~e~, church seat,
beds, trunks, coffee grinder, toy wagons and steam
engine, chums, Bl'ld walnut cabinets.
. .

. FARM EQUIPMENT: · Rake (horse drawn) b•l~r.
wagon (oil field), barn limberl, log chains, copper
wire, jacks, gas furnace , cream separator, sk.il saw,
Ptpe fittings, drums, tiles, ledders, pulleys, ~oal
heatrola, tools, brick, tarp~ulin, tin , rope, lumber
wire, etc.

lf\ISCELLANEOUS : Lady's ,accord! an ·(120. key base

I· I I

plano), banjo, jars, Maytag wringer washer. charc?al

(lots &amp; grlll,·storm doors, windows and frames, btrd
house {600 apartr11ents), and many numerous items not

llst.\!(1.
NOTE: M.any us~ful and 'unusual Items' which have
been collected for over 70 years. Sale had to be

previously cancelled.
.

.

.

Signed: J. l. Winner, Owner

TE-RMS: CASH BRI&lt;OFORDA~CTION COMPANY •
Not Responslbltlor Accidents
C. G. BRADFORD,
Auctioneer

1
•

I

'(Positive I. D.

PHON E614-949-20011 nr 949 -248~

lRUMMU~

;HE5E RUNNeRS ARE

NOT t501N~ ·~'A$
T01AL ~05E~.

Now unnp lhe clrtted lotion
to fonil the IUrpriH anawer, u

••n•tod bJ tho obcioo cartoon.

�2--0-'lbe Sunday Tim~tinel, SUnday, Oct. 24, 1976

:::::::::;:;:;.::::;;::::::~;::~::::::::::::.-;::::::!:~::::;:::~~::::::

Electoral College .'has no walls'
Sy ROBERT BENJAMIN

W:..SiflNGTON (UP! J ( ~ o Nov. 2, the American
people will elect a · new
vresident.
That statement, however 1

is not literally true.
'/be American people will,
Indeed, be voting for a
president. B~l their votes
actually will establish that
q •1rennhll lnstiti!tion of
flnti:lr.ican

politics ,

the

E.lectoral College.
1\nd it will be the Electoral
College whose vole will
certify the next president.
The Electoral College has
. no walls, although its critics
I"IY it is a wall between the
voters and the president they
ore supposed Ill be electing.
It is a sy!!lem. provided for

EXTt:NDED OUTLOOK

Menday througb W&lt;doeaclay, clla11&lt;t of abewen
Moaday add maiDJy lD
nortbust Tuesday. Fair
, Wed..Uy. Hlgbs In the
IO.aadlow5t1Mow; aad
Tuesdoy,udj.athe50saod
low M1 Wedaesaay. Lows
bi the 30s nod low to..

in the, Constitution, under Libertarian party candidate. College and became th~ 23rd
which each state has votes
It will take 270 of the 538 American Rresidenl.
equsl to the total of Its electoralvotesatstakeNov. 2
The elections of 19\6, 194ll,
coogresslonal delegation for either President Ford or 1960 and 1968 were so close
Its two senawrs plus all its Jimmy carter to become that a tiny swing in certain
. representatives. ·
president.
·
states could have given the
Alter the popular vote election , the elecwrs named by vo~lifo~;! h~o~e ~::· ~~~ pr~i=~k~h~h~ ~~:~ had ::;:::::;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::w.:::&lt;W.:;:;:&gt;;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:::::;::
each state's legislature ·will Pennsylllllnia 27, Jllinois and more popular and electoral
cast their votes for the winner Texas 26 each, Ohio 25, votes than either Hubert
of their state's popular voteMichigan 21, and New Jersey Humphrey or George
alihough there Is nothing In and Florida 17 each, · The Wallace. But be did not have
the Constitution that forces minimum is three, held by more popular votes than the
them Ill do that.
Alaska, Delaware, Nevada, other two combined; and
In 1972, for example, · North Dakota , Vermont, Walla ce got 46 electoMI
Richard Nixon won 520 Wyoming and the District of votes.
elecwral votes according to Columbia.
Wallace's third-party
the popular vote count.
Article
II
of the success showed it is possible
. But whn the electors ''met" Constitution established the that nobody might win
in their state capitals Dec. 18, electoral system . It was enough electoral votes to PORTLAND, Maine (UP!)
Nixon Jell short of that wtal changed somewhat in 1804 by become prE(iident.
- Two men were arrested
because one Republican the 12th Amendment, but the --..In·· that case, the Satli.rday and charged with
elector voted for a basic idea of the Founding Constitution provides for the the shooting death of Anne
Fathers remains: To keep House of Representatives to Payson Holt, 79, the sister-inpower with the states in a elect the president, as law of the tate owner of the ·
federal system, wmake each happened in 1824 when John New York Mets baseball
state count for something in Quincy· Adams took office team.
the selection of a president. even though Andrew Jackson · Mrs. Holt was killed in the
Every presidential election won the popular vote. .
bedroom of her Fa!mQuth
year, critics note that the ~· In )876, Samuel Ttlden home 2% weeks ago.
electoral system may put Into oulpolled Rutherfo.rd B. Deputy Attorney General
office the popular-vote loser, .Hayes but was &lt;Jhe short of Richard Cohen said Leon
independents, clutched their if that candidate wins the the necessary 185 electoral Frederick Rich, 29, of South
votes. Alter confusion about Portllind, was arrested in a
bloody marys and coffee cups right states.
This year, Ford could get eligibility of so~e electors, a car about 12:30 a.m. and
and crowded into line to get In
fewer tAltal votes than carter spectalcommtssoon volm~ oo . charged with criminal
a few words with Ford.
Ford, who arrived at (he in the popular election but party hnes gave Republican homicide in the second
mansion well beyond still win the presidency. The Hayes the 19th prestdency, 8 degree.
About an hour later,
midnight after the debate in independent candidacy of to 7.
With a Democratic Edward Byron Austin, 32, of
Williamsburg, appeared Eugene McCarthy may be a
Congress, carter would be Portland, was arrested and
rested and relaxed as he fa ctor.
Polls
show
McCarthy
~xpected to win a sho.wdown charged with third degree ·
stood in the hallway of the
elegant mansion . There was a getting 5 per cent of the m the House, but crtttcs say criminal homicide, Cohen
lot of autographing and popular vote and he says he only the only legtttmale salp . .
picture taking as party hopes to be on the ballot in 40 elec.Uon ts electton by popular Mrs ~ Holt was the sister of
.
banker Charles Shipman
leaders and other Virginia states . If he gets his 5 per vote.
Ford notes that he never Payson and the' sister-in~aw
pols, including former Gov. cen t, it most likely would he
was elected Ill the presidency of Joan Witney PaysOn, late
William Tuck, a Democrat, at Carter's expense.
Thus,
carter
could
win
big
'" the hrsl place, and owner of the Mets.
stood in neat rows with Ford
in
tbe
South,
lose
some
key
suggests
he would need a She was found by her
for photographs.
northern
,
industrial
states
by
popular
mandate.
to pursue housekeeper who heard shots
Former Alexandria mayor
Marshal Beverley squeezed an eyelash to Ford, and lose hos goals wnh some and summoned police. She
into the receiving line at the the electoral vote although he assuranc.e of achieving · died several hours later at
Maine Medical Center.
last moment and clipped a wins the popular vQte by, say, them.
Should he lose the popular Mrs . . Holt's family had
hatchet and fire hat clasp 2 million votes.
In 1888, Benjantin Harrison vote and still win in the offered a $5,1100 reward for
onto Ford's gray and blue lie,
shook the President's hand got 100,000 fewer popular electoral college, another ~t- information leading to the
vigorously and told him he votes than Grover Cleveland tempi can be expected lo.ktll arrest and conviction of h~r
killers.
had just become an honorary but won in the Electoral that institution.
member of the Friendship
Fire Co.
Beverley's enthusiasm was
unabashed. "I know Jerry

·Shooting
suspects

arrested

Ford· prepares for la~t
week of ·:ciunpaign tour
lly KAREN T. RYPKA
RICHMOND, Va. (UP!) He didn 't have much sleep
following the last debate, but
President Ford began the
first day of his final
campaign tour Saturday with
energetic ride On an

nn

cxcerclse bicycle in the
Virginia Governor's
Mansion .

The bicyCle belongs wGov.
.Mills E. Godwin 's wife, Ka·
lherine, who pedals it the
e&lt;)uivalent of three miles a
day. Ford left a note for Mrs.
Godwif\Saying he was better
at sprinting, and: "l couldn't

make the three miles ."
As a prelude to a final
campaign journey
of
thousands of miles, Ford
greeted more than 100 slate
politicians

invited

to

breakfast at the mansion.
Ford declined an offer to
eal in advance with the
Godwlns and instead ate his
Virginia ham and biscuits
iilonc in the same bedroom

that has provided a night's
rest for the Marquis de
Lafayette and Wins ton ·
lllurchill.
The local politicians, whom

TOM TJED.E

real well/' he said. 11 1 liVed

right near him in Alexandria
before he moved over 1to the
White Hou.•e). "He's a _great
lhe governor' s staff was guy, a wonderful President.
careful to point out included He lived in my town. I was
11epub\icans. Democrats and mayor there."

--------------------------Letters of oplllion are welcomed. They should be

300words long (or be o~bject to ,..duclion !!)'
I the editor) and mll8t be signed with llle signee's ad·
I dreso. Names may he withheld upon publlcadon.
!lowever, oo requC!It, names will be dlscl01ed. Lelten
1
1 should be in ·good taste, addret1slng 1Jo0es, nol per·
1 110uallliC11.
IC!islhan

l.
l
I

I

I
I
I

j)~ .

•

.

••• ?Jtt. Fdl/h: r;;.;::::;

l

Frank Hill, on how it is ...
near Sir:
. Back In 1930 when I was an eighlh grade student in city
sehool I started visiting the local Library ut every oppoctunity.
I loved to scan the old newspapers of bygone years. In
those days the old Tribunes and Journals were very large and
bulky and bound in book fot:m. Tnday one can see the old
Tribunes back to the year 1895 on mlcr&lt;Hilrn which is much
better.
'
Being a lover of history, I also researched many books that
are stili available. If one were a history fiend such as I, they
need but go to the Library ' and ask for such books as:
Hardesty's Atlas, W. G. Sibley's French 500, Historical
Collections of Ohio (2 vols.) by Henry Howe, and if a Civil War
bug, Whitelaw Ried's, "Ohio in the Civil War."
Many hundreds of you folks have told me aU summer long
how much you enjoy my humble efforts of presenting some of
Utis history weekly in this newspaper under the title, "This is
how it was ... " Tbe local library and the fine staff there
deserve much credit for many of the articles which have
appeared. For nearly SO years I have enjoyed a grand
relationship here during my research .
I feel tbst we should aU vote yes for the upcoming renewal
of the Ubrary Leyy which will in no way mean an iucrease In
tnxes.
See you all at the polis next month. - Frank Hill,
Galllpolis, Oct. Z'i, 1976.

AND~

WOODBURY, Conn. ( UPI)
- Artiit Robert Templetoo
smiles when he thlnlut of a
portrait he painted of Jimmy
Carter
because
the
Democratic presidential
candidate did not. Templeton
likes it that way.
"We've bad so much of the
$!11ile. I lhought, 'Let's give
the ·smile a chance to rest.
There's. mlJI'e to this man
than the smile and the 'smile
sometimes almost verges on
the clown which I dm'tlilre,"'
Templeton said.
Templeton has painted portraits of Lyndon JOhnson,
Hubert Humphrey, George
Romney, Ralph Abernathy
and ftrmer CoMecticut Gov.
John Dempsey.
He went to Plains, Ga. to
draw two pastels each of
Carter and his wife,
Rosalynn, during a sitting
held after church Qll a Sunday
at the carU!m' horne. The
portraits were commissioned
by a national magazine,
which plans to publish them
in Janusry.
"Carter was completely
relaxed. Amy came in with a
18rge bowl of blueberries and
she passed those aroWld. I
expected Carter to be a llttle
moce Southern folksy, but
there isn't a lot of that y'all
business. He's an executive.
He's very effective, very
ariiculate and he was
businesslike."
Templeton said he tried to
portray Carter as a potential
president.
"He reminds me more of
John Kennedy than of anyone
else - not because of his
lopks - but because of his
control. He has that cool,
quiet; selfpossessed cootrol
that Kennedy had."
When Templeton painted
Humphrey's portrait, he had

smocked dress wllh intrteate:
Rower emlroidery.
The painting was CIIIIIDils.:
sioned In 1971 by ~ =
carter as a surprtae birthday;::
gift lor her hw!band, wbo:
wrote Templeton • IWOiltlgehandwrilt.en thank-you letter ·.•
While Templeton drew:
Carter seated on a brick waD··
near the Georgia black plne1:
aro111d his home, he . told:
CarU!r the subjects of
portraits usually send him:. ·
typewritten letters, not notes;:
written by hand.
"Carter told me, 'I remem·;;
bered that you had stood at:.:
your easel and used . YOU~:: '
hand to create this portrait ofAmy and the least I could
'was to answer ln kind,"':
Templeton said.
:
How does a portrait'artlat:::
. assess the Carters?
" If ·Carter becomes :
. president, the enUre tribe will..:
mask:''
, be interesting becauseTempleton says portrait lhey're not in th_e mold.:
artists lend t~ be good judges They're different, lhey are .
of character because they are not flashy, they do not do a lot:
prof~ional observers of the of oohing and ahhlng, lhey:
human face. To read a face, don't throw excited sentencesat you. Thetre quiet an
he looks first at the eyes.
'
:
"I don't say I'm 100 per solid."
Mrs. Rosalynrr€arter-.:.;
cent right, but I'm coovinced
of lhis: Everything about you "She's pretty. She comes 00::,
is right out there. It's there as a soft, low-spokeJ~c•
belle,
buC:
for the person who's Southern
perceptive enough to read · underneath she's very;:

to make a slmlllar decision
about
the
Minnesota
senator's famous smile.
"I let him smile because I
tried tq do him without the
smile and something just died
In him. He's a performer and
a very gOOd one. The smile is
port of his performance. If
you talte the smile away, you
get less lhan you expeCt."
As a portr•tt artist,
Templeton tiles to make a
statement on canvas instead
of palnUng a mask. H~aws
the subject _In a slttlng and
then completes the portrait in
his studio, nestled in the
rolling Utchlield Hills.
"You letlhe subject make
Ute statement lhrough - his
face ftr you, but you have to
decide what you want him to
say about himself. You don't
want to end up wilh him
saying nothing about himself
and with just a welli&gt;llinted

it." '

'

Full

~

So doing, he received shell
With the Dole Campaign-It fragments in the shoulder
was only a brief moment lit and several cracked ver·
Robert Dole's exhausting bid tebrae. He spent39 months in
for the vice presidency. But it repair, much of it wrapped in
was nice. The candidate !fas a cast from neck to trunk.
His rtght arm is now only
in Newark, N. J. riding in a
pc!rade, When some men in slightly withered, but vi.r·
the !!lreet hoisted a large tually useless. He can use the
poster drawing or a twisted elbow as a paperweight, and
hand which contained this tbe curled hand to hold light .
crude but tender inscription : · objects. otherwise, he has
"A four-letter word for Bob one arm, and therefore must
spent 30 minutes to an hour
Dole is Guts !"
It may have been the getting dressed , must ask for
nonpsrtisan tribute of this assistance In some of his
electric season. Each of the dining habits, and must
principal candidates ha s endlessly guard against Ute
admirable qualities, for exuberant voter who tries to
grab him for a well-meaning
exampl~ each of them Is a
small-town American with but painful handshake.
Three decades after
quite humble beginnings, but
receiving
his wounds, Dole
the junior senator from
still
suffers
from pain. Not
Kansas is also 110methlng of a
terribly,
he
says, but oe·
spiritual inspiration. He is a
casionally.
He
thinks it's a
handicapped citizen, crippled
· if you will, and one does not matter of improper ·cir·
have to be Republican to culaUon. For Instance he
feels cold weather more than
appreciate his courage.
The·story of his disability is · he'd like. Aides say he must
py now familiar to those who. sometimes take mild
· have followed the news of the · painkillers.
Beyond these brief com·
hustings. When he was 2J,and
ments,
neither Dole nor his
a World War II infantryman
staff
talk
at length about the
in Italy, Dole led a charge
disability.
Apparently they do
against an angry ,German
not
want
to appear to· be
machine-gun emplacement.

As with apples, favorable
weather conditions In the
western states offset poor
LTops caused by poor weather
In eastern and central states.

AGREEMENT REACHED
CLEVELAND {UP!) ~ A
tentative agreement was
reached Saturday afternoon
in 'the six-week-old strike by
teachers against Cuyahoga
County's II schools for the
mentally retarded. The
teachers. repo·esented by the
Association · of Cuyahoga
County Teachers of the·
Trainable
Retarded,
scheduled a ratification
meeting for 3 p.m. Sunday.
The Cuyahoga County Board
of Mental Retardation
scheduled a !PCclal meeting
for 5:30 p,m. 'Monday for Ute
same pUQlOSe.

SWINGING SINGLES SCENE in Milwaukee, Wis.,
has a new member. David McKellar modified a seat on his
backyard swing set to accommodate Muffin, his bulldog.
Why' He swears that Muffin enjoys it.

'I

75 Dart Swinger
Custom

"

vinyl roof.

KANAUGA, OHIO

Public Sale

.. 4

This is the sale of the personal propertv of the estate of

.75 Granada Ghia

the tale Mary Pork of

vinyl roof

$4095

~ ·---~~--~~--------~

7 Pontiac Gran Am.
Priced to sell!! Loaded!!
Extra Nice!!
•

:

O! Cqllector

1.1~11',1.}"

_Dodge

" Household and Mic."

AVTHORIZED DEALERS

pans, cedar chest , boo ks, puzzles, filt . for Kirbey
sweeper, leather overnight bag, rugs . linens,
Christmas decorations, Singer sewing machine with
~nch , ottoman , ca nes, barometer, potty cha ir, wash
tubs, shovels, ha nd saws, step ladders, 5 firep lace
fron~ , and m isc . to numerous lo mention .

I

3 speed, 14,000 miles. We
. sold this one new!!

"No responsible for accidents or loss of pr!]perty ''
lunch
·
Terms : Cash
Lawrence Donohue
Dan Smith ' James Carnahan

THE FULL SIZE CARl

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
· GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

$3895

SAVE

742 -3048

BUY THESE .AT WHOLESALE:
1974 CAPRICE CLASSIC-air cond., power steering
1974 FORD LTD..:.air power steering
1973 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill-power steering, air cond.

-

.....
-

1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA-power steering, air

~

Chrysler·Plymout~ before you buy your next
AurOMOBJ:!.E. Over 40nice clean late models to choose from.

Mioke sure you stop at Gallipolis

RENDIN6 PLeAS FOR.
HE!..D AND CLIMI!I
UP ON M'ol BA ~ ~ ~

..

GALLIPOLIS·
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUT
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

.446·3273

:1639 EASTERN AVE.

DON'T MISS THEMI

Lamps, magazine ra cks, chair·s , radio, metal twl_n bed ,
2 pc. bedroom suite , Hoover sweeper, dishes, pots and

74 Duster"

.

North Third Ave. in

Grape rocker and 6 chairs, 2 pc. Wlllit cherry bedroom
suite, marble top stand; empire couch, walnut dropleaf table, 2 Boston rockers. stand . clank bottom
chairs, wi c"er baskets and stand, sewing rockers, Seth
Thomas mantle clock, sideboard,. china -closet , table
with captain and s chairs, wlckei rocker, chest of
drawers, cut, green and some good glassware, silver ·
tea set, constitution book ends, yan lty , stool and chair,
wing chair, picture i ram e;:i. typewr iter with loWer and
up per keys, sew ing stooL old cook books, 2 oil lamps
and jewelry .

4 Qoor, A/C, AIM radio

$3495

371

Middleport, Ohio.

"An.tiqu~

4 Door, A.C.; power steering,
• radio.

~·

milking sympathy. Dole
occasionally makes light of
the Injury, telling once that
he hoped to be vice president
because it is an inside job
with no heavy lifting;
otherwise, as he should, he
minimizes the probl~m.
perhaps thankful, con·
siderlng war, that it is no
worse.
And yet throughout his
eight years in Congress, and
also during this campaiga, he
has hoped others in similar
circumstances might benefit
from his example. During the
Republican convention he
conspicuously used a sign·
language translator during
his podluro remarks. Last
month he showed up at a Miss
Wheelchair American
pageant. And he has told
1e ad l n g Ph Y sic a I
rehabilitation officials,
politics notwithstanding, to
"use me this election, use me
any way you can."
Such use could be con·
siderable, particularly if Dole i.mu: oRl'IIAN ANNiE
'
wins In November. Milton
LITTLE
O·RPRAIII AIIIIIIII\-TB&amp; 'I'ILLAG&amp; B!.ACiiiBiiliP
Kahn, director of the
Federation of Handicapped
(New York), reminds that
when Franklln Roosevelt
served as president from a
wheelchair, his influence on
rehabilitation services was
immel!surable. He Inspired
the March of Dimes cam·
paign against polio, for one
thing, leading to medical
research and immunization.
It Ia unarguably a bit
unfortunate that the one in 11
Americans who bsve some
kind of disability must watt
for a high leader to
popularize their problems,
but at this things are better
than they once were for the
· handicapped. In Caesar's day
the crippled were thrown
over cliffs. Native Americans
often left the deformed
behind on the trail. And even
now the "village ldiota" of
Anyplace, U.S.A., may be
cripples who with early help
might have lived wholly
better lives.
&amp;i this is why Bob Dole is
Inspirational. He reminda 118
that with help and fortitude
the handicapped are not so
sad as neglect would bsve it.
Once, as he haa said, "My
primary Interest was how
well I could do on a basketball
floor (and) whether I could
catch a football." Then be
was injured and his friends
helped him to overcome hl.s
loss. "I learned io understand
that I wsa very fortWI8te. It's
ablllty tliat counts, not
dlaabllity.It'showwe act and
perfonn."
Rlght you are, Bob Dole.
The poster in Newark said it
all.
l ·

SMITH HONDA SALES
Rt. 7

SATURDAY, OCT. 30, 1976 9:00 A.M.

I

BJ' Tom Tiede

NOW •2995

A.C., P.S., t•pe deck.

P.S., tape deck.

.. top f all the extras!

Amy: "She's a fantasti~
little girl. Amy doesn't reaUy.
lm~w she coUld be someone":
different, someone special!'
She's a typieal Americmt;
Southern child. She isn' too
affected at all."
~
Carter: "I left the meeting:;,
with him thinking, hoi(;
animated."
During carter's sitting, the unusual it is that this coun~
former Georgia governor with all its faults and all i~
talked about a portrait sirife can keep cO!nlng up":
Templeton did of Amy with people of that caliber 10;
:
CarU!r. whO was 90ct.19, in a run for president."

A~L' ~IG' H T• MIZ PITIFUl.. !
KIIIOCI&lt;:: OFf THE ~eART·

SELF CONTAINED
171Jz FOOT
TRAVEL TRAILER
LIST $3747

2-74 Monte.. Carlos

Tllt wheel , cruise. A. C.,

A Door, l()w miles, vinyl

When you sit for
Templeton, he keeps you
awake and talking. "I've had
the experience of asking
someone to be quiet in a niee
way and lhey just die. The
spirit goes out of the picture
so I try to keep them

CAPrAIN ~MV

73 ()Ids Cutlass
Supreme

75 Ch!JSier.
Newport

do:

.

PROWLER

• l PLYMOUTH DUSTER

• 2-VOLA~E • 2 dOOIS

See The '77 Dodges

NEW 1976

SAVE ON THESE 1976 LEFTOVERS

hla:

strong."

SPECIAL

ovER 15
Size 1977
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHS IN STOCK!!

~

•

Apple crop is smaller
, WASIDNGTON (UPI) The 1976 United states apple
crop was forecast Tuesday at
18 per cent smaller than a
year ago, although the
domestic pear output was
predicted to be slightly iJl..
creased, ·
Statistics released by ·
USDA's Foreign Agricultural
Service forecast the domestic
apple harvest at 2.8 million
tons. It said the small crop
was Rreclpitated by adverse
weather conditions in central
and eastern states.
U. S. exports were an·
ticlpated to be lower than a
year ago when ·there was a
record crop.
The FAS predicted the
United States pear crop
would be 2 per cent higher
than a year ago, although the
total for the Northern
Hemisphere would remain
virtually
unchanged
..
;j
I

By JANE

J·D-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, &amp;mday, Oct . 24, 1976

Dole an lnS:pl·:tPOohon
for handicapped
u

1
1
1

·

Carter wasn't smiling

----

949-2033

949·2708

POLAROID SNACK .
SHAH KNOCKS KHADAFY
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) NEW YORK (UPI) - The
A
bank robbery $uspect wok
Shah of Iran believes that
a
Polaroid
print as his blue
Libyan national leader
plate
special
Thursday .
1\ioammad Khadafy is crazy.
Court
officials
say Fred
"He's crazy. No doubt , the
Hale
Hu.
b
ands
Jr.
grabbed
man
is
absolutely
Lhe
picture
,
prosecution
irresponsible and crazy/' the
shah told CBS · interviewer evidence, and ate it .
Husbands took his snack at
Mike Wallace.
a pretrial hearing for an Aug.
Asked his opinion of the
Palestinians, the shah ~id, 20 robbery of $13,897.
"It was a picture of him/'
"Our good Palestlman
one
witness said. "He took it
friends must know that there
·
off
the
table where it was
is a limit to where they can go
spread
out with other
aild bully the world ... by
evidence
and
bit off the head .
te r r orism
and
Then
he
just,
gulp, swallowed
blackmailing."
it. "

Ch~rlie

Webster, Buster Sprague, Don Harden, Tom Norris.

The ca.rs ll•ted below have exceptionally
low mileage. Previous ~wnen names
'

'

are available. Mileage Is verified•
100% Warranty.

1976 BUICK
CENTURY

r.-~~~----------~·
•

~-

Public Auction

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS

Located one mile east of Rodney on Rt. 35,
turn on Watson Rd. Watch for Auction signs.

62 Fur ·b earing
mammals
64 Steamship
1 " Ship olthe
desert "
labbd
65P&lt;irlof " tobe"
6 Bouts
66 Vut lhrong
1 I Stimulated
67Bury
18 Angry
69 Soeak tool ishly
19 Repu t!le
7 1 Coolin g dev1ce
20 Di sc usses
73 Chooses
23Werm
74 Steak su dden ly
24 Ma ture
76 Consol ation
26 Ceremony
79 Woman 's name
27 Delirium
tremens (abbr .) 81 Greek. leiter
82 Hindu cymbals
29 Growing ou t ol
84 ·Pertainin\j tO
3001d n amelor
punishmenl
Thailand
85 Widow
3 1 The swee t ~op
87 Artificial atioy
32 Perm lt
33 Above (poet .l
90 Englishmen
92 Wooden vessel
34 Be b orne
93 Fille t
35 Tra dod tor
95 Enc om ium
money
97 Toward the
36 Comely
mouth
. 38 Irritate
98 Pronoon
40 Guido's high
99 N\')le ol scale
note
10 l Goin
4 1 L1nger
10 3 Japanese
"2Twist
staoesman
"3qm b
104 River in Siberia
45 Eu tual es
105 Boer mug
"6 Roman gods
108 Time Per iod
4 7 Go by water
1 10 Pawl s
4B Tele
112 Reach ac ross
49 Core
113 Beverage
5 i Favor it es
114 Com pass o.oint
52 Atop
115
Woman 's nam e
53 Cover
5 4 Plays on words 117 8r ls tles
55 Make amen ds 118 Pl'lrt of shoe
119 Fren ch house of
l&lt;&gt;&lt;
fashion
57 Female rull
120 Teuton1c de ity
58 Part olllower
12 1 Soap plant
60 Unit of
.123 Edge
Portu guese
124 Mounltt ln lak e
currency (pl.l
12 5 Challenge
6 1 The su n

.

Listing In P.art: 2 Hot water tanks, kitchen cabinet,
stone jags, old radio, folding chairs, fruit iars, wringer
type washer, old 5 leg table, 2 small heflters, pie safe,
step ta.dder, John Deere 2 row corn planter, large corn
sheller, John Deere corn pic;ker, cut-oH saw, 2 Ford
pu. llies, Jo~n Deere 14'' drag type plows, John Qeere
cultiva'tors; JOhn Deere Model B tractor, John Deere
No. 9 mower, John Deere manure spreader, New
Holland baler Model 66, New Idea rake, hay elevator
and motor, farm wagon , 2 rolls barbed wire, front end
loader for Ford tractor, pony harness and collars,
scrap iron-and miscellaneous.
' ·
Terms Cash ·
Lunch will be served

Owner W. S. Fanning

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
Dilry I Alban
Oak Hill, Ohio

Not responsible for accidents

88Ch0 iceoarl
t6Comp a ss~o l nt
&amp;9 WillY remarks
17 Symbo l l or
9 0 ElC IS1
dysprOSIUm
91 A state l !lbbr I
2 1 Altar screen
94 Hin de1
22 Benz ol
96 Pr oceed
der ivallve
98 Roman road
23Swordhandle
99 Told
250blaln
100 Hermit
27 Str ikes out
t
02 Ner ve networks
28L ock so l ha ll
104 Unlocked
30 Oiri
3 1WIIdbul l aloo t 105 Wil d OllJm
106 Sluggishrless
India
33 AQlJatiC memmllt107 Sea nymphs
35 Uec tared ·
109PosillveJ:Jole
11 1 An onymous
36 Wooden pinS
t 4 2Domes ti ca t e ~
3 7 Per1ods ot 11me I 12 Wllhered
143 Giant sla1n by
11 J Ventilates
39 HI! llghlly
Athena
1 t 6Pries l' s
41 La m ent
144 O riginat es
vestment
&lt;12 Prohl bil s,
1~6Roc~
118 Oetes l
44i\varlce
148 Depefl
11 9 Ti!le olrespect
4781id geter m
ti\ 9B ' xe s
122 Cooj u nc t ion
48 Han d bag
I SO Ta ut
49 Woman ' g name 12 4 Most
15 t Proofreader's
domestica ted
50 For mer Russian
m&lt;trk
125 Eat
ru lers
126
Pill
5 4Ufllto! Sp anlsh
DOWN
12 8 Handle
c urren c~
130 Uncooked
55 Oecilys
1 17 -year loc ust
56 SailinQ ... assels 131 Women 's name
2 Rugged
132 Resol~e
59 Jury
mou nta in cres t
135 Preposition
60 Pari Ill play
3 Woman s
137 Shallow vess els
61 Symb ol lor l 1n
n1ckname
T38 Distr ict in
· 63 Food list}
4 Fren ch l or
German~
6B Prrnoun
· s.ul'f'lmer ..
140Mala~c oln
67 Eds ts
5 French ar11cle
14 2 Measure ol
68San e
6 Ba k er's pr odu ct
wefgh1
70Wooly
7Papermea sure
7 1 Eve1green t.ree 14 3E d ib te seed
a likely
144 Centimeters
7:2 E~IS 1
9 Earth goddess
(abbr I
T3 F ollo~ing li rst
tO Designa ted
14 5 Prm t er:s
75 Sponso1
1 I Grapp led
me asu re
77 Veh ic le
12Pronoun
TB An 11ere d an lma 14 7 Sym b ol for
.13 Nobl eman
tellur ium
. 80 Baseba lll eam
14·Ch inose woigt'lt
14 8 Lower case
83 GrMIU SfJ OI
(var .J
(abbr .)
66 C;mies
15 Walk un steadilY

Choice morsel
lnlla1e
Goals
Comb form
br is tle
133 Fren ch l or
" su mmer
124 Pretix lhree
136 C110 01ed
137 Eve rgr een tree
138 De11 se
139 Pretix· down
140Ai thatt ime
141 Fema le sheep

SOLD NEW IN JULY
2 seater:•. arr, J,.(?PQ miles

'5495

1975
MUSTANG II

1975 DODGE

12.~ Prel111 ' be lore

I 2"7
129
131
132

'

'5295

SUNDA Y, D&lt;;t.' 24. 1976

OCTOBER 30 AT 10:30 A.M.

Kenneth Swain.
Gallipolis, Ohio

4 Dr., air, 10,600 miles.
This person trades every
year.

1976 CHEV. IMP-AlA
STA. WAGO"

CORONET CUSTOM

Automatic, air cond., 5,000
miles .

2 Dr . hdtp., air cond., 3,000

1975 AMX PACER X

1974 MGB-GT

cond.,
miles.

·automatic, air
AM- F M, 7,000

miles. ,

4295

4 speed, 24,000 miles, new
radials.

•3995
MODEL CARS

'

Sunday Shoppers Welcome,
Come In and Browse Around

•

PUBLIC SALE

'

OCTOBER 30, 1976
SATURDAY 11:01 A.M.

Having sold the farm lhe following will be 501d at the
residence located on Athens County Twp. Rd. ~oo. Take
'St. Rt. so east from Athens to Guysville. Pick up St. Rl.
319 to Co. Rd. 48, ·go north· for 2 miles and turn east on

Twp. Rd. soo for a mile.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTABLES: Sideboard (Oijk, lap

robe, qulits, tia~ke'ts, pictures a'nd fra ~e~, church seat,
beds, trunks, coffee grinder, toy wagons and steam
engine, chums, Bl'ld walnut cabinets.
. .

. FARM EQUIPMENT: · Rake (horse drawn) b•l~r.
wagon (oil field), barn limberl, log chains, copper
wire, jacks, gas furnace , cream separator, sk.il saw,
Ptpe fittings, drums, tiles, ledders, pulleys, ~oal
heatrola, tools, brick, tarp~ulin, tin , rope, lumber
wire, etc.

lf\ISCELLANEOUS : Lady's ,accord! an ·(120. key base

I· I I

plano), banjo, jars, Maytag wringer washer. charc?al

(lots &amp; grlll,·storm doors, windows and frames, btrd
house {600 apartr11ents), and many numerous items not

llst.\!(1.
NOTE: M.any us~ful and 'unusual Items' which have
been collected for over 70 years. Sale had to be

previously cancelled.
.

.

.

Signed: J. l. Winner, Owner

TE-RMS: CASH BRI&lt;OFORDA~CTION COMPANY •
Not Responslbltlor Accidents
C. G. BRADFORD,
Auctioneer

1
•

I

'(Positive I. D.

PHON E614-949-20011 nr 949 -248~

lRUMMU~

;HE5E RUNNeRS ARE

NOT t501N~ ·~'A$
T01AL ~05E~.

Now unnp lhe clrtted lotion
to fonil the IUrpriH anawer, u

••n•tod bJ tho obcioo cartoon.

�'

•

FORD TO GET
"'ORE USE
OUT OF A
DAN
THOMPSON USED CAR

GO

FORD

CAiortlUCK
from

POMEROY·MOUJR 'CO-..

A~l.

CHEVROLET MONTE

Low mileage, gas saver.

1

1973 CHEVY VEGA .............................. 1295

1975
PONTIAC ASTRE

cylinder, automatic transmission.

1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR.......................... 11294

2 d r. 4 cy l • auto

rea l low m ileage

6 cylinder, automatic transmission .

'2995

1970 DODGE DART 4 DR...................... 11295
6 cylinder, standa rd transmission

1974 MERCURY

1972 CHEVY IMP. 2 DR....................... .12195

Montego MX , 2 dr l'
H T , ye llow wilp
Wh1te v1ny l top , air ,
sharp

One loca l owner, very clean

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .................. 12995
Ai r, power steering anCI brakes, clean.

'3195

1

1

1972 FORD LTD BROUGHAM 4 DR........... 1895

1974 PONTIAC

One owner

F treb lrd , red w1th
While buckets , auto,
P S , P B , loca l one
owner

1972 PINTO WAGON ........................... .'1695
4 cylinder, automat ic transmission .

1974
PLYMOUTH
Sebnng , 2 Or , H T ,

au to , P s ,
P B
sun dance
modeL e)ctra n1ce,
low mileage

•3-995

1

1974 GRAND TORINO 4 DR. .................. 2795

'3295

1973 FORD

(),e local owner

1970 RANCHERO SQUIRE... ................... 1795
1

F250, " ~ ton pickup , 6
c yl s tandard A rea l
n1 ce work tr uc k,
local owner

Wood gra in trim , V 8, power steering.

1972 GMC lfz TON PICKUP..................... 11995

1973 DODGE
0100 1!1 ton p1ck up,
auto
P S, P B,
Enttra low m11eage
Th1s IS a n1ce pickup

•2395

'2795

Step side. 6 cylinder, standard transmiSSIOn

1974 FORD lh TON PICKUP....................13195

Ma ch 1, auto , P s,
P B , 360 eng me , low
mileage , a n1 ce spor t
car

Ole local owner

MANY MORE

992·2196

dr , sea , Newpor t
Custom , go ld w1th
matching gold 1n
tenor . a~r n1ce

1973 CHEV.

Imp c ustom , 2 dr ,
H T , brow n wlfh
be•ge
v.nyl top ,
aut o , a 1r , a nece car

proce~2'495

'2195

1972 PONTIAC

Grand Pn x, 2 dr ,
H T has over 90,000
miles on runs , like a
.ne w one, shar-p car

1966 CHEV.

Now Showing
The Leader of
Luxury Cars.
Visit Our
Showroom
And See For

I.I

Yourself.
I

I

.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

Cadi llac-Oidsmobile
GMC f•nancing Avalla~le

Pomeroy

"You'll Li ke Our Q Ill w
ua Y ay of Doing BusineSs"

5

0Den Eves. Til6- Til o.m . S~t.
See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns
.
Lloyd, Mclaughlin
Mac.v;n Keebaugh
-

Television Log
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1976
6 OG-VIewpolnt 8: This Is the Life 10
6:311-Jerry Falwell 4, Talking Hands 8, Public Polley
Forums 10; Newsmoker '76 13
7·oo-chrlslopher Closeup3, Thinking In Black 8: Rev.
Cleophus Robinson 13
7 311-This Is the Life 3: Your Health 4; Buliwlnkle 6,
Jerry Falwell B, To Be annou nced 10. Amazlnn
Grace Bible Class 13.
'
7 55-Black Cameo 4
B·OG-Mormon Choir 3: Day of Discovery 4; Ten~essee
'tuxedo 6, Church Service 10; Blue Ridge Quarto! ,
13; Sesame Street 20.
.
8 3il-'--Oral Roberts 3, Yours For the Asking 4, Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery 8; James RobiS0!1
Presents 10, Rex Hulmbard 13, Open Bible IS.
9:00-Gospel S1nglng Jubilee 3, Hour of Power 4, Oral
Roberts 10: Rex Hum bard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
8; Acros1 the Fence 15; Mister Rogers 20 .
9 :3~ Whot Does The Bible Plainly Say? B; Movie
Anchors Aweigh" 10; Christ Is the Answer 13
Insight 15, Sesame Street 20
'
I O : ~Jim Franklin 3; Church Service 4. Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8, Jimmy Swaggart 13
•
Faith for Today 15.
'
10:311-B lg Blue ('Aorble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4 15
Rex Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggart 6; This Is 'th~
Life 15; Zoom 20
II 00-TV Chapel 3, OSU F.ootball Highlights 4 Hot
Fudge 6; Rex Humberd 15; Rev. Henry Maha~ 13·
Rebop 20.
'
11 :311-At Issue 3, How to Follow the Campaign 6·
Face the. Nation B. Testimony Time 13; Once Upon'
,a Classic 20:
12 &gt;00-Meet the' Press 3,4,15; losues ancfAnowers ,
6

•

210 2 door, local car. 4 •peed trans , 44,21111 miles, good
tires, dark green finish, real economy.

8' Fleetslde VS engine, autamanc trans , factory air, p
steering &amp; brakes, local. 1 owner, low mileage truck,
good tires, radio.

1975lUV PICKUP. ................ $3195
CHEVELLE MALIBU ........ .
H T cpe., good tires, radio, VB, automatic, P .S.. P . B.,
bucket seats, runs good, needs paint.

1969 V.W. 2 DR.....................SS95
Runs good, new tires, radio.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR... }1595

Rev. Robert Schuler a. Evangelistic outreach 13,
Soundstate 20 ,
12 30-Grandsland 3,15, News Conference4 4; NFL
Today 8. The Issue 10, Lower Lighthouse 13.
1 00-NFL Football 3,15, NFL Football 4; Com. munlque6; NFL Football8,10. College Football '76
131 Adams Chrolcles 20. Infinity Factory 33
1 30-Aware 6, Zoom 33.
2:0G-Pol nt of View 6, ls!5ues and Answers 13; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 20; Once Upon a
Classic 33
2:3if-'-Formby 's Antique Furniture Workshop 6, Rebop
33
3·00-Movle "Blood on the Sun" 6, Next Generation 13,
French Chef 33.
3 3&lt;&gt;-Town Topics 13; Un Day Concert 3s3 .
4·00-NFLFootball3.4,15; l!!uesandAnswers4, NFL
Football 8,10; Movie "The Big Show" 13
•·311-Puzzle Children 20
5:00-Witness to Yesterday 6, Tennis for Everyone 33
5.311-Space. 1999 6; What' s Wrong With My Chi ld? 20;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
6.00-Fran Curci Footbaii1J;Sesame Street 20, Wall
Street Week 33
6·311-News 6; World Press 33. Newsmaker '16 13
7.00-Movle "20,000 Leagues Under the See" 3,4,15,
am Cosby 6,13, 60 Minutes 8, 10; Crockett's VIctory
Garden 20; Onedln L1ne 33
7.311-Anllques 20.
8·00-Six Million Dollar Man 6,13 , Sonny 8. Cher 8, 10;
Evening at Symphony 20,33
9 00-Movle "The Stepford Wives" 6,13; Kojak 8,10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20,33
9.311-McCioud 3.4.15 .
lO ·OD-De1vecchlo 8,10, Great Performances 20,33 .
10 55-Political Program 3.4, 15
11 00-News 3,4,8, 10,15
11 15--CBS News 8, 10; Music Hall Amerlce IS
11.20-Poiltlcal Program 6.13.
11 25-Peter Marshall 6, News 13
11 :30-Star Trek 3; Movie "What's so Bad About
Feeling Good? " 4, Movie "Flight to Tangier" B;
Face the Notion 10
11·55--lronslde 13.
12.00-Howail Five 0 10.
12 · ~ABC News 6,13 , Political Program 10.
1 :00-News 20; Janakl 33
1 311-Peyton Place 4.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1976
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 IS-English 3; Farm Report 13.
6·211-Not For Women Only 13
6·3o--&lt;:oiumbuo Today 3; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
,
Ounce ot Prevention 10
6·4S--Mornlng Report 3.
6 so..-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13
1 00-Today 3,4,15, Good Morning, America 6,13, CBS
News B: Chuck White Reports 10.
7 05--Schooiles IU.
I 4S-Sesame St 33.
8 OO-La5Sie 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10.
8 30-Big Valley 6.
9·00-A.M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15, Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
·
9:30-Cro... wlts3; One Life to Llve6; Good Day 8.
10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Pr ice Is Right 8 10 Mike
Douglao 13
' '
10 15-'-General Hospital 6.
10.30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 ,00-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
'
Night 6; Gambll8, 10; Morning with D J 13 E lee
· Co. 20.
· · ' . ·
II 30-Stumpers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13, l.ove of Life
8, 10, Sesame 51 20,33.
'11.55--Take Kerr 8, Ms. Fixll 10
12·oo-New5 3,6,8, 10; Don Ho 13, Bob Braun 4, 50
Grand Slam 15
.
12:311-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 55-NBC News 3, IS.
1·00-Somerset 3, Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Concentration 8;
Young 8. the Restleso .IO; Not For Women' Only 15
1·311-0aysofO'fL1ves3.4.1S: Family Feud6,13; As

The World Turns 8,10
2 00-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6
2· 311-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8 10,
Getting On 20.
'
3 15--General Hospital 13.
3 30-Max B Nimble- 6, Match Game a, 10.
4.00-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus 1\'elby, M.D. 4,
Somerset 15, fiowdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8, Sesame 51 20,33, Movie " Dear Brigitte" 10.
Dinah 13
4•30-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6. Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15
5.00-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch a,
. Mister Rogers 20,33; Star rek 15.
5:311-News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec Co. 20 33· Adam12 13
' '
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Education In Transition 33.
6 311-NBC News3.4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B,IO, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
7.00-Town fiall Decision '76 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10, To
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affair 15; Oil-From God's
Bedroom 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7•30-Bobby Vinton 4; Muppet Show 6, Gong Show 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10;
Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15
B ~apt 8. Tennille 6,13; Movie "Amelia Earhart"
4, 13; Rhoda 8, 10; Adams Chronicles 20,33 .
8 30-$128,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.
9 00-NFL Football6,13. Maude 8, 10; In Performance
at Wolf Trap 20,33.
9·311-All'o Fair 8,10.
10 :00-Executlve Suite B,10, News 20; Soundstage 33.
10:30-Farm Digest 20
10:55--Polltlcal Program 8,10
11 :0G-News 3,4,B,10,1S; MocNeii-Lehrer Report 33.
11 ·311-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS. Movie "The Morning
Allier" 8; Mar~ Hartman 10; Bikes Bikes, Bikes 33.
12.~News 6, 13; Movie "The Swimmer" 10; Janak!
12 .311-Coilege Football '76 6; lron 5ide 13.
1:00-Tomorrow J,-4.
I :30-News 13

The Almanac

By
United
Press
International
Today Is Sunday, Oct. 24,
the 298th day oll976 with 68 to
follow.
The moon ts between ita
new phase and ftrst quarter.
The morning stars are
Jupiter, Mercury and
Satum.
The evening stars are
Venus and Mars.
, Thoae born on this date are
under the sign of Scorpio.
American playwright Moss
Hart was born Oct. 24, 1904.

OLD furm ture, te e boxes , brass
beds, wall te lephones and
ports, or complee households.
Wnte M D Miller Rt &lt;I
Pomeroy Oh•o Coli 992·7760

CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products. Top pr.ce for standmg
sowt1mber Coli Kent Hanby
1-446-8570
$$CASH$$ for 1unked autos
Phone 742 2081 Frye's Tt;uck &amp;
Auto Ports, Rutland
COINS, 192' and older currency,
gold and st 1'o'er, scrap. Wtll buy,
sell or trade , foro good selac-

READY TO TRAVEL

Meigs
County
Form
BurtiU FeCter1tlon
Annuol meeting, Tuesdoy
nlghl, Oclober 26 - 7:21
p.m.
Sluk
dinner .
Enttrtalnmlltt.
Chetltr
Grode School, Chester, OH •
Tickets 11.50 ior lduWI and
$1.00 for clllldren. Cll119t2·
2111.

Hurry In For AGood DEAL

....

"Good Neighbor"

*· ..... .. .

for Ill ,.... IIMMtnce IIIIi•
1C, K. Snowden
24 State Street
G~llipoU,, Ohio
Ph nne H6 4290

.&amp;.......

hmto5pm
Enninv1 ftl .JJlO
~ 1'

lrom Nlllonal Manuh1Ctu1er

Wllh 12-year r~-eord oT auceess

1n a~ BILLION doHar 1ndus1r~
seekllout th1110Uior

NO SELLING!

Revive the o:~~~m::~~:~~~
of your rugs.

ACCOUNTS SECURED
BY Cat.f&gt;ANY
HUNDREDSAVAILABLE IN THIS

your own home

by Von Schrader
dry·foam method.
No muss. No fuss .
No odor. Use the
same day.

AREA

LO$t Lodits leather b1Ufold m
front of Duuons m Middleport
Coll949-2510.
Found·l971 Closs ring, South
Parkersburg · Please Identify
to claim, found at Meigs High
School grounds. Phone m

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
Open Evenings until&amp; p.m .

1970 BuiCk R1v1era good cond•· 1970 Yellowstone
han new !Ires $900 Phone
sleeps 6 Set up, very conve·
742-2796
mently $2000 Call 9.49-2014
ofter5p m
1975 MONTE CARLO outomot1c,
power sleenng , power brakes, 1968 13 h . Stop aver campmg
o1r condii10n1ng, AM rad1o and
troller Furnace, ICII!I box , sleeps
stereo, roily wheels wt11 sell
4 $575 Phone 985 3S06
reasona ble Phone 992 ·7036
" 1'969 Nova . extra sha rp, new
paml bucket seats 01r shocks,
mags Phone 9.49·2480
AUCTION SALE
1973 VW THING 35 mpg neor
MONDAY
perfect
condtllon. , Ric k
OCT 2S
Gilmore Rt 1, Reedsville (Sue
10:00 AM.
cess Road ) or phone 992 5323
Turn South of R 50 lust
of Athens onto C 17 , go
1976 Chevrolet .4 wheel drive West
w~ miles and tu rn nght
truck Phone 9"9 2132
onto C76, l!it house on rlghtr,
(J IJSt past Elm Golf C )
1973 Cad illac Eldorado Conver·
Lynchs are going to
table like new 1973 Toyota 2 The
Flor~da and w11l sell .
0 excellent condit1on 1969
ANTIQUE FURNITURE , 5
Buick 20 CAl l (304) 882-2793.
pieces PEWTER , 2 china
head
DOLLS ,
1969 Novo 6 cylmder, good co n
GLASSWARE,
CHINA,
d1llon $800 Phone 992 7054
STONEWARE - Inc ludes
Helse-v humidor, 15 p1eces
1968 Chevrolet C 20\ ~ % ton
porcela.n Bavar1a chcna , 25
pickup fruck Good condition
p1eces Fostorta, blown
Phonem..n27
enamel p1tcher. lg covered
compote, washStllnd pit·
1969 Dodge Coronet runs good
cher , much more , COAL &amp;
and m good cond1tion ·Quick
WOOD STOVES , NEW
• sole", $395 or best offer. Phone
G A· S
F URNACE ,
992-5524 .
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS,
APPLIANCES .
1969 Dodge Coronel , runs good
MACHINERY &amp; FARM
ond m good cond1t1on ' QuiCk
ITEMS- InCludes M F. 7'
sale" $395 or best offer Phone
mower, l pt hitc h post hole
992-5524
d1gger. pony cart , harness,
c:---:---:-,-Blacksm•lh Forge, anvil ,
1971 VEGA. Good condition good
28" hydraulic saw, horse
fire s, $800 Phone 992·2207
sled and plows, sm bofler
alter 6 Sond1 Sargent
and tank, tools. 100 rou~~
be les hay, etc Term! ~,
1973 Vega G T Stollon Wagon,
Cash or check w 10 Not
$1200 Cafl 742·2818 or contact
responsible for accidents.
R•chard Fetty, Rutland, ohio
Eats ava ila ble
Carlos W, Lynch
For sole by owner 1969 t( door
Owner
Cad1lloc Sedan OeV1IIe, full
Sheridan's Auct1an
power excellent condll lon
Service
Phone992·2413
Ph; 441-1261
1967 F1ol, $.400 PhOne 992·S.C62,

$4250
FOt lree brochure call
1-800.6otJ.S596 (!OIIIree

WEL.CO INC
510Piaza West Bulldmg
Little Rock Arkansa9
7'2205

FISHING TACKLE
CLEARANCE
All

Rods,

Line

Reels

&amp;

One· Third Off
All Lures
1/2 Price

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio
Winter Hours:
Man., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri. 9·

5

IF YOU hove a service fo offer,
want to buy or sell someth•ng,
oe lootung for work . . or
whatever . . you·ll get results
laster with o Sentintl Wont Ad
Coll992-2156.
ODDS and Ends Sale, Octobor 16,
17th 1976 at Five Poln'ts, State
Rt 7, 10:00tiiiS,ratn1arshlne
Back Porch Sole toch week. Monday thru Saturday. 10 till .5.
Guns, dlshet, depression gklt~,
dothlng, 7 hp motor, collec·
tables. man~ m11c. 1tem1.
Take Rt 124 to Itt 325, tt.n
toke Rt 325 to Donville Follow
tho signs. Phorio 742-24BI.

'
PLEASURE HORSES ond pontes,
also will buy horses and
ponlos Phone (614) 698-3290.
Ruth Reeves
AkC Rte'stered Saint Bernard
Puppl" , 2 molt, 1 female, 3
month1 old. Stror,g and
htolthy Phone (304) n3-5AM
or (304) 675-2310, Pt Ploaoont,
W Vo.
Pups, 7 wHkl, mlx.clbreed Fru
to good homos Phone 985·
4244 ,

I

2 hclroom Mobile Hom• outlide
Racine, phoot992·26$9
2 bedroom trailer. Phon• 992·
312'1 or 992·5434
Ono (I) Trailer spoco locotod ot
24'7 1/tMulb.rry Ave., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Phone 992-3044 or 9923736.

CHIPWOOD
10 Inches 011

largest end.

'8 PER TON

THE MAN TO CAll

Deliver To

with 11umlnum or vinyl

llclnt.

FREE ESTIM n•JES!
CONTACT

Alf4f·2101
Or
949-2140
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Rt. 2 Pomeroy, Ohio
.•;o

·:.

-

..

7' 2B·4 m!)S.
i~·~··~·m~o
~79~·~2~
~'~'2-~
L------~9~.~~1~m~o~ ·l___w_•_Dt~ll~v~or~~~-J
tOO~IE~tS~ot ~co~l/;3
AMPS,
One
of ~~
o kind
·

CODNER'S
CAM/ERS

.

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

Rainbow Ridge
BUhln Are•
Long Bottom, Ohio
Showing ' Swiss Co lony ,
Maple Leaf, Playmor ,
Cricket Salu , renta l,
service, supplies Travtl
trailers. truck campers,
camping trailers, truck
c•ps Special Saturday
nights Open evening' or by
appointmen t, conhct
Robert Codner
00· 11 · 1ma pd )

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
w'ecldings

KEN ,GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(614) 915-4155
Chesler, Ohio
10-17-1 mo(Pd)
.

D&amp;D
Construction
We repau• the old and build
the new . Papering, paint·
Int. panelingJ window
replacements,
glass.
rooftnt. hot mix , siding,
storm windows, doon,
remod1l kitchens and
baths, etc. Phone 949·2023.
No Sunday t11ts Plene .
10 141mo pd

House far sale IY1 bedrms , por
tlolly fu rn l$hed carpeted
$7900 or see
Lynn St , jUS I
off V•ne St , 1

HOUSE lor sole 5 rooms and
bo th, al l electnc, porllolly
carpeted, pOliO See Irene Cun·
d1ff , Fourth Street, Syracuse,
Ohto
Approximately 2 acres of ground
2 mob1le homes garage bose·
ment , form equ1pment and
BlOwn
wa ldlng equipment Phone
965-3837
lllllflaiiOII Senites
Fiolnti'IAMillble
3 bedroom Immobile home with
2.4 acre lot Two rooms bu1lt-on
Blowti lniOWals 1 '"'"
permanently Wall to wall
STOIM
carpel, range, refngerolor and
WIIIIOWS lliOOIS
garbage d•sposol. Lorge br~ck 2
IEPLAC£¥ENT
cor
goroge and workshop
WINDOWS .
Stee l ut1hty building Located
AUIIINUM
341 Rutland St M1ddleport A
SIDIIIG-SOFFln
good tnvestmenl at on ly
GUIJ(IIS-AJIII!II;S
110.000 Phone 992 3843.
New three bedroom house
carpet , Iorge k1tchen attached
Ph. 992·39!3 ~1~I ~o
garage Iorge lot Phone (614)
607 -6304
Commerc•ol property approx 11
Redi Haul
acres , level la nd located at
Fret
Tuppers Ploms on Ohio, Route
color brochure
7 Phone (614) 667 6304
•.:.:.__ _
Available in many s1zes,
3
bedroom
house
on
the
r~ght m
flatbeds . gra'J1ty beds and
Syracu$e go•ng from Pomeroy.
a variety of special ty
I f baths o1r condttlaned, F A
bodies for fleet use
gas lurnoce full basement and
Montgom erv Tra ller Sates
garage, poneu1on 1mmedla le·
At. 1, Box 121
lv . Phone 992 2266 evenings
LangSVille, OH 4.5741
for oppt
Phone (6141 669· 4245 ,
evenings
3 bei::lroom home, u. . mg room,
d1mng room firep lace full
FAIRMONT STEEL
basement extra lot w1lh dou·
PRODUCTS , INC .
ble &lt;or garage , $23,000 firm
Fa~rmont , Minn.
031
Phone (304) 743 6326
10·22 1 0 pd
House , .5 rooms end bath, I acre
of land . $11.500. Phone 7-42
2769
3 bedrooms 11/t baths large llv·
mg room, d1nmg room and kit·
chen, fu ll~ carpeted Phone
992 3129. or992 5434
BRADFORD Auctioneer , Com· "56
'--'-'0-"cr..:e.:.l::;oc.rm.:;:..
, 6= roo
..:.;m
.:_..hc_o-u,-, - o-n-d
plete Serv~ee Phone 949-2487
or 9.49-2000 Racine, Ohio Cnn
bath 2 outbulldmgs, all fenced
w1th mmerol nghts Askmg
Bradford.
$25 000 Phone 742·2766

LOCUST POSTS, round . or split.
Pllone 949·2774
COAL, l1mestone, ond colc:1 um
c~loride ond calcium brine tor
dust control and special mhung
salt for farmers. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992
3891
1971 HONDA CL-450, 12,000
miles, slssy bar crash bars,
pull bock handle bars , new f1re
and seals , Scrambler side
p1pes, $650 Cal! 949-2480
POTATOES and pumpkms. C W
Prollltf, Portland Oh1o Phone
843-2254
COAL for sole Open. 6 days per
week and evemngs For further
mlormotlon co li (614) 367-733B.
APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
STATE ROUTE ~9. PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (61•) 669-3785,
FULLER 8!11sh Products for sale
Phone 992-3410
MODERN stereo A~·FM rod~~
!rock tope comblnollon
Balance $97.40 or term5 . Call
9923965.
SCHOOL SEWING MACHINES,
Smgen 1n walnut consolette
leatur~ng buttonholes , blind
hem Sews on knits Cosh or
terms . Coii992-S146
ELECTROLUX SWEEPERS Rebuolt
with all attachments. $29. Also,
Hoover Sweepers tanks or
upr•ghts $18 Coli 992-51 .. 6
CAMPER
$600. Also, horse
troller $450 Phone (61C} 698·
3290.
Stove, $200 Refr l'fn;~tor, $100,
both 1 veor ol Phone 9C9·

-- -------- -

OHIO PALLR COMPANY

Southeasterfl Ohio
Co
Truss

GLEN R. BISSELL

ELWOOD
SweepersBOWERS
toasters REPAIR
, ~rons , o11
small opphonces Lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone [614) 985USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
3825
Timber1ack 2300 Sk1dder, Case
600 Skld·King $kidder, Inferno·
REMO.OELING Plumbmg. hooting
tionol 578 Hough Skldder;
and all types of general repa~r
John Dtett 2010 Wheel Loader.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
Contact Don Groves, or Lyons
perlence Phone 992-2409.
Equipment Co., Inc. C~rdev1lle,
D&amp;D
TREE Tnmmtng, 20 years ex·
Oh ~113 Phone (614) 474 W2B or
perience. Insured free
596·4769
• estimates Coli 992 2384 or
Fuel oil tank cop, 275 gallons , like
(614) 698-7257 Albany
new $40 Phone (614) 667-3303,
1
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
Lyons, Linzy. Tuppers Plams.
v1ce, all make!!, 992·2:28A The
OhiO
Fabric Shop, Po!T1eroy .
1974 40ft. DORSEY TRAILER woth
Authorized Singer Sales and
olidlng tondem. Coli 992 7/A1
Service, We sharpen Scissors.
after5p m.
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
FORO ET aluminum slot mog
bockhoe work dump trucks
2nA.
wheels, $3J Wh1te Scondtno·
and lo·boys for hire wlll haul
v1an style open flrep1oct w1th Sweet potatoes, 54,00 $S 00, and
fill dirt, to s01l , limestone and
chimney kit, $150. New 6ft. x 6
$6 00 bushel. rf.W lewis, Rt.
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef
ft building. wood w1th metal
124. Rac1ne, Ohio Phone 843·
fers . day phone 992-7089,
siding, lni'ulated, $80 4 h p. •2432.
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
rototlller, 1 year old, $150
5232
Firewood
Call
9C9-2630
or
992·
Phone 992·2820 from 9 till 4 and
n31.
EXCAVATING dozer, bockhoe
ask for Tina.
ond d1tcher Chorles R. Hal·
UNFINISHED
G.T
0
stock
cor
and
10 GALLON fish tonk write
held , Bock Hoe Service,
parts
.
Phone
992
2659
Harvey Leamond, P 0. Box 63,
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742-2008
Roclne, Ohio.
Apples and cider, bring con·
SEPTIC Systems msto11ed by
1974 Dodge Y, ton pickup, 'iJt'"- ~ ta1ners for apples. Brinker H•ll
l1censed Installer . Shepard
Orchards,
phone
992-7600.
dow olr conditioners 2 C.B
Conlrcctors Phone 7.. 2·2409
radio, Phone 992-7066
Garage Equipment, cheap.
bu!llness building 50 x 60, ex· SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
H &amp; N doy old started 1tghorn
Sanlfoticn , 992-3954 or 992·
cellent
condltlqn , cement
pullets 8oth floor or cage
242B
drlv&amp;,
Rutland
Corp.
,
price
grbwn available. Poultry Hous
reduced
Coli
742-2602
oiler
5
WILL
do rooting, construction,
lng and Automation Modern
p m Reoton for ,sefllng • poor
plumbing and heating No tob
Poultry, 399W Main , Pomeroy
health.
too large or too smo11 Phone
Phone992-2164.
742-2348
6
and
7
week
old
pigs
and
4
baby
General Eledrlc cloth.. dryer
boel Phono 949·2115
CARPENTER, flo~mng , ceiling,
ilkt now. White, CAll (614) 367paneling Phone 992·2759
PioJD'66i&amp;r -4110. Phone 992
7378
DOZER work ond wt1dlng Con·
tact James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Racine, on Carmel Rood
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
S£PT1C TANKS INSTALLED lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.
MOBILE Home Repa1r Elec ,
plumb1ng and heatmg . Phone
fGOd rll!\nlng condil!lon f!•w llr•• $6SO
992·5858
P'hone 91!1 3106
•
Will do odd jObs rooftng, po•n· GAs and"D.i...H;;;ng -Sai;;-o~
New Ashley Woodburnlng Stove
Service, 24 hours Phone 843·
11ng, gutter work. Phone 992
dealership offering savln91 at
2165 or 843-2341.
7409:'-:
· ---:---: - - - - ... - ~up to $50 on an~ Ashley cabinet
Estep
Weldmg and Fabrication
J.l1gh
school
girl
senior
available
or econom~ modelt Also,
Portable weld.ng rlgg, weldmg
for port time work , secretory
Cameron Cool Circulators
on all types , spac•altzlng In
Christine G•gllo , Rt
-4 , work preferr.cl On school
olummum truck bod1es Day or
Pomeroy, Oh1o Phone (614} work program Phone 992
ntght , phone (614) 698 ·-~ .
3940.
6'18·7191
Thur. &amp; Sot. 9-Noon

WANTID

Ph. 992·261111

CASH RECliiRED.

Addr1U and Talephone

•

maximum diameter

rrsnch1se

anyUmel or eentl N1me

GALVIN-FARRIS-ROSS Controct
1"'*6 $200 weeki~ possible
stuffing envelopes Send seff.
addressed,
stamped
envelope. Edroy Malls, Box
1118, Dept 516 Albony, MO
6oU02
Somaone needed to live m w1th
Invalid woman Please coli
992-2097
Babysitter wonted, 3 days per
week, Must hove own transpor·
tatlon . 1638 Lincoln He1ghts,
Pomeroy
Babys1tter wonted, 3 da~s per
wHk, Must hove own tronspor·
!allan. 1638 Lincoln Heights,
1
Pomeroy.
Waitress. apply In person Craw's
Steak House Pomero~~

r

'SWEEPER and sewing mochln•
r•pa lr, pods ond suppl1es Pick
~
- ...
up ond d•llvery, Davis Vacuum
~~
Cleaner, Yt mile up Georges
&lt;I
1Crook Rd. Ph . 446-0294.
· , THURMAN House, Antiques , Fur
ANY PITCH
, nlture stripping. repolr ond
ANY SIZE
rolintshlng Countv Rd: 8 oli 3l
C•nterville Vitloge 245·9479
PASQUAlE Electrtcol So-.Jco
b..&amp;...
46·2716 day or ntg.~hr::.._____
IUIIUII
•
BEGIN vour spring cloonlng by
hx 21·A
having your carpets cleon.d by
best method known . Remove
45715
Rutlond, Olllo
oil tho dirt. Moke your carpel
Ph. ( 6141742 •24G9
look now ogoln For ''"

-.,.--:::;ii;~--,

LARI\~~~DER

Men or Women. full or

Number to

MEROY MOTOR
992·2126

IU~ntnteed.

PEW' t~rne This rs not a

m9.

Chevrolet

All work

IMMEDIATE INCOI.1E
WITH MONEY BACK
RE-PURCHASE
AGREEMENT

II

You Clft IIVI hundreds
evtn tM~a~ndl of dolllrs

SEWING Moc:hlne r•palr service
All mak~t French City Fabr1c
St'loppe . 58 Court . Gall ipolis
Ohl. ~
o ,__ _ _ _ _ __

FREE SliM TES

lllk IOO!.Ir Dlslrlbutors

OtMr TK Omelet C...llu V•-

l mo

Company mart~e11ng d11e&lt;:t

.

.On Display Chevy Mini Ho111es

Poles

PlloMt4f·U14

You mey VISit llle IICIOf)llnd

metal

Wonted old upright p1onos 1n ony
condition. W1ll pay $10 each
First floor only Write glvmg
dlre&lt;:tlon!l to Witten P10no Co
8o ~ 188, Sord1s Oh1o 43946

MARK-UP 100%
VERY HIGH
VOLUME
BUSINESS

(3) 1976 Chevy Mini Homes

llon of comt Hove supphes lor

detectors . Roger
Wams le~ . on Leadmg Creek
and Rutland Road Phone 7422~1!~r-~~o:.;;fi.•:.o&lt;-:'--:-:--'-WANTED Chtpwood Poles mox·
•mum diameter , 10 inches on
largest end $8.00 per ton ,
bund led slobs, S6 00 p~r ton.
UPI•v.,r to Ohio POllet Com·
pony , Rt 2 Pomero~ , Oh1o
Phone 992-2689
:- -'--:-:
Fuel oil stove. Phone m-6010
from 6 tob
'Fuel oH stove Phone 992-6010
from6 to b
23 d 1onnel mob1le C 8 Phone
7A2-241Xl

~~~~f,•s-.hlonl,

COMPANY

If ·

"YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER"

,...,POU.:fPJAr

DIRECT

Red finish , good tires, clean Interior, automatic trans.,
economy.
•

•

Business Services

DIRE~1 f!Rs~~JALES

With topper, low mileage.

Whore
you

save

furnlsh.d apts. PMne 992544.

•.,.rv

1973.CHEVROLET lh Too ..... ..'2995

'2795

soo

~----···----················--·-··

1974 DATSUN ........................$2195

P1ckup C10 'h ton , a
l1ttle rough , but runs
r eal well good buy

u:::::;.. ~.~~~ NE~~4 MOTO~~eroy
THE 1977

and father, Fronk (Jack) K&lt;Out:
te&lt;. Jr. wllo -od awvy

,,
3 AND 4 RM. furn ished ond un-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1974 OPEL
Manta , 2 dr , H T , 4
cy l , 4 speed , extra
low mileage, a real
gas sav~r

'2195

Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Melvin Uttle
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle
Open Evenings Til7:00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD

1972 CHRYSLER
4

I owner car, green finish, green vinyl roof, redial
1....., tllrM air cond., v.a, with automatic P. •leering &amp;

V 8

dear husband

EXPIRIENQD

8 cyl , auto., P 5., P. B 1 radio.

1973 PINTO RUNABOUT 3 Dr•.•......•.•••••• 11895

of our

'*'"

1968 FORD 6' lh Too .............. '695
1971 CHEV. 8' lh Too.............~1995

DASHER ..•.•.•.••••.•.••••••••••••••.11995

~

thrH
'!80 on Oct. 24,
1973.
COUNTRY Mol&gt;llt Homo Porlt, Rt
$adly miOMd bv wHo, lonnlo on&lt;l
33. ten mlln north of Pomeroy
cllil-: Jock. Fronlt, Tlm ,Tom
Loree lots with concrete pattos,
and Debra Also, moth.r, Mrs.
sidewalks, runn•s and off
Freda Krautter and 111ter~ and
str..tparklng. Phone992 7479
brother~
ONE bedroom apartm.nts or
VILLAGE MANO\IIn Middleport
for $104 mont~ly plus elec, ..or
$130 Including ettctrlc. LOWER
RATES, FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
THE MCINE Flrt Deportment will
Conven•ent to shopping on
have a gun 1hoot Saturday at
Third ond Mill Stroo" In Mid6 30 p m. a~ their building In
dleport. Brand new high qualiBqshan.
f
ty apartments See the
NOW occeptl~tg piano students,
monoger ot Apt, 28, or call
bttlnntrs, lnttrmtdlotto, ad992-n21 .
vanced student1.' Call 992·
AVAilABlE at Riverside Apart·
2270.
ments. 1 bedroom apart·
Skate·A-Way annl?unces bua
ments, $100 p« month, 2
PliH.Z174
,_
schedule . •aclne and
bedroom apartments, $133 per
MlnenYIIIe,
Middleport,
month. Phono 992·3273
Pomeray Saturday nights.
3
Mdroom
mobllt home, tumlsh·
Optn Wtch. , friday ond Sotur·
ed ond unfurnl1hed adults on·
doy.
1 30 to 10 1111
I~
Water and heat paid.
Available for prlyate pgrtiH,
Phone 742-2692.
Monday, Tue•day, and
For
ThurldQV evening, Saturday Very nicel2 IC 65 house trader for
mottressos, paddln,. Ideal
and Sunday Ofttrl)oons Phone
lor compers. V1r ttY of
rent In Mason, W Va Adults
for reservations, 985·3929,
sills.
only, no"Pefs Contact Sandra,
985-9996 or 985-4141
992-5693 Monday through . Velvets, nyiQn prints ..
herculons, vinyl solids, 1nd
Friday. 9tlll3.
Brimstone MX, Sunday, I p.m.
Ioney prints, occouorl"!:
Rain, shine or snow, new ONE and 2 bedroom furnfshed
trailbikt clan. Coolville, Phone
apartments. Coli 992-3129 or
(614) 667·3610
992-5434
Pl. Pltosonl
Shooting Match, juat off Rt 1 by· 6 room house and bath,
Ph.675-3449
pou by Rock SPrings
Kingsbury Rood, Harr.10nvtlle
9:10-5:00 O.lly
C.metery, 12 noon, Sponsored
Phone 742·2Sn
TIUI:OOO Frldoys
by Lucky 7 Gun Club.
Tro1ier. odulls only Call 992·7639
FROSTY's Cl RADIO Equipment,
or 992-3181'
everything In two-way radio,
antennas ond occes Phone
Portland, 843-2855
eA.Iumlnum Gutttrs I
'OaWIISDOI.Jtt
Solar water heating units now
ROCiflnQ : A.tuml~~t~m Sldi"V
• &amp; Soffits
ovalloble. A home Improve
ment that poys for itself.
FedtroUy approvedoves In ·
lured Installer For informa·
tlon,· call Karl Culp Phone
992-7525 after Ss p m. on
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
weekends or wnte, Route 3,
PROFIT
· Pomeroy

equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, dlr1&lt; green
finish, Ieos than 9,000 miles, showroom citJln.

V 8. autometlc transmission

4

In

$3895 '
1976
AMC
HORNET··········
Sportaboul, 6 cyl., automatic, power s!Mrlng. deluxe

1972 DODGE CHALlENGER ...................... '995
1974 V.W.

For Fast Results lfse The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

s•IC'f'¥a'*I!IXT

·-- -- - - ___.._

-::=========
TEAFORD
o"

'
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomoroy,"O.
Phone ?92-3371
DOUBLE - 2 t1ve room
apartments. Nat gas, city
water, basement, 2 baths,
furnace 8. gordon $12,000
LARGE NEW - 9 room,
2112 baths, a woml!ln's
kitchen, lamlly room, sun
deck, garage and over 21h
acres. $46,000.

NEW LISTING -S acres, 4
room house that need•
everything. Dug well,
electric on a lonesome
country road: First $5,000.
NEW LISTING - l roomo,
2 bedroom•, nice beth,
dining, nat gas F A
furnace, basement with
washer-dryer.
Equ ipped
kitchen. $12,900.
RT. 124 - Like new 2'12
bedrooms, nice eat-In
kitchen, utility room,
cerem1c bath, nat gas F.A
furnace , carport and 'h
acre. 137,500.
RIVER LOT - 77x119 to
the water. Electric, water
and sewage . Only $3,000
11 ACRES - Real nice 3
bedroom spilt level, 1'h
bolhs, equipped kit . with
bar,
dining
area,
basement, family room
and garage near Tuppers
Plains . $41,500.
NEW LISTING - 3 year
old brick veneer, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kitchen. large dining with
olldlng glass doors Nlc.
carpeting, 2 car garage and
4 lots. On river front.
137 ,500.
CONVERT
YOUR
PROPERTY INTO CASH
IN VEST AND LIVE ON
THE lNTEREST .

Halloween ond holiday coc:*l•
stomps by Soroh Mosh1er. See
and buy at M cKnlgh t ~Dovl es
Hodwe , .. 3 Court St
Gallipolis Ph C46·137.. •

440 JOHN DEERE Do••f. Ph 4A6
0168
·=:._..~~~.~-

-

IN LOVING MEMORV OF Berthae
Mae Miller, who paned owa.,
Oc:t 23, 1961 You co nnol soy
you must not soy that she Is
dead. She Is just awoy , with o
cheory smile and a wove of the
hand she has wandered Into an
unltnoWn lond and left us
dreaming how very fo~r 11
needs must be, since sha
hngers there so think of her
formg on, as deor In the love ol
There os the love of Her,, Think
of her sllll 05 the some ond sa~
she IS not dead , she is just
away
Sadly mi ned b.,
daughter Mrs John K Clark
Parents, Mr and Mr, Stanle'JI
Swain , Brothers and S1s1ers

HOMESITE$ for sale I ocre and
up, Middleport near Rutland
Cali992 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 both'
all elec 1 acre M1ddleport
close to Rutland Phone 992
7481
SMALL farm for sole, 10% down
owner fmanced Monroe Coun
ty , W Vo . Phone (30 .. ) 772
3102 or (304) 7&lt;2-3227
COUNTR Y farmland with sedud
ed woods water ond good oc
ceu in Monroe Co unt y, W Vo
$1,000 down , coli (304) m
3102 or (304) 172 -3227

OUIIIIndlng River View
No. 185 - $42,000 This 8
rQQm house Is tilled with
extras New carpet, new
furnac::e best view of river
In town All In very good
condition. A prel!y place to
live $42,000.
Country Acrtt
No 172 100 Acres,
120,000. This land Is on
Improved road, less than a
mile to - hard-surface, ~
miles to otore. Farm It or
rest on It, good place for
your new home 24x34 barn,
poultry house and corn crib
already here. Get out of the
city, ln.est In property
120,000 dots II . Close to a
large mine, too.
How Aboul Tltls Ont?
No. 187 - 3'1• acres, 15250
This tract has peved road
frontage, In town location
It you're looking for land,
you should be s ure to see
this percel. Priced at S5250
For O.volopmlltl
No. 1B6 - 1B acres, 128.51111
This property Is In town,
walling t ... a lucky buyer to
develop . Pretty rolling
terrain . 528,500.
804 W. Main
Porner·o~
992-2298
Afte.r Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT:
IJtil PIUIIy
Bronch

Stock remov_. No charge.. JUNK auto and IC'fP meta~ Ph.
Coil 245·5514
3118-8716 _ _ _--:--:....;::.=.:;..:.:;_
LOGS WANTED top price paid lor
quality log• delivered to our
Huntin~j~ ,• cam p lnt
1nd
yard lndu•tr1al J lmblr and
hom esites
Land Co , Oak Hill Save • State
Ploh of S or m on 1trts.
Rt. 93. 3 mlleo N ol Ooi&lt; Hill ,
wlth euittlnt road fron·
1182-&lt;&gt;909. 1182-7687.
ta9 t, l2500
1nd up
Situated on St At 23), U
TIMBER. Top prices pold far stan·
.,u., from Gallipolis Ohio
ding tlmbe~, Industrial Timber
and
adjglnlnt , Wayne
oncfland Co , Oclk Hill Dlv , St.
National Forest , which
Rt 93, 3 miles 1'1 . 0 1 Oak Hili,
1Uords uc. public huntlnt
2-6909. 682-7687
1nd fishing, special hide· •
LO
:
:-I
A
:
:O:
D:,.:::O_:cF:.:,G,:_:OO
:;.:.D:::T::,O'-:P-:SC:::C:
O IL~,4-:4~
6.
1way aver 100 yun old
r•stored ub•n and 14
9304
IICrtl .
Fgr more In ·
torm aflon, call 446· 44'2 or
446-Jitl .
Financing
~~
available.
PROWlER
TRA.VEL lroll•rs, ' " the Nb 1
teller In the USA . Smith's Hon·
do Solos St Rt . 7, Gallipolis
Ohio .Ut~ · 1240
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels , 388·8274, Rt STARC R~FT FAll SALE
Ss.t, 'It milt east of Porter .
On mini motors trailen and lold
downs also u11td troller ond
BOARDING Siamese Klnens. Cit·
fold down priced to go We
de L. Kennela 2 mll•s from
service and quaiUy . CAMP
town 4.46 4824
~CONLEY STAR CRAFT SALES ..
CENTENARY Wood1 Kennel Pet
RT 62 N PT PLEASANt . W
grooming loc111tles, Ha ... • .,our
VA" - - - pel groo(T1ed undetjtr sanitary
cond All br•eds accepted.
4·6-0231
ORAGONWYNO Cattery-Kennel,
Medical Technologist
A K C ·C F A Hlmala~n (PerFOR LAIOIIATORY work, EKG
sian) and Slomeae 446·3844
and onlst with patients and
ofter 1 p m
physlclon , office Write PO Sox
RISING ST ~R KENNEL 8oordlng.
83.4
_ Hu~g~ V
:.;o:.;___
Indoor, outdoor runs, AKC
Shetland Sheep dogs (S heltles·
miniature collies ) Cht~hlre ,
Ph 367-0292
BRIAR PATCH Kenr1els !)oordlng
AKC Gordon Sellers, Engllah
C9cker Spanl•ls .... 6..(f91
AKC Reg Sain t Bernard puppies,
2 male, 1 lemo1e 3 mos old,
strong hea lthy. Ph 3().4 773
5.405 or b75 2310 Pt Pleasant,
W Vo
App~
AKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES , cham·
pion blood line , good temper·
ment, Ph, 67.5·2056
RED MALE do chshund, Ph 3670581

••11

NOW HIRING

Counter Waitress,
FIJ Cooks,
Curb Waitreaes.
in penon

at
Bob Evans Drive Inn.

NEWGMC
Truck Headqua rters
2- 1910 VW•I974 Vi T GMC
P1ckup
1974 'It T GMC Pickup
1974 1/t T, Ch4w PU 4 WD
1975 'It 1 Chev PU
191 1 Chev Impala
1973% o-, • . , Pickup
1rrl4 1/ , T GMCPU
1972 1 T. ~ord Sto"e Bod~
1975 Ford Mustang II
1975 three.fourlh C he~; PU -4 w
dr
1975 three fo urth T GMC PU 4 w
dr
1975 1 TonChev Stoke
1972 1/~ T Chev pickup
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS , INC
133 Pine St .
446-2532
69 FORO Pickup one· hall T , •46•
3712
72 Chev cu1 tom camper, three·
fourth T PU , 350, t( barrel ,
stock, $1300 coll379-2403
1971 MERCURV, Montlgo good
cond .. $800 446 1502
1975 PINTO Stal1on Wagon , 16 S00
miles Ph 446 0056
1968 AM Rebel , very good condl·
lion . $395 Ph256 1921
1970 DODGE Dart Swinger, low
mtleoge, good cond Priced to
sel l Phone 256-1921
73 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER.
340 PS PB o1r auto one
owner Cralgor wheels ond
rodloi !Ires, also 4 Roily rims
and tires, plua spore Ph 2-45
95118

-

-

----

SLEEPING Roomt week ly rote•
Pork Central Hetti
LOW week1v and monthly rat11 at
.....
Libb Hotel 446 ·1743
LIGHT hou1ekeeplng room Pork
Cehtrol Hole1
--------~
SLEEP ING roam• fo r rent Gollia.
Hqtel
OFFICE 1poce downto wn , 51.4 Se·
cond A.v$ 446·0008
TRAILER lot one mile !ro m HMC
Phone ••6·3805

_..__

-------

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APTS.
FURN. APT.

446·1599
6 ROOM house In city Writ• to
Box C27 In care of Go111poiiTrlbune
RENT A.l ovallabl• flrtt of October
now occupied by Central Soya
of the north side of Sycomor•
Street betwetn Second and
Third Avenue, rea•onab1• rent,
lor.,- parking area, call for on
appointment. Ph 446·1066.
MOBILE home, smo11, 8x35,
Hilltop Or. Call after 6, 675·
41186 .
NEW Mobile Home In Gallipolis ,
one or 2 adult1 only., houtt fur
nlshlngs central olr Ph 446·
0338:;__ _:__-.,....

SPRING VIII
rv
.........
GREEN APTS,

58 FORD FARM TRUCK . 14 It bod,
exc: cond , $500 388-8230
196ol FORD pick up truck, VB 292,
3 !lpd , good cond , Ph .44(,..
0088
197• DODGE QART SPOilT HAT·
- CHBACK, PS. powor disc
brakes auto low mileage corf
see Debbie Davis ot Jones Boys
or coil ofler 5 pm, 256-12-43
1912 PINTO, great gal mileage,
exc cond., 4 spd., frons il67·
7260
1972 ' FORD RANC!iERO pick up,
VB auto , PS, air cond , good
tires, shcr , $1800., 245·5617
69 OLDS 442, exc cond 350
auto . electric seats , Ond win·
dows, A,.·FI.\ , $1250.. Ph
256-6732, col l oiter 6 pm
1973 1.4 Ton Chevy pick up, ve,
will con1ldtr car In trad t up to
$:1)0 , value, Ph 2-45·5050
QUICK SAlE PRICE , 1972 Ford
Ranchero, Ph 446· 7440
1970 JEEP CJ-5, 4 WD, low
mileage, many extras 1966
HARLEV ·Ca..,ldton 74 Elec ·
troglide. A-1 cond .. P~ . 446
743B
72 Tovota Mork II . 71
Volkswogon , both 1tatlon
wagons, chickens 7.5C, each
Harl McGown, Woods Mill
Road , Bidwell , Ohio
71 MAVERICK, 6 ely. one owner,
245569S
1968 FORD MUSTANG std shift.
289, 6 cyl , private owner, good
cond., Ph ~46- 2311
72 FORO 11• Ton camper special,
auto PS, dual gas tanks ,
$1 ,625. , 4467512
69 01ds 88, very dean, all power,

MIDDLEPORT - ! '12 story
brick, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
dining room , enclosed
porch, front porch, N G
furnace, bath, garage, nice
level lot Needs some peper
or paint. $8,900.1111
POMEROY - . Walk to
shop, 2 story trame, 3
bedroomo, bath, utility R..
lois ot storage, penellng
end
other . features ,, ~A
:c:M
~
·F,::
M:;c•,::
rod
~
lo:c•P
~h~
3,:.
79:::·2=,
2 8811:..,..,.
$8,5001111
1975 BUICK llmltod, 4 Dr , HT, AC,
TUPPERS PLAINS PS, P8, AM FM Sttrf'O, exc.
cond ., one owner , Call C. Leon
Bran~ new, J bedrooms,
Soundtn, ai ..C6·2673, or se• at
ceram lc bath, lovely
12 Belmont Or
kitchen (loads of cabinets),
utility R., fully carpeted,
large garage, approx. I
acre. 523.000 oo
Four Wheel
POMEROY - Close ln. 5
Drive Trallrldt
bedrooms, 1'h baths, lull
sunday Oc:t. 24 et 1 p.m .
stutt 1t the Gallla Co Fair
basement, N G. or coal
Ground and covert Chief
heat, nice kitchen. A REAL
Corntf1lk area 1t P't .
BUY AT $7,500.00
• Phtaunf. All • -wd owners
welcome Brlnt the flmlly.
LE-T US SELL YOUR
Sponsored by the Ohio
PROPERTY.
River Valley 4-wd club for
HENRY E. CLELAND
info call 2.-S-5347 . HS-SOU
BROKER
1tter 6 p m.

1 &amp; 2 Br. u 'n furn . Apts.

L---.-4_46_·1..:5~99..:..__...:....1
TRAILER SPACE Iorge lot on Rt 35
near shopp)ng area $~ mo
Phone -446 1909
M081LE HOME $160 month,
utilities paid, on Rt 160 5 miles
from ho1pltal adult1 Phont
3811·8688
MOBILE HOME space, Upper River
Rood, Phofle 446·0008
FURNISHED APT , I Or 2 adults on·
ly, central heat , First floor , oft
street parkln9 ph -446·0338
MOBILE ~OME , I BR , m Third
Ave adults only, no pets
Phano 446 3748 or 2:16-1903
EFFICENCY APARTMENT, furnish ed In town, one or two only .
$130 per mo utll pd , small
deposit , ~h , 446·35.0 or C46·

OOIB
AVA. NOV . 1, furn . apl., -4 rooms
and bath, adults only, no pets
446-1945 after 5

•

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

1113 laths
Ont Utility

P1y Only

AddiiOfl, OhiO
For lntorm1tlon
Call Shlrlty Adkins

367·7250
CLEA,..INGEST carpet cltanlr you
ever used, sa easy too Get
Blu• Lustre Rent elctrlc sham·
pooor $1 Control Suppl Co.
FU~N APT 4 rooms ond bath,
controlly locotod. oclults anly .
coll446 0444
COITAGE IN THE COUNTRY .
•ultoble for one pers9fl. mutt
be dependable and no pets,
$60. per month, plus utlltlet,
oloo utility dtp coil 256-6233
GARAGE FOR THE WINIER ph
446-4127

�'

•

FORD TO GET
"'ORE USE
OUT OF A
DAN
THOMPSON USED CAR

GO

FORD

CAiortlUCK
from

POMEROY·MOUJR 'CO-..

A~l.

CHEVROLET MONTE

Low mileage, gas saver.

1

1973 CHEVY VEGA .............................. 1295

1975
PONTIAC ASTRE

cylinder, automatic transmission.

1971 CHEVELLE 4 DR.......................... 11294

2 d r. 4 cy l • auto

rea l low m ileage

6 cylinder, automatic transmission .

'2995

1970 DODGE DART 4 DR...................... 11295
6 cylinder, standa rd transmission

1974 MERCURY

1972 CHEVY IMP. 2 DR....................... .12195

Montego MX , 2 dr l'
H T , ye llow wilp
Wh1te v1ny l top , air ,
sharp

One loca l owner, very clean

1972 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .................. 12995
Ai r, power steering anCI brakes, clean.

'3195

1

1

1972 FORD LTD BROUGHAM 4 DR........... 1895

1974 PONTIAC

One owner

F treb lrd , red w1th
While buckets , auto,
P S , P B , loca l one
owner

1972 PINTO WAGON ........................... .'1695
4 cylinder, automat ic transmission .

1974
PLYMOUTH
Sebnng , 2 Or , H T ,

au to , P s ,
P B
sun dance
modeL e)ctra n1ce,
low mileage

•3-995

1

1974 GRAND TORINO 4 DR. .................. 2795

'3295

1973 FORD

(),e local owner

1970 RANCHERO SQUIRE... ................... 1795
1

F250, " ~ ton pickup , 6
c yl s tandard A rea l
n1 ce work tr uc k,
local owner

Wood gra in trim , V 8, power steering.

1972 GMC lfz TON PICKUP..................... 11995

1973 DODGE
0100 1!1 ton p1ck up,
auto
P S, P B,
Enttra low m11eage
Th1s IS a n1ce pickup

•2395

'2795

Step side. 6 cylinder, standard transmiSSIOn

1974 FORD lh TON PICKUP....................13195

Ma ch 1, auto , P s,
P B , 360 eng me , low
mileage , a n1 ce spor t
car

Ole local owner

MANY MORE

992·2196

dr , sea , Newpor t
Custom , go ld w1th
matching gold 1n
tenor . a~r n1ce

1973 CHEV.

Imp c ustom , 2 dr ,
H T , brow n wlfh
be•ge
v.nyl top ,
aut o , a 1r , a nece car

proce~2'495

'2195

1972 PONTIAC

Grand Pn x, 2 dr ,
H T has over 90,000
miles on runs , like a
.ne w one, shar-p car

1966 CHEV.

Now Showing
The Leader of
Luxury Cars.
Visit Our
Showroom
And See For

I.I

Yourself.
I

I

.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
992-5342

Cadi llac-Oidsmobile
GMC f•nancing Avalla~le

Pomeroy

"You'll Li ke Our Q Ill w
ua Y ay of Doing BusineSs"

5

0Den Eves. Til6- Til o.m . S~t.
See one of these courteous salesmen:
Pete Burns
.
Lloyd, Mclaughlin
Mac.v;n Keebaugh
-

Television Log
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1976
6 OG-VIewpolnt 8: This Is the Life 10
6:311-Jerry Falwell 4, Talking Hands 8, Public Polley
Forums 10; Newsmoker '76 13
7·oo-chrlslopher Closeup3, Thinking In Black 8: Rev.
Cleophus Robinson 13
7 311-This Is the Life 3: Your Health 4; Buliwlnkle 6,
Jerry Falwell B, To Be annou nced 10. Amazlnn
Grace Bible Class 13.
'
7 55-Black Cameo 4
B·OG-Mormon Choir 3: Day of Discovery 4; Ten~essee
'tuxedo 6, Church Service 10; Blue Ridge Quarto! ,
13; Sesame Street 20.
.
8 3il-'--Oral Roberts 3, Yours For the Asking 4, Gospel
Caravan 6; Day of Discovery 8; James RobiS0!1
Presents 10, Rex Hulmbard 13, Open Bible IS.
9:00-Gospel S1nglng Jubilee 3, Hour of Power 4, Oral
Roberts 10: Rex Hum bard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass
8; Acros1 the Fence 15; Mister Rogers 20 .
9 :3~ Whot Does The Bible Plainly Say? B; Movie
Anchors Aweigh" 10; Christ Is the Answer 13
Insight 15, Sesame Street 20
'
I O : ~Jim Franklin 3; Church Service 4. Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8, Jimmy Swaggart 13
•
Faith for Today 15.
'
10:311-B lg Blue ('Aorble 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4 15
Rex Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggart 6; This Is 'th~
Life 15; Zoom 20
II 00-TV Chapel 3, OSU F.ootball Highlights 4 Hot
Fudge 6; Rex Humberd 15; Rev. Henry Maha~ 13·
Rebop 20.
'
11 :311-At Issue 3, How to Follow the Campaign 6·
Face the. Nation B. Testimony Time 13; Once Upon'
,a Classic 20:
12 &gt;00-Meet the' Press 3,4,15; losues ancfAnowers ,
6

•

210 2 door, local car. 4 •peed trans , 44,21111 miles, good
tires, dark green finish, real economy.

8' Fleetslde VS engine, autamanc trans , factory air, p
steering &amp; brakes, local. 1 owner, low mileage truck,
good tires, radio.

1975lUV PICKUP. ................ $3195
CHEVELLE MALIBU ........ .
H T cpe., good tires, radio, VB, automatic, P .S.. P . B.,
bucket seats, runs good, needs paint.

1969 V.W. 2 DR.....................SS95
Runs good, new tires, radio.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR... }1595

Rev. Robert Schuler a. Evangelistic outreach 13,
Soundstate 20 ,
12 30-Grandsland 3,15, News Conference4 4; NFL
Today 8. The Issue 10, Lower Lighthouse 13.
1 00-NFL Football 3,15, NFL Football 4; Com. munlque6; NFL Football8,10. College Football '76
131 Adams Chrolcles 20. Infinity Factory 33
1 30-Aware 6, Zoom 33.
2:0G-Pol nt of View 6, ls!5ues and Answers 13; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 20; Once Upon a
Classic 33
2:3if-'-Formby 's Antique Furniture Workshop 6, Rebop
33
3·00-Movle "Blood on the Sun" 6, Next Generation 13,
French Chef 33.
3 3&lt;&gt;-Town Topics 13; Un Day Concert 3s3 .
4·00-NFLFootball3.4,15; l!!uesandAnswers4, NFL
Football 8,10; Movie "The Big Show" 13
•·311-Puzzle Children 20
5:00-Witness to Yesterday 6, Tennis for Everyone 33
5.311-Space. 1999 6; What' s Wrong With My Chi ld? 20;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
6.00-Fran Curci Footbaii1J;Sesame Street 20, Wall
Street Week 33
6·311-News 6; World Press 33. Newsmaker '16 13
7.00-Movle "20,000 Leagues Under the See" 3,4,15,
am Cosby 6,13, 60 Minutes 8, 10; Crockett's VIctory
Garden 20; Onedln L1ne 33
7.311-Anllques 20.
8·00-Six Million Dollar Man 6,13 , Sonny 8. Cher 8, 10;
Evening at Symphony 20,33
9 00-Movle "The Stepford Wives" 6,13; Kojak 8,10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20,33
9.311-McCioud 3.4.15 .
lO ·OD-De1vecchlo 8,10, Great Performances 20,33 .
10 55-Political Program 3.4, 15
11 00-News 3,4,8, 10,15
11 15--CBS News 8, 10; Music Hall Amerlce IS
11.20-Poiltlcal Program 6.13.
11 25-Peter Marshall 6, News 13
11 :30-Star Trek 3; Movie "What's so Bad About
Feeling Good? " 4, Movie "Flight to Tangier" B;
Face the Notion 10
11·55--lronslde 13.
12.00-Howail Five 0 10.
12 · ~ABC News 6,13 , Political Program 10.
1 :00-News 20; Janakl 33
1 311-Peyton Place 4.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1976
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 IS-English 3; Farm Report 13.
6·211-Not For Women Only 13
6·3o--&lt;:oiumbuo Today 3; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
,
Ounce ot Prevention 10
6·4S--Mornlng Report 3.
6 so..-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13
1 00-Today 3,4,15, Good Morning, America 6,13, CBS
News B: Chuck White Reports 10.
7 05--Schooiles IU.
I 4S-Sesame St 33.
8 OO-La5Sie 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10.
8 30-Big Valley 6.
9·00-A.M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15, Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
·
9:30-Cro... wlts3; One Life to Llve6; Good Day 8.
10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Pr ice Is Right 8 10 Mike
Douglao 13
' '
10 15-'-General Hospital 6.
10.30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 ,00-Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
'
Night 6; Gambll8, 10; Morning with D J 13 E lee
· Co. 20.
· · ' . ·
II 30-Stumpers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13, l.ove of Life
8, 10, Sesame 51 20,33.
'11.55--Take Kerr 8, Ms. Fixll 10
12·oo-New5 3,6,8, 10; Don Ho 13, Bob Braun 4, 50
Grand Slam 15
.
12:311-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13, Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 55-NBC News 3, IS.
1·00-Somerset 3, Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Concentration 8;
Young 8. the Restleso .IO; Not For Women' Only 15
1·311-0aysofO'fL1ves3.4.1S: Family Feud6,13; As

The World Turns 8,10
2 00-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6
2· 311-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8 10,
Getting On 20.
'
3 15--General Hospital 13.
3 30-Max B Nimble- 6, Match Game a, 10.
4.00-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus 1\'elby, M.D. 4,
Somerset 15, fiowdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8, Sesame 51 20,33, Movie " Dear Brigitte" 10.
Dinah 13
4•30-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6. Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15
5.00-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch a,
. Mister Rogers 20,33; Star rek 15.
5:311-News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec Co. 20 33· Adam12 13
' '
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15. ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Education In Transition 33.
6 311-NBC News3.4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B,IO, Hodgepodge Lodge 20
7.00-Town fiall Decision '76 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10, To
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affair 15; Oil-From God's
Bedroom 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7•30-Bobby Vinton 4; Muppet Show 6, Gong Show 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10;
Candid Camera 13; Friends of Man 15
B ~apt 8. Tennille 6,13; Movie "Amelia Earhart"
4, 13; Rhoda 8, 10; Adams Chronicles 20,33 .
8 30-$128,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.
9 00-NFL Football6,13. Maude 8, 10; In Performance
at Wolf Trap 20,33.
9·311-All'o Fair 8,10.
10 :00-Executlve Suite B,10, News 20; Soundstage 33.
10:30-Farm Digest 20
10:55--Polltlcal Program 8,10
11 :0G-News 3,4,B,10,1S; MocNeii-Lehrer Report 33.
11 ·311-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS. Movie "The Morning
Allier" 8; Mar~ Hartman 10; Bikes Bikes, Bikes 33.
12.~News 6, 13; Movie "The Swimmer" 10; Janak!
12 .311-Coilege Football '76 6; lron 5ide 13.
1:00-Tomorrow J,-4.
I :30-News 13

The Almanac

By
United
Press
International
Today Is Sunday, Oct. 24,
the 298th day oll976 with 68 to
follow.
The moon ts between ita
new phase and ftrst quarter.
The morning stars are
Jupiter, Mercury and
Satum.
The evening stars are
Venus and Mars.
, Thoae born on this date are
under the sign of Scorpio.
American playwright Moss
Hart was born Oct. 24, 1904.

OLD furm ture, te e boxes , brass
beds, wall te lephones and
ports, or complee households.
Wnte M D Miller Rt &lt;I
Pomeroy Oh•o Coli 992·7760

CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products. Top pr.ce for standmg
sowt1mber Coli Kent Hanby
1-446-8570
$$CASH$$ for 1unked autos
Phone 742 2081 Frye's Tt;uck &amp;
Auto Ports, Rutland
COINS, 192' and older currency,
gold and st 1'o'er, scrap. Wtll buy,
sell or trade , foro good selac-

READY TO TRAVEL

Meigs
County
Form
BurtiU FeCter1tlon
Annuol meeting, Tuesdoy
nlghl, Oclober 26 - 7:21
p.m.
Sluk
dinner .
Enttrtalnmlltt.
Chetltr
Grode School, Chester, OH •
Tickets 11.50 ior lduWI and
$1.00 for clllldren. Cll119t2·
2111.

Hurry In For AGood DEAL

....

"Good Neighbor"

*· ..... .. .

for Ill ,.... IIMMtnce IIIIi•
1C, K. Snowden
24 State Street
G~llipoU,, Ohio
Ph nne H6 4290

.&amp;.......

hmto5pm
Enninv1 ftl .JJlO
~ 1'

lrom Nlllonal Manuh1Ctu1er

Wllh 12-year r~-eord oT auceess

1n a~ BILLION doHar 1ndus1r~
seekllout th1110Uior

NO SELLING!

Revive the o:~~~m::~~:~~~
of your rugs.

ACCOUNTS SECURED
BY Cat.f&gt;ANY
HUNDREDSAVAILABLE IN THIS

your own home

by Von Schrader
dry·foam method.
No muss. No fuss .
No odor. Use the
same day.

AREA

LO$t Lodits leather b1Ufold m
front of Duuons m Middleport
Coll949-2510.
Found·l971 Closs ring, South
Parkersburg · Please Identify
to claim, found at Meigs High
School grounds. Phone m

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
Open Evenings until&amp; p.m .

1970 BuiCk R1v1era good cond•· 1970 Yellowstone
han new !Ires $900 Phone
sleeps 6 Set up, very conve·
742-2796
mently $2000 Call 9.49-2014
ofter5p m
1975 MONTE CARLO outomot1c,
power sleenng , power brakes, 1968 13 h . Stop aver campmg
o1r condii10n1ng, AM rad1o and
troller Furnace, ICII!I box , sleeps
stereo, roily wheels wt11 sell
4 $575 Phone 985 3S06
reasona ble Phone 992 ·7036
" 1'969 Nova . extra sha rp, new
paml bucket seats 01r shocks,
mags Phone 9.49·2480
AUCTION SALE
1973 VW THING 35 mpg neor
MONDAY
perfect
condtllon. , Ric k
OCT 2S
Gilmore Rt 1, Reedsville (Sue
10:00 AM.
cess Road ) or phone 992 5323
Turn South of R 50 lust
of Athens onto C 17 , go
1976 Chevrolet .4 wheel drive West
w~ miles and tu rn nght
truck Phone 9"9 2132
onto C76, l!it house on rlghtr,
(J IJSt past Elm Golf C )
1973 Cad illac Eldorado Conver·
Lynchs are going to
table like new 1973 Toyota 2 The
Flor~da and w11l sell .
0 excellent condit1on 1969
ANTIQUE FURNITURE , 5
Buick 20 CAl l (304) 882-2793.
pieces PEWTER , 2 china
head
DOLLS ,
1969 Novo 6 cylmder, good co n
GLASSWARE,
CHINA,
d1llon $800 Phone 992 7054
STONEWARE - Inc ludes
Helse-v humidor, 15 p1eces
1968 Chevrolet C 20\ ~ % ton
porcela.n Bavar1a chcna , 25
pickup fruck Good condition
p1eces Fostorta, blown
Phonem..n27
enamel p1tcher. lg covered
compote, washStllnd pit·
1969 Dodge Coronet runs good
cher , much more , COAL &amp;
and m good cond1tion ·Quick
WOOD STOVES , NEW
• sole", $395 or best offer. Phone
G A· S
F URNACE ,
992-5524 .
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS,
APPLIANCES .
1969 Dodge Coronel , runs good
MACHINERY &amp; FARM
ond m good cond1t1on ' QuiCk
ITEMS- InCludes M F. 7'
sale" $395 or best offer Phone
mower, l pt hitc h post hole
992-5524
d1gger. pony cart , harness,
c:---:---:-,-Blacksm•lh Forge, anvil ,
1971 VEGA. Good condition good
28" hydraulic saw, horse
fire s, $800 Phone 992·2207
sled and plows, sm bofler
alter 6 Sond1 Sargent
and tank, tools. 100 rou~~
be les hay, etc Term! ~,
1973 Vega G T Stollon Wagon,
Cash or check w 10 Not
$1200 Cafl 742·2818 or contact
responsible for accidents.
R•chard Fetty, Rutland, ohio
Eats ava ila ble
Carlos W, Lynch
For sole by owner 1969 t( door
Owner
Cad1lloc Sedan OeV1IIe, full
Sheridan's Auct1an
power excellent condll lon
Service
Phone992·2413
Ph; 441-1261
1967 F1ol, $.400 PhOne 992·S.C62,

$4250
FOt lree brochure call
1-800.6otJ.S596 (!OIIIree

WEL.CO INC
510Piaza West Bulldmg
Little Rock Arkansa9
7'2205

FISHING TACKLE
CLEARANCE
All

Rods,

Line

Reels

&amp;

One· Third Off
All Lures
1/2 Price

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio
Winter Hours:
Man., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri. 9·

5

IF YOU hove a service fo offer,
want to buy or sell someth•ng,
oe lootung for work . . or
whatever . . you·ll get results
laster with o Sentintl Wont Ad
Coll992-2156.
ODDS and Ends Sale, Octobor 16,
17th 1976 at Five Poln'ts, State
Rt 7, 10:00tiiiS,ratn1arshlne
Back Porch Sole toch week. Monday thru Saturday. 10 till .5.
Guns, dlshet, depression gklt~,
dothlng, 7 hp motor, collec·
tables. man~ m11c. 1tem1.
Take Rt 124 to Itt 325, tt.n
toke Rt 325 to Donville Follow
tho signs. Phorio 742-24BI.

'
PLEASURE HORSES ond pontes,
also will buy horses and
ponlos Phone (614) 698-3290.
Ruth Reeves
AkC Rte'stered Saint Bernard
Puppl" , 2 molt, 1 female, 3
month1 old. Stror,g and
htolthy Phone (304) n3-5AM
or (304) 675-2310, Pt Ploaoont,
W Vo.
Pups, 7 wHkl, mlx.clbreed Fru
to good homos Phone 985·
4244 ,

I

2 hclroom Mobile Hom• outlide
Racine, phoot992·26$9
2 bedroom trailer. Phon• 992·
312'1 or 992·5434
Ono (I) Trailer spoco locotod ot
24'7 1/tMulb.rry Ave., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Phone 992-3044 or 9923736.

CHIPWOOD
10 Inches 011

largest end.

'8 PER TON

THE MAN TO CAll

Deliver To

with 11umlnum or vinyl

llclnt.

FREE ESTIM n•JES!
CONTACT

Alf4f·2101
Or
949-2140
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Rt. 2 Pomeroy, Ohio
.•;o

·:.

-

..

7' 2B·4 m!)S.
i~·~··~·m~o
~79~·~2~
~'~'2-~
L------~9~.~~1~m~o~ ·l___w_•_Dt~ll~v~or~~~-J
tOO~IE~tS~ot ~co~l/;3
AMPS,
One
of ~~
o kind
·

CODNER'S
CAM/ERS

.

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

Rainbow Ridge
BUhln Are•
Long Bottom, Ohio
Showing ' Swiss Co lony ,
Maple Leaf, Playmor ,
Cricket Salu , renta l,
service, supplies Travtl
trailers. truck campers,
camping trailers, truck
c•ps Special Saturday
nights Open evening' or by
appointmen t, conhct
Robert Codner
00· 11 · 1ma pd )

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
w'ecldings

KEN ,GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(614) 915-4155
Chesler, Ohio
10-17-1 mo(Pd)
.

D&amp;D
Construction
We repau• the old and build
the new . Papering, paint·
Int. panelingJ window
replacements,
glass.
rooftnt. hot mix , siding,
storm windows, doon,
remod1l kitchens and
baths, etc. Phone 949·2023.
No Sunday t11ts Plene .
10 141mo pd

House far sale IY1 bedrms , por
tlolly fu rn l$hed carpeted
$7900 or see
Lynn St , jUS I
off V•ne St , 1

HOUSE lor sole 5 rooms and
bo th, al l electnc, porllolly
carpeted, pOliO See Irene Cun·
d1ff , Fourth Street, Syracuse,
Ohto
Approximately 2 acres of ground
2 mob1le homes garage bose·
ment , form equ1pment and
BlOwn
wa ldlng equipment Phone
965-3837
lllllflaiiOII Senites
Fiolnti'IAMillble
3 bedroom Immobile home with
2.4 acre lot Two rooms bu1lt-on
Blowti lniOWals 1 '"'"
permanently Wall to wall
STOIM
carpel, range, refngerolor and
WIIIIOWS lliOOIS
garbage d•sposol. Lorge br~ck 2
IEPLAC£¥ENT
cor
goroge and workshop
WINDOWS .
Stee l ut1hty building Located
AUIIINUM
341 Rutland St M1ddleport A
SIDIIIG-SOFFln
good tnvestmenl at on ly
GUIJ(IIS-AJIII!II;S
110.000 Phone 992 3843.
New three bedroom house
carpet , Iorge k1tchen attached
Ph. 992·39!3 ~1~I ~o
garage Iorge lot Phone (614)
607 -6304
Commerc•ol property approx 11
Redi Haul
acres , level la nd located at
Fret
Tuppers Ploms on Ohio, Route
color brochure
7 Phone (614) 667 6304
•.:.:.__ _
Available in many s1zes,
3
bedroom
house
on
the
r~ght m
flatbeds . gra'J1ty beds and
Syracu$e go•ng from Pomeroy.
a variety of special ty
I f baths o1r condttlaned, F A
bodies for fleet use
gas lurnoce full basement and
Montgom erv Tra ller Sates
garage, poneu1on 1mmedla le·
At. 1, Box 121
lv . Phone 992 2266 evenings
LangSVille, OH 4.5741
for oppt
Phone (6141 669· 4245 ,
evenings
3 bei::lroom home, u. . mg room,
d1mng room firep lace full
FAIRMONT STEEL
basement extra lot w1lh dou·
PRODUCTS , INC .
ble &lt;or garage , $23,000 firm
Fa~rmont , Minn.
031
Phone (304) 743 6326
10·22 1 0 pd
House , .5 rooms end bath, I acre
of land . $11.500. Phone 7-42
2769
3 bedrooms 11/t baths large llv·
mg room, d1nmg room and kit·
chen, fu ll~ carpeted Phone
992 3129. or992 5434
BRADFORD Auctioneer , Com· "56
'--'-'0-"cr..:e.:.l::;oc.rm.:;:..
, 6= roo
..:.;m
.:_..hc_o-u,-, - o-n-d
plete Serv~ee Phone 949-2487
or 9.49-2000 Racine, Ohio Cnn
bath 2 outbulldmgs, all fenced
w1th mmerol nghts Askmg
Bradford.
$25 000 Phone 742·2766

LOCUST POSTS, round . or split.
Pllone 949·2774
COAL, l1mestone, ond colc:1 um
c~loride ond calcium brine tor
dust control and special mhung
salt for farmers. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992
3891
1971 HONDA CL-450, 12,000
miles, slssy bar crash bars,
pull bock handle bars , new f1re
and seals , Scrambler side
p1pes, $650 Cal! 949-2480
POTATOES and pumpkms. C W
Prollltf, Portland Oh1o Phone
843-2254
COAL for sole Open. 6 days per
week and evemngs For further
mlormotlon co li (614) 367-733B.
APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
STATE ROUTE ~9. PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (61•) 669-3785,
FULLER 8!11sh Products for sale
Phone 992-3410
MODERN stereo A~·FM rod~~
!rock tope comblnollon
Balance $97.40 or term5 . Call
9923965.
SCHOOL SEWING MACHINES,
Smgen 1n walnut consolette
leatur~ng buttonholes , blind
hem Sews on knits Cosh or
terms . Coii992-S146
ELECTROLUX SWEEPERS Rebuolt
with all attachments. $29. Also,
Hoover Sweepers tanks or
upr•ghts $18 Coli 992-51 .. 6
CAMPER
$600. Also, horse
troller $450 Phone (61C} 698·
3290.
Stove, $200 Refr l'fn;~tor, $100,
both 1 veor ol Phone 9C9·

-- -------- -

OHIO PALLR COMPANY

Southeasterfl Ohio
Co
Truss

GLEN R. BISSELL

ELWOOD
SweepersBOWERS
toasters REPAIR
, ~rons , o11
small opphonces Lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone [614) 985USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
3825
Timber1ack 2300 Sk1dder, Case
600 Skld·King $kidder, Inferno·
REMO.OELING Plumbmg. hooting
tionol 578 Hough Skldder;
and all types of general repa~r
John Dtett 2010 Wheel Loader.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
Contact Don Groves, or Lyons
perlence Phone 992-2409.
Equipment Co., Inc. C~rdev1lle,
D&amp;D
TREE Tnmmtng, 20 years ex·
Oh ~113 Phone (614) 474 W2B or
perience. Insured free
596·4769
• estimates Coli 992 2384 or
Fuel oil tank cop, 275 gallons , like
(614) 698-7257 Albany
new $40 Phone (614) 667-3303,
1
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
Lyons, Linzy. Tuppers Plams.
v1ce, all make!!, 992·2:28A The
OhiO
Fabric Shop, Po!T1eroy .
1974 40ft. DORSEY TRAILER woth
Authorized Singer Sales and
olidlng tondem. Coli 992 7/A1
Service, We sharpen Scissors.
after5p m.
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
FORO ET aluminum slot mog
bockhoe work dump trucks
2nA.
wheels, $3J Wh1te Scondtno·
and lo·boys for hire wlll haul
v1an style open flrep1oct w1th Sweet potatoes, 54,00 $S 00, and
fill dirt, to s01l , limestone and
chimney kit, $150. New 6ft. x 6
$6 00 bushel. rf.W lewis, Rt.
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef
ft building. wood w1th metal
124. Rac1ne, Ohio Phone 843·
fers . day phone 992-7089,
siding, lni'ulated, $80 4 h p. •2432.
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
rototlller, 1 year old, $150
5232
Firewood
Call
9C9-2630
or
992·
Phone 992·2820 from 9 till 4 and
n31.
EXCAVATING dozer, bockhoe
ask for Tina.
ond d1tcher Chorles R. Hal·
UNFINISHED
G.T
0
stock
cor
and
10 GALLON fish tonk write
held , Bock Hoe Service,
parts
.
Phone
992
2659
Harvey Leamond, P 0. Box 63,
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742-2008
Roclne, Ohio.
Apples and cider, bring con·
SEPTIC Systems msto11ed by
1974 Dodge Y, ton pickup, 'iJt'"- ~ ta1ners for apples. Brinker H•ll
l1censed Installer . Shepard
Orchards,
phone
992-7600.
dow olr conditioners 2 C.B
Conlrcctors Phone 7.. 2·2409
radio, Phone 992-7066
Garage Equipment, cheap.
bu!llness building 50 x 60, ex· SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
H &amp; N doy old started 1tghorn
Sanlfoticn , 992-3954 or 992·
cellent
condltlqn , cement
pullets 8oth floor or cage
242B
drlv&amp;,
Rutland
Corp.
,
price
grbwn available. Poultry Hous
reduced
Coli
742-2602
oiler
5
WILL
do rooting, construction,
lng and Automation Modern
p m Reoton for ,sefllng • poor
plumbing and heating No tob
Poultry, 399W Main , Pomeroy
health.
too large or too smo11 Phone
Phone992-2164.
742-2348
6
and
7
week
old
pigs
and
4
baby
General Eledrlc cloth.. dryer
boel Phono 949·2115
CARPENTER, flo~mng , ceiling,
ilkt now. White, CAll (614) 367paneling Phone 992·2759
PioJD'66i&amp;r -4110. Phone 992
7378
DOZER work ond wt1dlng Con·
tact James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Racine, on Carmel Rood
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
S£PT1C TANKS INSTALLED lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992-2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.
MOBILE Home Repa1r Elec ,
plumb1ng and heatmg . Phone
fGOd rll!\nlng condil!lon f!•w llr•• $6SO
992·5858
P'hone 91!1 3106
•
Will do odd jObs rooftng, po•n· GAs and"D.i...H;;;ng -Sai;;-o~
New Ashley Woodburnlng Stove
Service, 24 hours Phone 843·
11ng, gutter work. Phone 992
dealership offering savln91 at
2165 or 843-2341.
7409:'-:
· ---:---: - - - - ... - ~up to $50 on an~ Ashley cabinet
Estep
Weldmg and Fabrication
J.l1gh
school
girl
senior
available
or econom~ modelt Also,
Portable weld.ng rlgg, weldmg
for port time work , secretory
Cameron Cool Circulators
on all types , spac•altzlng In
Christine G•gllo , Rt
-4 , work preferr.cl On school
olummum truck bod1es Day or
Pomeroy, Oh1o Phone (614} work program Phone 992
ntght , phone (614) 698 ·-~ .
3940.
6'18·7191
Thur. &amp; Sot. 9-Noon

WANTID

Ph. 992·261111

CASH RECliiRED.

Addr1U and Talephone

•

maximum diameter

rrsnch1se

anyUmel or eentl N1me

GALVIN-FARRIS-ROSS Controct
1"'*6 $200 weeki~ possible
stuffing envelopes Send seff.
addressed,
stamped
envelope. Edroy Malls, Box
1118, Dept 516 Albony, MO
6oU02
Somaone needed to live m w1th
Invalid woman Please coli
992-2097
Babysitter wonted, 3 days per
week, Must hove own transpor·
tatlon . 1638 Lincoln He1ghts,
Pomeroy
Babys1tter wonted, 3 da~s per
wHk, Must hove own tronspor·
!allan. 1638 Lincoln Heights,
1
Pomeroy.
Waitress. apply In person Craw's
Steak House Pomero~~

r

'SWEEPER and sewing mochln•
r•pa lr, pods ond suppl1es Pick
~
- ...
up ond d•llvery, Davis Vacuum
~~
Cleaner, Yt mile up Georges
&lt;I
1Crook Rd. Ph . 446-0294.
· , THURMAN House, Antiques , Fur
ANY PITCH
, nlture stripping. repolr ond
ANY SIZE
rolintshlng Countv Rd: 8 oli 3l
C•nterville Vitloge 245·9479
PASQUAlE Electrtcol So-.Jco
b..&amp;...
46·2716 day or ntg.~hr::.._____
IUIIUII
•
BEGIN vour spring cloonlng by
hx 21·A
having your carpets cleon.d by
best method known . Remove
45715
Rutlond, Olllo
oil tho dirt. Moke your carpel
Ph. ( 6141742 •24G9
look now ogoln For ''"

-.,.--:::;ii;~--,

LARI\~~~DER

Men or Women. full or

Number to

MEROY MOTOR
992·2126

IU~ntnteed.

PEW' t~rne This rs not a

m9.

Chevrolet

All work

IMMEDIATE INCOI.1E
WITH MONEY BACK
RE-PURCHASE
AGREEMENT

II

You Clft IIVI hundreds
evtn tM~a~ndl of dolllrs

SEWING Moc:hlne r•palr service
All mak~t French City Fabr1c
St'loppe . 58 Court . Gall ipolis
Ohl. ~
o ,__ _ _ _ _ __

FREE SliM TES

lllk IOO!.Ir Dlslrlbutors

OtMr TK Omelet C...llu V•-

l mo

Company mart~e11ng d11e&lt;:t

.

.On Display Chevy Mini Ho111es

Poles

PlloMt4f·U14

You mey VISit llle IICIOf)llnd

metal

Wonted old upright p1onos 1n ony
condition. W1ll pay $10 each
First floor only Write glvmg
dlre&lt;:tlon!l to Witten P10no Co
8o ~ 188, Sord1s Oh1o 43946

MARK-UP 100%
VERY HIGH
VOLUME
BUSINESS

(3) 1976 Chevy Mini Homes

llon of comt Hove supphes lor

detectors . Roger
Wams le~ . on Leadmg Creek
and Rutland Road Phone 7422~1!~r-~~o:.;;fi.•:.o&lt;-:'--:-:--'-WANTED Chtpwood Poles mox·
•mum diameter , 10 inches on
largest end $8.00 per ton ,
bund led slobs, S6 00 p~r ton.
UPI•v.,r to Ohio POllet Com·
pony , Rt 2 Pomero~ , Oh1o
Phone 992-2689
:- -'--:-:
Fuel oil stove. Phone m-6010
from 6 tob
'Fuel oH stove Phone 992-6010
from6 to b
23 d 1onnel mob1le C 8 Phone
7A2-241Xl

~~~~f,•s-.hlonl,

COMPANY

If ·

"YOUR FRIENDLY DEALER"

,...,POU.:fPJAr

DIRECT

Red finish , good tires, clean Interior, automatic trans.,
economy.
•

•

Business Services

DIRE~1 f!Rs~~JALES

With topper, low mileage.

Whore
you

save

furnlsh.d apts. PMne 992544.

•.,.rv

1973.CHEVROLET lh Too ..... ..'2995

'2795

soo

~----···----················--·-··

1974 DATSUN ........................$2195

P1ckup C10 'h ton , a
l1ttle rough , but runs
r eal well good buy

u:::::;.. ~.~~~ NE~~4 MOTO~~eroy
THE 1977

and father, Fronk (Jack) K&lt;Out:
te&lt;. Jr. wllo -od awvy

,,
3 AND 4 RM. furn ished ond un-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1974 OPEL
Manta , 2 dr , H T , 4
cy l , 4 speed , extra
low mileage, a real
gas sav~r

'2195

Save Now on a 1976 Pinto, Mustang, or Maverick.
See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Melvin Uttle
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle
Open Evenings Til7:00
Except Thurs. and Sat.
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD

1972 CHRYSLER
4

I owner car, green finish, green vinyl roof, redial
1....., tllrM air cond., v.a, with automatic P. •leering &amp;

V 8

dear husband

EXPIRIENQD

8 cyl , auto., P 5., P. B 1 radio.

1973 PINTO RUNABOUT 3 Dr•.•......•.•••••• 11895

of our

'*'"

1968 FORD 6' lh Too .............. '695
1971 CHEV. 8' lh Too.............~1995

DASHER ..•.•.•.••••.•.••••••••••••••.11995

~

thrH
'!80 on Oct. 24,
1973.
COUNTRY Mol&gt;llt Homo Porlt, Rt
$adly miOMd bv wHo, lonnlo on&lt;l
33. ten mlln north of Pomeroy
cllil-: Jock. Fronlt, Tlm ,Tom
Loree lots with concrete pattos,
and Debra Also, moth.r, Mrs.
sidewalks, runn•s and off
Freda Krautter and 111ter~ and
str..tparklng. Phone992 7479
brother~
ONE bedroom apartm.nts or
VILLAGE MANO\IIn Middleport
for $104 mont~ly plus elec, ..or
$130 Including ettctrlc. LOWER
RATES, FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
THE MCINE Flrt Deportment will
Conven•ent to shopping on
have a gun 1hoot Saturday at
Third ond Mill Stroo" In Mid6 30 p m. a~ their building In
dleport. Brand new high qualiBqshan.
f
ty apartments See the
NOW occeptl~tg piano students,
monoger ot Apt, 28, or call
bttlnntrs, lnttrmtdlotto, ad992-n21 .
vanced student1.' Call 992·
AVAilABlE at Riverside Apart·
2270.
ments. 1 bedroom apart·
Skate·A-Way annl?unces bua
ments, $100 p« month, 2
PliH.Z174
,_
schedule . •aclne and
bedroom apartments, $133 per
MlnenYIIIe,
Middleport,
month. Phono 992·3273
Pomeray Saturday nights.
3
Mdroom
mobllt home, tumlsh·
Optn Wtch. , friday ond Sotur·
ed ond unfurnl1hed adults on·
doy.
1 30 to 10 1111
I~
Water and heat paid.
Available for prlyate pgrtiH,
Phone 742-2692.
Monday, Tue•day, and
For
ThurldQV evening, Saturday Very nicel2 IC 65 house trader for
mottressos, paddln,. Ideal
and Sunday Ofttrl)oons Phone
lor compers. V1r ttY of
rent In Mason, W Va Adults
for reservations, 985·3929,
sills.
only, no"Pefs Contact Sandra,
985-9996 or 985-4141
992-5693 Monday through . Velvets, nyiQn prints ..
herculons, vinyl solids, 1nd
Friday. 9tlll3.
Brimstone MX, Sunday, I p.m.
Ioney prints, occouorl"!:
Rain, shine or snow, new ONE and 2 bedroom furnfshed
trailbikt clan. Coolville, Phone
apartments. Coli 992-3129 or
(614) 667·3610
992-5434
Pl. Pltosonl
Shooting Match, juat off Rt 1 by· 6 room house and bath,
Ph.675-3449
pou by Rock SPrings
Kingsbury Rood, Harr.10nvtlle
9:10-5:00 O.lly
C.metery, 12 noon, Sponsored
Phone 742·2Sn
TIUI:OOO Frldoys
by Lucky 7 Gun Club.
Tro1ier. odulls only Call 992·7639
FROSTY's Cl RADIO Equipment,
or 992-3181'
everything In two-way radio,
antennas ond occes Phone
Portland, 843-2855
eA.Iumlnum Gutttrs I
'OaWIISDOI.Jtt
Solar water heating units now
ROCiflnQ : A.tuml~~t~m Sldi"V
• &amp; Soffits
ovalloble. A home Improve
ment that poys for itself.
FedtroUy approvedoves In ·
lured Installer For informa·
tlon,· call Karl Culp Phone
992-7525 after Ss p m. on
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
weekends or wnte, Route 3,
PROFIT
· Pomeroy

equipment, whitewall tires, luggage rack, dlr1&lt; green
finish, Ieos than 9,000 miles, showroom citJln.

V 8. autometlc transmission

4

In

$3895 '
1976
AMC
HORNET··········
Sportaboul, 6 cyl., automatic, power s!Mrlng. deluxe

1972 DODGE CHALlENGER ...................... '995
1974 V.W.

For Fast Results lfse The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

s•IC'f'¥a'*I!IXT

·-- -- - - ___.._

-::=========
TEAFORD
o"

'
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomoroy,"O.
Phone ?92-3371
DOUBLE - 2 t1ve room
apartments. Nat gas, city
water, basement, 2 baths,
furnace 8. gordon $12,000
LARGE NEW - 9 room,
2112 baths, a woml!ln's
kitchen, lamlly room, sun
deck, garage and over 21h
acres. $46,000.

NEW LISTING -S acres, 4
room house that need•
everything. Dug well,
electric on a lonesome
country road: First $5,000.
NEW LISTING - l roomo,
2 bedroom•, nice beth,
dining, nat gas F A
furnace, basement with
washer-dryer.
Equ ipped
kitchen. $12,900.
RT. 124 - Like new 2'12
bedrooms, nice eat-In
kitchen, utility room,
cerem1c bath, nat gas F.A
furnace , carport and 'h
acre. 137,500.
RIVER LOT - 77x119 to
the water. Electric, water
and sewage . Only $3,000
11 ACRES - Real nice 3
bedroom spilt level, 1'h
bolhs, equipped kit . with
bar,
dining
area,
basement, family room
and garage near Tuppers
Plains . $41,500.
NEW LISTING - 3 year
old brick veneer, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kitchen. large dining with
olldlng glass doors Nlc.
carpeting, 2 car garage and
4 lots. On river front.
137 ,500.
CONVERT
YOUR
PROPERTY INTO CASH
IN VEST AND LIVE ON
THE lNTEREST .

Halloween ond holiday coc:*l•
stomps by Soroh Mosh1er. See
and buy at M cKnlgh t ~Dovl es
Hodwe , .. 3 Court St
Gallipolis Ph C46·137.. •

440 JOHN DEERE Do••f. Ph 4A6
0168
·=:._..~~~.~-

-

IN LOVING MEMORV OF Berthae
Mae Miller, who paned owa.,
Oc:t 23, 1961 You co nnol soy
you must not soy that she Is
dead. She Is just awoy , with o
cheory smile and a wove of the
hand she has wandered Into an
unltnoWn lond and left us
dreaming how very fo~r 11
needs must be, since sha
hngers there so think of her
formg on, as deor In the love ol
There os the love of Her,, Think
of her sllll 05 the some ond sa~
she IS not dead , she is just
away
Sadly mi ned b.,
daughter Mrs John K Clark
Parents, Mr and Mr, Stanle'JI
Swain , Brothers and S1s1ers

HOMESITE$ for sale I ocre and
up, Middleport near Rutland
Cali992 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 both'
all elec 1 acre M1ddleport
close to Rutland Phone 992
7481
SMALL farm for sole, 10% down
owner fmanced Monroe Coun
ty , W Vo . Phone (30 .. ) 772
3102 or (304) 7&lt;2-3227
COUNTR Y farmland with sedud
ed woods water ond good oc
ceu in Monroe Co unt y, W Vo
$1,000 down , coli (304) m
3102 or (304) 172 -3227

OUIIIIndlng River View
No. 185 - $42,000 This 8
rQQm house Is tilled with
extras New carpet, new
furnac::e best view of river
In town All In very good
condition. A prel!y place to
live $42,000.
Country Acrtt
No 172 100 Acres,
120,000. This land Is on
Improved road, less than a
mile to - hard-surface, ~
miles to otore. Farm It or
rest on It, good place for
your new home 24x34 barn,
poultry house and corn crib
already here. Get out of the
city, ln.est In property
120,000 dots II . Close to a
large mine, too.
How Aboul Tltls Ont?
No. 187 - 3'1• acres, 15250
This tract has peved road
frontage, In town location
It you're looking for land,
you should be s ure to see
this percel. Priced at S5250
For O.volopmlltl
No. 1B6 - 1B acres, 128.51111
This property Is In town,
walling t ... a lucky buyer to
develop . Pretty rolling
terrain . 528,500.
804 W. Main
Porner·o~
992-2298
Afte.r Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT:
IJtil PIUIIy
Bronch

Stock remov_. No charge.. JUNK auto and IC'fP meta~ Ph.
Coil 245·5514
3118-8716 _ _ _--:--:....;::.=.:;..:.:;_
LOGS WANTED top price paid lor
quality log• delivered to our
Huntin~j~ ,• cam p lnt
1nd
yard lndu•tr1al J lmblr and
hom esites
Land Co , Oak Hill Save • State
Ploh of S or m on 1trts.
Rt. 93. 3 mlleo N ol Ooi&lt; Hill ,
wlth euittlnt road fron·
1182-&lt;&gt;909. 1182-7687.
ta9 t, l2500
1nd up
Situated on St At 23), U
TIMBER. Top prices pold far stan·
.,u., from Gallipolis Ohio
ding tlmbe~, Industrial Timber
and
adjglnlnt , Wayne
oncfland Co , Oclk Hill Dlv , St.
National Forest , which
Rt 93, 3 miles 1'1 . 0 1 Oak Hili,
1Uords uc. public huntlnt
2-6909. 682-7687
1nd fishing, special hide· •
LO
:
:-I
A
:
:O:
D:,.:::O_:cF:.:,G,:_:OO
:;.:.D:::T::,O'-:P-:SC:::C:
O IL~,4-:4~
6.
1way aver 100 yun old
r•stored ub•n and 14
9304
IICrtl .
Fgr more In ·
torm aflon, call 446· 44'2 or
446-Jitl .
Financing
~~
available.
PROWlER
TRA.VEL lroll•rs, ' " the Nb 1
teller In the USA . Smith's Hon·
do Solos St Rt . 7, Gallipolis
Ohio .Ut~ · 1240
BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels , 388·8274, Rt STARC R~FT FAll SALE
Ss.t, 'It milt east of Porter .
On mini motors trailen and lold
downs also u11td troller ond
BOARDING Siamese Klnens. Cit·
fold down priced to go We
de L. Kennela 2 mll•s from
service and quaiUy . CAMP
town 4.46 4824
~CONLEY STAR CRAFT SALES ..
CENTENARY Wood1 Kennel Pet
RT 62 N PT PLEASANt . W
grooming loc111tles, Ha ... • .,our
VA" - - - pel groo(T1ed undetjtr sanitary
cond All br•eds accepted.
4·6-0231
ORAGONWYNO Cattery-Kennel,
Medical Technologist
A K C ·C F A Hlmala~n (PerFOR LAIOIIATORY work, EKG
sian) and Slomeae 446·3844
and onlst with patients and
ofter 1 p m
physlclon , office Write PO Sox
RISING ST ~R KENNEL 8oordlng.
83.4
_ Hu~g~ V
:.;o:.;___
Indoor, outdoor runs, AKC
Shetland Sheep dogs (S heltles·
miniature collies ) Cht~hlre ,
Ph 367-0292
BRIAR PATCH Kenr1els !)oordlng
AKC Gordon Sellers, Engllah
C9cker Spanl•ls .... 6..(f91
AKC Reg Sain t Bernard puppies,
2 male, 1 lemo1e 3 mos old,
strong hea lthy. Ph 3().4 773
5.405 or b75 2310 Pt Pleasant,
W Vo
App~
AKC DOBERMAN PUPPIES , cham·
pion blood line , good temper·
ment, Ph, 67.5·2056
RED MALE do chshund, Ph 3670581

••11

NOW HIRING

Counter Waitress,
FIJ Cooks,
Curb Waitreaes.
in penon

at
Bob Evans Drive Inn.

NEWGMC
Truck Headqua rters
2- 1910 VW•I974 Vi T GMC
P1ckup
1974 'It T GMC Pickup
1974 1/t T, Ch4w PU 4 WD
1975 'It 1 Chev PU
191 1 Chev Impala
1973% o-, • . , Pickup
1rrl4 1/ , T GMCPU
1972 1 T. ~ord Sto"e Bod~
1975 Ford Mustang II
1975 three.fourlh C he~; PU -4 w
dr
1975 three fo urth T GMC PU 4 w
dr
1975 1 TonChev Stoke
1972 1/~ T Chev pickup
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS , INC
133 Pine St .
446-2532
69 FORO Pickup one· hall T , •46•
3712
72 Chev cu1 tom camper, three·
fourth T PU , 350, t( barrel ,
stock, $1300 coll379-2403
1971 MERCURV, Montlgo good
cond .. $800 446 1502
1975 PINTO Stal1on Wagon , 16 S00
miles Ph 446 0056
1968 AM Rebel , very good condl·
lion . $395 Ph256 1921
1970 DODGE Dart Swinger, low
mtleoge, good cond Priced to
sel l Phone 256-1921
73 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER.
340 PS PB o1r auto one
owner Cralgor wheels ond
rodloi !Ires, also 4 Roily rims
and tires, plua spore Ph 2-45
95118

-

-

----

SLEEPING Roomt week ly rote•
Pork Central Hetti
LOW week1v and monthly rat11 at
.....
Libb Hotel 446 ·1743
LIGHT hou1ekeeplng room Pork
Cehtrol Hole1
--------~
SLEEP ING roam• fo r rent Gollia.
Hqtel
OFFICE 1poce downto wn , 51.4 Se·
cond A.v$ 446·0008
TRAILER lot one mile !ro m HMC
Phone ••6·3805

_..__

-------

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APTS.
FURN. APT.

446·1599
6 ROOM house In city Writ• to
Box C27 In care of Go111poiiTrlbune
RENT A.l ovallabl• flrtt of October
now occupied by Central Soya
of the north side of Sycomor•
Street betwetn Second and
Third Avenue, rea•onab1• rent,
lor.,- parking area, call for on
appointment. Ph 446·1066.
MOBILE home, smo11, 8x35,
Hilltop Or. Call after 6, 675·
41186 .
NEW Mobile Home In Gallipolis ,
one or 2 adult1 only., houtt fur
nlshlngs central olr Ph 446·
0338:;__ _:__-.,....

SPRING VIII
rv
.........
GREEN APTS,

58 FORD FARM TRUCK . 14 It bod,
exc: cond , $500 388-8230
196ol FORD pick up truck, VB 292,
3 !lpd , good cond , Ph .44(,..
0088
197• DODGE QART SPOilT HAT·
- CHBACK, PS. powor disc
brakes auto low mileage corf
see Debbie Davis ot Jones Boys
or coil ofler 5 pm, 256-12-43
1912 PINTO, great gal mileage,
exc cond., 4 spd., frons il67·
7260
1972 ' FORD RANC!iERO pick up,
VB auto , PS, air cond , good
tires, shcr , $1800., 245·5617
69 OLDS 442, exc cond 350
auto . electric seats , Ond win·
dows, A,.·FI.\ , $1250.. Ph
256-6732, col l oiter 6 pm
1973 1.4 Ton Chevy pick up, ve,
will con1ldtr car In trad t up to
$:1)0 , value, Ph 2-45·5050
QUICK SAlE PRICE , 1972 Ford
Ranchero, Ph 446· 7440
1970 JEEP CJ-5, 4 WD, low
mileage, many extras 1966
HARLEV ·Ca..,ldton 74 Elec ·
troglide. A-1 cond .. P~ . 446
743B
72 Tovota Mork II . 71
Volkswogon , both 1tatlon
wagons, chickens 7.5C, each
Harl McGown, Woods Mill
Road , Bidwell , Ohio
71 MAVERICK, 6 ely. one owner,
245569S
1968 FORD MUSTANG std shift.
289, 6 cyl , private owner, good
cond., Ph ~46- 2311
72 FORO 11• Ton camper special,
auto PS, dual gas tanks ,
$1 ,625. , 4467512
69 01ds 88, very dean, all power,

MIDDLEPORT - ! '12 story
brick, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
dining room , enclosed
porch, front porch, N G
furnace, bath, garage, nice
level lot Needs some peper
or paint. $8,900.1111
POMEROY - . Walk to
shop, 2 story trame, 3
bedroomo, bath, utility R..
lois ot storage, penellng
end
other . features ,, ~A
:c:M
~
·F,::
M:;c•,::
rod
~
lo:c•P
~h~
3,:.
79:::·2=,
2 8811:..,..,.
$8,5001111
1975 BUICK llmltod, 4 Dr , HT, AC,
TUPPERS PLAINS PS, P8, AM FM Sttrf'O, exc.
cond ., one owner , Call C. Leon
Bran~ new, J bedrooms,
Soundtn, ai ..C6·2673, or se• at
ceram lc bath, lovely
12 Belmont Or
kitchen (loads of cabinets),
utility R., fully carpeted,
large garage, approx. I
acre. 523.000 oo
Four Wheel
POMEROY - Close ln. 5
Drive Trallrldt
bedrooms, 1'h baths, lull
sunday Oc:t. 24 et 1 p.m .
stutt 1t the Gallla Co Fair
basement, N G. or coal
Ground and covert Chief
heat, nice kitchen. A REAL
Corntf1lk area 1t P't .
BUY AT $7,500.00
• Phtaunf. All • -wd owners
welcome Brlnt the flmlly.
LE-T US SELL YOUR
Sponsored by the Ohio
PROPERTY.
River Valley 4-wd club for
HENRY E. CLELAND
info call 2.-S-5347 . HS-SOU
BROKER
1tter 6 p m.

1 &amp; 2 Br. u 'n furn . Apts.

L---.-4_46_·1..:5~99..:..__...:....1
TRAILER SPACE Iorge lot on Rt 35
near shopp)ng area $~ mo
Phone -446 1909
M081LE HOME $160 month,
utilities paid, on Rt 160 5 miles
from ho1pltal adult1 Phont
3811·8688
MOBILE HOME space, Upper River
Rood, Phofle 446·0008
FURNISHED APT , I Or 2 adults on·
ly, central heat , First floor , oft
street parkln9 ph -446·0338
MOBILE ~OME , I BR , m Third
Ave adults only, no pets
Phano 446 3748 or 2:16-1903
EFFICENCY APARTMENT, furnish ed In town, one or two only .
$130 per mo utll pd , small
deposit , ~h , 446·35.0 or C46·

OOIB
AVA. NOV . 1, furn . apl., -4 rooms
and bath, adults only, no pets
446-1945 after 5

•

TARA
TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

2 Bedroom
Townhouses

1113 laths
Ont Utility

P1y Only

AddiiOfl, OhiO
For lntorm1tlon
Call Shlrlty Adkins

367·7250
CLEA,..INGEST carpet cltanlr you
ever used, sa easy too Get
Blu• Lustre Rent elctrlc sham·
pooor $1 Control Suppl Co.
FU~N APT 4 rooms ond bath,
controlly locotod. oclults anly .
coll446 0444
COITAGE IN THE COUNTRY .
•ultoble for one pers9fl. mutt
be dependable and no pets,
$60. per month, plus utlltlet,
oloo utility dtp coil 256-6233
GARAGE FOR THE WINIER ph
446-4127

�•

6-D-The Sunday TlJnes.Sentinel Sunday Oct 24 11176

7-D-'Die &amp;mdly Times-Sentinel &amp;inday Oct 24, 1916

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunilay Times-Sentinel CliJssifieds

' ~ ili.
+ w£1or-.-41iP:
=-=~
~---

.: . .

CANADAY REALTY
2S1f2 Locust

St Galhpohs

RUSSELL WOOD

OhiO

155 Second Avenue G.· 111polls Ohio
Oll1ce 446 7900
Home 446 1049
LISTINGS NEEDED NOW TO FIT OUR
BUYERS NEEDS
GALLIPOLIS AREA LISTINII&gt;

~ ~=

REALTY
u L.ICUII St
Howard 8ranlfon:\roker
Olllct 446 2t14
Lucille ann non
e..~· 4~ 1116 ., t461614

Mernll Carter

Bonnie Stutes

........
446-2885

Associate
Ph Home 379-2184

Ph. Home

GaUia

County~

LOV!LV

FIVE BEDROOM carpetee homelocatee 4 miles from
downtown Gallipolis Two w b fireplaces two baths w
showers beautiful woodee 3 acre lot heatee and coolee
wllh heat pump Gallipolis City School District Call
for more information

Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

-

~l

AT RIO GRANDE
Extra nice 3 year old brick home carpetee throughout

T.

L.!rge living room formal dining room 3 bedrooms
family room with beamee ceiling and woodburnlng
fireplace Super equipped kitchen city water and

Leadi~1gham

ALMOST NEW

J BEDROOM JUST COMPLETED

Been llvee In • short lime 3 beeroom home located In

Quiet neighborhood This home swell constructed on a
n ce level lot 140 x160 Frame constructton with bt ck
front master bedroom with bath Ntce bunt m kttchen
table top electric range and wall oven The house ts
fully carpeted and has atta ched garage T h s one you
w II ! ke medtum priced Owner wtll help finance
qual HP.d b ver Call now

windows single car garage New li sting don t watt to

see

near a shopping center and hospital Prlu recently

reeucee to S32 900 00 This area Is growing and
developing rapidly and property values will surely
increase greatly heft over the ned few years If you
are considering buy ng in this pr ce range you owe It to
yourself to look at this Call us today for more
information and an appointment

GREEN ACR
112 baths cor

dishwasher Cl

t-ftl n IS ION - Brand new 3 BR
;)1\1\.U family room range hood
a r ctuallty construction throughout

$34 000

Three beeroom home with modern kitchen lots of

WANT TO SELL?
NEW ON THE MARKET
66 acre farm - 20 ac res

CHEAPIE - 3 rm home
on J acres wooded land on~
au bu d ng
some fur
n lu re
1 rep ace
n LR
S5 000

t lc'lbl e 15 acres n ce
t mber 30 acres asture J
BR 2 s ory ' D'"'ome 2
barns
~ L'1 and
ch eke ~
• ac or

RIO GRANDE AREA Jus off Rt 35 block ranch
ype home features 20 K 24
LR w th t rep ace all mod
conv 30 )( dO barn 25 acres
eve
to rot ng pa s ure
enced pond S37 500

bush ho
... .&lt;e baler
plow
mow ng
mach ne 200 ba es hay 6
cows
and
2 calves

numerou s sma

tools

hs

farm won
be on the
market ong at SJS 000

Beller ca II soon

M Nl FARM

Ideal

COZY 2 BR
t,IY new
home 5 ...,..
~~\ ty a
•o e ed
e ectr ~
mod
ove y
coun ry
ng
c y
schools •23 500

for

ho ses Jl" acres nearly all
fenced good uge barn
land leve to o)l ng a ll
cleared Good 3 BR w. th
bath t ame ho me SI8.000

'KEMPER HOLLOW -

m es from c v J
fram e rar)ch on g lot
t n sh th s yourself and
save $21 000

Offered to you at lbe bargain price ol S23 500 DO
Excellently constructed 3 bedroom on a large lot In a
very pleasant neighborhood In Kyger Creek School
District Give us

a

call today and let us show you th s

OTHER COUNSELORS
Denver K Higley 446 0002
Joe Crans 2S6 14S6
ADVERTISING With the Gallery of

KIMBALL SWINGER 100 0 gon
Ry hn box 2 y s o d $500
small d neue se wooden 4
cho s $50 Ear y A ne co
solo and 2 cho rs $50 o4-t6
13 6
NEW3 PC 8 sue $15995Reg
S 99 95 R ce s New and U!&gt;ed
Fun u e
--~~-

SWEET POTATOES Co 388 8754
HAV $ 25 per bole pure h one~
$2 50 a qt co olte 5 446

1052

FUEL OIL fu nonce hot wa er
heater
k tchen cob ne 5
both oorn I x tu es cal used
Ph 256 65&lt;4"

-

FIREWOOD SOLO by Wh e Ook
8opl st Vouth Group Ph 367
0339 alter 5 pm
BASE C 8 Poce 10238 AM and
s deband w th Tu ner power
m ke ro der 100 Watt L nea
AM and s debond G ound
Plane and 75 ft coax bought
h s summer $600 11alue aka
$350 cosh 4&lt;46
ca ll of e

:rno

6pm

TIMONTHV Clover Alfo fa hoy
m )(ed
also T monthy hay
ne'1er go wet Ia ge boles

367 7350
/'EAT NG STOVE fuel o I Ph
256 1&gt;469
~ ·~~~---------------,
.SPECIAL FALL SALE

NEW

N H hoy tools
G oder b ode " scoops
4 5 61 RoYory I&lt; utters
Cull vators 0 ""
6 and

0 T
wagom
'Plows Boom Poles ca ttle pca::ks

USEG
Tractors
Fo ds 9000

COMMERCIAL SITE or
su table tor res dent at 38
acre!. 400 fron ta ge on R
1 400 Oh o R ver frontage
4 water taps $25 000

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUF
GALL POLIS OHIO

Olf1ce

446 7900
4% 1049

Home

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW

TO FIT OUR

BUVERS

NEEDS

GALLIPOLIS
AREA LISTINGS
PRICED FOR

IMMEDIATE SALE

E)(ce llenll y cons1ructed 3
bedroom on apprh :14 ot
an acre n a 11ery pleasant
neighborhood In Kyger
Creek Schoo o strict You
can own th ! beaufllu
home right now for the
unbe eot·able
price
of

S23 500 00
vacant Land
J2 Acres
Jus! ott Route 160 on
Thompson Road Beaut fu
bu ldlng sites w th wooded
aren Build your home
here and get away from t
a I Priced well be low far
market value at $10 000
Select N•IIJhborhood
Near shopping ce nter and
hosp tal Very well kept 3
bedroom 1 ~ bath on one of
he n cer lots n l h s area
Oon t let th s barga n pass
you by
In Town
Near the corner of Th rd
and V ne Streets Th sIs .a 2
story 3 bedroom home that
has
been
rem ode ed
recently Just think of the
ease n getting t o the
shopp ng dlstr ct schools
churches etc offered to
you at a \lery reasonable
price of 529 000
Nice J Bedroom
With one car garage on
.approx 'h acre ot j ust off
Bulav lie Road ne.ar Route
35 Only 5 ve.Hs old and
modestly pr iced .at 522 ooo
Need a 4 bedroom?
Large well kept home on a
' .acre lot short dr 11e from
town end near hasp tal
shopp ng cen er etc Th
home offers e ot more fo r
the money than most on the
market today
OTHER

COUNSELORS

GALLIPOLIS

2 800 2 601 9N

J 0 60 40 1974 B03 Osl
M F 175 ISO 235 135 3 SOOeol
I 65 Ferg 20
30Corn P cken

USEO
EQUIPMENT
TO
NUMBEROUS TO 1,\ENTION
J MS FARM EQUIP NC
S R 3SW
Golllpol • Oh o Ph 446 9777

Denver K t1 gtev

CROWN CITY
Joe Crans

446 0002

256 1456

~ATIONAL

ADVERTISING with fhe
Callery of Homes.:.:.._ ___,

ed at Barrs Super Ma ket
GolloRolle Mls o lesleMc
Combs St Rt 775 379 2166

WATER HEATER CHEAP 446 4127
2 P ck Up trucks both $275 150
HOndo $95 chest freezer 1
yr old $200 6 mo o d po
able dishwasher $150 7 y
old gentlePolom no G e/d ng

$250 400 boles of hoy $1 00
~USED

1

I

!RIPPLE TRACK SOTRM WIN

DOWS New 8 f p1cture w n
dow wtlh wood frame double
~lou

Ph 446 43 ,

'

SEVENTY

each Fo d I octo w th bru sh
hog and 7ft s ckfe bar $1200

Ph 614379 2663
IISOSALESofhoy co J H Ndo
245 Slf A
~

1

FIVE

ACRE
FARM 2 story 3 BR w bath

home good barn o her
au bu d ngs good pasture
fe nce d pond tobacco base
Imber on b acktop r oad
S50 000

ADDISON Very wei kept 2
B R tu ! ba""'
I w h
garage ., ~l I oars
c arpet
It fue
washer
o I fun
and dr
2 n acres
PR CEL.. LOW $20200

c:,\1 •

RENTAL INVESTMENT 2
tul y turn shed a r cond
tra ers on lg tot Georges
Cr&lt;'!ek Rd 514 500

ACRES beau lu y
wooded
several good
bu ld ng s tes e acktop
road rura wa er s 0 500
48

624
ACRES
perfe c
bu d ng s tes p cturesque
country surround ng s city
schoo s
r ura
water
SlO 000

PRE INFLATION
PRICED 3 BR all elec
tr c fully ca rpeted new
qual ty cons ructed hom e
wl h carport you II have o
see to bel eve he pr ce
526 sao
DOUBLE WIDE 97014
x 50 mob e hom e w range
and refr gerator 13 )( 33
awn ng n ex.ce en cond

s10 600

WE NEED LISTINGS!

4% 3636

Hour

FOR SALE
CARL WINTERS PH 245 5115

antf ogg ess ¥e co po a on
needs a few good peop e n the
mmed a e areo No s.el ng e
qu ed Se ous people only
need apply For more nfo mo
t on col 388 9367 8 om t
1
om 3pmtl5pm

ALL TYPES ol bu ld ng rna er als NEW &lt;4 Ft )( 8 F F ash ng Por
table S ghn5 w th .450 fe ers
b ock br ck s.ewe p pes w n
ssqs
col
216 745 9572
dows
ntels e c Claude
anyt me
W nters R o Grande 0 Phone
245 5121 after.c5::__ __
REFR GERATORS
washers
dryer ranges Gene Skoggs
1294 Eosern Ave Ph .4.46 7398

~~

COAL - ope-n 6 day~~o a week and
even ngs Fo fu the nfo mo
on coll 367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Chopper new
po n JOb good co nd Ph 992

6192

CHAIN LINK
PRIVACY &amp; WOOO FENCE
For Home Bus ness and n
du! y RAY HOUCK FENCE
CENTER
Call .u6 0-t 2 or
LIGHT we gh ch mney blocks
Go I po s Block Co Ph 4A6

2783
USED Furn ure Duncan flhyfe d
ng room su e one coil sp
ngs fuJ s ze Corbin ond
Sny~er Fu n ~5 2nd Ave
-446 117~
MUST se I I ke new 2 pc Span sh
I v g oom su te eke cond
&lt;446 3712

FIREWOOO Co I 388 9930 ,

I

LAND 35 acre!. of le\'e o
rol ng ground on both s des
160 near
of Sta e R
Porte Rural water tronts
on F oyd Clark Rd and R
LAND
56 acres fenced
w lh 20 ac es of t mber
c ose to North Ga. a H gh
Schoo
cealed
on
Thorn pson R d lots of road
frontage
Buy for
S25 000 00
LAND 20 acres Loca ed n
Morgan Tw p
ocated w th
road tr on age on Rowles
v e R d Spr ng wa er
ava sble
Buy for
S1700000
LAND
50
K 96
ot
loca ed on L ddy Hollow
Buy fo r S4 000 00

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK CONE AT REASONABLE
RATE
Con tact Sn h
co vat ng __!h 446 3981

Ex

All TYPES of dozer work Ph
379 2621 AI en Ruthe fo d
ECONOMIZE on luel w h ou r
spec o on ~lone f eplaces
Logue Con act ng bock and
brick wo k Ph 368 9939

PRICE REDUCED on
doub e w de home
3
bedrooms
carpeted
modern kitchen
rura
water
ncludes retr g
range living &amp; dmtno room
furn ture washer dryer
central a r Pr ce 519 500

USEO MOBILE HOMES
CALL 576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel unde p n
you mob le home and anchor
Ia safety Foster Mob le Home
Ser¥ ce -446 2783 orE me Sk d
moe &lt;4 46 3479
1972 2x65Costle3 B
960 0)(50 Van Dyke
959 0)(50 R chard son
960 0~~:50 Rego
977Sofo 1811 011eltra e
2 used ave! a lers
T State
I'
Mobile Homes Co p
1220Eos en Ave
Gall pols Oh o
Bank F none nL_ - - 10•55 2 b mob e home a Ph

~m ..sOHcrcd

BABYSITTING Fo n c
nurse y DON T BE nco ven enced by le
~c ho I en( e w I co e to
I gyourt ashp eup
lrl c n my I orne wcf.'kdays
beca use of undepenoblc ser
515 00 pe week Nea Ho ze
vte Co A&amp;RTrosh
Ph 446 7643
e v
I 4&lt;46 b540

I

BUILD A HOME Aong
Rt 1 Crown c ty we have
2 lots with a total of 91
frontage Buy both for only
$5 000

FOR

THE

LARGE

FAMILY we have a 9 room
A bedroom ~story ~ome In
Bldwe
only 20 minutes
from co a m lnes storm
w ndows and doors F A
fuel oil furnace
n ce
garden area can be yours
w thin 30 days fpr only
$22 ooo Call for an ep
oolntment

3 BEDROOM CARPETE'D
HOME loc ated In Harrison
Twp Macedon a ~d F A
furnace modern k tchen
rural water and c sterns a
peaceful home In a rural
settlno Price $21 000
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
HOME near Clay School
Ga !polis
c ty S D
situated on 1 acr~ lot W·b
f replace unique v no lnd
d n ng room ca I tor more
nformatlon

BUSINESS

BUILDING

located on upper Second
Avenue
Gallipolis
N ce
lo t city water and sewer
Pr ce S26 000 00
TH~EE

BEDROOM

VOU RE

TO SELL

PLANNING

CALL US

WE

HAVE
A
LIST
OF
PRctSPECTIVE BUYERS
AND WERE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU
IF YOU DON T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
MAV BE ABLE TO FIND
tT FOR VOU
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Reel Estate 44' 1066
E venlngs R USSIU Woetd
44f 4618
ICen Morg1n 446 0971

'!

Here s t-tve Nice Homes In The C1ty

3 Bedroom Home With Loh 01 Room -large liv ing
room w th fireplace dining room

HOWARD Peck Water Del 11ery
245 9315 or 388 8262 day or
n ght
SAND and Beaver Insurance Co
has offered serv ces for F re In
surance coverogv n Gall a
County for almos t a tentury
Forms homes and personal
property
cove rage s are
ova loble to mee nd v dual
needs Contact Charles Neal
__!? U~ghbor and :agent
BOBS
CS
Rod o
Equ p
everyth ng n Two Way Rod o
Antennas and acces Geo ges
Creek RC Gall po s -t-46 4517

ALLEN S Conti ucl on remodel
ng odor new bu ldng Ph

446 2910

LAWRENCE

HEAT NG

AND

ELECTR C TO g ve you a free
est mate on b own n nsulo
t! on Coll675 3099

SA NOV ANO BEAVER INSURANCE
CO hos offered serv ces fa
F re lnsu once cove rage n
Gal o Co lor alm.l$ a century
Forms homes Ol'ld pe sonol
fJ;Jropv ty
coveroges ore
avo lab e o meet nd v dual
needs Con act Foster L
s
you e ghbo and ogen

Very

ch with huge living and dining plus family room and 2
baths Best buy In the area for $31 500 If you neee room
~

S beeroom brick

Older Home Needs Cleanup -

sa

money

maker w th lots of potential
Dandy Two Bedroom On 2nd Ave New roof new
furnace and very nice deep flat lot close to everythmg

Two Story Weth

Rtver V1ew- Excellent view of river
handy location house needs some work must sell
make offer
oedroom home
Bargatn Hunters Oeltg
ear city limits
full basement located

SOLD

22 000 00
Country LIVIng At Its s-•• l
sq ft of modern
llvtng space Includes 4 ~n:\.V baths fireplace 2
car garage beautiful k ~ ....., won t find a better
buy tor $53 000
4 Bedroom 2 story - VJ.Dted one of the areas
nicest colonial homes ~ftl 1 new and buill by a

J\'{1

master draftsman 3 ~~ tJiace fam ly room
torm~le dining ond 2 ca garao• Prlcee atS62 000
81 level- You II be sur·~
the living space In this
well kept 3 bedroom ho~~ kit tamlly room and
garage Priced at S25 S&lt;;u
Clo$e To Town- Ne
oom, This one has 4

t\

solJR

.U

bedrooms 3 baths
formale dining conv

Ra1se Your Own Grocertes
A most an acre ( 91 ~ fer e
Raccon Creek bot om land
nea Cora 0 der 2 slory 3
bedroom fram e In good
cond\t on
formal d n ng
v ng room
oom n ce
k !chen and oa h
Do&gt;o:ol
ga s for heat dr ed well
On Raccoon Creek
N ce year old one story
frame on 75x300 foot lo
w th 75 foot frc;m tage on
Raccoon Creek Panel ng
and dry walt
carpeted
throughout
aluminum
s d ng centra l electr cheat
and a r new kitchen In
1975 C ty Schools With th s
home vou will never need a
summ er or weekend home

1 1 Acre
Four year o d 13U sq ft
frame home near Add son
carpeted throughout
3
bedrooms n ce kit c hen
range oven refrigerator
centra
heat and .a r
nature! gas
two story
garage 24x36 could have
n ce apartment upsta rs

2 baths nice k1t

Restore ThiS one
And make yourself a
bundle owner w I make
you the best barge n you
ever had on th s 8 room 2
bath home Its old but t
was one of those real good
ones when bu II Modern
k t and heating system

Something N1ce
You I agree For: $33 900
th s peasant modern 3
bedroom
2 story wl
please you Includes arge
tam 'y room formal dining
and garage
Barga n n Waterloo
An olde 1 story frame In
e:-:ce l ent condtt on
Recent y remodeled by
add ng
a new
h rtf
bedroom a bath new doxo
gas
furnace
and
an
enlarged k chen Close to
store church and school
Cou ld not be replaced tor
lhru t me the ask ng price
Of 56000 00

We need Ltstlngs Call the
W1seman Agency 446 3Ul
Ga I a Co s Largest Rut
Estate Sates Agenc:y
Office 446 l64l
Ike Wtseman 446 3796
E N Wiseman 44~ 4500

n orch qclurol
des gn and bu ld ng of new
homes
small commerc al
bu d ngs opt o remodell')g
w h s a e oppro11o of pons
B II Walker 446 21-46 or 446
8652
SEPT C Tonks Cleaned Plants
Sep c Tonk Serv ce Ph 446

0' 675 21&gt;47

STUCCO plaster ng and plaster
epa
Te-. lured ce I ng sw ri
I oat or brush des gn 32 yr ex
p Work by the hou or by the

10b

256 1182

All

~~---_:_

____

--------TRUSS£0 RAFTERS
Any
p tch
any
s\r:e
Sou heoslern Oh o T uss Roller
Co Box 28 A Rutland 0

45775 Ph (614) 742 2409 We
delver
~

P cture Tube Spec o1 sis
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245 5365

BOROI'R S GARAGE OOOR Se'
v ce Commerc ol and Res den
I a Spec olz ng In opere ors

Local 256 1&gt;472
PASQUALE Insula! ng 103 Cede
St Galhpol $ Ph 446 2716 o
4-46 1092

CUSTOM REMODELING 20 yoon
el(perience 388 8308 New dry /
walt ce I ng w th sw rl o tex
ture des.gns Other dry wol
repa r v nyl wq !paper ng new
baths new k tchens Anything
n remodeling of repa r

wo'k COUGHENOUR Wate

TAYLORS Ar Condtonng and
Refrlgerot on Commerc ol and
domes. c 4.46 2247

-- ----r•r

HLIF=F NE~ n,~ r ns F)( tf Sl'iop
Pfumbtng
electrtcol
small
npp washer and d
corp
repo r.. ond genera repo rs
-J. C'o1138tl ~47 ave 15 yrs exp

12 ACRES RT 325

6 Roam q,ome F A fur
na ce
wood burn ng
f replace 4 be ns m lk
house 500ga ton m lk tank
good ten c ng a
m nere
r ghts goes ots of pas lure
approx 25 acres of tillable
Off sa te Roue 2 8

JS YOUR

FAR~ - SIA

A good a I around farm

s
hard to com e by 6 oom
house ba se m en g a nery
tor co rn stora ge 700 bu
Barn 7S )(60
2 s ory
ch cken house n g ood
cond 1 on 20 acres of top
eve land 35 ac es blue
g a ss pas ure 1700 l b
obd cco base n ce pond 2
con e ete water ng roughs
very a rae! ve sodded
wa cr d v er s on Th s farm
s h gh l y proctuct ve
11
you wan a good fa rm cal
us now

7 ROOMS
4 BEDROOMS

180 ACRES PLUS
Vacan
A wo od and
wonder al"d
some
pasture and t !lab e and
Less than Sl60 per ec re
DAIRY BOY CROWN CITY
Gb ng prof table bus ness
390 fl fronta ge on State R t
7 Al l bu d ngs and lsted
equ p ment goes Large
paved a ea easy access
Good nvestment proper y
Th s s a ~ast develo!lfng
erea Th e on y es au ant
w h n sev eral
m es
lnqU e oday
LOT &amp;
MOBILE HOME
n Po e
10 xSO
bed ooms
Elcona
Nee
ot 305 ac e ev e P ced
on y $6 900
enx ous to sell can be
bough! as a s ngle un I or
srna er amounts
ACREAGE
BU L DING SITES
t-5 Acres oca ed n G een
&amp;
Perry Twp
Sma
amount ot
mbcr &lt;~0 A
abe ?. barns JO )(]0 and
40 x ?. J
f yo u are oo k ng
fo r valuab f' land tor n
ve:!. lm en l hf' c I s cal
odav
OLD STYLE
COLONIAL HOME
One at ll C a ra c t v e old er
two
s orv
hom es
n
Ga ll po s
r ooms
4
bed ooms 2 ba hs bu 1
n k che n F A na ur a gas
tur n ace n ce larg e fran
po ch screened n back
po ct N ce o w h 4 ca r
gar age n bac k clo se o
chu ch &amp; bus ne ss sec on
do wn own Tti s DfOp er y s
good c ond 1 on and
pr ced o se ll

'

&lt;

NEW LISTING
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
Ano th er qu al y home we
a k en c a o of Som e ot he
good f ea ur e; 3 bedrooms
5 n ce close t s to ce d a r
na ur al gas f urnace Very
pr e y I a dwood I oors
cen a a r co nd oner
c~ l evi;'
Ol f n she d
a ached ~a age A
hi s
1 m t:S of
nd mor e w lh
Ga I po 5 Pr ced n the
low th r es
18 ACRE FARM
NEAR R 0 GRANDE
Ga ll pol s Sc hool 0 st ct 2
barns 2 sh ed s approx 20
acr es of pas ure 40 acres
of good
mber (Oak &amp;
P nel App ox 20 acres of
I abe and All m nera l
r gh ts goes tobacco base
some fa r m machlner)l
I vestock ( hogs and lay no
hens l 3 Rura water taps
pa cJ A
crops goes
2
mob le homes (one Is
4 X65 I and a 5 room attl"
house Just sted

ALMOST NEW
Been 1 ved n a short t me
3 be droom home aca ea n
Fa t eld A c res Subd
Modern eat n k c h en w th
a bu I cabs N ce bath
e ectr c heat Th e rmope~ ne
w ndo ws
s ngle
ca r
ga ag e New I s ng don I
wa
o se e Pr ce d to se H

•

TV REPAIRS RENTALS

~·· 2923

HERE

213 ACRES

Near Me gs M nes has
barn
storage bu ld ng
farm pond Presen y has
one tra ler rental space
Th s can be deY eloped nto
a n ce n came propertv
PR CE REDUCED
S2 DOO 00
Do yo u war .:. barga n?
He e
s on e yo u are
over oak n g So mu ch to so
c
2 s ory Coun r y
Hone 3 bed oom s bu
n
k te l en cab nt! s ba h
grav ty t ed sp r ng wate r
sys em p en y of pressure
sac r oof good sma t barn
almos t new meta l root
ch c k e n hou se
garage
co ncr e e s ab for mob le
home
9 ac res p as ure
and b ack op road
at of
h s t or only $14 00 0 DO
168 ACRES
GOOD CATTLE FARM
Lots. of poss b t es 2 larg e
stock barn s good cone ete
round s to ck wat er
h
ough
lO
a c res
n
cult vat on 1200 f tobacco
base Lots of new f en c ng
P enty wale
n I eld s 10
a!: es mber Own!:[_ e41ly
16bACRES
NEAR PORTER
New house under cons tr
plus 6 room far m house
barn &amp; other outbu d ng!.
Approx
140 ac r es o f
pasture and
n ber &amp;
'3pprox 28 acres of T I able
and
A 1 m neral r ghts
goes some goo d fences AI
and &amp; houses tor only
S55 000 Now
TARA ESTATES
ONLY S48 000
Beaut fu 8 roo m ho use
881 sq f
v ng space
Fea tur ng 3 BR w h d e uxe
wa lk n c ose s 2 baths g
attra c ve FR
beau fu l
rock ted s Qne f r ep la ce
Formal DR Bu t n k I
che n lm por ed I ght f x
u es and pewter door
hardware A so en tO Y the
use of
ub House &amp;
Sw mm ng Poo l
Pr ce
R@duced to 549000
3 BEDROOMS
RT JSWEST
Ga pol s Sc hoo D st 2
Car garage
2 bath s
5
rooms ra 1ch sty e w t h
1 249 sq f
v ng spa ce
storm doo s &amp; w ndow s
modern k tch en w th d sh
washer Large lot See h 5
one now
3 BEDROOMS
LARGE FAMILY
ROOM
La ge o n a n c e com
mun ty frame w h br ck
ont
FA
furnace
modern k tchen
pa o
u
y r oom mo dern bath
rvust see th s hom e
ts
pr ced r gh l ca now

'"'

Near Town
Home and 5 s acres on s R
588 I 1 acres t m ber 285
toot
frontage
extra
bu lid ng s te s N ce two
bedroom
frame cot age
Nth a carport
Rural
wa ter bottled gas furnace

ECONOMY Trac ors and Equip
men Co ol s Soles and Ser
v ce 2 m les West on 588 Ph

LOOK THIS OVER
76 Acre Farm modern s K
room home
good barn
new too shed ut y b dg
L ne fences a I woven w re
42 acres B G pas url!
o
acres woods
22 acres
m eadow
and !liable
plenty of ocust 1 ees 200
lb obacco base Th s farm
s n the Ga lllpo s Sc hool
D s r c t Ca I Now

Gall polls Sch ool D str cl
basem ent
1
balhs
mo dern kitchen ce~mp e e
w lh birc h cab nets F A
furnace ca rport 2 wood
burn ng f replaces fam y
room arge ot w ttl fru t
and
a storage
t rees
way
bu !ding W th n 5 m te5 of
SMALL FARM
Galllpo s N ce home et a
LIVING
good nr ce
Today s cho ce
ap
COMMERCIAL
prox mately 25 acres of
BUILDING&amp; SITE
pasture and farm ng and
7
rooms
full State H ghway 7 North
N ce
Mason ry Bu d ng w th
basement 3 bed oomS
ke
good barn
two a her br ck frofll bu !d ing
outs de bu ld ngs
fences new Approx s ze 30 :o&lt;24 2
fa r
plenty wa er for slory Level at fronts 175
catlle
smal
obacco f on Stale H ghway 7 Call
acreage we are ready to now
BUSINESS INCOME
sell
PROPERTY~ HOME
SPRINGVALLEY
Up to $660 00 per rnonth
SUBDIVISION
R:en ats plus a beau tu 7
vacant o1~
n cc s zc room (3 bedrooms ho me
build ng lo ts w l h al
o I ve n yourse f alum
utI es ther e
Lot s ze s d ng good grade n c e
10 8 by 7 2 Be er ge
trent por ch ots of buill n
urn now
cabinets tab e op range
76ACRES
wal~ oven
aundry tubs
SPRINGFIELD TWP
na t gas forced a r furna ce
Old
house
5
ooms
centra a r wood bu rn ng
f rep ace a dr lied and dug f replace Lots ot shrub
well
La s of good s zc bery
evc t grassy to
A
timber
Lots of wa nu
beaut tul p ace pus 11 n ce
trees a 1 m nera r ghts
ncome Pr ced r Qhl
goes aporox 12 acr es good
JBE DROOM
t liable and ONLY Sl6 000
Acre P us eve! ap
prox
1 1 m es tram
BRICK CONSTRUCTION
hOspita on black op rd
-G ALLIPOLIS
p en y ot garden ~pace
We are p leased Ia offer tor
sa e th s 8 rOOjllS n ceo der rural water country v ng
c ose to Ga 1 po s Pr ced
home n one of the bes
of!!.y s1a ooo
locations of Gall po s 4
BEAUTIFUL
bedroom basemen
Na
COUNTRV HOME
gas forced a r furnace
Th s hOme ha s ha d a
PLUS70 A LAND
Beauty Sa on operat on n Th s home
~
11ery a
t tor years own th s n ce tract ve modern n every
hom e and
your own way
6
rooms
3
bus ness now
bedrooms
5 c osets
2
baths shower ~ chen
- 3 BEDROOM BRICl&lt;
arge and pre y Many
Immediate
possess on
moe des rab e fea ture s
owner h.n moved to a
ncludi ng
c orner
ot
farm Be the f
to ook at
blackt op road
3 car
tl:\ls nice
ga age 2 por ches pat o
sma I gr een house w th
I
furnace barn 70 A med
and
fert I zed
B G
pasture
ots of walnut
trees Check w th us oday

for children see this one
story 2 baths modern forced air furnace It

HIDDEN CHALET
One of Gal a County s
most untQve homes
10
rooms plus
2 bath s
featur ng ~ bedroom s on
the matn eve! and th e
master bedroom on th e
second level w th s.l d ng
glass doors ead ng to a
balcony Has a s unken p
with
wood burn n g
flrep ace d n ng room and
modern k. tchen compte e
w h all bu It n cab net s
d shwasher d sposa and
range
Hom e
s tot a
elec r c with central a r
The tnter or of ttl s s very
ru stic
\41th
beamed
cathedra ce I ngs Th s
co u d be your dream hom e
sett ng on 6 acres of
woodland Approx 3 m es
from
Ga ll pol s
No
s gh se ers pease
BROOMS
2ACRES
Th s s a very a ract ve 3
bedroom home bu It n
k t chen nc udes garbage
d sposal coun e op stove
wal oven refr gerator
w th ce maker F n shed
Beau fu arge
bas em en
tree s In background The
comt9r of c y 1 fe the
bea ut Y and enroymcn of
country 1 v ng a 1 h s c ose
to Gall ipo son Sta e H gh

room modern forced air gas furnace New no
mamtance siding Small lot owner \lery anKious
4 5 or 6 Bedrooms - Modern brick and stone ran

1972

BACKHOE dozer dllcher and
dump ruck We ns all water
I nes f oo ers drains sept c
sys ems conc rete work Hot
I eld Backhoe Ser Rutland 0
Ph 7&lt;2 2008~ 44~2~.7~86
=--·
ARE VOU COOL MAN? Then you
need the lnsulot ng e)(perts at

or famtly room

nice equ pee modern kitchen 2 baths large utility

Call us right now

446 0294

1976 SCHULT MOB lE home 2x60
2 bedroom k !chen and v ng
BACKHOE &amp; Doze work also op
roam furn shed bedrooms un
so I and fill d r ova oble 379
lu n shed curta ns o e tnc lud
2258
eel cen a heat and o cond
8 CENTENN AL
on ng shag corpe I
v ng
SPEC Al
room hallway ond moste
Camp ete auto pa n jOb one
bed oom on ly I ved n 5 mon
color only $76 00 2 toneS 00
ths lnte ested port es only
Phone 446 3769 after .4 P ce
Mon h of July only Stop n at
Pe sons Body Shop 26 Ro oad
S6500
S Midd epo
Oh o o co
MOBLE HOME She ;o;tPok
367 0165
Unlu n o "f!urn Ph 4&lt;46 124
ahe 5
GENERAl Cant oc o s Do ol
no~orTo y co penter 8 plumb
MOBLE HOME 2 b9d oo m QC'Od
g Ins ol and
epa
ol
cond Seer f ce Ph 446 1365
d llewoys Ph 446 9587
I W ll DO sew go d ,.., f' o o s
n n y home Ph 440 31 S

3

carpe ed all e ec;tric home
10 tuated on
120x75
ot
front ng on Twp b acktop
Rd County water &amp; sewer
Pr ce $22 500 00
BUSINESS Price reduced
DWELLING and 26 )( 32
bloc k bu ld ng s ua ed on on 2 bay bus ness bu d ng
and land located on Rt
40 lC 132 lot n Gall pol s
160 nEw ngton Buy now
r~clud ng
co n tents of for S1Hl00 nn
dwell ng
Buy
for
New L st1ng NEAR RIO
$20 000 00
GRANDE New modular 3
S20 000 00 w buy a bedroom home cathedral
modern
one f ocr
3 ce I ng n I 11 no room
bed oom all elec r c home storm w ndows and doors
Pr ced tor qu ck sale
n Gal pol S C ty SChOO
d s r ct S tuated on 1 ~0 x $17 500
75 ot Car peted except to
NEW
3 bedroom
car
k !ch en and bath
new peted ranch sty le br ck
cand 1 on
rural water
home 2 car garage lot s of
cen ra t sewage co ec on
concrete
mmed a e
bla ck op streets
Cal fo
possess on Pr ~:e Low 40 s
mor e ntormal on Ca n be
V A and F H A f nanced

FALL SALE

USED APPLIANCES

POL V FOAM
fo solo cha r
cush ons man esses podd ng
deo lor co pe s Vo ely of
s zes 0 rec Fabr c ond Foom
So es Mo n Sf P Ple(nont
Ph 675 3-469 9 5 do ly till 8
F day

LAND Buy approx matel y
3 acres along St R 160
be ween C ty of Gall po s
and Holzer Hosp Ia c ty
we er and 5ewer An ex
ce ent buy tor on y $7 500

S30 000 00

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Young

LIMESTONE FOR DR IVEWAYS

LAND Bu d ng or mob le
hOme lots n Eureka area
Buy as many as 9 acres for
on y
$5 300 00 Has rural
water and wel

GRACIOUS 2 story br ck
home
9 large rooms
k !chen and bath up and
down has b ee n used as
rental apartment large
front porch city water and
sewer Call for appo nt
ment today
Buy far

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Assoc1ate

CH MNEY S ocks W Vo &amp; Oh o
Lump Cool Gall pol s Bock
Co 4.46 2783

LAND
Bu ld ng o
n
Porter Ca oday for mo r e
nformat on

IF

RON CANADAY, REALTOR

I 776 2237

~

NEW SORGHUM Con be pu chos

MAKE AN OFFER 3 BR
home barn garage o her
ell ne ed
au bu d ngs
r epa
3 2 acres 500 rd
f ron tage c y water gas
c ty schools

LOTS OF ROOM a
a
reasonable pr ce
4 BR
hom e on 2 4 acres city
schoo s 5 m les from town
on blacktop road $20 500

New listing located within tile city of Gallipolis

New Homo 11 Acru Farm ,.nd
You can now move Ia the counlry and enf'IY all the
modern conveniences
This beauty includes 3
bedrooms family room formal dining full basement
2 car garage 1 h baths and a heat pump The picture
cant speak tor this one you must see It Price w il l be
under SSO 000 ()(I

bedrooms 1 h baths c ty water &amp; sewer natural gas
F A furnace Call for appo ntment Price $26 900

160

CALL 446-3636

tine property

GOOD USED FURN lURE Gas
onge se I clean 19 cu I
el geroto 6mo o d 2e• o
a ge tab e-s oak d e$Se E
Am l v ng oom su le solo
bvds end cho s end and coffee
abies b ed room su tes boby
beds youth bed
spool bed
poster bed o4 tab le and cha
se s wash stand 2 desks
efr geroto s onges washe s
and d ye s elev s on con so e
and po~ olbe color block and
wh te m sc tems Ph 446
0322onyt me

NEAR VINTON 40
acres 5 BR home g barn
good
pastu e
f en ce d
sever a good bu ld ng s es
on blacktop ~d S40 000

7
BR

cabinets guest house other ourhutld ngs with plenty of
storage area S tuated on 90 K172 lot w tthtn the city of
Gall tpol s Price $21 500 00

Pr Ieee to sell

Del very
&lt;46 3962 &lt;4A6 4262 any t me

DOZER work excavating
cleo ing Ph 446 0051

land

T~DMASFAIN

EXTERMINATING
Term te Pest Control
Wheelersburg Ohio

=- - pollos
-CONCRETE
WORK
sidewalks
bonment
Louis Cox .U6 33'CI8

etc

ELECTRICAl Installation
R~
Comm
lndustrtol 256 6855
Crow~ t~ Oh o

f'

MASSIE
REALTY
32 State Street
Ph 446 1998
A A Nibert, Broker
Crouse Beck Roilld Neary new br ck and
frame spl t evel home on a
large 1 3 a lot Th s home
offers o1 br
2 baths
g
firepla ce I 11 rm 15)(24
carpet drapes built n
double oven and range
dishwasher
comb ned
refng freezer and
n
tercom Mus t 5ee to liP
precla e
keller Yale College Rolid
- 4 year o d br ck rancher
3 bedroom s ca rpeting ex
Insulation in walls and
cell ng
lg
f replace
fantast c fam ly ro am
etec baseboard hea bu II
In dishwashe r and range
s.plit ra 1 fenc e and a 10,;12
blo ~ k storage room
Centerpo nt
Slore
bu ding
w lh
v ng
quarters and equ pmen t to
put you n business for
yourself
Addison
Older
3
bedroom hOme on Iaroe lot
~!so two ad10 n no lots
Th s proper v has frontaQe
on Poute 7

Hc..U &amp;tote for ~1&lt;
PRICE RECUCED
Ca t
oday tor new tow
pr ce on lh s f ne 3 B R
hom e
o c aled
w h n
walk ng
d s ance
of
schoo l s
chu ches
and
~ o es
Easy na n enanc e
w h a u m s d ng and N u
Sa sh w ndows t\11 ap
p ances
o
se
up
hou se keep ng c a
oday
for your appo n men I
Oft1ce 44' 1694
EVENINGS
Charles M Nul
U6 1546
J Michael Nul
4ot6 1503
N.t1t
&lt;~ 46 7358

sam

WANT TO OWN BUT NEED

HELP IN FINANCING?
N e 2
bedroo 'n fa m home
wl ch has been camp e e y
emodeiPd ecen ly large born
ngoodco dt on o !I ss !
ng o approx matefy 7 oc es
nea tow Mob le I orne en o
spot on p ope y Good nve ~ t
e
re o oppo u y Co
44b 049o o 6p m

HOUSETRAILER &lt;.a I of e 5 p n
440 052

AND HEATING

ONE BEDROOM MOB LE hone
oco ed
Ce e o y 44 0 766
0 4-46 1317

STANDARD

592 3051
DOUBLE WIDE o d Ia Wood bur
n g f ~p la ce po o (e ro
a r 3 n les f om H M C Ph
446 502

REMODELED 3 BR house w h new
lu QC(J alu n r um s d ng ou
bldg
.Jnd CPIIO o
Stole
Hgwy w h ood I o loge Con
be bought w lh 5 to bO acres
P (ed easo ab le Pho e 388
853!»

FURN
olso I a le.
spo ce PI 379 2&lt;46q

Co Fourth /l. P n e
Phone .tl-46 3888 o -446 44777

691
VA FHA 30 y I none g I eland
Mo tgog e 77 E S o e A I ens

bu d ng good pdstu e p ced
on nspect on Phone J88 8824

ob e ho e n Ga ll po s
a e or 2 odull s on y house l u
P 4.40
sh ngs cen ol a

NEW

1RA LER

CARTERS PlUMB NG

MUST se ll p ce reduced pr te
SU 900 by Qwne
2 b
4
n es ou M I C ee k Ph 4-46

00 ACRE fo m nob le home 2
barns 2 ponds o he out

111obtl&lt; Homes for H&lt;nt

0338

l'lumbmg and Heating

CJi EAPI E

LAST

u

HOUSE

I
-

Perfect for
weekends l S acrea of and
about 'It clured and !h
woods with frontage on
Little Raccoon Creek plu$
en old 2 s1ory home
$11 900
BUILDING OR MOBILE
HOME SITE - Appro~~: S
acres about 13 m
tram
town Land 1 flat w th
fron t age on a BT rd and
co unly water available

VOUR

1 yr old
brick ranch offers 2 140 sq

,I

Fairfield Acres Subd Modern eat In kitchen woth all
buill In cabs Nice bath electric heat Thermopane
L1ve 1n 1 neighborhood you can ba proud ot Very wet I
kept J bedroom 1 h both on approximately 'o acre lol

AT

DREAM t10ME -

fleaiiO,

•

sewer

SUIURIAN

SETTING
Adds 1
room to breathe
at
mosphert To this fine 3
Ddrm rllnch Inside you 11
enjoy a fireplace In the
v ng room ~or mal din ing
room 1 1'1 bath! laundry
room and &amp; tull basement
with a flrepte ce All lh s
pus a large well land
seeped lot 3 mi out

~

LIVIN 15 EASY In this like new country home on
beautiful one acre lot - J BR w, baths electric
furnace heat cen air extra large country kitchen city
schools 132 900

.:-::· ... = .

THE WISEMAN MiENCY
GAWA OOUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY - - - - t:·

REALTOR
446-1066

446-3636

Bob Lane Branch Manager

= ,;:.-

$5 000

ft ot modern llvlno Don t
wa t o see th s 3 Br end 2
baIt'! home The k tchen s
comp lete w th dishwasher
Cl sp m crowa11e oven and
range
Other
s.pec al
teetures .!Ire the large.
formal d n ng rm quality
carpet heat pump 2 sets
pat a doors 12xS7 pa llo and
~ car garage w th electric
door opener

MOBILE HOME PARK ~mall

close lo own good
lncom.e eosv to take care
of
call for more n
form atlon
VACANT
LAND
IN
RACCOON TWP
100
acres pr ced at l275 pe"
acre Very pr 11111e about
h tillable and J woods
with fron tage on Raccoon
Creek

CITY - QUIET STREET
- Comfor table 6 rms end
blllh w th a larg e back
porch and oaraoe located
on F ifth A11c Pr ced to se I
$ !t_OOO

CAN

YOU

AFFORD

vr

CITV- VACANT LA NO Appro&gt;-: 5 1 acres running
from
Four h Ave
to
ChickA mauga
Creek
56 500 Don t waIt to buy
buy and wa t
BAR BUS NESS &amp; HOTEL
- Be your own bOS5 w th
th s on ce n a fellme n
Located on a
ves men
corner o n M ddleport
can for Q10re informal on

PRICE REDUCED - Near
VInton - 41 A ctean rolling
pasture Good fences Iaroe
pond old horne with 7 rm s
and batt! and ee l ar hou se

LOTS FOR
SALE
Locat ed on Ne ghborhood
Rd L nco n P ke George
Creek Rd and Rodney
Harr sburg Rd F nanclng
ava ab le
4 BE OROOMS IN TOWN N ce comfortable 1 2 story
hOme on Evans He ghts
offers room o spare for
your
grow ng
fam ly
Where else can you get a
full basement fam ly rm
w fh gas fireplace large
k tchen and dining area tor
only 525 500

COMMERCIAL SITE - S
lo 9 'lnd older home on
Slate Route 7 In Kanauoa
Lots of polenl ja l for 534 000
CLOSE TO MI~S - 116
ac farm
mo~tly clun
le~el and roll ing land Good
7 rm home
PIZZA BUSINESS An
t'llCellent opportun ty tor
some bus ness m inded
erson This arge corner
ot with a modern brick
building s a go od place to
5tart car be bouaht w th
or wtlhout equ pment Call
tor appo ntment

LAND
CONTRACT
Almost 12 A of level ond
o n g land w h a small 2
BR and bath home pond
and ots Of pr vact,- located
n Morgan Twp

r.

COUNTRY BEAUTY
see h s Yery n ce com
for abe fa m Mme w h 6
rms and oa h furnace
t rep ace sma I bar.n P:Qnd
an d 30 acres leve l oro I no
land
Owner nas been
ran st erred and w I sell tor

DEBBY DRIVE If you
want e to ea on o be proud
of don t walt o see h s
ove y br ck ranch A most
1 400 sq fl ot
y/ng ar ea
plu s -a full basement and
oversized 2 c ar garag e The
k chen s modern and
compte e w th a range self
clean ng oven d shwasher
and d sp A
this p us a
arge fla we ll andscaped
ot w ttl ~large s.hade trP.c s

$!7 900

LOt; CAB IN 55 000 Lo c a ed 1ear Thurman
w lh 5 acres of woods

OHIO RIVER
REAL TV INC.

I •~ '

-

I

3 FAMILY yo d o!Q 41 Go I e rl
Ave ue F doy o d 5o u

do~

lJ

5

DEWITT 5 PlUMBING
ANOHEATNG
Rou e 60 ot ( e g c
Pho e 446 2735

PORCH SALE ve y good w c
oil eli Mn f" dnv 0
15
29 39 few:o R od
1

oc r. lo
HOUSETRA EH n
nerl o H
I No lup
0
!:tn nkr&gt;y Rrl I h 3/9 '1fl9b
a of£' b

()() ACRE f AWM
J8
0
v

room porches nlae

bsm gas furn Large lot 180 x125

KING SIZE FARM
190 A Iust 3 ml from the hospital 100 A pesture 60 A
cropland timber 2 ponds oprlngo &amp; well water 3
barns tool shed a. granery j BR brick &amp; slone homo
built In kitchen FP In LR full bsm All electric This is
one of Gellle Co s baHer farms Owner will help
f nance

"WE SELL BEnER LIVING"

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL Th s o ve ly home s ess
th an I year o d has 3
bedrooms 1 ' baths n ce
k c h en
w th
range
refrig erator d sposa ful y
carpe ed 1 car garage
N ce leve tot S33 000
GROVER ROAD
Th 5
all e ec tr c r.anch w th
br ck front has 3 bedrooms
n ce ba h w th shower
lovely k tch en w th ra nge &amp;
d sposa fam ly room with
f r eplace Lo cated on 2 38
acres of n ce land beh nd
Chesh re SJl 900
NEW LISTING
N ce 3
bedroom home bath w th
shower
tam tv
room
bea u fu carpet e)(ce en
co nd on Located on 554 n
B dwe 1 for ~2~ 900
CROWN CITY
N ce 3
bedroom
hom e
with
I rep ace In den
fu
basement to11ely kitchen
w th range I ca r garage
Pr ce S2S 800
NEW LISTING
2 hOuse s
on a full c
tot good In
ve s tm ent pr oper ty or
com mer c at s te Located
on 01 ve Str eet $32 000

v

GOOD
BUSINESS
Lo oking for a buslnes!i
Tay or s Upholstering Shop
and r es dence s wa no for
you
located
at
1918
Eas E.' rn A11e Call for more
nforn a on

tor Lease
UNFU
pok
I
w

o c

\

VS REALTY
Branch BUD McGHEEManager

446-3434

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
Th s attrac 11e home has
3 bed room s 2 balhS family
room w h f rep lace n ce
k (: hen with bu It n range
and d shwashe r beautiful
carpe thr oug hout loca ed
an a 1 acr e o on Rt 160
U9 BOO

\ard Snlc
A. V£'

PRICE REDUCED!
A PICTURESQUE VIEWI
3 BR home with nice kitchen formal DR for that
Thanksgiving dinner open &amp;!airway extra large hobby

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

THERE
RIO GRANDE
N ce
12K60 mobl e home with 2
bedrooms
bath
k tchen
w lh
r"nge
and
retr gerator haS l'l Iaroe
bu td no
sui! abl e
tor
garage or other com
mercia! business W h an
apartmen overhead Price
S21 500
EUREKA
Look at this
1o11e y old er hOme with a
view of the r ver has 4
bedrooms l arge din ng
room t replace n llv ng
room garage $2 700
IN TOWN - Older br ck
hom e has 6 rooms ba h
full Dasemenl very n ce
to goM buy f or 118 500
owner w II help f nan ce
10 ACRES
Look ng for
hal perfect building s te?
Th s l and s clear on the
front tlnd n ce woods In I he
back
Localed
on
Ebenezer Carmel Rd from
Rlo Grande SIO ooo

80 A~RES - New st no
very good farm with n ce "
bedroom house new bath
forced atr furna ce Has a
large barn and oarage
1 952 pounds obacco base
th s year s crop goes w th
farm
Loca ed close to
Pen t ca
for more In
format on

I PCt 1o VA FINANCING
AVAILABLE NOW
WE NEED LISTING$
E11enlng1 Call
Doug Wetherholt4&lt;46 42:44

Lee Johnton 2!6 6H0 1
Earl Winters 44'I 111
John f'l.lftr 446

uu

g HE&gt;o g
215 Third Ave 44b 3782

A

CONVENIENT
Excellent neighborhood - near school churches &amp;
shopping Two story • BR country kitchen storage
room 2 room Bsm ges turn porches garage large
we I landsca ped lawn

S22 500

Pl u nb

GENE Pl:ANl SII SON
PlUMBING
Heo ng
Co d lo ng 300 Fou 111
Ph 446 637

•

A

HOME &amp; FARM OVER
$100 000? Wet
we ha11e
one 11 you qua fy meke
an appo ntment to see thiS A
old brick lace ed about
1 ml tram HMC
This
beauty Is situated on 10.4
acres ot and n th e city
SChOO l diSI With :V• m
frontage
on
R.a c caon
Creek
Other
special
feat ures are " BRs 3 h
baths family rm with WB
fireplace forme dining
rm
forma
entrance
camp ete k tchen
arge
LR
aundry rm
large
screened In patio attached
2 ca r garage plus another
new 2&lt;4 x 36 con cre e blo ck
garage
No s ohtseers
please

VINTON AVE
N ce
older 1 1 story home s ts
on a large le11et lot and
offers 1 rms
and bath
downstairs pus 2 up If
eeded
Thls home ties
been partially remade ed
end has ce pet10d f oars
new f ur nace and sink
basement
gerege and
terge shade trees

In • most doslroblo orea •
with tlroplactt In J
BR s A spoclouo reception holl with FP and music R
wllh F P carpeted In deep pile gold tone a graclouo
lor mal OR with F P a most desirable kitchen with
loland snack bar built In double oven a. Ban Franklin
fireplace a second carpetee stairway leads from lhe
kitchen This homo is complolely reeocoratee lo wired
ges turn Over slzt lot from 1st A\lt to lnd Av~ .
99 h x200 Well landscape&lt; with brick polio pool wi!lo
sloM a. waterfall Shown by appointment only

Health insurance

IS NO

DOUBT

abou I
f you like plush
carpet
arge
roomy
bedroom s modern kitchen
plu s a tam v room and
living room erge enough to
en erta n your guests this
is, just what you are ook!ng
tor Its priced o sell Ca I
today lor an appo n me
GREEN ACRES Is
he
pace for you This c o~y
home off ers l er s a tar qe
11 ng r oom built n k I
chen and a luI basement
P lus a very frien d y n e gh
borhood
ONUS lSn esr HMC Th s
room v th ree bed roo n
home has e very n Ge
k chen t ardwood floors
ba se m en
w fh tam ly
ro on
ut 1 y room 11nd
y ar age 527 900
THE PRICE IS reduc ed or
1 32 acres laca ccJ fou
n les from Gl'l I po s or
Route 41
, b(lllh&amp;
th ee bedrooms lots of nlct
ca rp e and much more al
n every pr e! y brick Cll~
schoo s Ca 1 soon 1 won
ta s long
The home 1t Ul 2nd Ave
s n neetl of repa r If you
are handv this could be a
money maker The pr ce
has been reduced CALL
T0DA Y I
Real

Estate V1tue1 con

1 nue to

net ease
I you
plan to buy you will be SSS
ahea d f you buy today
We ha~e two a I brick
homes on Kelly or bath
with nalurat ges heat and
cenlrel a r Call now tor an
appointment

Sll ODO will buy a very
comfortable o der home
ea!.y to heat (Na1ura Gasl
Lo s ot verv n ce carpet

II You H1ve though !!I about
the brick home at 100
Ch I icothe Rd
perhap~
you should call right now
he pr ce hall been reduced

we hntl hid several ca l s
concer n{,g the neat lttle
home 5 miles out Rt 1&lt;41
Th e owner has agreed to
5(1 w th 2 9 acres or with a
5:maller lol to the buyer s
sat sfacllon
Thll 35 Acr• f&amp;rm hill a
very n ce home with 3
bedrooms two baths a
11ery nice fireplace Also a
Iaro e
Cfncrete
block
garage (26M3 71
11 s a
hunter s havt-n
Lo cated
opty 3 miles from Me os
m ne No 1

Leu th1n 2 yun old lh s
f ne all br ick has like new
carpe t 1" baths 3 BRa
very
pretty
k l tc;:hen
cab nets a very large 2 car
garage all on a flat tot lh
the c IV school district
Owner has moved
buy
odev move In tomorrow
Two story house lots or
ou si de storage Includes 3
ou buildings w th concre e
walks glus a 20~t30 b1rn
w 111 concrete f oor All of
th s Including 6 acres of
ground s ocated at the
south edge of Vinton Ca
tOday on tv 121 sao No 020
742 3Rd A.ve Could be used
for many d Herent pur
poses oerhaos vour deas
are better than m lne
Why not take a took tod.ay
No 021
New listing at JR Nell Aile
New roof v nyl Siding 3
bedrooms bath Ut room
lots of storage natural gal
neat $15 soo.
We have other listings If
vou art "uvtnv or ttllln1
ull vs Rutty Toduo
All of
shown
only

our
by

llsfln11 1rt
appointnunt

PHONE 446-0552-MmME
428 2nd AVE. GAWPOUS. IIUO

�•

6-D-The Sunday TlJnes.Sentinel Sunday Oct 24 11176

7-D-'Die &amp;mdly Times-Sentinel &amp;inday Oct 24, 1916

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Fast Results Use The Sunilay Times-Sentinel CliJssifieds

' ~ ili.
+ w£1or-.-41iP:
=-=~
~---

.: . .

CANADAY REALTY
2S1f2 Locust

St Galhpohs

RUSSELL WOOD

OhiO

155 Second Avenue G.· 111polls Ohio
Oll1ce 446 7900
Home 446 1049
LISTINGS NEEDED NOW TO FIT OUR
BUYERS NEEDS
GALLIPOLIS AREA LISTINII&gt;

~ ~=

REALTY
u L.ICUII St
Howard 8ranlfon:\roker
Olllct 446 2t14
Lucille ann non
e..~· 4~ 1116 ., t461614

Mernll Carter

Bonnie Stutes

........
446-2885

Associate
Ph Home 379-2184

Ph. Home

GaUia

County~

LOV!LV

FIVE BEDROOM carpetee homelocatee 4 miles from
downtown Gallipolis Two w b fireplaces two baths w
showers beautiful woodee 3 acre lot heatee and coolee
wllh heat pump Gallipolis City School District Call
for more information

Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

-

~l

AT RIO GRANDE
Extra nice 3 year old brick home carpetee throughout

T.

L.!rge living room formal dining room 3 bedrooms
family room with beamee ceiling and woodburnlng
fireplace Super equipped kitchen city water and

Leadi~1gham

ALMOST NEW

J BEDROOM JUST COMPLETED

Been llvee In • short lime 3 beeroom home located In

Quiet neighborhood This home swell constructed on a
n ce level lot 140 x160 Frame constructton with bt ck
front master bedroom with bath Ntce bunt m kttchen
table top electric range and wall oven The house ts
fully carpeted and has atta ched garage T h s one you
w II ! ke medtum priced Owner wtll help finance
qual HP.d b ver Call now

windows single car garage New li sting don t watt to

see

near a shopping center and hospital Prlu recently

reeucee to S32 900 00 This area Is growing and
developing rapidly and property values will surely
increase greatly heft over the ned few years If you
are considering buy ng in this pr ce range you owe It to
yourself to look at this Call us today for more
information and an appointment

GREEN ACR
112 baths cor

dishwasher Cl

t-ftl n IS ION - Brand new 3 BR
;)1\1\.U family room range hood
a r ctuallty construction throughout

$34 000

Three beeroom home with modern kitchen lots of

WANT TO SELL?
NEW ON THE MARKET
66 acre farm - 20 ac res

CHEAPIE - 3 rm home
on J acres wooded land on~
au bu d ng
some fur
n lu re
1 rep ace
n LR
S5 000

t lc'lbl e 15 acres n ce
t mber 30 acres asture J
BR 2 s ory ' D'"'ome 2
barns
~ L'1 and
ch eke ~
• ac or

RIO GRANDE AREA Jus off Rt 35 block ranch
ype home features 20 K 24
LR w th t rep ace all mod
conv 30 )( dO barn 25 acres
eve
to rot ng pa s ure
enced pond S37 500

bush ho
... .&lt;e baler
plow
mow ng
mach ne 200 ba es hay 6
cows
and
2 calves

numerou s sma

tools

hs

farm won
be on the
market ong at SJS 000

Beller ca II soon

M Nl FARM

Ideal

COZY 2 BR
t,IY new
home 5 ...,..
~~\ ty a
•o e ed
e ectr ~
mod
ove y
coun ry
ng
c y
schools •23 500

for

ho ses Jl" acres nearly all
fenced good uge barn
land leve to o)l ng a ll
cleared Good 3 BR w. th
bath t ame ho me SI8.000

'KEMPER HOLLOW -

m es from c v J
fram e rar)ch on g lot
t n sh th s yourself and
save $21 000

Offered to you at lbe bargain price ol S23 500 DO
Excellently constructed 3 bedroom on a large lot In a
very pleasant neighborhood In Kyger Creek School
District Give us

a

call today and let us show you th s

OTHER COUNSELORS
Denver K Higley 446 0002
Joe Crans 2S6 14S6
ADVERTISING With the Gallery of

KIMBALL SWINGER 100 0 gon
Ry hn box 2 y s o d $500
small d neue se wooden 4
cho s $50 Ear y A ne co
solo and 2 cho rs $50 o4-t6
13 6
NEW3 PC 8 sue $15995Reg
S 99 95 R ce s New and U!&gt;ed
Fun u e
--~~-

SWEET POTATOES Co 388 8754
HAV $ 25 per bole pure h one~
$2 50 a qt co olte 5 446

1052

FUEL OIL fu nonce hot wa er
heater
k tchen cob ne 5
both oorn I x tu es cal used
Ph 256 65&lt;4"

-

FIREWOOD SOLO by Wh e Ook
8opl st Vouth Group Ph 367
0339 alter 5 pm
BASE C 8 Poce 10238 AM and
s deband w th Tu ner power
m ke ro der 100 Watt L nea
AM and s debond G ound
Plane and 75 ft coax bought
h s summer $600 11alue aka
$350 cosh 4&lt;46
ca ll of e

:rno

6pm

TIMONTHV Clover Alfo fa hoy
m )(ed
also T monthy hay
ne'1er go wet Ia ge boles

367 7350
/'EAT NG STOVE fuel o I Ph
256 1&gt;469
~ ·~~~---------------,
.SPECIAL FALL SALE

NEW

N H hoy tools
G oder b ode " scoops
4 5 61 RoYory I&lt; utters
Cull vators 0 ""
6 and

0 T
wagom
'Plows Boom Poles ca ttle pca::ks

USEG
Tractors
Fo ds 9000

COMMERCIAL SITE or
su table tor res dent at 38
acre!. 400 fron ta ge on R
1 400 Oh o R ver frontage
4 water taps $25 000

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUF
GALL POLIS OHIO

Olf1ce

446 7900
4% 1049

Home

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW

TO FIT OUR

BUVERS

NEEDS

GALLIPOLIS
AREA LISTINGS
PRICED FOR

IMMEDIATE SALE

E)(ce llenll y cons1ructed 3
bedroom on apprh :14 ot
an acre n a 11ery pleasant
neighborhood In Kyger
Creek Schoo o strict You
can own th ! beaufllu
home right now for the
unbe eot·able
price
of

S23 500 00
vacant Land
J2 Acres
Jus! ott Route 160 on
Thompson Road Beaut fu
bu ldlng sites w th wooded
aren Build your home
here and get away from t
a I Priced well be low far
market value at $10 000
Select N•IIJhborhood
Near shopping ce nter and
hosp tal Very well kept 3
bedroom 1 ~ bath on one of
he n cer lots n l h s area
Oon t let th s barga n pass
you by
In Town
Near the corner of Th rd
and V ne Streets Th sIs .a 2
story 3 bedroom home that
has
been
rem ode ed
recently Just think of the
ease n getting t o the
shopp ng dlstr ct schools
churches etc offered to
you at a \lery reasonable
price of 529 000
Nice J Bedroom
With one car garage on
.approx 'h acre ot j ust off
Bulav lie Road ne.ar Route
35 Only 5 ve.Hs old and
modestly pr iced .at 522 ooo
Need a 4 bedroom?
Large well kept home on a
' .acre lot short dr 11e from
town end near hasp tal
shopp ng cen er etc Th
home offers e ot more fo r
the money than most on the
market today
OTHER

COUNSELORS

GALLIPOLIS

2 800 2 601 9N

J 0 60 40 1974 B03 Osl
M F 175 ISO 235 135 3 SOOeol
I 65 Ferg 20
30Corn P cken

USEO
EQUIPMENT
TO
NUMBEROUS TO 1,\ENTION
J MS FARM EQUIP NC
S R 3SW
Golllpol • Oh o Ph 446 9777

Denver K t1 gtev

CROWN CITY
Joe Crans

446 0002

256 1456

~ATIONAL

ADVERTISING with fhe
Callery of Homes.:.:.._ ___,

ed at Barrs Super Ma ket
GolloRolle Mls o lesleMc
Combs St Rt 775 379 2166

WATER HEATER CHEAP 446 4127
2 P ck Up trucks both $275 150
HOndo $95 chest freezer 1
yr old $200 6 mo o d po
able dishwasher $150 7 y
old gentlePolom no G e/d ng

$250 400 boles of hoy $1 00
~USED

1

I

!RIPPLE TRACK SOTRM WIN

DOWS New 8 f p1cture w n
dow wtlh wood frame double
~lou

Ph 446 43 ,

'

SEVENTY

each Fo d I octo w th bru sh
hog and 7ft s ckfe bar $1200

Ph 614379 2663
IISOSALESofhoy co J H Ndo
245 Slf A
~

1

FIVE

ACRE
FARM 2 story 3 BR w bath

home good barn o her
au bu d ngs good pasture
fe nce d pond tobacco base
Imber on b acktop r oad
S50 000

ADDISON Very wei kept 2
B R tu ! ba""'
I w h
garage ., ~l I oars
c arpet
It fue
washer
o I fun
and dr
2 n acres
PR CEL.. LOW $20200

c:,\1 •

RENTAL INVESTMENT 2
tul y turn shed a r cond
tra ers on lg tot Georges
Cr&lt;'!ek Rd 514 500

ACRES beau lu y
wooded
several good
bu ld ng s tes e acktop
road rura wa er s 0 500
48

624
ACRES
perfe c
bu d ng s tes p cturesque
country surround ng s city
schoo s
r ura
water
SlO 000

PRE INFLATION
PRICED 3 BR all elec
tr c fully ca rpeted new
qual ty cons ructed hom e
wl h carport you II have o
see to bel eve he pr ce
526 sao
DOUBLE WIDE 97014
x 50 mob e hom e w range
and refr gerator 13 )( 33
awn ng n ex.ce en cond

s10 600

WE NEED LISTINGS!

4% 3636

Hour

FOR SALE
CARL WINTERS PH 245 5115

antf ogg ess ¥e co po a on
needs a few good peop e n the
mmed a e areo No s.el ng e
qu ed Se ous people only
need apply For more nfo mo
t on col 388 9367 8 om t
1
om 3pmtl5pm

ALL TYPES ol bu ld ng rna er als NEW &lt;4 Ft )( 8 F F ash ng Por
table S ghn5 w th .450 fe ers
b ock br ck s.ewe p pes w n
ssqs
col
216 745 9572
dows
ntels e c Claude
anyt me
W nters R o Grande 0 Phone
245 5121 after.c5::__ __
REFR GERATORS
washers
dryer ranges Gene Skoggs
1294 Eosern Ave Ph .4.46 7398

~~

COAL - ope-n 6 day~~o a week and
even ngs Fo fu the nfo mo
on coll 367 7338
1970 TRIUMPH 650 Chopper new
po n JOb good co nd Ph 992

6192

CHAIN LINK
PRIVACY &amp; WOOO FENCE
For Home Bus ness and n
du! y RAY HOUCK FENCE
CENTER
Call .u6 0-t 2 or
LIGHT we gh ch mney blocks
Go I po s Block Co Ph 4A6

2783
USED Furn ure Duncan flhyfe d
ng room su e one coil sp
ngs fuJ s ze Corbin ond
Sny~er Fu n ~5 2nd Ave
-446 117~
MUST se I I ke new 2 pc Span sh
I v g oom su te eke cond
&lt;446 3712

FIREWOOO Co I 388 9930 ,

I

LAND 35 acre!. of le\'e o
rol ng ground on both s des
160 near
of Sta e R
Porte Rural water tronts
on F oyd Clark Rd and R
LAND
56 acres fenced
w lh 20 ac es of t mber
c ose to North Ga. a H gh
Schoo
cealed
on
Thorn pson R d lots of road
frontage
Buy for
S25 000 00
LAND 20 acres Loca ed n
Morgan Tw p
ocated w th
road tr on age on Rowles
v e R d Spr ng wa er
ava sble
Buy for
S1700000
LAND
50
K 96
ot
loca ed on L ddy Hollow
Buy fo r S4 000 00

BACKHOE DOZER TRENCHER
WORK CONE AT REASONABLE
RATE
Con tact Sn h
co vat ng __!h 446 3981

Ex

All TYPES of dozer work Ph
379 2621 AI en Ruthe fo d
ECONOMIZE on luel w h ou r
spec o on ~lone f eplaces
Logue Con act ng bock and
brick wo k Ph 368 9939

PRICE REDUCED on
doub e w de home
3
bedrooms
carpeted
modern kitchen
rura
water
ncludes retr g
range living &amp; dmtno room
furn ture washer dryer
central a r Pr ce 519 500

USEO MOBILE HOMES
CALL 576 2711
TO ECONOMIZE on fuel unde p n
you mob le home and anchor
Ia safety Foster Mob le Home
Ser¥ ce -446 2783 orE me Sk d
moe &lt;4 46 3479
1972 2x65Costle3 B
960 0)(50 Van Dyke
959 0)(50 R chard son
960 0~~:50 Rego
977Sofo 1811 011eltra e
2 used ave! a lers
T State
I'
Mobile Homes Co p
1220Eos en Ave
Gall pols Oh o
Bank F none nL_ - - 10•55 2 b mob e home a Ph

~m ..sOHcrcd

BABYSITTING Fo n c
nurse y DON T BE nco ven enced by le
~c ho I en( e w I co e to
I gyourt ashp eup
lrl c n my I orne wcf.'kdays
beca use of undepenoblc ser
515 00 pe week Nea Ho ze
vte Co A&amp;RTrosh
Ph 446 7643
e v
I 4&lt;46 b540

I

BUILD A HOME Aong
Rt 1 Crown c ty we have
2 lots with a total of 91
frontage Buy both for only
$5 000

FOR

THE

LARGE

FAMILY we have a 9 room
A bedroom ~story ~ome In
Bldwe
only 20 minutes
from co a m lnes storm
w ndows and doors F A
fuel oil furnace
n ce
garden area can be yours
w thin 30 days fpr only
$22 ooo Call for an ep
oolntment

3 BEDROOM CARPETE'D
HOME loc ated In Harrison
Twp Macedon a ~d F A
furnace modern k tchen
rural water and c sterns a
peaceful home In a rural
settlno Price $21 000
4 BEDROOM CARPETED
HOME near Clay School
Ga !polis
c ty S D
situated on 1 acr~ lot W·b
f replace unique v no lnd
d n ng room ca I tor more
nformatlon

BUSINESS

BUILDING

located on upper Second
Avenue
Gallipolis
N ce
lo t city water and sewer
Pr ce S26 000 00
TH~EE

BEDROOM

VOU RE

TO SELL

PLANNING

CALL US

WE

HAVE
A
LIST
OF
PRctSPECTIVE BUYERS
AND WERE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU
IF YOU DON T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD CALL WE
MAV BE ABLE TO FIND
tT FOR VOU
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Reel Estate 44' 1066
E venlngs R USSIU Woetd
44f 4618
ICen Morg1n 446 0971

'!

Here s t-tve Nice Homes In The C1ty

3 Bedroom Home With Loh 01 Room -large liv ing
room w th fireplace dining room

HOWARD Peck Water Del 11ery
245 9315 or 388 8262 day or
n ght
SAND and Beaver Insurance Co
has offered serv ces for F re In
surance coverogv n Gall a
County for almos t a tentury
Forms homes and personal
property
cove rage s are
ova loble to mee nd v dual
needs Contact Charles Neal
__!? U~ghbor and :agent
BOBS
CS
Rod o
Equ p
everyth ng n Two Way Rod o
Antennas and acces Geo ges
Creek RC Gall po s -t-46 4517

ALLEN S Conti ucl on remodel
ng odor new bu ldng Ph

446 2910

LAWRENCE

HEAT NG

AND

ELECTR C TO g ve you a free
est mate on b own n nsulo
t! on Coll675 3099

SA NOV ANO BEAVER INSURANCE
CO hos offered serv ces fa
F re lnsu once cove rage n
Gal o Co lor alm.l$ a century
Forms homes Ol'ld pe sonol
fJ;Jropv ty
coveroges ore
avo lab e o meet nd v dual
needs Con act Foster L
s
you e ghbo and ogen

Very

ch with huge living and dining plus family room and 2
baths Best buy In the area for $31 500 If you neee room
~

S beeroom brick

Older Home Needs Cleanup -

sa

money

maker w th lots of potential
Dandy Two Bedroom On 2nd Ave New roof new
furnace and very nice deep flat lot close to everythmg

Two Story Weth

Rtver V1ew- Excellent view of river
handy location house needs some work must sell
make offer
oedroom home
Bargatn Hunters Oeltg
ear city limits
full basement located

SOLD

22 000 00
Country LIVIng At Its s-•• l
sq ft of modern
llvtng space Includes 4 ~n:\.V baths fireplace 2
car garage beautiful k ~ ....., won t find a better
buy tor $53 000
4 Bedroom 2 story - VJ.Dted one of the areas
nicest colonial homes ~ftl 1 new and buill by a

J\'{1

master draftsman 3 ~~ tJiace fam ly room
torm~le dining ond 2 ca garao• Prlcee atS62 000
81 level- You II be sur·~
the living space In this
well kept 3 bedroom ho~~ kit tamlly room and
garage Priced at S25 S&lt;;u
Clo$e To Town- Ne
oom, This one has 4

t\

solJR

.U

bedrooms 3 baths
formale dining conv

Ra1se Your Own Grocertes
A most an acre ( 91 ~ fer e
Raccon Creek bot om land
nea Cora 0 der 2 slory 3
bedroom fram e In good
cond\t on
formal d n ng
v ng room
oom n ce
k !chen and oa h
Do&gt;o:ol
ga s for heat dr ed well
On Raccoon Creek
N ce year old one story
frame on 75x300 foot lo
w th 75 foot frc;m tage on
Raccoon Creek Panel ng
and dry walt
carpeted
throughout
aluminum
s d ng centra l electr cheat
and a r new kitchen In
1975 C ty Schools With th s
home vou will never need a
summ er or weekend home

1 1 Acre
Four year o d 13U sq ft
frame home near Add son
carpeted throughout
3
bedrooms n ce kit c hen
range oven refrigerator
centra
heat and .a r
nature! gas
two story
garage 24x36 could have
n ce apartment upsta rs

2 baths nice k1t

Restore ThiS one
And make yourself a
bundle owner w I make
you the best barge n you
ever had on th s 8 room 2
bath home Its old but t
was one of those real good
ones when bu II Modern
k t and heating system

Something N1ce
You I agree For: $33 900
th s peasant modern 3
bedroom
2 story wl
please you Includes arge
tam 'y room formal dining
and garage
Barga n n Waterloo
An olde 1 story frame In
e:-:ce l ent condtt on
Recent y remodeled by
add ng
a new
h rtf
bedroom a bath new doxo
gas
furnace
and
an
enlarged k chen Close to
store church and school
Cou ld not be replaced tor
lhru t me the ask ng price
Of 56000 00

We need Ltstlngs Call the
W1seman Agency 446 3Ul
Ga I a Co s Largest Rut
Estate Sates Agenc:y
Office 446 l64l
Ike Wtseman 446 3796
E N Wiseman 44~ 4500

n orch qclurol
des gn and bu ld ng of new
homes
small commerc al
bu d ngs opt o remodell')g
w h s a e oppro11o of pons
B II Walker 446 21-46 or 446
8652
SEPT C Tonks Cleaned Plants
Sep c Tonk Serv ce Ph 446

0' 675 21&gt;47

STUCCO plaster ng and plaster
epa
Te-. lured ce I ng sw ri
I oat or brush des gn 32 yr ex
p Work by the hou or by the

10b

256 1182

All

~~---_:_

____

--------TRUSS£0 RAFTERS
Any
p tch
any
s\r:e
Sou heoslern Oh o T uss Roller
Co Box 28 A Rutland 0

45775 Ph (614) 742 2409 We
delver
~

P cture Tube Spec o1 sis
HARTWELL ELECTRONICS
245 5365

BOROI'R S GARAGE OOOR Se'
v ce Commerc ol and Res den
I a Spec olz ng In opere ors

Local 256 1&gt;472
PASQUALE Insula! ng 103 Cede
St Galhpol $ Ph 446 2716 o
4-46 1092

CUSTOM REMODELING 20 yoon
el(perience 388 8308 New dry /
walt ce I ng w th sw rl o tex
ture des.gns Other dry wol
repa r v nyl wq !paper ng new
baths new k tchens Anything
n remodeling of repa r

wo'k COUGHENOUR Wate

TAYLORS Ar Condtonng and
Refrlgerot on Commerc ol and
domes. c 4.46 2247

-- ----r•r

HLIF=F NE~ n,~ r ns F)( tf Sl'iop
Pfumbtng
electrtcol
small
npp washer and d
corp
repo r.. ond genera repo rs
-J. C'o1138tl ~47 ave 15 yrs exp

12 ACRES RT 325

6 Roam q,ome F A fur
na ce
wood burn ng
f replace 4 be ns m lk
house 500ga ton m lk tank
good ten c ng a
m nere
r ghts goes ots of pas lure
approx 25 acres of tillable
Off sa te Roue 2 8

JS YOUR

FAR~ - SIA

A good a I around farm

s
hard to com e by 6 oom
house ba se m en g a nery
tor co rn stora ge 700 bu
Barn 7S )(60
2 s ory
ch cken house n g ood
cond 1 on 20 acres of top
eve land 35 ac es blue
g a ss pas ure 1700 l b
obd cco base n ce pond 2
con e ete water ng roughs
very a rae! ve sodded
wa cr d v er s on Th s farm
s h gh l y proctuct ve
11
you wan a good fa rm cal
us now

7 ROOMS
4 BEDROOMS

180 ACRES PLUS
Vacan
A wo od and
wonder al"d
some
pasture and t !lab e and
Less than Sl60 per ec re
DAIRY BOY CROWN CITY
Gb ng prof table bus ness
390 fl fronta ge on State R t
7 Al l bu d ngs and lsted
equ p ment goes Large
paved a ea easy access
Good nvestment proper y
Th s s a ~ast develo!lfng
erea Th e on y es au ant
w h n sev eral
m es
lnqU e oday
LOT &amp;
MOBILE HOME
n Po e
10 xSO
bed ooms
Elcona
Nee
ot 305 ac e ev e P ced
on y $6 900
enx ous to sell can be
bough! as a s ngle un I or
srna er amounts
ACREAGE
BU L DING SITES
t-5 Acres oca ed n G een
&amp;
Perry Twp
Sma
amount ot
mbcr &lt;~0 A
abe ?. barns JO )(]0 and
40 x ?. J
f yo u are oo k ng
fo r valuab f' land tor n
ve:!. lm en l hf' c I s cal
odav
OLD STYLE
COLONIAL HOME
One at ll C a ra c t v e old er
two
s orv
hom es
n
Ga ll po s
r ooms
4
bed ooms 2 ba hs bu 1
n k che n F A na ur a gas
tur n ace n ce larg e fran
po ch screened n back
po ct N ce o w h 4 ca r
gar age n bac k clo se o
chu ch &amp; bus ne ss sec on
do wn own Tti s DfOp er y s
good c ond 1 on and
pr ced o se ll

'

&lt;

NEW LISTING
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
Ano th er qu al y home we
a k en c a o of Som e ot he
good f ea ur e; 3 bedrooms
5 n ce close t s to ce d a r
na ur al gas f urnace Very
pr e y I a dwood I oors
cen a a r co nd oner
c~ l evi;'
Ol f n she d
a ached ~a age A
hi s
1 m t:S of
nd mor e w lh
Ga I po 5 Pr ced n the
low th r es
18 ACRE FARM
NEAR R 0 GRANDE
Ga ll pol s Sc hool 0 st ct 2
barns 2 sh ed s approx 20
acr es of pas ure 40 acres
of good
mber (Oak &amp;
P nel App ox 20 acres of
I abe and All m nera l
r gh ts goes tobacco base
some fa r m machlner)l
I vestock ( hogs and lay no
hens l 3 Rura water taps
pa cJ A
crops goes
2
mob le homes (one Is
4 X65 I and a 5 room attl"
house Just sted

ALMOST NEW
Been 1 ved n a short t me
3 be droom home aca ea n
Fa t eld A c res Subd
Modern eat n k c h en w th
a bu I cabs N ce bath
e ectr c heat Th e rmope~ ne
w ndo ws
s ngle
ca r
ga ag e New I s ng don I
wa
o se e Pr ce d to se H

•

TV REPAIRS RENTALS

~·· 2923

HERE

213 ACRES

Near Me gs M nes has
barn
storage bu ld ng
farm pond Presen y has
one tra ler rental space
Th s can be deY eloped nto
a n ce n came propertv
PR CE REDUCED
S2 DOO 00
Do yo u war .:. barga n?
He e
s on e yo u are
over oak n g So mu ch to so
c
2 s ory Coun r y
Hone 3 bed oom s bu
n
k te l en cab nt! s ba h
grav ty t ed sp r ng wate r
sys em p en y of pressure
sac r oof good sma t barn
almos t new meta l root
ch c k e n hou se
garage
co ncr e e s ab for mob le
home
9 ac res p as ure
and b ack op road
at of
h s t or only $14 00 0 DO
168 ACRES
GOOD CATTLE FARM
Lots. of poss b t es 2 larg e
stock barn s good cone ete
round s to ck wat er
h
ough
lO
a c res
n
cult vat on 1200 f tobacco
base Lots of new f en c ng
P enty wale
n I eld s 10
a!: es mber Own!:[_ e41ly
16bACRES
NEAR PORTER
New house under cons tr
plus 6 room far m house
barn &amp; other outbu d ng!.
Approx
140 ac r es o f
pasture and
n ber &amp;
'3pprox 28 acres of T I able
and
A 1 m neral r ghts
goes some goo d fences AI
and &amp; houses tor only
S55 000 Now
TARA ESTATES
ONLY S48 000
Beaut fu 8 roo m ho use
881 sq f
v ng space
Fea tur ng 3 BR w h d e uxe
wa lk n c ose s 2 baths g
attra c ve FR
beau fu l
rock ted s Qne f r ep la ce
Formal DR Bu t n k I
che n lm por ed I ght f x
u es and pewter door
hardware A so en tO Y the
use of
ub House &amp;
Sw mm ng Poo l
Pr ce
R@duced to 549000
3 BEDROOMS
RT JSWEST
Ga pol s Sc hoo D st 2
Car garage
2 bath s
5
rooms ra 1ch sty e w t h
1 249 sq f
v ng spa ce
storm doo s &amp; w ndow s
modern k tch en w th d sh
washer Large lot See h 5
one now
3 BEDROOMS
LARGE FAMILY
ROOM
La ge o n a n c e com
mun ty frame w h br ck
ont
FA
furnace
modern k tchen
pa o
u
y r oom mo dern bath
rvust see th s hom e
ts
pr ced r gh l ca now

'"'

Near Town
Home and 5 s acres on s R
588 I 1 acres t m ber 285
toot
frontage
extra
bu lid ng s te s N ce two
bedroom
frame cot age
Nth a carport
Rural
wa ter bottled gas furnace

ECONOMY Trac ors and Equip
men Co ol s Soles and Ser
v ce 2 m les West on 588 Ph

LOOK THIS OVER
76 Acre Farm modern s K
room home
good barn
new too shed ut y b dg
L ne fences a I woven w re
42 acres B G pas url!
o
acres woods
22 acres
m eadow
and !liable
plenty of ocust 1 ees 200
lb obacco base Th s farm
s n the Ga lllpo s Sc hool
D s r c t Ca I Now

Gall polls Sch ool D str cl
basem ent
1
balhs
mo dern kitchen ce~mp e e
w lh birc h cab nets F A
furnace ca rport 2 wood
burn ng f replaces fam y
room arge ot w ttl fru t
and
a storage
t rees
way
bu !ding W th n 5 m te5 of
SMALL FARM
Galllpo s N ce home et a
LIVING
good nr ce
Today s cho ce
ap
COMMERCIAL
prox mately 25 acres of
BUILDING&amp; SITE
pasture and farm ng and
7
rooms
full State H ghway 7 North
N ce
Mason ry Bu d ng w th
basement 3 bed oomS
ke
good barn
two a her br ck frofll bu !d ing
outs de bu ld ngs
fences new Approx s ze 30 :o&lt;24 2
fa r
plenty wa er for slory Level at fronts 175
catlle
smal
obacco f on Stale H ghway 7 Call
acreage we are ready to now
BUSINESS INCOME
sell
PROPERTY~ HOME
SPRINGVALLEY
Up to $660 00 per rnonth
SUBDIVISION
R:en ats plus a beau tu 7
vacant o1~
n cc s zc room (3 bedrooms ho me
build ng lo ts w l h al
o I ve n yourse f alum
utI es ther e
Lot s ze s d ng good grade n c e
10 8 by 7 2 Be er ge
trent por ch ots of buill n
urn now
cabinets tab e op range
76ACRES
wal~ oven
aundry tubs
SPRINGFIELD TWP
na t gas forced a r furna ce
Old
house
5
ooms
centra a r wood bu rn ng
f rep ace a dr lied and dug f replace Lots ot shrub
well
La s of good s zc bery
evc t grassy to
A
timber
Lots of wa nu
beaut tul p ace pus 11 n ce
trees a 1 m nera r ghts
ncome Pr ced r Qhl
goes aporox 12 acr es good
JBE DROOM
t liable and ONLY Sl6 000
Acre P us eve! ap
prox
1 1 m es tram
BRICK CONSTRUCTION
hOspita on black op rd
-G ALLIPOLIS
p en y ot garden ~pace
We are p leased Ia offer tor
sa e th s 8 rOOjllS n ceo der rural water country v ng
c ose to Ga 1 po s Pr ced
home n one of the bes
of!!.y s1a ooo
locations of Gall po s 4
BEAUTIFUL
bedroom basemen
Na
COUNTRV HOME
gas forced a r furnace
Th s hOme ha s ha d a
PLUS70 A LAND
Beauty Sa on operat on n Th s home
~
11ery a
t tor years own th s n ce tract ve modern n every
hom e and
your own way
6
rooms
3
bus ness now
bedrooms
5 c osets
2
baths shower ~ chen
- 3 BEDROOM BRICl&lt;
arge and pre y Many
Immediate
possess on
moe des rab e fea ture s
owner h.n moved to a
ncludi ng
c orner
ot
farm Be the f
to ook at
blackt op road
3 car
tl:\ls nice
ga age 2 por ches pat o
sma I gr een house w th
I
furnace barn 70 A med
and
fert I zed
B G
pasture
ots of walnut
trees Check w th us oday

for children see this one
story 2 baths modern forced air furnace It

HIDDEN CHALET
One of Gal a County s
most untQve homes
10
rooms plus
2 bath s
featur ng ~ bedroom s on
the matn eve! and th e
master bedroom on th e
second level w th s.l d ng
glass doors ead ng to a
balcony Has a s unken p
with
wood burn n g
flrep ace d n ng room and
modern k. tchen compte e
w h all bu It n cab net s
d shwasher d sposa and
range
Hom e
s tot a
elec r c with central a r
The tnter or of ttl s s very
ru stic
\41th
beamed
cathedra ce I ngs Th s
co u d be your dream hom e
sett ng on 6 acres of
woodland Approx 3 m es
from
Ga ll pol s
No
s gh se ers pease
BROOMS
2ACRES
Th s s a very a ract ve 3
bedroom home bu It n
k t chen nc udes garbage
d sposal coun e op stove
wal oven refr gerator
w th ce maker F n shed
Beau fu arge
bas em en
tree s In background The
comt9r of c y 1 fe the
bea ut Y and enroymcn of
country 1 v ng a 1 h s c ose
to Gall ipo son Sta e H gh

room modern forced air gas furnace New no
mamtance siding Small lot owner \lery anKious
4 5 or 6 Bedrooms - Modern brick and stone ran

1972

BACKHOE dozer dllcher and
dump ruck We ns all water
I nes f oo ers drains sept c
sys ems conc rete work Hot
I eld Backhoe Ser Rutland 0
Ph 7&lt;2 2008~ 44~2~.7~86
=--·
ARE VOU COOL MAN? Then you
need the lnsulot ng e)(perts at

or famtly room

nice equ pee modern kitchen 2 baths large utility

Call us right now

446 0294

1976 SCHULT MOB lE home 2x60
2 bedroom k !chen and v ng
BACKHOE &amp; Doze work also op
roam furn shed bedrooms un
so I and fill d r ova oble 379
lu n shed curta ns o e tnc lud
2258
eel cen a heat and o cond
8 CENTENN AL
on ng shag corpe I
v ng
SPEC Al
room hallway ond moste
Camp ete auto pa n jOb one
bed oom on ly I ved n 5 mon
color only $76 00 2 toneS 00
ths lnte ested port es only
Phone 446 3769 after .4 P ce
Mon h of July only Stop n at
Pe sons Body Shop 26 Ro oad
S6500
S Midd epo
Oh o o co
MOBLE HOME She ;o;tPok
367 0165
Unlu n o "f!urn Ph 4&lt;46 124
ahe 5
GENERAl Cant oc o s Do ol
no~orTo y co penter 8 plumb
MOBLE HOME 2 b9d oo m QC'Od
g Ins ol and
epa
ol
cond Seer f ce Ph 446 1365
d llewoys Ph 446 9587
I W ll DO sew go d ,.., f' o o s
n n y home Ph 440 31 S

3

carpe ed all e ec;tric home
10 tuated on
120x75
ot
front ng on Twp b acktop
Rd County water &amp; sewer
Pr ce $22 500 00
BUSINESS Price reduced
DWELLING and 26 )( 32
bloc k bu ld ng s ua ed on on 2 bay bus ness bu d ng
and land located on Rt
40 lC 132 lot n Gall pol s
160 nEw ngton Buy now
r~clud ng
co n tents of for S1Hl00 nn
dwell ng
Buy
for
New L st1ng NEAR RIO
$20 000 00
GRANDE New modular 3
S20 000 00 w buy a bedroom home cathedral
modern
one f ocr
3 ce I ng n I 11 no room
bed oom all elec r c home storm w ndows and doors
Pr ced tor qu ck sale
n Gal pol S C ty SChOO
d s r ct S tuated on 1 ~0 x $17 500
75 ot Car peted except to
NEW
3 bedroom
car
k !ch en and bath
new peted ranch sty le br ck
cand 1 on
rural water
home 2 car garage lot s of
cen ra t sewage co ec on
concrete
mmed a e
bla ck op streets
Cal fo
possess on Pr ~:e Low 40 s
mor e ntormal on Ca n be
V A and F H A f nanced

FALL SALE

USED APPLIANCES

POL V FOAM
fo solo cha r
cush ons man esses podd ng
deo lor co pe s Vo ely of
s zes 0 rec Fabr c ond Foom
So es Mo n Sf P Ple(nont
Ph 675 3-469 9 5 do ly till 8
F day

LAND Buy approx matel y
3 acres along St R 160
be ween C ty of Gall po s
and Holzer Hosp Ia c ty
we er and 5ewer An ex
ce ent buy tor on y $7 500

S30 000 00

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Young

LIMESTONE FOR DR IVEWAYS

LAND Bu d ng or mob le
hOme lots n Eureka area
Buy as many as 9 acres for
on y
$5 300 00 Has rural
water and wel

GRACIOUS 2 story br ck
home
9 large rooms
k !chen and bath up and
down has b ee n used as
rental apartment large
front porch city water and
sewer Call for appo nt
ment today
Buy far

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Assoc1ate

CH MNEY S ocks W Vo &amp; Oh o
Lump Cool Gall pol s Bock
Co 4.46 2783

LAND
Bu ld ng o
n
Porter Ca oday for mo r e
nformat on

IF

RON CANADAY, REALTOR

I 776 2237

~

NEW SORGHUM Con be pu chos

MAKE AN OFFER 3 BR
home barn garage o her
ell ne ed
au bu d ngs
r epa
3 2 acres 500 rd
f ron tage c y water gas
c ty schools

LOTS OF ROOM a
a
reasonable pr ce
4 BR
hom e on 2 4 acres city
schoo s 5 m les from town
on blacktop road $20 500

New listing located within tile city of Gallipolis

New Homo 11 Acru Farm ,.nd
You can now move Ia the counlry and enf'IY all the
modern conveniences
This beauty includes 3
bedrooms family room formal dining full basement
2 car garage 1 h baths and a heat pump The picture
cant speak tor this one you must see It Price w il l be
under SSO 000 ()(I

bedrooms 1 h baths c ty water &amp; sewer natural gas
F A furnace Call for appo ntment Price $26 900

160

CALL 446-3636

tine property

GOOD USED FURN lURE Gas
onge se I clean 19 cu I
el geroto 6mo o d 2e• o
a ge tab e-s oak d e$Se E
Am l v ng oom su le solo
bvds end cho s end and coffee
abies b ed room su tes boby
beds youth bed
spool bed
poster bed o4 tab le and cha
se s wash stand 2 desks
efr geroto s onges washe s
and d ye s elev s on con so e
and po~ olbe color block and
wh te m sc tems Ph 446
0322onyt me

NEAR VINTON 40
acres 5 BR home g barn
good
pastu e
f en ce d
sever a good bu ld ng s es
on blacktop ~d S40 000

7
BR

cabinets guest house other ourhutld ngs with plenty of
storage area S tuated on 90 K172 lot w tthtn the city of
Gall tpol s Price $21 500 00

Pr Ieee to sell

Del very
&lt;46 3962 &lt;4A6 4262 any t me

DOZER work excavating
cleo ing Ph 446 0051

land

T~DMASFAIN

EXTERMINATING
Term te Pest Control
Wheelersburg Ohio

=- - pollos
-CONCRETE
WORK
sidewalks
bonment
Louis Cox .U6 33'CI8

etc

ELECTRICAl Installation
R~
Comm
lndustrtol 256 6855
Crow~ t~ Oh o

f'

MASSIE
REALTY
32 State Street
Ph 446 1998
A A Nibert, Broker
Crouse Beck Roilld Neary new br ck and
frame spl t evel home on a
large 1 3 a lot Th s home
offers o1 br
2 baths
g
firepla ce I 11 rm 15)(24
carpet drapes built n
double oven and range
dishwasher
comb ned
refng freezer and
n
tercom Mus t 5ee to liP
precla e
keller Yale College Rolid
- 4 year o d br ck rancher
3 bedroom s ca rpeting ex
Insulation in walls and
cell ng
lg
f replace
fantast c fam ly ro am
etec baseboard hea bu II
In dishwashe r and range
s.plit ra 1 fenc e and a 10,;12
blo ~ k storage room
Centerpo nt
Slore
bu ding
w lh
v ng
quarters and equ pmen t to
put you n business for
yourself
Addison
Older
3
bedroom hOme on Iaroe lot
~!so two ad10 n no lots
Th s proper v has frontaQe
on Poute 7

Hc..U &amp;tote for ~1&lt;
PRICE RECUCED
Ca t
oday tor new tow
pr ce on lh s f ne 3 B R
hom e
o c aled
w h n
walk ng
d s ance
of
schoo l s
chu ches
and
~ o es
Easy na n enanc e
w h a u m s d ng and N u
Sa sh w ndows t\11 ap
p ances
o
se
up
hou se keep ng c a
oday
for your appo n men I
Oft1ce 44' 1694
EVENINGS
Charles M Nul
U6 1546
J Michael Nul
4ot6 1503
N.t1t
&lt;~ 46 7358

sam

WANT TO OWN BUT NEED

HELP IN FINANCING?
N e 2
bedroo 'n fa m home
wl ch has been camp e e y
emodeiPd ecen ly large born
ngoodco dt on o !I ss !
ng o approx matefy 7 oc es
nea tow Mob le I orne en o
spot on p ope y Good nve ~ t
e
re o oppo u y Co
44b 049o o 6p m

HOUSETRAILER &lt;.a I of e 5 p n
440 052

AND HEATING

ONE BEDROOM MOB LE hone
oco ed
Ce e o y 44 0 766
0 4-46 1317

STANDARD

592 3051
DOUBLE WIDE o d Ia Wood bur
n g f ~p la ce po o (e ro
a r 3 n les f om H M C Ph
446 502

REMODELED 3 BR house w h new
lu QC(J alu n r um s d ng ou
bldg
.Jnd CPIIO o
Stole
Hgwy w h ood I o loge Con
be bought w lh 5 to bO acres
P (ed easo ab le Pho e 388
853!»

FURN
olso I a le.
spo ce PI 379 2&lt;46q

Co Fourth /l. P n e
Phone .tl-46 3888 o -446 44777

691
VA FHA 30 y I none g I eland
Mo tgog e 77 E S o e A I ens

bu d ng good pdstu e p ced
on nspect on Phone J88 8824

ob e ho e n Ga ll po s
a e or 2 odull s on y house l u
P 4.40
sh ngs cen ol a

NEW

1RA LER

CARTERS PlUMB NG

MUST se ll p ce reduced pr te
SU 900 by Qwne
2 b
4
n es ou M I C ee k Ph 4-46

00 ACRE fo m nob le home 2
barns 2 ponds o he out

111obtl&lt; Homes for H&lt;nt

0338

l'lumbmg and Heating

CJi EAPI E

LAST

u

HOUSE

I
-

Perfect for
weekends l S acrea of and
about 'It clured and !h
woods with frontage on
Little Raccoon Creek plu$
en old 2 s1ory home
$11 900
BUILDING OR MOBILE
HOME SITE - Appro~~: S
acres about 13 m
tram
town Land 1 flat w th
fron t age on a BT rd and
co unly water available

VOUR

1 yr old
brick ranch offers 2 140 sq

,I

Fairfield Acres Subd Modern eat In kitchen woth all
buill In cabs Nice bath electric heat Thermopane
L1ve 1n 1 neighborhood you can ba proud ot Very wet I
kept J bedroom 1 h both on approximately 'o acre lol

AT

DREAM t10ME -

fleaiiO,

•

sewer

SUIURIAN

SETTING
Adds 1
room to breathe
at
mosphert To this fine 3
Ddrm rllnch Inside you 11
enjoy a fireplace In the
v ng room ~or mal din ing
room 1 1'1 bath! laundry
room and &amp; tull basement
with a flrepte ce All lh s
pus a large well land
seeped lot 3 mi out

~

LIVIN 15 EASY In this like new country home on
beautiful one acre lot - J BR w, baths electric
furnace heat cen air extra large country kitchen city
schools 132 900

.:-::· ... = .

THE WISEMAN MiENCY
GAWA OOUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY - - - - t:·

REALTOR
446-1066

446-3636

Bob Lane Branch Manager

= ,;:.-

$5 000

ft ot modern llvlno Don t
wa t o see th s 3 Br end 2
baIt'! home The k tchen s
comp lete w th dishwasher
Cl sp m crowa11e oven and
range
Other
s.pec al
teetures .!Ire the large.
formal d n ng rm quality
carpet heat pump 2 sets
pat a doors 12xS7 pa llo and
~ car garage w th electric
door opener

MOBILE HOME PARK ~mall

close lo own good
lncom.e eosv to take care
of
call for more n
form atlon
VACANT
LAND
IN
RACCOON TWP
100
acres pr ced at l275 pe"
acre Very pr 11111e about
h tillable and J woods
with fron tage on Raccoon
Creek

CITY - QUIET STREET
- Comfor table 6 rms end
blllh w th a larg e back
porch and oaraoe located
on F ifth A11c Pr ced to se I
$ !t_OOO

CAN

YOU

AFFORD

vr

CITV- VACANT LA NO Appro&gt;-: 5 1 acres running
from
Four h Ave
to
ChickA mauga
Creek
56 500 Don t waIt to buy
buy and wa t
BAR BUS NESS &amp; HOTEL
- Be your own bOS5 w th
th s on ce n a fellme n
Located on a
ves men
corner o n M ddleport
can for Q10re informal on

PRICE REDUCED - Near
VInton - 41 A ctean rolling
pasture Good fences Iaroe
pond old horne with 7 rm s
and batt! and ee l ar hou se

LOTS FOR
SALE
Locat ed on Ne ghborhood
Rd L nco n P ke George
Creek Rd and Rodney
Harr sburg Rd F nanclng
ava ab le
4 BE OROOMS IN TOWN N ce comfortable 1 2 story
hOme on Evans He ghts
offers room o spare for
your
grow ng
fam ly
Where else can you get a
full basement fam ly rm
w fh gas fireplace large
k tchen and dining area tor
only 525 500

COMMERCIAL SITE - S
lo 9 'lnd older home on
Slate Route 7 In Kanauoa
Lots of polenl ja l for 534 000
CLOSE TO MI~S - 116
ac farm
mo~tly clun
le~el and roll ing land Good
7 rm home
PIZZA BUSINESS An
t'llCellent opportun ty tor
some bus ness m inded
erson This arge corner
ot with a modern brick
building s a go od place to
5tart car be bouaht w th
or wtlhout equ pment Call
tor appo ntment

LAND
CONTRACT
Almost 12 A of level ond
o n g land w h a small 2
BR and bath home pond
and ots Of pr vact,- located
n Morgan Twp

r.

COUNTRY BEAUTY
see h s Yery n ce com
for abe fa m Mme w h 6
rms and oa h furnace
t rep ace sma I bar.n P:Qnd
an d 30 acres leve l oro I no
land
Owner nas been
ran st erred and w I sell tor

DEBBY DRIVE If you
want e to ea on o be proud
of don t walt o see h s
ove y br ck ranch A most
1 400 sq fl ot
y/ng ar ea
plu s -a full basement and
oversized 2 c ar garag e The
k chen s modern and
compte e w th a range self
clean ng oven d shwasher
and d sp A
this p us a
arge fla we ll andscaped
ot w ttl ~large s.hade trP.c s

$!7 900

LOt; CAB IN 55 000 Lo c a ed 1ear Thurman
w lh 5 acres of woods

OHIO RIVER
REAL TV INC.

I •~ '

-

I

3 FAMILY yo d o!Q 41 Go I e rl
Ave ue F doy o d 5o u

do~

lJ

5

DEWITT 5 PlUMBING
ANOHEATNG
Rou e 60 ot ( e g c
Pho e 446 2735

PORCH SALE ve y good w c
oil eli Mn f" dnv 0
15
29 39 few:o R od
1

oc r. lo
HOUSETRA EH n
nerl o H
I No lup
0
!:tn nkr&gt;y Rrl I h 3/9 '1fl9b
a of£' b

()() ACRE f AWM
J8
0
v

room porches nlae

bsm gas furn Large lot 180 x125

KING SIZE FARM
190 A Iust 3 ml from the hospital 100 A pesture 60 A
cropland timber 2 ponds oprlngo &amp; well water 3
barns tool shed a. granery j BR brick &amp; slone homo
built In kitchen FP In LR full bsm All electric This is
one of Gellle Co s baHer farms Owner will help
f nance

"WE SELL BEnER LIVING"

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL Th s o ve ly home s ess
th an I year o d has 3
bedrooms 1 ' baths n ce
k c h en
w th
range
refrig erator d sposa ful y
carpe ed 1 car garage
N ce leve tot S33 000
GROVER ROAD
Th 5
all e ec tr c r.anch w th
br ck front has 3 bedrooms
n ce ba h w th shower
lovely k tch en w th ra nge &amp;
d sposa fam ly room with
f r eplace Lo cated on 2 38
acres of n ce land beh nd
Chesh re SJl 900
NEW LISTING
N ce 3
bedroom home bath w th
shower
tam tv
room
bea u fu carpet e)(ce en
co nd on Located on 554 n
B dwe 1 for ~2~ 900
CROWN CITY
N ce 3
bedroom
hom e
with
I rep ace In den
fu
basement to11ely kitchen
w th range I ca r garage
Pr ce S2S 800
NEW LISTING
2 hOuse s
on a full c
tot good In
ve s tm ent pr oper ty or
com mer c at s te Located
on 01 ve Str eet $32 000

v

GOOD
BUSINESS
Lo oking for a buslnes!i
Tay or s Upholstering Shop
and r es dence s wa no for
you
located
at
1918
Eas E.' rn A11e Call for more
nforn a on

tor Lease
UNFU
pok
I
w

o c

\

VS REALTY
Branch BUD McGHEEManager

446-3434

LOVELY BRICK RANCH
Th s attrac 11e home has
3 bed room s 2 balhS family
room w h f rep lace n ce
k (: hen with bu It n range
and d shwashe r beautiful
carpe thr oug hout loca ed
an a 1 acr e o on Rt 160
U9 BOO

\ard Snlc
A. V£'

PRICE REDUCED!
A PICTURESQUE VIEWI
3 BR home with nice kitchen formal DR for that
Thanksgiving dinner open &amp;!airway extra large hobby

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

THERE
RIO GRANDE
N ce
12K60 mobl e home with 2
bedrooms
bath
k tchen
w lh
r"nge
and
retr gerator haS l'l Iaroe
bu td no
sui! abl e
tor
garage or other com
mercia! business W h an
apartmen overhead Price
S21 500
EUREKA
Look at this
1o11e y old er hOme with a
view of the r ver has 4
bedrooms l arge din ng
room t replace n llv ng
room garage $2 700
IN TOWN - Older br ck
hom e has 6 rooms ba h
full Dasemenl very n ce
to goM buy f or 118 500
owner w II help f nan ce
10 ACRES
Look ng for
hal perfect building s te?
Th s l and s clear on the
front tlnd n ce woods In I he
back
Localed
on
Ebenezer Carmel Rd from
Rlo Grande SIO ooo

80 A~RES - New st no
very good farm with n ce "
bedroom house new bath
forced atr furna ce Has a
large barn and oarage
1 952 pounds obacco base
th s year s crop goes w th
farm
Loca ed close to
Pen t ca
for more In
format on

I PCt 1o VA FINANCING
AVAILABLE NOW
WE NEED LISTING$
E11enlng1 Call
Doug Wetherholt4&lt;46 42:44

Lee Johnton 2!6 6H0 1
Earl Winters 44'I 111
John f'l.lftr 446

uu

g HE&gt;o g
215 Third Ave 44b 3782

A

CONVENIENT
Excellent neighborhood - near school churches &amp;
shopping Two story • BR country kitchen storage
room 2 room Bsm ges turn porches garage large
we I landsca ped lawn

S22 500

Pl u nb

GENE Pl:ANl SII SON
PlUMBING
Heo ng
Co d lo ng 300 Fou 111
Ph 446 637

•

A

HOME &amp; FARM OVER
$100 000? Wet
we ha11e
one 11 you qua fy meke
an appo ntment to see thiS A
old brick lace ed about
1 ml tram HMC
This
beauty Is situated on 10.4
acres ot and n th e city
SChOO l diSI With :V• m
frontage
on
R.a c caon
Creek
Other
special
feat ures are " BRs 3 h
baths family rm with WB
fireplace forme dining
rm
forma
entrance
camp ete k tchen
arge
LR
aundry rm
large
screened In patio attached
2 ca r garage plus another
new 2&lt;4 x 36 con cre e blo ck
garage
No s ohtseers
please

VINTON AVE
N ce
older 1 1 story home s ts
on a large le11et lot and
offers 1 rms
and bath
downstairs pus 2 up If
eeded
Thls home ties
been partially remade ed
end has ce pet10d f oars
new f ur nace and sink
basement
gerege and
terge shade trees

In • most doslroblo orea •
with tlroplactt In J
BR s A spoclouo reception holl with FP and music R
wllh F P carpeted In deep pile gold tone a graclouo
lor mal OR with F P a most desirable kitchen with
loland snack bar built In double oven a. Ban Franklin
fireplace a second carpetee stairway leads from lhe
kitchen This homo is complolely reeocoratee lo wired
ges turn Over slzt lot from 1st A\lt to lnd Av~ .
99 h x200 Well landscape&lt; with brick polio pool wi!lo
sloM a. waterfall Shown by appointment only

Health insurance

IS NO

DOUBT

abou I
f you like plush
carpet
arge
roomy
bedroom s modern kitchen
plu s a tam v room and
living room erge enough to
en erta n your guests this
is, just what you are ook!ng
tor Its priced o sell Ca I
today lor an appo n me
GREEN ACRES Is
he
pace for you This c o~y
home off ers l er s a tar qe
11 ng r oom built n k I
chen and a luI basement
P lus a very frien d y n e gh
borhood
ONUS lSn esr HMC Th s
room v th ree bed roo n
home has e very n Ge
k chen t ardwood floors
ba se m en
w fh tam ly
ro on
ut 1 y room 11nd
y ar age 527 900
THE PRICE IS reduc ed or
1 32 acres laca ccJ fou
n les from Gl'l I po s or
Route 41
, b(lllh&amp;
th ee bedrooms lots of nlct
ca rp e and much more al
n every pr e! y brick Cll~
schoo s Ca 1 soon 1 won
ta s long
The home 1t Ul 2nd Ave
s n neetl of repa r If you
are handv this could be a
money maker The pr ce
has been reduced CALL
T0DA Y I
Real

Estate V1tue1 con

1 nue to

net ease
I you
plan to buy you will be SSS
ahea d f you buy today
We ha~e two a I brick
homes on Kelly or bath
with nalurat ges heat and
cenlrel a r Call now tor an
appointment

Sll ODO will buy a very
comfortable o der home
ea!.y to heat (Na1ura Gasl
Lo s ot verv n ce carpet

II You H1ve though !!I about
the brick home at 100
Ch I icothe Rd
perhap~
you should call right now
he pr ce hall been reduced

we hntl hid several ca l s
concer n{,g the neat lttle
home 5 miles out Rt 1&lt;41
Th e owner has agreed to
5(1 w th 2 9 acres or with a
5:maller lol to the buyer s
sat sfacllon
Thll 35 Acr• f&amp;rm hill a
very n ce home with 3
bedrooms two baths a
11ery nice fireplace Also a
Iaro e
Cfncrete
block
garage (26M3 71
11 s a
hunter s havt-n
Lo cated
opty 3 miles from Me os
m ne No 1

Leu th1n 2 yun old lh s
f ne all br ick has like new
carpe t 1" baths 3 BRa
very
pretty
k l tc;:hen
cab nets a very large 2 car
garage all on a flat tot lh
the c IV school district
Owner has moved
buy
odev move In tomorrow
Two story house lots or
ou si de storage Includes 3
ou buildings w th concre e
walks glus a 20~t30 b1rn
w 111 concrete f oor All of
th s Including 6 acres of
ground s ocated at the
south edge of Vinton Ca
tOday on tv 121 sao No 020
742 3Rd A.ve Could be used
for many d Herent pur
poses oerhaos vour deas
are better than m lne
Why not take a took tod.ay
No 021
New listing at JR Nell Aile
New roof v nyl Siding 3
bedrooms bath Ut room
lots of storage natural gal
neat $15 soo.
We have other listings If
vou art "uvtnv or ttllln1
ull vs Rutty Toduo
All of
shown
only

our
by

llsfln11 1rt
appointnunt

PHONE 446-0552-MmME
428 2nd AVE. GAWPOUS. IIUO

�;10£ th. e Bend ·

. ',• :~·;:

or~~nization,

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

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

Filipino purge is ·b roadened
·

..

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

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

Leftist Thais
•

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

·r----------...;--------------1

Datelin
.e

:1

.

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

G tt•

+++

WIN AT BRIDGE
South plays for smaller set
23
NORTH IDI

• AJ 3
• AKQ.l52

• K

... 7 s '

WEST

EAST

4 K 94

... 10752

••

• 10 9 6
• Q 53

+IO B642
4A Q3

"'K 9 8 5
.

SOUTH
• Q86

• 8 73
• AJ 97

• ·' 10 2

Roth vulnerHbl e

Wt&gt;sl

Easl South
Pass , I N.T.

Pass
Pass

Pass JN .T.
Pass

Pass

Opening lead - 5 t4t

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

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

Polls show Carter leading
Ford by four point average

offers Arica"method

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

+++

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

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

+++

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

+++

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

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

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

H
•
omecommg
shOW.repeated

p

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

·MARVIN OURS

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

Hudson elected
FOP president

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. 3RD FLOOR

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

22gtll

1

•

e~na

W•dt:

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

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

• Desrgned 10 hi nn~ de cor
t Extra Tall

\ \::.,..'..

.

. l '\

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

'

'

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

·'

l nr~• r,

•too•••• ~

Altll ~lliC

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

.

Rhodesia
·Issue clear

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

Weather

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

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

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1976

(
)
(
)
.
·goo
139 31

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

'·-

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN Cf.NlS

Ford stumps California, has
Garagiola for taped .series
•

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

·News. • . in

Brief~

"'I

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

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

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

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

Pay raises in July confirmed

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

Patrol logs 14

Two-day moratorium

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

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

•

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

concern."

vehicular errors

·

Identifax coming .to Meigs

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

'

•

•

e

va.

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

.

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

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

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

Boys arrested

.

¥'

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

,

1

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

•

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