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10- The DaUySfntlnel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 25, 19'12

President Gets In First Blows
SAN CLEMENTE; Calif.
(UP! )-To judge by the curtain
raiSer, President Nixon llas
junked the script that called for
him to remain above the battle,
and plunged Into his last
campaign rel\Bhing the chance
to strike out at his foes.
His strategists had passed
the word for ltl()nths that Nixon
would not don the politician's
hat until Congress adjourns.

But they did not bargain on the
Presi&lt;lent, wbq does not like to
leave the game to chance. ·
Less than 12 hours after he
had delivered his acceptance
speech at the Republican
National Convention in Miami,
Nixon hit the road In search of
that "New American Majority ."
He spoke before the American Legion in Chicago and was

American Ideals
Shipped Abroad
WASHINGTON (UPI) -sen.
George S. McGovern said
today President Nixon has sent
America's principles of peace,
prosperity, justice and open
government into exile.
McGovern said 20,000 young
Americans have died since
Nixon promised a secret plan
for peace in Vietnam, 5 million
workers have no jobs and ttie
crime rate . is climbing"boosted along)ly the Republican burglers" whO are charged
with breaking into Democratic
headquarters.
In a statement reacting to
Nixon's speech accepting the
GOP nomination for reelection, McGovern said the
President "shrinks from
debate, hides from the press
and covers up $10 million in
secret money from big special
interest backers."
McGovern returned ThW"s·
day from a foW"-day campaign swing in which he got the
silent treatment from Minneapolis conventions of
Veterans of Foreign Wars
(VFW) and the American

Legion, won endorsement from
Chicago Mayor Richard J.
Daley and ended some dif.
ferences with former President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
McGovern called a summit
meeting of his top Ia bor advisers today to try to win wider
support from unions and to lure
AFL-CIO President George
Meany back into the
Democratic cam~.
McGovern was cheered
Thursday at the Minneapolis
convention of the American
Federation of Teachers, which
gave him 25 per cent of its $1
million political fund. His
running mate, Sargent Shriver,
won the endorsement of the
75,!JOO.member International
Moulders and Allied Workers,
who said in convention at
Cincinnati that Meany's reluctance to back the Democratic

applauded loudly when he
chaslized those - obviously
meaning McGovern.;.who
Nixon said would cui .the
defense budget and relegate .
America to the position of a
"second rate power."
·
He also has made a major
campaign issue out of amnesty
for draft dodgers, challenging
McGovern's more lenient posilion.
"!think we have had enough
of running down our men who
have served their country,
rather than deserting it and
running off to Canada," he ·
said. "I think we ought to stand
up for those who served it."
His campaign staff had done
their work well, drawing out
the crowds at welcoming
rallles in San Diego-which
Nixon calls his "lucky city"
because he never lost it in an ·
election-and on home soU in
San Clemente.
Either because he is con-

.Free Meal Policy Set Up by School

cerned about the- lfl.year-&lt;&gt;ld
vote or is setking a land.sliuc,
Nixon in~~ his strongest pitch
to -youth throughout the day,
At his appearance in Utica,
Mich. to dedicate the. Dwight
D. Eisenhower High School,
speaking to an all-white,
strongly antibusing audience,
Nixon invoked memories of his
own youth.
With emotion he recalled his
father "whose ... greatest
desire•for his children was for
them to get .a college ed~cation
because he only .finished the
fifth grade."
Nixon, obviously having enjoyed hls first full day on the
campaign trail, settled. in for a
two-week stay in his oceanside
v!Ua to plan political strategy.
He will fly to Hawaii next
Thursday for a two-day meeting with Japanese Prime
Minister Kakuei Tanaka and
then return to San Clemente
until after Labor Day.

.HOSPITAL NEWS
Births - Mrs. Clifford
Boyer, daughter, Crown City,
and Mrs. Edward McGrath,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Jenny
Black, Middleport ; Virgil
son, Athens.
Yarbrough, Rutland ; William
Discharges
Sharon Jones , Middleport, and
Goodnight, Charles Hughes, Clarence McDaniel, Rutland.
Jr., Tony McKinnis, Daniel
DISCHARGES - Clyde
Miskimen, Mrs. John Conley Bayles and Raymond Miller.
and son, Mary Bownan,
Thoinas Bohe•n, Mary
PARENTS TO MEET
Richards, Mrs. Leonard
RACINE - Parents of
Crabtree and daughter, Ruth
Swango, Marjorie Saunders, kindergarten students in
Micky Preston, Eric Harris, Southern Local School District
Sue Harmon, Kevin are asked to meet in the kinBetty
ticket was a 11puzzle."
BW"gess, Rose Brown, Mrs. dergarten room Monday at 10
McGovern also plans to Gary Basham and daughter a.m. Children will not report at
modify his welfare and tax and Don Adams.
this time. Kindergarten classes
reform proposals to try to
will begin Tuesday.
reduce alienation of big busiCLUB TO MEET
ness. The changes . in his tax
LOCAL. TEMPS '
The Wildwood Garden Club
and welfare programs will be
Temperature in downtown
revealed Tuesday in a Wall will meet Wednesday at 8 p. m. Pomeroy Friday at 11 a.m.,
Street speech, his aides report- at the home of Mrs. Alfred onder partly cloudy skies, was
Yeauger.
ed.
81 degrees.

FLOWERS
fpr All Occasions

-........... _..,..----·
- Bus Routes Mostly Repeat
.....
We wire flowers
Everywhere ...__

992-2039
~omeroy Flower Shop
&amp;u.Hernut Avt!., .:.omeroy
Mrs. Millard Van M,ter

Larry Morrison, Assistant
Superintendent, announced
today the bus route, and kinderg.arten Information for the
Meigs Local School District
this term.
All morning bus routes in the
district will be run at the same
time and the same way as
dW"ing the last school year
excepttheroutedrlvenbyMrs.
Pauline Darst In the BradbW'y
-State Route 143 -area. Mrs.
Darst's bus schedule will be as

EH
I
. ALF. QUARTS·
H
•

Royal Crown
Bottling Company
Middleport

follows :
7:20 - Picks up the students
on Harrisonville Rosd between
State Route 7 and the Oren
Wears' farm. Down Route 7 to
Union Avenue.
7:30 - Up Union Avenue
picking up grades one through
eight between Route 7 and the
old Chevrolet Garage. (Mrs.
Knight will turn around at the
old Chevrolet Garage) .
7:35 - Up Mulberry Avenue
to the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Junior High students
willlransfer to bus No. 35 to be
Iran sported to the Jonior High.
High School students will
remain on the bus. This bus

TWO OF THE MOST IMPORTANT
THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH
"tOUR MONEY.

In a Savings Account, your money grows regularly
at a good rate of interest white 11 secures your future toryau,

In a Checking Account. your money goes Ia work
paying all your bills. Easily. Quickly. By check.
And gives you legal proof ol payment.

will leave Pomeroy Elemen·
tary and go back to Route 7.
7:45 - Up upper Leading
Creek Road to McElhinney
Hill . Over McElhinney Hill to
County Road No. 5 and into
Bradbury Elementary.
7:55 - Arrives at the
BradbW'y Elementary School.
Back to State Route 7and down
to Business Route 7 at Hobson.
8:05 - Up Business Route 7
to Pearl Street and on Into
Middleport Elementary.
8:10 - Arrives at Meigs
Junior High School.
This bus transports a load of
High School students from the
Jonior High to the High School.
All afternoon routes wlll be
run the same as last school
year.
All parents wishing to pick
up their children in the af.
ternoon at the Pomeroy
Elementary School are asked
to do so at 2:55p.m. to avoid
!raffle congestion in front of
the school at the regular 2:43
dismissal time. This will allow
the buses leaving the school to
clear the loading areas before
the parents arrive.
The sixth grade bus going
from Middleport to Bradbill'Y
will leave the Junior High
School at 7:20 a.m. The fifth
grade bus to Bradbury win
leave the Junior High at 7:45
a.m.
Any pupil attending kin·
dergarten In the Meigs Local
School Dlslrict wlll be permilled to board the school bus
at any of th~ regular bus stops.
This also includes students
residing within the village
limits of Rutland, Middleport
and Pomeroy.
Kindergarten classes will be
in session a full day this year
instead of the usual half-day.
The kindergarten pupils will be
assigned by the kindergarten
teacher to the MondayWednesday class or the
Tuesday-Thursday class. Each
class will attend school every
other Friday . Parents are
being urged to take their child
to kindergarten class on the
first day to meet with the
.teacher and obtain the child's
class assignment from the
teacher.
'

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
I he ce n1u ry•
eslablished 1872

LANGSVILLE - Alpha
Lewis Barr, 64, Langsville, Rt.
I, died thls morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Barr is survived by his
wife, Elvira; two dalighters,
Jane Messer, Magnetic
Springs, Ohio; and Kay Cadwallader, Manchester, Ohio;
three sons, Dwain, Oak Hill;
Larry, Langsville, and Mike,
Glenville, W. Va .; a sister,
Pinia Stone, Columbus; five
brothers, Wal ter, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Harvey , Columbos; Milton, Zanesville;
Bill, Buckeye Lake, and Floyd
of Marion, and II grandchildren.
Mr. Barr worked on the

FoW' bonds were forfeited
and three defendants were
fined in Pomeroy Mayor
William Baronick's Court
Thur~day, night.
Fined were Allen Sayre, of
Mason, 25. driving while intoxicated, 1100 and costs and
three days in jail; Dave Lips.
comb,
20,
Middleport ,
speeding , $25 and costs, and
Sharon Cotterill, Syracuse, 25,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
running a stop sign, $5 and
The
Middleport E-R squad
costs. Forfeiting bonds were.
was
called
at 12 :27 a.m. today
Wilmer Cornell, 29, Racine,
speeding, $18.70; Myrtle to State Route 7 for Susan
Hanning, 53, Pomeroy, driving Emri ck, LancaSter, who was
whi1e intoxicated, $200, an d injured
.d 1 inShan automobile
t k ac·
LeO Young, Jr ., resisting Cl en ·
e wa ~ a en to
arres t, $100, and disturbing the Vedteradns Memonal Hospital
peace, 125 _ ·
• an a m11ted.
DIVORCES GRANTED
Three divorces were granted
Thursday in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Judge
John C. Bacon. Dorothy L..
Fischer, plaintiff , wa s given
custody of one minor child in
her divorce from John Thurmond Fischer, defendant. lona
Brickles, defendant, was given
a divorce and custody of three •
minor children fr om Donald
Brickles, plaintiff. Dana L.
Channell, plaintiff , was
granted a divorce fr om Judy
M. ChannelL

JOB WEL.L DONE
The Meigs County Unlt of the
American Ca ncer Society will
honor board members and
crusade chairman "for a job
well done" during this week's
crusade with a dinner on Sept.
6 at 7 p.m. at the American
Legion Hall in Pomeroy .
REUNION SET
The annual Bahr reunion will
be held Sunday, Sept. J, at the
Forked Run State Park at
noon. A basket dinner should
be brought.

section gang of the B'&amp;O
Railroad.
•Funeral services wiU be held
Sunday at 2 p. m. at the Martin
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Eugene Musser officiating.
Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime
Saturday.

Judge wants
'

Early Trial
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
federal judge.says he wants to
begin a civil trial in the alleged
. bugging
attempt
of
Democratic national
headquarters before the Nov . 7
presidential election to ' 1 insure
the right of the public to
know."
" It may be that, so far as the
public is concerned, their in·
terest might be better served
by having a civil trial before
the election," U. S. District
Courl Judge Charles R. Richey
told surprised attorneys ThW"sday at what they had expected
to be a routine procedW"al
hearing.
The $1 million civil suit filed
by the Democratic National
Committee against the
Committee to Re-elect the
President and five suspects in
the alleged bugging stems
from an attempted June 17
break-in · at Democratic
headquarters in the posh
Watergate apartment - commercial complex.

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E·R squad
answered a call at 9:11 p.m.
Thursday to aid Clarence
McDaniel, Rutland, who was
hav ing chest pains . He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was ad·
mit ted .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Sunday through Tuesday:
Variable cloudb1ess with a
chance of dally showers.
L.Ittle change In tern·
perature. Highs In the upper
70s to the mid 80s. Overnight
lows In the upper 50s to the
lower 60s.
Variable cloudiness and
con tinued warm and humid
today through Satm·day with a
chance of mainly afternoon
and evening thundershowers.
High today and Saturday in the
80s . Low tonight in the mid to
upper 60s.

SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM-SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9:00 PM

Save 20% Now On

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Tie-backs, val~nces, special-order yardage and matching bed:

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or unlined.

Double Feoture Program
"GROUP MARRIAGE"

I

OF A

'

YOUNG STOCKBROKER

Now On Our Second Floor

· (Color)
Richard Benjamin
Joanna Shimkus

NOWYOUSEEHIM,
NOW YOU DON'T

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Kurt Russell
Cesar Romero

Exclusive Trunk Showin2 and Sale Of
Fall and Winter Coats
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( R)

(G)

ALSO
BEARCOIINTRY
COLORCARTOoN:

Alpha L. Barr Dies on Friday

on the application will be ·
confidential and will be used
only for the purpose of
determining eligibility.
Under the provisions of the
policy the local superihtendent
wiU review · appl!catlo11S and
determine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the
ruling of the local official he
may make a request either
orally or in writing for a
hearing to appeal the decision.
Robert Bowen, Mulberrr
Ave., Pomeroy, ' has bee~
designated as the hearing
official. Hearing procedures
are outlined in the policy.
The policy- provides that
there will be no identification
of or discrimination against
any student unable to pay the
run costs of a meal,
Family ·size and income
scale for free lunches is as
'ollows: 2-$3209, 3-$3968, ~
$4727, ~. ~130, 7$6762, 8-$7395, 9-$7919, 16$8545, 11-$9120 and 1~95 .

THE MARRIAGE

Walt Oisne~·s
pomeroy
rullond

Court &amp;nds

simple to complete .and
requests information needed to
determine number of children
in school and any · unusual
circumstences or hardships
which effect the family's
ability to pay for school lun·
ches. Tbe infonnation provided

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Plus
Tonightthru T111sdoy
August 25-29

Four Forfeit

application forms sent home in .
a letter to parents. Additional
copies are available at the
principals' office in each
school.
Applications may be submitted any time during the
school year. The form itself is

· Kindergarten pupils will be , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
permitted to eat their noon
meals in the cafeteria at the
price of 25 cents per day.
Kindergarten pupils residing
in the Harrisonville area can
be picked up at any of the
regular stops in that area and
transported
into
the
Harrisonville Elementary
School. All Harrisonville area
kindergarten pupils will then
be transferred to Linda Morris'
bus (Bus No. 17) to be transported to the Rutland
Elementary School where
kindergarten classes are held .
Mrs. Morris will pick up the
kindergarten pupils in the
afternoon and transport them
back to the Harrisonville
Elementary School where they
will transfer back to the bus
that picked them up in the
morning.
Kindergarten pupils residing
in the Salem Center area can
be picked up at any of the
regular stops in that area and
transported to the Salem
Center Elementary School. All
Salem Center area pupils will
be transferred to Alice
Globokar's bus (Bus No. 8) to
be transported to Rutland
Elementary. Mrs . Globokar
will pick up the pupils in the
afternoon and transport them
back to the Salem Center
Elementary School where they
will transfer back to the bus
thst picked them up in the.
morning.
Kindergarten pupils residing
in the Salisbury-Bedford
Township area can be picked
up at any of the regular stops in
that area and transported into
the High School. All kindergarten pupils will then be
transferred to William Ratliff's
bus (Bus No. 6) to be transported to the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Mr. Ratliff
will pick up the kindergarten
pupils in the afternoon and
transport them back to the
High School where they will
transfer back to the bus that
lcked them u in the morning.

Tonlght-Augusl2l

MEIGS THEATRE

The Southern Local Board of
Education today announced a
free meal policy ior children of
the district unable to pay the
price of a meal. .
Local school officials have
adopted the following family
size and income l'Cale to assist
them in determining eligibility.
Families falling within this
scale, or those suffering from
unusual circumstances or
hardships may apply for free
meals for their children. They
may do so by filling in the

Double Dribble
Admission : $1.50 Adults
Children : 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

•

SATURDAY-AUG. 26
DOUBLE FEATURE

......

'":'

_..

____

J. W.COOP

Cliff Robertson
ALSO
JOE HILL

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Color
GP

•

Weather
Cooler Sunday, chsnce of a
few showers sout~Mlaat portion.
High temperatW"a~ Sunday in
the upper 70s to lower 80s.
Some cloudi~ess and cooler
Sonday night. Lows In the
upper 50s to the lower 60s.

+

tmts

Your Invited Gue3t
Reaching More
Than 11 ,()(}()

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

34 PAGES

VOL VII NO. 30

THREE.

Pomeroy-Middleport

SECTION~

Families

-·--~
· '-'~--------,--

Ga llipolis-Point Pleasant
SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1972
- ·-· - - - - ·.
- - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -~---

15 CENTS

Pollutio,n Control Board Proposes to
Stop More Septic Tank Installations
' COLUMBUS - The Ohio Water
Pollution Control Board here has proposed
sewer connection bans for 12 areas ln the
state including the Leading Creek Conservancy District involving Meigs and
Vinton counties.
Asewer ban stops additional·bW"den of
the existing sewer systems by prohibiting
any new sewer line construction or connections into that system.
In areas without sewerage and
wastewater treatment facilities, the ban
prevents the fW"ther approval of individual
on-lot sewage systems such as septic
tanks.
Other area involved are the Village of
Lowell; Gaslight Village Mobile Home
Park, Goshen, Wood County, Main Sewer
District; Village of West Union, and the
Franklin County, Sewer District Franklin

5.
Aboard spokesman said consideration
would be given to lifting a ban when lhe
political entities submitted plans and
·. began construction of sewerage and
wastewater treatment plants that can
meet water quality standards.
The ban , subject to a hearing if
requested by Sept. 10, was placed on areas
in Meigs and Vinton Counties beca use the
board foond that the addition of the
proposed water seJ·vice by the Leading
Creek Conservancy District would lead to
rapid development which cannot be
handled at the present.
AU of the areas were informed of the
bo•rd's action by a letter issued Aug. 11
from Dr. John W. Cashman, chairman ol
the board and director of the Ohio
Department of Health . Each subdivision

has 30 days from the date of that letter to
request a board hearing where they can
present their cases in person. After the
hearing , if one is requested, final board
orders are issued.
The board on July 11 found that the
Meigs County Commissioners had not
submitted an application for a water
pollution Control Board permit. That
action should have been taken under
section 611.03 of the Ohio Revised Code.
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District proposes to provide water service
for the southwest section of Meigs Coonty .
The water will be supplied by five wells
loca ted along the Ohio River near Cheshire
in Gallia County .
II will se rve approximately 400
existing customers with provision made
for 100 pet. growth . The system will in-

elude approximately 65 miles of water
mains ranging in size from two inches to 10
inches. The proposed areas to be served by
the water service systems are lightly
populated and are situated in hilly terrain.
Growth is expected to take place as a
result of the water service system brought
about through the constr uction of the Ohio
Power Company's James M. Gavin Plant
to be located in Gallia County . This will
cause rapid population growth, not only in
Gallia. but also in surroonding Meigs
County . The board also found :
- That the soil within most of the
proposed water service system areas, aS
well as in the majority of Meigs County, is
generally unsuitable for on-lot disposal by
leaching onder present regulations and
that pollution of waters of the state has
occurred .

- That due lo the topographic natW'e
of Meigs County, the streams are small
with little sustain ed flow and do not have
the capacity to assimilate poorly treated
sewage effluents and thai at present,
onder these conditions, there are no individual treatment onits thai will produce
an e!lluent that will· meet water quality
standards.
- That building construction prior to
appr oval of waste-water treatment
fac ilities is occW"ring in Meigs Coonty.
- That the local health department
does not have an adequate program of
inspection to insure proper operation of the
individual sewage treatment systems.
- That fW"thet· development will add
to existi ng nuisance and water pollution.
- That county health departments are
authorized, under Section 3739.21, Ohio

Revised Code, to regulate the discharge of
hwnan , animal or household wastes within
their districts, and,
- That county conunissioners are
authorized toform regional water and-or
sewer districts onder Section 6119, Ohio
Rev ised Code, and county sewer districts
under Section 6117, Ohio Revised Code.
The Meigs County Commissioners by
order of the board were authorized to
prepare a report and general plan for
county-wide sewerage and wastewater
treatment facilities by July I, 1973. The
board also directed that there be no approval by the local health department of
individual sewage systemS in Meigs
County until the Meigs Coun ty Health
Department shall submit for review and
obtain approval from the Ohio Department
(Con tinned ~n Page 11 )

Vo-Ag Classes Erased at K-C
CHESHIRE - Due to a lack of
, enrollment and overall interest, the Kyger
Creek Board of Education Friday night,
decided to eliminate the school's
vocational agriculture department. The
district has had problems In obtaining a
vocational agricultW'al instructor for the
1972-73 term. However, this was only one
reason for the action.
Principal John Wickline said only 32
students had indicated an interest in the
three agricultW'al classes offered at Kyger
Creek. Over the past three years,
vocational agricultural students have
decreased sharply.
1 Too, \ben .Ia lltUe tnc.nllve for the
vocational ~gricultura) instructor since all
land around llie high '.chool le owned by
the Ohio Power Company or Ohio Company, owners of the strip mine area around
Cheshire and Addison Twps., and apparently unavailable for use by the Vo-Ag
students.
Principal Wickline was authorized to
establish three other courses of study.
The board employed teacher aides and
Title One personnel for the 1972-73 school
term. Aides employed for three hours each
were Nancy Preston at Cheshire-Kyger
Elemenary and Martha Kelly at Addaville
Elementary.
Last year, the district was pertnilted
to have four aides, two each on a fulltime
basis at both schools, but the state
department cut the budj!et according to
Local Superintendent Comer Bradbury .
Mila Woods was designated as
remedial reading instructor . Others
employed were Gary Minton, consultant;
Doris Roush, clerk; Esther Gordon, book·
keeper; and Roberta Kail, secretary.
Darlene Mllam was employed as a
regular bus driver replacing Leo Swisher.
Substitute drivers employed were Roy
Gardner, Virginia Gardner and John
Scott. The district is in dire need of additional substitute drivers. Anyone in·
terested is asked to contact Supt. Brad·
bury or clerk Doris Roush for applications.
Substitute cooks employed Friday
were Ruby Lucas, Lucille Mulford and Jo
Ann Conkle.
'
Following a brief discussion, the board
voted to increase the price of lunches from
25 cents to 30 cents per day. Teacher
lunches were ralsed· from 35 cents to 45

cents per day. The action was taken due to
. the high costs of food and other cafeteria
supplies.
II was also decided to re-advertise for
bids on repairs for the Kyger Creek
Swimming Pool. Bids were opened last
May but the board did not offer a contract

for the repair work.
musical instruments for band director
In other matters , the board adopted David Phillips.
the 1972-73 school calendar and school
- Voted to replace the floor in the
CW" riculwn guide .
junior high auditorium .
- Approved bus transportation for all
- Discussed continued repairs and
kindergarten students.
painting work at the high school.
- Authorized thp purchase of two new

Police, Firemen in

Auto Tax Endorsed

Night of Hoax Calls
POMEROY - II was a wild night
between 12:25 and 1:13 a. m. Saturday in
Mei~s County for lawmen and firemen.
At 12:36 a.m. Pomeroy ~olice received
a call that there was a serious wreck at the
Shenang's Springs Nile Club on Rt. 7 near
Five Points. The call was referr ed to the
Middleport police who answered it as
Pomeroy officers were at an accident in
Bradbury near Middleport at the time . The
call to Shenang's was a hoax.
At 12:55 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Department received an alarm that the
Children's Home was on fir e. This was also
a hoax.
.
The Middleport Fire Department
received a call between I and I :JOa.m.
that the Rawlings and Scns Garage at the
"T" was on fire. This was a hoax .
Shortly later , Middleport police
received a call that there was a fight at the
Blue Tartan, So. Third and Locust St.
About the same time they got another that
there was a llomb threat at the King's

By Middleport C-C
MIDDLEPORT - Mayor John
Zerkle received the endorsement
here Friday evening of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce for
the proposed auto license permissive $5 tax to be voted on here

Arms Nile Club, Rt . 7, south of Hobson.
Both were hoaxes.
The calls are still onder investigation.

Nov. 7.

New York Daily News
Endorses President
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - The New York
Daily News, a tabloid with a circulation of
over 2 million, endorsed President Nixon
for re-election in its Sunday editions.
The newspapers also urged voters to
vote for Republican . ca ndidates running
for the Congress in the November 7
general election .
The Daily News said in its editorial
that Nixon deserved to be re-elected
because of his handling of the Vietnam
War, national defense, the fight against
inflation and other domestic programs of
the Nixon administration.

The mayor explained the need
lor the levy which would be paid only
by automobile owners, with all
proceeds to be used for repair and
maintenance of the town's streets.
The chamber approved a $100
contribution to help promote its
passage. The mayor called lbe tax
, the most fa{r of all taxes.
C of C President Manning i&lt;Ioes
said new Christmas llg~ts have been
purchased. He called a meeting for
next Friday at the same place, the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., building when plans for
the Christmas Promotion will be
completed.

.. . &amp;i
. . . x··-:·····:-·mm··
..::w..-.:... •

. ......
:::::~·

:- o''$1;,;o'•'•

COOLING TOWER NO. I - Workers continue pouring concrete on the
number one cooling tower for the James M. Gavin Plant at Cheshire. When
completed, both cooling towers at the plant will be m feet hlgh with a base
diameter of 380 feet or about the size of a major league baseball field. The towers
are constructed to avoid the discharge of wanned water back into the Ohio River
after it has passed through the condensers during the steam process. This view
shows the inside of the cooling tower. See additional pictures on page 28.

-·~-:······················........,.,...•·.···············'
•.•.•.
•'•'•'•'•' "'•""'•'•'...•.·.·-....
·::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~~x:::::::::::::::::::::::::

·.··········;.;·.·······=·

,:·

No Fault is
Liked 72-28
POMEROY - Congressman Clarence
E. Miller today announced the results of
the public opinion SW"vey conducted at the
Meigs Coonty Fair.
Do you favol' a national no,lault
autiu11obUe . insurance prOf!raJ)l which
would provide compensation fof bodily
Injury reg~ess o( who c.auses the accident? Yes 72 pet, No. 28 pet.
· Should .the ilale· transfer of hand·
glin$, other.hiin those ~.uil.blefor sportiJig
purposes, be prohibited? Yes 45.~ pet.., No ·
5Upct.' . . · · . .. . · . . .. .
. . . Would YoU 'favor a naUon'l iBl! in· the ' .
fomi of a "villue:added tax1' tO relieve llui
burden of loeal property' iaxe~? ·Yes 44.8 · ,
·pet., No 5$,2 _pet: .
•. . ·
..
10,000 PER ~OUR -Calli and dogs are being born in the
. ··!lhould ·tl)e Feder.a t Goyernment ln·ler:vene In P.rolonged · slrl~es which- adUnited States at the rate of 10,000 per hour. That's 240,000 a
. versely •aif~ct the pullUC ln_lerest? Yes 79 . day llf e~ry man, woman and chlid in the nation adopted an
. pcl.;No .:11 pet. ·
.;·
anlmil, fl!llll0111 would atW be ~omeleu,like the Utter of nine
· . Sl)ouJa tile u. 'S. foreign ..aid program
. pu(ll ·above left abandoned on the Kinpbury road early last
be;'lncreriaed, 4 IJCI:; &lt;tecreaaid, 1o'pct::
week near tire !rome of Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd King with 118
r~maln ·it ihe ~I l~vel, 38.P.cJ:.
· !Dother·alll 2 other grown dogs, a llrge female and 8R18U
..Do ··you ap'prove of • the . ~nt · · male. It'asucll lilq)le 2plul2makes 4logic that sUpports the
agreeJilenla 'betweett the U: $: -.rid ,the
.' Melli Co~ty Hwnane Society's dri" to obtain an anlnnal
SoVIet · Union to · limit offenai.ve · ~~~~
. libeller In Metga County and which putll priority onto Its
defellllve 1mpona? Yea II pet., No 18 pet.
Jli'OII'IID.ofinflll'llllrw the public of the need to hive their pel8
'

ar

spayed or neutered; An anlrilal shelter helps relieve the
wesent problem because It is a place where puppies like
: these can be kept until some or all may be adopted. And they
will be lreated humanely. The puppies above, while healthy,
still had their eyes closed when abandoned. Unless these dogs
are adopted soon they will have to he taken to the dog pound
where their near certain fate is death. Anyone Interested in
adopting one or more of the litter should call Mrs. Donald
Beizlng, or Mrs. I.Jnyd King. Left to right with the dngs are
Br'an, Phil and BriU King.

Can We Really Not Care?
The MERCY Committee, JoAnn Sidles, chsirman, Richfield, Ohio, asks
for a public hearing midst the clamor some citizens are raising to repeal the
stale income tax.
The "pre income tax" conditions cited below in Ohio's care for iis
retarded are matters of record. Nobody denies them . Scme successfully
Ignore they ever existed; these same Ohlo citizens, often among those most
able to.pay the income tax, de_ny society's obligation to care hW"nanely for its
unfortunate individuals, young or old.
In this respect, inan has yet to equal the compassion of the animals in
the forests for their biological or environmental accidents :
"U voters repeal the ilew state income tax, people in Ohio's state institutions for the retarded will return.to a disgraceful, subhuman existence .
. The result will be dismissal of newly hired employees, red~cing salaries and
ending all newly Initiated !raining programs.
"The income tax makes it possible lor every ward in every state hospital
to haveatleastone atlendantataU times. With repeal, these new attendants
· would be fll'e(\. Employees starting salaries were recently raised from $1.96boilr to $2.5lHiour . .With repeal, again Ohi would pay state employees less
t!lan ·milst ev~y other state. ·
''With . re\fenue. frinn .the stale inci&gt;me tax many wardS are being
. renovated. New .techniqes and _tralnirjg prPSrams are just geUing started.
. MS!Jyare:stlll wailing: Ol)eyear ago chlldren.llved in barren rooms, tied to
wooden
ben~es : They
o(teh had' staph infection
sores. ·In room
Ill SO to 60 I
. •
'
'
'
chUdren~s diapers w:er~ overfiow!Jig with diarrhea ... that two attendants ·
rould not J!OsSll!IY. keep_changed. Some of.ihese clilldren never left !he ward .. .
Tl!ey $hit\t. on one Side 0{ a wOOden .divider, beds nearly touc~. Their ·
waking hours were spent III;J'e.ilmlng, biting, kicking, trying to · make
·someone hear thelf plea, unrlerstand their needs. They crawled and roUed on
the cement floors waiting for orie dl.y to end and another day to st,.rt.
''Today, because of the state Income tax, thes aame chlidren a~ being
taught to dress &amp; undress, to brush their own teeth, to, go to the bathroom; to
bathe. They are learning towtton a aldrt, zip a zipper, lace a shoe and some
day soon, tie • snoestring. They learn simple tasks' like folding table linen or
(Conunuec~ on Page 11)
·

�2- The Thnes-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 'll, 1972

_

.

.,' ''

1

Coal Miners Threaten Probe of Ca:ptive Bank
WASlUNGTON (UPI) -In·
surgent miners may ask for a
federal!l"obe of a uniono&lt;Jwned
bank that kept United Mme
Workers president w. A.
"l'ony" Boyle out of prison last
June by advancmg h1m
$179,500 in umecured credit so
he could post bond, a
spokesman said Saturday.
Joseph L. Raub Jr., attorney
for the anti-Boyle Miners for
Democracy, told UPI the group
Is considering asking the U.s.
comptroller of the currency who oversees national banks to look mto the "policies and
practices" of the National
Bank of Washmgton
It was disclosed m court
IJ"Oceedings Friday that the
bank, more than 7Q per cent
owned by the UMW, provided
the personal credit line to
Boyle without any collateral on

June 'l1 This was arranged
within mirrutes after he had
been ordered to pay $179,500
and sentenced to priSOn lor ftve
years for a series -of federal
crunes, including illegal conversion of Wlion funds
The credtt line enabled
Boyle, once a director of tl)e
hank, to obtain and post a
surety bond for the full amount
from the Maryland Casualty
Co. to secure release pending
appeal.
It was not Wltil Aug. 19,
nearly two months after he was
advanced the unsecured credit,
that Boyle sat down with hank
offictals and pledged more
than $190,000 m various savings
accounts to assure tt.
The financtal arrangements
were elictted by Raub from
Boyle himself and a bank attorney, John Wilson, at a

federal distrtct court hearing
to detenrune Boyle's net worth
in connection wtth a ciVIl su1t
for damages filed agamst him
by the Mmers for Democracy
m 1969 and decided in their
favor Aug 15.
"He only got out of the pokey
because the bank guaranteed
the bond," Raub satd m an
intervtew. "You're hardly a
ftrst-class risk a few mmutes
after you've been convicted of
convertmg funds It's JUSt
absurd. It was obVIOUS to
everyone m the courtroom that
only because Boyle ts prestdent
of the UMW that owns the bsnk
that he got the loan."
He satd the msurgent group
was constdermg asking for a
federal mvesttgation because
"we want to protect the hank "
"A bsnk that has practices of
puttmg up a $179,500 letter of
credit to a man who has JUSt

New Dike Bombing

been convicted

IS

not acting in

the best interests of tls
customers. Maybe there are
others who are getting the

same favors ''
The 70-year-&lt;&gt;ld UMW ch1ef
was conVIcted last March of
makmg illegal polttical contrt-

buttons of $49,500 and of
illegally converting umon
funds to unauthortzed uses. At
sentencing last June, U.S.
District Judge Charles H.
Richey, in ordermg him to
repay tbe $49,500 and finmg
him aoother $130,000, directed

sattonal m that," one source
satd. "He does tl all the time in
every ctty durmg a long

tournament."
Russian aides satd Spassky
relaxed at hts pnvate villa w1th
his wife Lartssa.
· "The hotel is noisy on
weekends and Mr Spassky
enJoys his wife's home-cooked
food," an atde satd
Gudmundur Thorarmsson,
president of the Icelandic
Chess Foundation, said crafts-

---------------------

WASHINGTON (UP!) - mire said in a statement.
President Ntxoo's charges that
"The administration is enthe Democratic Congress is gaged m polillcal hogwash,
guilty of spendthrift spending selfrighteous nonsense, and
amount to election-year electiOn-year eyewash in
"political hogwash," Sen. charging Congress wtth the
William Proxmire, D-Wis., responsibihty for budgetsaid Saturday.
busting big spendmg," he
Promrlre, head of the Joint commented.
Houae-Senate Economtc ComProxmire, a persistent critic
mittee, asserted the ad- of the Defense Department
ministration's tache was budget, said Ntxon had added
designed to obscure tis own "at least $1.2 bilhon" to the
emphasis on heavy military bodget by increasing the tempo
spending.
of bombing in Vietnam War
He said he would offer an spending would increase by
amendment when Congress that much more "if the vast
returns Sept. 5 to limit the increase in bombing, ammurufederal budget this year to $240 tion expended and Navy sh1p
billion. This would be $10 expenses continue," he added
billion less than Nixon's
He charged the President
JI"OPOsed celllng.
excluded the $1.2 billion in
''That will separate the men higher defense costs when he
from the boys and the believers proposed the $250 billion
from the public relations budget ceilmg for the current
IJ"Opaganda experts," Prox- fiscal year. Furthermore, he

.For President in November
CINCINNATI (UPI)
trend
Labor Secretary J. 0. Hodgson
" I wtll never be sahsfted
said Sat111·day President Nixon with an~lhtng but zero
would recetve "the biggest Wlemployment m lhts counlabor vote for a Republican try," Hodgson sa1d
Presidential nomtnee in 40
The Amertcan slrtke levelts
years" because union leaders the lowest smce 1963, he satd
have been "turned off" by "A clunate of mduslrial peace
Democratic Presidential tn lhts COWl lry IS begtnmng to
nominee George McGovern. show results," sa1d Hodgson.
Hodgson made the remarks
The Labor Secretary
at a news conference here pnor credtled wage and pnce
to,a commencement address to controls wtlh brmgmg tnflatton
the University of Cmctnnalt tn down to a point where spenwhich he said there would be no dable mcome is about four per
massive shift to a four-day cent above last year
work week or the demise of the
"For the first time smce 1965
110-called "Protes tant Work real wages show an mcrease, "
Ethic" that labor is virtuous. he satd.
Hodgson !lllid Nixon would
In his commencement adtel the support of labor dress, Hodgson satd, "work
beeause union leaders have has a lot gomg for tt, even m
been "turned off by the the modern world."
"bru.thofr• of McGovern who
"Although some shortemng
hu promised them nothing of the work week Wldoubtedly
nlclre than to "double or triple will occur," he said, "I don't
the tax lOll d." •
count myself among those who
Unemployment has steadily predtcl an early massive shift
dnlpped In the past year, to the four-day work week."
Hodglan said, and he predicted
Hodgson said that work not
1 ccntlnultlon of the downward only offers economic rewards

QUICK QUIZ

SUNDAY, AUGUST27
6 OD-F1Im 4
•
,
6 3D-Day of Discovery 4. Newsmaker 72
7 oo-Oid Ttme Gospel Hour 13. Societies In Trans Ilion 4 '
7 30- Ttme for Ttmothy 4, Treehouse Club to. Faith for T\"'ay
8 Revival Fires 6
a OD-Heratdof Truth 3. Davey &amp; Goliath 4, Leonard Repass8;
Gospel Caravan 6; Church Service 13, Movie Peggy 10.
8 15-Mornmg Report 4

a·3D-Ora l Roberts 3; Your Health 4 , Day of Discovery S; Rex
Humbard 13. Revival Fires 15. Kathryn Kuhlman 6.
9 OD-Stnging Jubtlee3 , Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard 15, Tom
&amp; Jerry 8 Film, 10
9·3D-Church by Side of Road 4, Grovte Goodies B. Dr. Paul

READY TO DEPART for the Ohto State Fair exhibit are,
left to right, MISSes Lori Barron and LuAnn Foster and Mrs
Janet Wetherholt

Warren 13

10 DO-Church Servlce4 , Faith for Today 15, This We Believe 13,
Th1s Is the Ltfe 3, Reluctant DraP.on 13, Oral Roberts 6, Ktd
Talk 8; Mov te. '" Boemg. Boeing •, 10.
10 3D-ThiS Is The Lite 15 . inSight 4; Captain Noah 3, Facing
Ltfe 8 Doubiedeckers 13 , Christopher Closeup 6.
11 oo- rJ Chapel 3. Buliwlnkle 13, Focus on Columbus 4;

Two Students Will
Man Fair Exhibit

Camera ThreeS, Consumer ReportlS, Point of Vlew6.

JD-This Is The Answer 3. insightl5 ; Make A Wish 6, 13; Face
the Natoon 8
12 OD-Morman Chatr3 Rex Humbasd8, CBPA_Bowllng6, Rev.
11

Evans 13, To Be Announced 15, Friendly Junction, 10; One

Glow at Hope. 4
12 3D-Revival F~res 13. At Issue 3, Comment 4. Open Bible 15.

12 45-Sacred Heart 15
1 DO-Meet the Press 3, 15. Old Ttme Gospel Hour 8. Lower
Ltghthouse 13 , Lamp Unto My Feet 10

B~RRY'S WORLO

GALLIPOLIS - Mtsses
LuAnn Foster and Lon Barron
w1ll represent Galha Academy
Htgh School at the Health
Occupaltons exh1b1l at the Ohio
Slate Fatr on August 27 and 28
Both yoWJg women are 1972
graduates of GAHS and were
members of the mtltal
Dtversifted Health
Occup alto ns class The DHO
program is one of etght such
programs tn the stale of Ohto
Mtss Foster worked m the
Phystcal Therapy Department

Mr. and Mrs. Willwm Sims

1 30--lssues &amp; Answers 6, 13 , Gospel Talent Time 15 , Roller

Mary Hout- William
Sims Wed july 22

Derby 3, Sports Challenqe 4; Good News 10.
2 OD-Stl Down. Shut Up and Gel Out 4. Movie "Susie Slade" 6.

Wrestlmg, a, AAU Interna tiona l Champ1ons 10, The
Comed 1ans 13
2 JQ-Mo\lle,' Man of a Thousand Faces", 3, To be announced

13
3 OD-Gtlltgan•s Island

4. CBS Tennis ClasSic
Western Theatre 15
3 15-Commerccal Film, 13
3 3G-Summer Olympics 6, 13 , Primus 4

8, 10, Film 13,

4 OD-Man Irom UNCLE &lt;. Golf Tournaments 8, 10, Saint.
15
4 3D-Sports Challenge 4

GALLIPOLIS - In a candl eltght ceremony Mary
Yvonne Hout became the brtde
of W1lham Walter S1ms on July
22, at 6 30 p.m m the Ftrst
Presbyterian
Church,
Ga lhpohs Rev Glenn Hueholt
and Rev Lmson Stebbins offlc taled the double rmg
ceremony before an altar of
blue and whtte pompons and
greenery backed by lighted
candelabra
The bnde 1s the daughter of
Mr and Mrs George A Hout,
Galltpohs, and the groom ts the
son of Mr. and Mrs Herman
Jumor Stms, Eureka
One half hour of pre-nupttal
mustc was presented by Mrs
Mtke Spangler, orgamst. Mr.
and Mrs James Enyart,
vocahsts, sang ·•walk Hand m
Hand." 'One Hand , One
Heart, '' "Because" and ''The
Lord's Prayer "
Presented ,m marrioge by
her father and mother, the
bnde wore a whtte formal
length gown of organza
fash1oned wtlh emptre bodice,
sheer v1ctortan sleeves and
neckhne wtlh a detachable
chapel tram The gown was
accented by apphqued motifs
of alencon lace and rtbbon-run
vcmse lace ruche edged the
cuffs, sktrl and tram. Her
ftngcr-ltp vet! of tlluston fell
from a Camelot cap of venise
lace topped wtlh a dainty seed
pear I crown She carried a
large coloma! bouquet of blue,
and whtle pompons, stattce and
baby's breath with whtte satin
streamers and two long
stemmed roses As the bride
walked down the atsle, she
paused to present one rose to
her mother and one to the
groom's mother Her only
jewelry was her grandmother's watch which was
presented to ~er grandmother,
Mrs Carlton Young, on her
weddmg day It has been
handed down for three

4 45---Commerclal Film 3
5 OQ-Wagon Tram 3 Natconal Automotcve Trouble Test 4, To
be announced 15

s 3D-Ant mal Wor ld 8 Death Val ley Days 10. To Be Announced
15

6 oo-News, Weather, Sports 4, Commenf l 15 , Surv1val 6,
Campacgn ' 72,
6

a, 10 ,

T ime Tunne l 13

3D-NBC News 3, 4, 15. News. Weather, Sports 6

7 oo-Prlmus 3. Juven ile Jury -4, Magic Circus 6 . Lassie 8, 10.
Wild Kmgdom 13,
7 3Q-Wor ld of Ocsney, 3 4 15 , Movce " Ass1gnment K" 8, 10,
Surv1va l 13
8 oo-summer OlympiCS 6, 13
8 3()--J cmmv C:.tt&gt;,_,.,. ... , A ' (

9 00-Bonanza 3, &lt; 15. Pro Football 6, 13
9 3()-Life of Leonardo da Vtnct 8. 10
10 oo-Bold Ones. 3. 4, 15
10 3D-Death Va lley Days 8. Htgh Road to Adventure 10.
11 oo-News. Weather. Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15
11 15-CBS News. 8. 10
"
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Mov ie, " Twelve O'Clock High , 8.
Face the Nat 1on, 10

.,

12 OD-ABC News6, 13 Mov te. "Murder at the Gallop , 10
12 15-Judd 6
12 JD-MoY ie, " The F1reball ", 13
1 OG-News and Weather 4 1

&gt;~ We ' re

2 15- Local News 13

gettin' a t.ttJe low on corn, stnng beans and
cucumbers Better run O\ler to the supermarket an~ buy

BY JACK O'BRIAN
WHAT IS IN THE HOPE CHEST?
NEW YORK (KFS) - Years ago some
publication exaggerated Bob Hope's consaid, "at the same tune the Siderable fortune as "More than $150,000,000";
secretary of the Treasury and smce then the total has ballooned in journalistic
the budget dtrector are fantas1es, as a recent London newspaper
casttgattng Congress as blunped, to $600,000,000.
spendthrift, they are askmg for
When that ongmal uneducated centunillton
an added $7 billion" in the guess appeared, we noted tts wtld magniltcatton
Pentagon budget for new and suggested Bob's fortune was somewhat over
weapons such as the Trident $15,000,000 . . Now Bob has set hts own ftscal
submarme and the B-1 bomber. facts straight - said he ts worth about
He also denounced Wh1te $25,000,000, a certainly a notable sum for an old
House "agents" for lobbymg vaudevilhan to have stashed m his grouchbag.
on Captlol Hill for restoration
The ongmal Hopeless fmanctal fantasy
of nearly $500 million a came to mmd then because not long before, the
Proxmire subcommittee cut late Joseph P. Kennedy had told us the three
from the foretgn aid budget. richest actors were Bing Crosby, Morton
"When Congress adds funds Downey and Bob Hope, and he wasn't quite
for school lunches, soctal convinced Downey wasn 'I the rtchest of the three
secunty, or black lung .. Bob let the old magazine he remam unbeneftts, the admimstration corrected simply because Bob's one of the wiliest
denounces us as 'btg spen- press agents for himself m the ham trade and
ders,"' Proxmire srud. "But knew tl would steal miles of headlined space; but
btlhons for space, defense and he laughed through his reticence about denying
highways ts either lobbied for tt at the tune ... Also, Bob's had a marvelous
by the admimstrahon or personal rapport with newamen, and he didn't
exempted from the budget want to make the magazme look silly . •Now the
ce11ing."
or1gmal goofo&lt;Jff's been forgotten m the years of
Hope's poke-guessmg and his true worth is
fantastic enough.
Hope IS a remarkable gentleman of his
calling; we don't know of him ever domg a
shabby thing ... His personal handouts to old
vaudeville and movie pals go Wl-press agented,
his endless schedule of beneltts is duplicated by
no other star performer; he long ago passed the
presttge-mark fabricated by some entertainers
on-the-make for money and lame, who get
reputations for philanthropy to the point they
but also plays a role m assurmg feel thetr careers are in permanent orbit, and
mental health.
then you can't get them lor chartty for any
"Escaptsm may be a luxury, reason short of a White House bash.
buttt ts a dead-end luxury, " he
One star has been desperately trymg to
told the graduates. "And it cleanse himself of his hysterical reputation in
1sn't worth your ttme."
show busmess and In some degree, to the public,
Between now and the year. as a fellow so frightened of being drafted in WW
2000 the average male n that he literallyhithts head against the wall at
graduate of the Umvers1ly of Governor's Island whtle being forced to take his
Cmcinnalt will spend 87,000 physical tests, ultimately claiming he was a
hours of hts life employed on a homosexual and screaming his despair; the
JOb, about one-thtrd of hts non- Army rejected him not because he was a
sleeping hours, Hodgson satd. homosexual- it didn't believe he was -but the
"The Protestant work eth1c llTational display convinced the doctor-officers
.. IS an ethtc that has endured he was unfit emotionally and mentally for khaki,
occastonal unsuccessful espectally Wlder war condillons .... His goal for
challenges for over four cen- years has been to get the top U.S. medal in the
tunes," he sa1d. " Today, arts, g1ven so deservedly to George M. Cohan crtltcs are agam hackmg away and Bob Hope.
altt. But don't bet on tis early
Too bsd it wasn't given to a few great
demtse "
wartime entertainers who abandoned the. easy
big money of wartime mummery for long
periods, to go overseas to entertain our lads in
un:form ... AI Jolson, for instance, aging and
with a heart condition, entertained constantly in
Q- Who was the fm t ma- war areas ... So d1d Joe E. Lewis, whose health
101 league pitcher- ta. hit a never was wonderful. Joe always aggravated his
Wmld Senes g r a u d slam
1
his
homer?
. diabetes by his drink~, which not on y was
A- Dave McNally Oct 13 rughtclubcomedytoplcbutwasirue; we know of
1970. for th e B a Itt 111 0 r ~ oo entertainer who drank to Joe's capacity Onoles
and never missed a show except, caught sober,

Huge Labor Vote Expected

and Tomorrow

Face the Nat1on 10

Political Hogwash Tag
On President's Charge

men
had
reassembled
Spassky's U.S.made swivel
chatr
It was taken apart Frtday
after x..-ays had discovered
what Thorarinsson descrtbed
as "a black shadow, like the
shape of an knife" m the seat.
"It turned out to he an imperfect ftlling in the plywood, "
Thorarinsson said in annoWJcing results of a chemical
analysts and checks of the
lighting system.

,;
'·'

Programs for Tonight

Chess Stage Becalmed
By JIM WARD
REYKJAVIK (UPI)- Borts
Spassky's chair was back m
one ptece . Bobby Ftscher
observed his Sabbath. Spassky
enjoyed his wife's home cookmg. And referee Lothar
Schmid sa1d Saturday, "the rur
ts crtsp and clean, no protests
today."
The week began wtlh a
"control the noise or I qutt"
ultunatum from Fischer, the
Amen can challenger, and
ended on a lighter note when
the organizers could reJect
Russian charges that "electromc devtces and chemical
substances" were used to upset
Spassky's game.
"Perhaps tbetr public relations man had tbe day off when
they (the Russ tans) dreamed
up that tdea," satd Ftscher's
second, the Rev. Wtlltam
Lombardy "I understand experts found two dead flies and
faulty plywood m Spassky's
charr."
Sunday's l!lth game 1s scheduled to begm at 5 p m , wtth
Spassky playmg white and
movmg first.
Ftscher gamed another halfpomt m Friday's drawn game
and has a 10't..to 7't.. point lead.
He needs two more wins, four
draws or a combmation of both
to capture the title. The
champion must squeeze 4\\
pomts out of the last stx games
to retam his crown m the
$250,000 dollar "match of the
century."
U S. sources satd Fischer
observed hts 24-ltour Sabbathhe IS a member of the Church
of God-m a thtrd-floor sutte
wtth his chess books and the
B1ble. The sources satd Ftscher
moved out of the prestdenttal
sw te on the fourth floor- the
plushest m town-to occupy the
smaller room below.
"There IS nothing sen-

I

Television Log

that Boyle be held in custody
Wltil he posted bond for the fllll
BmOWlt.
Rauh satd the testimony
indtcated Boyle has assets "in
excess of a quarter of a million
dollars," includmg the $190,000
msavings and a $50,000 house.

Mrs. Lear Installs
New Unit Officers

u

some more.

6 00 6.1 5 -

6· 20 6 25 -

MONDAY, AUG. 28

Sunr1se Semcnar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Farmt)me 10, F ar.rn Re.t:~Qrt. . JJ , 11

Paul Harvey 13

,

,

1

Word of Ltfe 13
6.30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. School Scene 10

I
on Yom Kippur .
Joan Blondell, Kay Francis, Frances Langford, Roz Russell, Carol Landts women 's4tbbed
it mto dangerous war areas long before Glor1a
Stemem felt styrmed by men ... Morton Downey
even ltved a year in London during the worst of
the blitz whtch the English never forgot and
adored him for it; as they loved and rewarded
Ben Lyon and Bebe Daniels for staying m
London through it all plus many appearances up
front with the assorted Allied soldiers; and bandleader Jack Harris, now vtce-president of Meyer
Davis' mternattonal society dance band cartel,
who stayed nght at his podium as conductor of
the orchestra at the famed Cafe de Parts before,
durmg and after ww n.
These are the sort of cbsracters we admire not
just for their performing gifts but for their
humamty and a Presidential or Congressional
medal somehow doesn't seem quite enough
reward from a grateful America ... Morris
Ernst, the great old ctvil libertarian who
remains amazmgly active though pushing 85,
told us a few days ago he feels that the U. S.
should give not only proper honors, but even
titles.
"I'd like to see us give knighthoods, even
bsronetcies to the heroes we admire and who
deserve some lasting gratitude for their fine
body or work," Morris told us. "England gtves
lmighthoods to jockeys and hallerinas and actors
like Str Noel Coward and Sir John Gielgud and
Dame May Witty and Dame Margot Fonteyn and
even a lordship to Laurence Olivier. They ,ien 'I
have to worry about bsvmg the titles descl!'d to
possibly dissolute sons of performers who get on
the Queen's Honor Lists; they are only lifetime
titles and I am perfectly convinced they are
deserved. How else can the English reward a
Noel Coward for his huge lifetime of work when
he already has all the tangible honors, the riches,
that have gone with his success?
"It's considered by a few over here that we
mustn't go m for that sort of regal tapping of
sword on shoulder, but 11 is a custom more
worshiwed by the Engliah working classes than
by the stuffy old peers who cadged their titles by
inheritance or for earning millions for British
bslance of payments statistics. Moreover,
England Is a civilized country, and we have
taken many things from them In the arts, so why
oot knlghthoods and baronetcies?
"What are honorary degrees from colleges
but a sort of Little League honors list? Old
generals love bemg called •general' long after
retirement. Wartime temporary officers retain
their general or colonel rank before their names
and love It. Old discredited ambassadors keep
their title long after they've been fired; cabinet
officers hang onto their titles unto death . Why
not!" Indeed.
Itwon'thappen, we're certain, butwewlsh it
would. Why shouldn't a rich old gentleman who
for instance has produced more than 40 of the
most distinguished plays In hls sunset years
answer to, "Sir Max Gordon"? Or a Sir Richard
Rodgers, Lord Irving Berlin, Sir Fred Astaire,
Dame Hoz Russell, Dame Bette Davia? Sir John
Wayne? It doesn 't seem to fit Duke. Make Edward Kennedy Elllngton 's Duke official. And
Basle's Count. And, of course, Sir Bob Hope;
let's make Bob a full U&gt;rd.

6 45 -

Corncob Report 3

Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13
7 00 - Today 3. 4, IS , News, Weather. Sports6. s
7 25 - Sports 13
7 ~0 - Romper Room 6. Underdog 13. Sleepy Jeffers B.
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. New Zoo Revue 6. 13 , Sesame St

6 55 -

33; Fnendly Junction 10

8 30 -

Tennessee Tuxedo 6. Jack La Lanne 13

8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - What Every Woman Wants to Know 3, Paul Di xon 4;
Romper Room 8, Ttmmy &amp; Lassie 6, Phil Donahue 15;
Peyton Place 13; Mr. Rogers33 , Captain Kangaroo 10
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas6 . One Life to Live 13 ,
Etec Co 33 , My Three Sons 8
9 55 - Chuck Whtte Reports 10
10 00 - Dtnah Shore IS · Lucille Bali 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13 , In
School instruction 33
10·30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4 , Beverly Hlilbilll ..
8 My Three Sons 10, Spilt Second 13. F Troop6.
11 110 - Sale of Century 3, 15. Communique 6, Family Affair B,
10 , Love American Styl e 13

25 - Carol DuVall 6
30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4. 15 , Bewitched 6, 13; Lcve of Life
8, 10
12 011 - Jeopardy 3. IS . Password 6, Bob Btaun's SO so Club 4;
Contact 8, News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30- Splot Second 6; Search for TomorrowS. 10; Elec Co 33 .
News 3. 3 W's 15
11
11

1 00 - All My Ch1ldren 6, 13 , 0 1\lorce Court 81 News, Weather,

Sports 3, Flippo at !he Fatr tO , To Be Announced 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15 , Let"s Make a Deal 6, 13 ; As The
World Turns 8. 10, Sewing Sktlls 33
2·00 - Days of our Ltves 3. 4, IS . Newlywed Game 13. Love
Spiendored Thing 8. 10.
2 30 - Dattng Game 13. Guidtng Ltght 8. 10. Docfors3, 4, IS.
3 110 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15 ; One Life to Live 6, Edge
of N1ght 8.10. Jeff's Collie 13 , Sportscope33
4 110 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15 , Huckleberry Hound 6;
Batman 8, Fiintstones 13. Movie "'Devil Makes Three" 10;
Sesame St 33.
4 30 - Green Acres 3, Merv Griffin 4; l Love Lucy 6, Death
Valley Days 8 , Password 13, Andy Griffith 15.
5 00 - Wagon Train 3. big Valley 6; Mr. Rogers 33; Tarzan 13.
DICk Van Dyke15, To Be Announced 4, Merv GriffinS
5·30- Elec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15.
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8. 10; Truth or Conseq 6, t Dream of Jeannie
13, News 15, Hathayoga 33
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News6, 13, CBS News8, 10; Folk
Guitar 33
7 110 - Elec Co. 20 . News 6, It Takes A Thief 3, Dick Van Dyke
4, What's My Line 8, Saints IS Off The Record 33; Wild, Wild
West 13.
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6; Traffic Court 10; Edpisode· Action
33; I Dream of Jeannie 4, Dragnet 8
8 00- Gunsmoke 8, 10; Baseball 3, 4, 15, Summer Olympics 6.
13 , The Old Maid and The Thief 33.
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10 , Boboquivarl 33
9:30 - Doris Day 8, 10, Toy That Grew Up 33
10:00 - Cade's County 8. 10, Something Else 10
10 30 - Human Dimensions 33
11 00 - News3, 4.6 ; News8.10. IS
11·30 - Dick Cavett'6 . Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15; Movie "S O.S
Pacific" 8, Movie "The Sevbnth Sin"' 10; Movie "The Steel
Trap"' 13.
1 00 - Focux on Columbus 4
1 30 - News 13.

loday·s FUNNY

Timely Quotes
Maryland, announcing
after mediating two prison

disturbances that he will

RACINE - The Sayre
reun ion was held Aug. 6 at the
Racme Shnne Park A ptcmc
lunch. fun and games were
en JOyed Offcers elected for the
commg year are W1lma Styer,
prestdent, and
Alberta
SaWJders, secrel.ary-!reasurer
Attendmg were Mrs Freddte
Arthur, Dan Sayre, Path
Ftscher, Mr and Mrs Jack
Wilhs and famtly, Mr and Mrs
James Cox and Mrs. Maxme
Camp and Sharon, Columbus;
Mr and Mrs Brian Simpson
and famlly, Baltimore, Ohto,
Mr and Mrs Rodertek Grmm,
Mr and Mrs, Larry Evans, Mr
and Mrs Chester S1mpson,

acolyte
For the weddmg trtp, Mrs
Stms changed to a whtle
polyester kntt dress wtlh pastel
lrtm. She wore a corsage of
blue and wh1te pompons from
her brtdal bouquet.
The bnde ts a 1971 graduate
of Galha Academy and wtll be
a sophomore at Ashland
College, Ashland, Ohw. The
brtdegroom is a 1970 graduate
of Gallia Academy and a 1972
graduate of the Cleveland
Engmeertng Institute He ts
presently employed at Shylo
Tool Co., Mansfteld
The couple will reside at
Route 2, Greenwtch, Ohio.

'

~

-d'

,

Mtke !hie, Mrs Joyce Manual
GALLIPOLIS
The
and children, Mrs Isabel
Galltpohs
branch
of
he
Simpson, Mr and Mrs Hebert
Sayre, Dav1d Sayre, Mr. and Amertcan Assoctatton of
Mrs Ronald Hart, Mrs Umverstly Women (( AAUW)
Dorothy Glenn and Mr. and has planned tls annual
Mrs. Charles Pyles and famtly, membership buffet dmner
Racme , Mr and Mrs Norman meeting Monday, Sept 11, at
Styer, Waterford; Mr Howard 6 30 p.m The event wtll be held
and Mrs. Brooks Sayre, at the home of Mrs Rtchard G
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs Gerald Patterson, 47 Holcomb Htll,
Hart and famtly, Neward; Galhpolts, and will mclude a
Mrs M1ke Swatzel, Marietta; revtew of the programs for thts
Mr and Mrs Paul North, Mrs commg year Prospecttve
Alberta SaWlders, Terry and members are cordially InVIted
Roger, Mr and Mrs . James to attend
The local AAUW umt ts
Sayre, Mr &gt;Q(ld Mrs. Dav1d
McDamel and'Mr and Mr-s. concerned prtmartly wtlh
Jerry Bradley and family, enhancmg the mtelleclual and
Galhpolts; Donna Theiss, cultural growth of tts memDorcas, Ohto; Jtll, Aprtl and hers, offers fellowships for
Todd Burris, Pt Pleasant, w women scholars and works to
Va , Mrs Bobbie Grttter, provtde other educattonal
Grove c1ty, Mr and Mrs opporiWltltes lor lhe people of
Roger Wolfe and family, the communtty
Ashtabula; Antla Bradley,
Meetings are held m the
Covmgton, Ky , Paul Sayre, · evemngs, usua lly the first
Fatrvtew; Mr and Mrs. Monday of the month, SepChester and lam1ly, North
Ktngsvtlle, Ohto, and Mr and
Mrs Kelly Sayre and Gregg,
Pataskala
McCALL REUNION
CENTENARY - The annual
McCall reWJion wtll be Sept 3
at Centenary wtth a basket
dmner at noon. Friends and
relattves are invited

tember
through
June
Programs feature mlerestmg
speakers and deal wtth v1tal
Issues Toptcs selected for lhts
year are ''We, the People 1' and
"A Dollar's Worth. "
Part1ctpalton and Involvement Will bring new
fnends and new tnterests The
opemng meelmg promtses to
be an mterestmg and enjoyable
cvemng ReservatiOns are
requested and can be made
from now through Sept. 5 by
calltng Mrs Paul Stewart, 4464793 , Mrs James Yocum, 4461250 or Mrs Stephen Carter,
446-2497 Eltgtbthly may also
be checked at lh1s tline

,

l"lw1111 •

The Almanac
By Umted Press Intemal1onat
TONIGHT THRU
Today IS Sunday, A'Ug 27, the
WEDNESDAY
240th day of 1972 wtth 126 to
follow
WALT DISNEY
produollona"
The moon 1s between tis full ~
phase and last quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Venus and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Juptter
Those born on thts date are
under the stgn of Vtrgo.
~'ormer Prestdent Lyndon
Johnson was born Aug 27, 1908
On lhts day m htstory
In 1859, the first otl well tn
&lt;m l!lli"E£I/Nit:l1fil '
........ . ...
l. oil! .., • ..__
the Umted States was drtlled
~

near Titusville , Pa

~ l ~ll l!lihJ• rG II(

CARTOON

In 1928, the Kellogg-Bnand
pact to outlaw war was s1gned
by 15 natwns m Pans.
In 1939, Adolf Httler served
noltce on England and France
!hat Germany wanted Danztg
and the Pohsh Corridor.

and
~~ramoun!

A

Production

"liAR
IPI.I IIiiD
,

Mon , Tues
Aug 27 28-29
Double Feature
Program
11

Pte furl!~ p •e 5en l~

HOWARD W. KOCH

8east Of The

Yellow Night"
- Plus-

{;1

Creature W1th

~
~

The Blue Hand"

Color~~ Mov.elab ~

APN11mCu111P1Ciu re

~' .
r;~

PLUS

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght, Man , Tues.

Augu.t 27 28-29

Walt Disney 's

NOW YOU SEE HIM,
NOW YOU DON'T
Techn1color
Kurt Russell
Cesar Romero

ALSO
SEAR COUNTRY

(Gl

COLOR CARTOON ·
Double Drlbbto,...
Admission· $1 SO Adults
Children. 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 PM.

1

SPEARS REUNION
A Spears reumon will be held
at Lake Jackson Sept. 3 with a
basket dmner to be served at
noon. All frtends and relahves
are welcone .

Running Mates [or

FALL '72 ,
Here's a new plank for

TERRY
JOHNSON

your fash ion platform
The super look of
suede and

Sporty

.

•

l

l
l
1
.j

MOBILE

on

a

htgher, sturdier heel.
Navy suede w Blue
smooth,
B1tter

new mob1le home com-

pletely equipped, at a cost,
including a monlt1ly rental
of a modern home site, that
is less than most mortgage
or rental payments. on a
conventional home and it's
furnishings, with comparable advantages
Whatever your budget,
whatever the price, mobile
homu are available to suit
your needs, with very
reasonable credit terms
When you invest in a
mobile home. you Invest In
a complete home The
home itself and also major
appliances, · furniture.
droperlu, carpeting and
tamps, ali Included tn one
single payment.
Stop In and let us Introduce you to the mobile
home. You will agree It Is
unexcelled in beauty, style,
and design and what's
more It can be yours.

leather

. classic

tailored

Compare this tor value.
You can own a b&amp;autlful

\

St, CI..... M, Oh1o .. 113.

COLO\\ ·

By

no longer play that role.

Todor'• FUNNY will poy $1 00 for
todt orltiMI "hln•r" •N•. Sud gagl
hi: Tt4op't FUNI'4Y, 1200 Welt fh,r4

GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs H. Rtchard Suns St Rt
141, are announcmg lbe engagement and for ... Arung
mamage of thetr daughter, Cathy Ann, to Ronald William
Wray,son of Mrs. Alta Wray, Bidwell. The wedding will take
place Sept 2 at 7:30pm. at the Grace Untied Methodist
&lt;llurch with the Rev. Robert Colvm olf1ctating Tbe gractous
custom of open church wtll be observed.

Relatives Meet At AA UW Plans Annual
Racine Shrine Park Membership Dinner

I nominate COnnie·
-.,

and Youth, Mrs. Aldeth Wh1te ;
Commumty Serv1ce, Mrs
Harry Maggted, Ctvtl Defense,
Mrs Dorothy Hecker; Foretgn
Relaltons, Mrs. Wilham J
Brown, Legislaltve, MISS Magaret Toppmg, Nattonal
Secunty, Mrs. Edna Bulterlteld, Membership, Mrs
Dann Tabor; Poppy , M~s
Wanda Thomas, Pubhctly,
Mrs Wilham J. Brown ,
Ve terans
Servtce
and
Rehabtltlalton, Mrs L G
Marcht; Umt Acltvtltes, Mrs.
W1Iltam J Brown and Flowers
and Cards , Mrs Dorothy
Hecker
Offtcers of the Post Installed
by J J Panna baker were
Howard Lee, commander,
John Hood, ftrst vtce commander, Douglas Johnson,
second v&amp;ce commander, J J
Pannabaker, ftnance olftcer
and Charles Huber, adjutant
In a short mformal busmess
meetmg, the Auxtltary Umt
made plans to hold a rummage
sale September 21-23 and to
have a booth at Bob Evans
Farm Days Octber 13-15 at
wh1ch they wtll display and sell
arltcles made by veterans at
Ch1lltcothe V A Hosp1tal The
Arnencamsm Chairman, Mrs
Stlas Hamtllon, announced that
the gtrls who were delegates to
Buckeye G1rls Stale wtll g1ve
thetr reports at the next
meetmg of the Umt which wtll
be Sept 26

Tonoght

SUEDE 'n' LEATHER

I'm not gomg tote on ' will
call' for the pr1son3rs
,
1

-Gov. Mar v 1 n Mandel ot

generatwns She also wore her
mother's blue star sapphire
nng.
Cathy M1ller, ma1d of honor,
wore an A-hne prmcess style
gown of pale blue dotted sw1ss
Accenltng the vtclonan
neckline, puffed sleeves and
bow was a damty blue and
whtte flower trim Mrs.
Rodertck Hook and Mtss Billy
Sue
Oatley,
former
classmates, served as brtdesma!ds Both g1rls wore dresses
ldenltcaltu the ma1d of honor's
m deeper shades of blue Each
gtrl earned a smgle pale
yellow long stemmed rose w1th
yellow saltn streamers.
Servmg as best man for the
bridegroom was Tom Stms,
Galhpohs, brother of the
groom Ushers were Robert
Hunt and Andrew Hout,
brothers of the brtde
For her daughter 's weddmg,
Mrs• Hout wore a pale yeUow
Butte kmt ensemble wtlh black
accessortes . Th.e groom's
mother, Mrs. S1ms, wore a blue
kmt ensemble wtlh black accessortes Both molhers wore
gardema corsages
Followtng the ceremony, a
receplton was held tn the
church parlor The bnde's
table featured a Lady Wmdemere cake wtth four small
cakes on revolving stands set
off by three tiers decorated
w1th clusters of small blue
ruses The cake was topped by
m1mature brtde and groom
under ratnbow arches. The
four small cakes were topped
wtth angels and a heart-shaped
nngbox featurmg two weddmg
nngs Mtsses Carol and Mana
Hansen presided al the table.
Mtss Elame Suns registered
the guests and Kevm Stms was

at Holzer Medical Center and 1s
now a full lime employee m
that department
M1ss Barron worked m the
office of Drs R D and Wtlltam
B Thomas, optometrists, the
past school year She wtll be
enrolled m the Med1cal
Labo1 a tor Technology
Program offered by Rw
Grande College and Holzer
Medtcal Center
Instructor-Coordmator of the
DHO program at GAHS is Mrs
Janet Wetherholt

GALLIPOLIS - A jotnl
~1eeting and ptcnic was held by
Lafayette Post No
27,
Amertcan
Legton
and
Amertcan Legton Auxthary
Wednesday evening, Aug. 23,
at the home of Mr and Mrs. L
G March1 on Chtlhcothe Road.
Followmg the bounteous
ptcntc supper, George Ftsh, the
Post's delegate to Buckeye
Boys State. was introduced and
told of hts expenence at Boys
State Elected treasurer of h1s
ctty, he sa1d he was sorry that
more boys could not participate tn this expertence m
Amencan Government.
Wtth Mrs George Lear as
mstalhng off1cer, the officers
of Lafayette Umt were seated
Installed were Mrs. Clarence
Jones, prestdent; Mrs. Dann
Tabor, first v1ce president,
Mrs Wanda Thomas, second
v1ce prestdenl; Mrs. Wtlham J.
Brown, secretary, Mrs.
Dorothy Hecker, treasurer ,
Mrs L G Marcht, htstortan ,
Mtss Margaret Toppmg.
chaplam, and Mrs Aldeth
Whtte, sergeant-at-arms
M1ss Toppmg was presented
wtlh a Past Prestdenl's Ptn and
Mrs George Lear with an
Honor Guard pm tn recogmtton
of her 40 years service to the
Aux1hary Umt.
Mrs Jones announced her
commtltee cha1rmen lor the
year. These are AmerJcamsm,
Mrs Stlas Hamtlton; Chtldren

Cathy Sims-Ronald
Wray Are Engaged

Chocolate suede wBrown smooth or

Black suede w Black
smooth. 516.95

SAVE

SAVE

$60

On the k ng S1zn Sacropt&gt;d c
lmpt r!al (] P•CCC CI\SC,' II')

$50
On Ihe

*259.90

N11t1on• Hr

a d~e• lisod

Jl S319 go

O ~ tcn

Sltl! SiiCJO pC!Q c

lmpo riJ! (2 pn~c c c nsr!m blc)

'169.90
N31oo nally tdwllhud al $219 90

SAVE

$40
On lht! Full or Tw in

Sil OSiltrOpcdiC

tmprmJI (2 piece crucmbte ~

'119.90

N;~llor~nll y ad vertiSed ~1 $ 159 ~0

Bemco s 'once a-year Sacroped1c lmper al manre ss sale
IS on nght now And lhat means spec1a1 savtngs on the

mauress of yoor dreams

Bemco makes lhe Sacroped 1c lrnper1 al with f1rm Umlused'
Constructton lor extra support So you and your back both
wake up refresh eCJ
Sttetcl'l out on a 5acroped•c lmper1el mattress set now
And enjoy healthy uvlngs on a healthy nrghl s rest

'

Open Monday
'

\

Night Til 8 P.M.
llltlrl the lllollJ '""' . . . .
321 SttDIMI Att
GIJIIIIIOlls, 0

Friday9:3Dto8 P.M.
Thursday 9:30 to 12 Noon
Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30 to 5 PM

INNERSPRI~G

Md ttl of ltmeo Oullroum•' nw rr ~tllt l
1/lf Wu11d'J Cruwu 5/roepm,

MAnRESSES
$
OR 80X SI'RING$......·............................

,,lit•

tS

29 up

�2- The Thnes-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 'll, 1972

_

.

.,' ''

1

Coal Miners Threaten Probe of Ca:ptive Bank
WASlUNGTON (UPI) -In·
surgent miners may ask for a
federal!l"obe of a uniono&lt;Jwned
bank that kept United Mme
Workers president w. A.
"l'ony" Boyle out of prison last
June by advancmg h1m
$179,500 in umecured credit so
he could post bond, a
spokesman said Saturday.
Joseph L. Raub Jr., attorney
for the anti-Boyle Miners for
Democracy, told UPI the group
Is considering asking the U.s.
comptroller of the currency who oversees national banks to look mto the "policies and
practices" of the National
Bank of Washmgton
It was disclosed m court
IJ"Oceedings Friday that the
bank, more than 7Q per cent
owned by the UMW, provided
the personal credit line to
Boyle without any collateral on

June 'l1 This was arranged
within mirrutes after he had
been ordered to pay $179,500
and sentenced to priSOn lor ftve
years for a series -of federal
crunes, including illegal conversion of Wlion funds
The credtt line enabled
Boyle, once a director of tl)e
hank, to obtain and post a
surety bond for the full amount
from the Maryland Casualty
Co. to secure release pending
appeal.
It was not Wltil Aug. 19,
nearly two months after he was
advanced the unsecured credit,
that Boyle sat down with hank
offictals and pledged more
than $190,000 m various savings
accounts to assure tt.
The financtal arrangements
were elictted by Raub from
Boyle himself and a bank attorney, John Wilson, at a

federal distrtct court hearing
to detenrune Boyle's net worth
in connection wtth a ciVIl su1t
for damages filed agamst him
by the Mmers for Democracy
m 1969 and decided in their
favor Aug 15.
"He only got out of the pokey
because the bank guaranteed
the bond," Raub satd m an
intervtew. "You're hardly a
ftrst-class risk a few mmutes
after you've been convicted of
convertmg funds It's JUSt
absurd. It was obVIOUS to
everyone m the courtroom that
only because Boyle ts prestdent
of the UMW that owns the bsnk
that he got the loan."
He satd the msurgent group
was constdermg asking for a
federal mvesttgation because
"we want to protect the hank "
"A bsnk that has practices of
puttmg up a $179,500 letter of
credit to a man who has JUSt

New Dike Bombing

been convicted

IS

not acting in

the best interests of tls
customers. Maybe there are
others who are getting the

same favors ''
The 70-year-&lt;&gt;ld UMW ch1ef
was conVIcted last March of
makmg illegal polttical contrt-

buttons of $49,500 and of
illegally converting umon
funds to unauthortzed uses. At
sentencing last June, U.S.
District Judge Charles H.
Richey, in ordermg him to
repay tbe $49,500 and finmg
him aoother $130,000, directed

sattonal m that," one source
satd. "He does tl all the time in
every ctty durmg a long

tournament."
Russian aides satd Spassky
relaxed at hts pnvate villa w1th
his wife Lartssa.
· "The hotel is noisy on
weekends and Mr Spassky
enJoys his wife's home-cooked
food," an atde satd
Gudmundur Thorarmsson,
president of the Icelandic
Chess Foundation, said crafts-

---------------------

WASHINGTON (UP!) - mire said in a statement.
President Ntxoo's charges that
"The administration is enthe Democratic Congress is gaged m polillcal hogwash,
guilty of spendthrift spending selfrighteous nonsense, and
amount to election-year electiOn-year eyewash in
"political hogwash," Sen. charging Congress wtth the
William Proxmire, D-Wis., responsibihty for budgetsaid Saturday.
busting big spendmg," he
Promrlre, head of the Joint commented.
Houae-Senate Economtc ComProxmire, a persistent critic
mittee, asserted the ad- of the Defense Department
ministration's tache was budget, said Ntxon had added
designed to obscure tis own "at least $1.2 bilhon" to the
emphasis on heavy military bodget by increasing the tempo
spending.
of bombing in Vietnam War
He said he would offer an spending would increase by
amendment when Congress that much more "if the vast
returns Sept. 5 to limit the increase in bombing, ammurufederal budget this year to $240 tion expended and Navy sh1p
billion. This would be $10 expenses continue," he added
billion less than Nixon's
He charged the President
JI"OPOsed celllng.
excluded the $1.2 billion in
''That will separate the men higher defense costs when he
from the boys and the believers proposed the $250 billion
from the public relations budget ceilmg for the current
IJ"Opaganda experts," Prox- fiscal year. Furthermore, he

.For President in November
CINCINNATI (UPI)
trend
Labor Secretary J. 0. Hodgson
" I wtll never be sahsfted
said Sat111·day President Nixon with an~lhtng but zero
would recetve "the biggest Wlemployment m lhts counlabor vote for a Republican try," Hodgson sa1d
Presidential nomtnee in 40
The Amertcan slrtke levelts
years" because union leaders the lowest smce 1963, he satd
have been "turned off" by "A clunate of mduslrial peace
Democratic Presidential tn lhts COWl lry IS begtnmng to
nominee George McGovern. show results," sa1d Hodgson.
Hodgson made the remarks
The Labor Secretary
at a news conference here pnor credtled wage and pnce
to,a commencement address to controls wtlh brmgmg tnflatton
the University of Cmctnnalt tn down to a point where spenwhich he said there would be no dable mcome is about four per
massive shift to a four-day cent above last year
work week or the demise of the
"For the first time smce 1965
110-called "Protes tant Work real wages show an mcrease, "
Ethic" that labor is virtuous. he satd.
Hodgson !lllid Nixon would
In his commencement adtel the support of labor dress, Hodgson satd, "work
beeause union leaders have has a lot gomg for tt, even m
been "turned off by the the modern world."
"bru.thofr• of McGovern who
"Although some shortemng
hu promised them nothing of the work week Wldoubtedly
nlclre than to "double or triple will occur," he said, "I don't
the tax lOll d." •
count myself among those who
Unemployment has steadily predtcl an early massive shift
dnlpped In the past year, to the four-day work week."
Hodglan said, and he predicted
Hodgson said that work not
1 ccntlnultlon of the downward only offers economic rewards

QUICK QUIZ

SUNDAY, AUGUST27
6 OD-F1Im 4
•
,
6 3D-Day of Discovery 4. Newsmaker 72
7 oo-Oid Ttme Gospel Hour 13. Societies In Trans Ilion 4 '
7 30- Ttme for Ttmothy 4, Treehouse Club to. Faith for T\"'ay
8 Revival Fires 6
a OD-Heratdof Truth 3. Davey &amp; Goliath 4, Leonard Repass8;
Gospel Caravan 6; Church Service 13, Movie Peggy 10.
8 15-Mornmg Report 4

a·3D-Ora l Roberts 3; Your Health 4 , Day of Discovery S; Rex
Humbard 13. Revival Fires 15. Kathryn Kuhlman 6.
9 OD-Stnging Jubtlee3 , Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard 15, Tom
&amp; Jerry 8 Film, 10
9·3D-Church by Side of Road 4, Grovte Goodies B. Dr. Paul

READY TO DEPART for the Ohto State Fair exhibit are,
left to right, MISSes Lori Barron and LuAnn Foster and Mrs
Janet Wetherholt

Warren 13

10 DO-Church Servlce4 , Faith for Today 15, This We Believe 13,
Th1s Is the Ltfe 3, Reluctant DraP.on 13, Oral Roberts 6, Ktd
Talk 8; Mov te. '" Boemg. Boeing •, 10.
10 3D-ThiS Is The Lite 15 . inSight 4; Captain Noah 3, Facing
Ltfe 8 Doubiedeckers 13 , Christopher Closeup 6.
11 oo- rJ Chapel 3. Buliwlnkle 13, Focus on Columbus 4;

Two Students Will
Man Fair Exhibit

Camera ThreeS, Consumer ReportlS, Point of Vlew6.

JD-This Is The Answer 3. insightl5 ; Make A Wish 6, 13; Face
the Natoon 8
12 OD-Morman Chatr3 Rex Humbasd8, CBPA_Bowllng6, Rev.
11

Evans 13, To Be Announced 15, Friendly Junction, 10; One

Glow at Hope. 4
12 3D-Revival F~res 13. At Issue 3, Comment 4. Open Bible 15.

12 45-Sacred Heart 15
1 DO-Meet the Press 3, 15. Old Ttme Gospel Hour 8. Lower
Ltghthouse 13 , Lamp Unto My Feet 10

B~RRY'S WORLO

GALLIPOLIS - Mtsses
LuAnn Foster and Lon Barron
w1ll represent Galha Academy
Htgh School at the Health
Occupaltons exh1b1l at the Ohio
Slate Fatr on August 27 and 28
Both yoWJg women are 1972
graduates of GAHS and were
members of the mtltal
Dtversifted Health
Occup alto ns class The DHO
program is one of etght such
programs tn the stale of Ohto
Mtss Foster worked m the
Phystcal Therapy Department

Mr. and Mrs. Willwm Sims

1 30--lssues &amp; Answers 6, 13 , Gospel Talent Time 15 , Roller

Mary Hout- William
Sims Wed july 22

Derby 3, Sports Challenqe 4; Good News 10.
2 OD-Stl Down. Shut Up and Gel Out 4. Movie "Susie Slade" 6.

Wrestlmg, a, AAU Interna tiona l Champ1ons 10, The
Comed 1ans 13
2 JQ-Mo\lle,' Man of a Thousand Faces", 3, To be announced

13
3 OD-Gtlltgan•s Island

4. CBS Tennis ClasSic
Western Theatre 15
3 15-Commerccal Film, 13
3 3G-Summer Olympics 6, 13 , Primus 4

8, 10, Film 13,

4 OD-Man Irom UNCLE &lt;. Golf Tournaments 8, 10, Saint.
15
4 3D-Sports Challenge 4

GALLIPOLIS - In a candl eltght ceremony Mary
Yvonne Hout became the brtde
of W1lham Walter S1ms on July
22, at 6 30 p.m m the Ftrst
Presbyterian
Church,
Ga lhpohs Rev Glenn Hueholt
and Rev Lmson Stebbins offlc taled the double rmg
ceremony before an altar of
blue and whtte pompons and
greenery backed by lighted
candelabra
The bnde 1s the daughter of
Mr and Mrs George A Hout,
Galltpohs, and the groom ts the
son of Mr. and Mrs Herman
Jumor Stms, Eureka
One half hour of pre-nupttal
mustc was presented by Mrs
Mtke Spangler, orgamst. Mr.
and Mrs James Enyart,
vocahsts, sang ·•walk Hand m
Hand." 'One Hand , One
Heart, '' "Because" and ''The
Lord's Prayer "
Presented ,m marrioge by
her father and mother, the
bnde wore a whtte formal
length gown of organza
fash1oned wtlh emptre bodice,
sheer v1ctortan sleeves and
neckhne wtlh a detachable
chapel tram The gown was
accented by apphqued motifs
of alencon lace and rtbbon-run
vcmse lace ruche edged the
cuffs, sktrl and tram. Her
ftngcr-ltp vet! of tlluston fell
from a Camelot cap of venise
lace topped wtlh a dainty seed
pear I crown She carried a
large coloma! bouquet of blue,
and whtle pompons, stattce and
baby's breath with whtte satin
streamers and two long
stemmed roses As the bride
walked down the atsle, she
paused to present one rose to
her mother and one to the
groom's mother Her only
jewelry was her grandmother's watch which was
presented to ~er grandmother,
Mrs Carlton Young, on her
weddmg day It has been
handed down for three

4 45---Commerclal Film 3
5 OQ-Wagon Tram 3 Natconal Automotcve Trouble Test 4, To
be announced 15

s 3D-Ant mal Wor ld 8 Death Val ley Days 10. To Be Announced
15

6 oo-News, Weather, Sports 4, Commenf l 15 , Surv1val 6,
Campacgn ' 72,
6

a, 10 ,

T ime Tunne l 13

3D-NBC News 3, 4, 15. News. Weather, Sports 6

7 oo-Prlmus 3. Juven ile Jury -4, Magic Circus 6 . Lassie 8, 10.
Wild Kmgdom 13,
7 3Q-Wor ld of Ocsney, 3 4 15 , Movce " Ass1gnment K" 8, 10,
Surv1va l 13
8 oo-summer OlympiCS 6, 13
8 3()--J cmmv C:.tt&gt;,_,.,. ... , A ' (

9 00-Bonanza 3, &lt; 15. Pro Football 6, 13
9 3()-Life of Leonardo da Vtnct 8. 10
10 oo-Bold Ones. 3. 4, 15
10 3D-Death Va lley Days 8. Htgh Road to Adventure 10.
11 oo-News. Weather. Sports 3, 4, 8, 10, 15
11 15-CBS News. 8. 10
"
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Mov ie, " Twelve O'Clock High , 8.
Face the Nat 1on, 10

.,

12 OD-ABC News6, 13 Mov te. "Murder at the Gallop , 10
12 15-Judd 6
12 JD-MoY ie, " The F1reball ", 13
1 OG-News and Weather 4 1

&gt;~ We ' re

2 15- Local News 13

gettin' a t.ttJe low on corn, stnng beans and
cucumbers Better run O\ler to the supermarket an~ buy

BY JACK O'BRIAN
WHAT IS IN THE HOPE CHEST?
NEW YORK (KFS) - Years ago some
publication exaggerated Bob Hope's consaid, "at the same tune the Siderable fortune as "More than $150,000,000";
secretary of the Treasury and smce then the total has ballooned in journalistic
the budget dtrector are fantas1es, as a recent London newspaper
casttgattng Congress as blunped, to $600,000,000.
spendthrift, they are askmg for
When that ongmal uneducated centunillton
an added $7 billion" in the guess appeared, we noted tts wtld magniltcatton
Pentagon budget for new and suggested Bob's fortune was somewhat over
weapons such as the Trident $15,000,000 . . Now Bob has set hts own ftscal
submarme and the B-1 bomber. facts straight - said he ts worth about
He also denounced Wh1te $25,000,000, a certainly a notable sum for an old
House "agents" for lobbymg vaudevilhan to have stashed m his grouchbag.
on Captlol Hill for restoration
The ongmal Hopeless fmanctal fantasy
of nearly $500 million a came to mmd then because not long before, the
Proxmire subcommittee cut late Joseph P. Kennedy had told us the three
from the foretgn aid budget. richest actors were Bing Crosby, Morton
"When Congress adds funds Downey and Bob Hope, and he wasn't quite
for school lunches, soctal convinced Downey wasn 'I the rtchest of the three
secunty, or black lung .. Bob let the old magazine he remam unbeneftts, the admimstration corrected simply because Bob's one of the wiliest
denounces us as 'btg spen- press agents for himself m the ham trade and
ders,"' Proxmire srud. "But knew tl would steal miles of headlined space; but
btlhons for space, defense and he laughed through his reticence about denying
highways ts either lobbied for tt at the tune ... Also, Bob's had a marvelous
by the admimstrahon or personal rapport with newamen, and he didn't
exempted from the budget want to make the magazme look silly . •Now the
ce11ing."
or1gmal goofo&lt;Jff's been forgotten m the years of
Hope's poke-guessmg and his true worth is
fantastic enough.
Hope IS a remarkable gentleman of his
calling; we don't know of him ever domg a
shabby thing ... His personal handouts to old
vaudeville and movie pals go Wl-press agented,
his endless schedule of beneltts is duplicated by
no other star performer; he long ago passed the
presttge-mark fabricated by some entertainers
on-the-make for money and lame, who get
reputations for philanthropy to the point they
but also plays a role m assurmg feel thetr careers are in permanent orbit, and
mental health.
then you can't get them lor chartty for any
"Escaptsm may be a luxury, reason short of a White House bash.
buttt ts a dead-end luxury, " he
One star has been desperately trymg to
told the graduates. "And it cleanse himself of his hysterical reputation in
1sn't worth your ttme."
show busmess and In some degree, to the public,
Between now and the year. as a fellow so frightened of being drafted in WW
2000 the average male n that he literallyhithts head against the wall at
graduate of the Umvers1ly of Governor's Island whtle being forced to take his
Cmcinnalt will spend 87,000 physical tests, ultimately claiming he was a
hours of hts life employed on a homosexual and screaming his despair; the
JOb, about one-thtrd of hts non- Army rejected him not because he was a
sleeping hours, Hodgson satd. homosexual- it didn't believe he was -but the
"The Protestant work eth1c llTational display convinced the doctor-officers
.. IS an ethtc that has endured he was unfit emotionally and mentally for khaki,
occastonal unsuccessful espectally Wlder war condillons .... His goal for
challenges for over four cen- years has been to get the top U.S. medal in the
tunes," he sa1d. " Today, arts, g1ven so deservedly to George M. Cohan crtltcs are agam hackmg away and Bob Hope.
altt. But don't bet on tis early
Too bsd it wasn't given to a few great
demtse "
wartime entertainers who abandoned the. easy
big money of wartime mummery for long
periods, to go overseas to entertain our lads in
un:form ... AI Jolson, for instance, aging and
with a heart condition, entertained constantly in
Q- Who was the fm t ma- war areas ... So d1d Joe E. Lewis, whose health
101 league pitcher- ta. hit a never was wonderful. Joe always aggravated his
Wmld Senes g r a u d slam
1
his
homer?
. diabetes by his drink~, which not on y was
A- Dave McNally Oct 13 rughtclubcomedytoplcbutwasirue; we know of
1970. for th e B a Itt 111 0 r ~ oo entertainer who drank to Joe's capacity Onoles
and never missed a show except, caught sober,

Huge Labor Vote Expected

and Tomorrow

Face the Nat1on 10

Political Hogwash Tag
On President's Charge

men
had
reassembled
Spassky's U.S.made swivel
chatr
It was taken apart Frtday
after x..-ays had discovered
what Thorarinsson descrtbed
as "a black shadow, like the
shape of an knife" m the seat.
"It turned out to he an imperfect ftlling in the plywood, "
Thorarinsson said in annoWJcing results of a chemical
analysts and checks of the
lighting system.

,;
'·'

Programs for Tonight

Chess Stage Becalmed
By JIM WARD
REYKJAVIK (UPI)- Borts
Spassky's chair was back m
one ptece . Bobby Ftscher
observed his Sabbath. Spassky
enjoyed his wife's home cookmg. And referee Lothar
Schmid sa1d Saturday, "the rur
ts crtsp and clean, no protests
today."
The week began wtlh a
"control the noise or I qutt"
ultunatum from Fischer, the
Amen can challenger, and
ended on a lighter note when
the organizers could reJect
Russian charges that "electromc devtces and chemical
substances" were used to upset
Spassky's game.
"Perhaps tbetr public relations man had tbe day off when
they (the Russ tans) dreamed
up that tdea," satd Ftscher's
second, the Rev. Wtlltam
Lombardy "I understand experts found two dead flies and
faulty plywood m Spassky's
charr."
Sunday's l!lth game 1s scheduled to begm at 5 p m , wtth
Spassky playmg white and
movmg first.
Ftscher gamed another halfpomt m Friday's drawn game
and has a 10't..to 7't.. point lead.
He needs two more wins, four
draws or a combmation of both
to capture the title. The
champion must squeeze 4\\
pomts out of the last stx games
to retam his crown m the
$250,000 dollar "match of the
century."
U S. sources satd Fischer
observed hts 24-ltour Sabbathhe IS a member of the Church
of God-m a thtrd-floor sutte
wtth his chess books and the
B1ble. The sources satd Ftscher
moved out of the prestdenttal
sw te on the fourth floor- the
plushest m town-to occupy the
smaller room below.
"There IS nothing sen-

I

Television Log

that Boyle be held in custody
Wltil he posted bond for the fllll
BmOWlt.
Rauh satd the testimony
indtcated Boyle has assets "in
excess of a quarter of a million
dollars," includmg the $190,000
msavings and a $50,000 house.

Mrs. Lear Installs
New Unit Officers

u

some more.

6 00 6.1 5 -

6· 20 6 25 -

MONDAY, AUG. 28

Sunr1se Semcnar 4, Sacred Heart 10
Farmt)me 10, F ar.rn Re.t:~Qrt. . JJ , 11

Paul Harvey 13

,

,

1

Word of Ltfe 13
6.30 - Columbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8. School Scene 10

I
on Yom Kippur .
Joan Blondell, Kay Francis, Frances Langford, Roz Russell, Carol Landts women 's4tbbed
it mto dangerous war areas long before Glor1a
Stemem felt styrmed by men ... Morton Downey
even ltved a year in London during the worst of
the blitz whtch the English never forgot and
adored him for it; as they loved and rewarded
Ben Lyon and Bebe Daniels for staying m
London through it all plus many appearances up
front with the assorted Allied soldiers; and bandleader Jack Harris, now vtce-president of Meyer
Davis' mternattonal society dance band cartel,
who stayed nght at his podium as conductor of
the orchestra at the famed Cafe de Parts before,
durmg and after ww n.
These are the sort of cbsracters we admire not
just for their performing gifts but for their
humamty and a Presidential or Congressional
medal somehow doesn't seem quite enough
reward from a grateful America ... Morris
Ernst, the great old ctvil libertarian who
remains amazmgly active though pushing 85,
told us a few days ago he feels that the U. S.
should give not only proper honors, but even
titles.
"I'd like to see us give knighthoods, even
bsronetcies to the heroes we admire and who
deserve some lasting gratitude for their fine
body or work," Morris told us. "England gtves
lmighthoods to jockeys and hallerinas and actors
like Str Noel Coward and Sir John Gielgud and
Dame May Witty and Dame Margot Fonteyn and
even a lordship to Laurence Olivier. They ,ien 'I
have to worry about bsvmg the titles descl!'d to
possibly dissolute sons of performers who get on
the Queen's Honor Lists; they are only lifetime
titles and I am perfectly convinced they are
deserved. How else can the English reward a
Noel Coward for his huge lifetime of work when
he already has all the tangible honors, the riches,
that have gone with his success?
"It's considered by a few over here that we
mustn't go m for that sort of regal tapping of
sword on shoulder, but 11 is a custom more
worshiwed by the Engliah working classes than
by the stuffy old peers who cadged their titles by
inheritance or for earning millions for British
bslance of payments statistics. Moreover,
England Is a civilized country, and we have
taken many things from them In the arts, so why
oot knlghthoods and baronetcies?
"What are honorary degrees from colleges
but a sort of Little League honors list? Old
generals love bemg called •general' long after
retirement. Wartime temporary officers retain
their general or colonel rank before their names
and love It. Old discredited ambassadors keep
their title long after they've been fired; cabinet
officers hang onto their titles unto death . Why
not!" Indeed.
Itwon'thappen, we're certain, butwewlsh it
would. Why shouldn't a rich old gentleman who
for instance has produced more than 40 of the
most distinguished plays In hls sunset years
answer to, "Sir Max Gordon"? Or a Sir Richard
Rodgers, Lord Irving Berlin, Sir Fred Astaire,
Dame Hoz Russell, Dame Bette Davia? Sir John
Wayne? It doesn 't seem to fit Duke. Make Edward Kennedy Elllngton 's Duke official. And
Basle's Count. And, of course, Sir Bob Hope;
let's make Bob a full U&gt;rd.

6 45 -

Corncob Report 3

Rocky &amp; Bullwtnkle 13
7 00 - Today 3. 4, IS , News, Weather. Sports6. s
7 25 - Sports 13
7 ~0 - Romper Room 6. Underdog 13. Sleepy Jeffers B.
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. New Zoo Revue 6. 13 , Sesame St

6 55 -

33; Fnendly Junction 10

8 30 -

Tennessee Tuxedo 6. Jack La Lanne 13

8 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - What Every Woman Wants to Know 3, Paul Di xon 4;
Romper Room 8, Ttmmy &amp; Lassie 6, Phil Donahue 15;
Peyton Place 13; Mr. Rogers33 , Captain Kangaroo 10
9 30 - Truth or Conseq 3, Mike Douglas6 . One Life to Live 13 ,
Etec Co 33 , My Three Sons 8
9 55 - Chuck Whtte Reports 10
10 00 - Dtnah Shore IS · Lucille Bali 10 , Dick Van Dyke 13 , In
School instruction 33
10·30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Phil Donahue 4 , Beverly Hlilbilll ..
8 My Three Sons 10, Spilt Second 13. F Troop6.
11 110 - Sale of Century 3, 15. Communique 6, Family Affair B,
10 , Love American Styl e 13

25 - Carol DuVall 6
30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4. 15 , Bewitched 6, 13; Lcve of Life
8, 10
12 011 - Jeopardy 3. IS . Password 6, Bob Btaun's SO so Club 4;
Contact 8, News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30- Splot Second 6; Search for TomorrowS. 10; Elec Co 33 .
News 3. 3 W's 15
11
11

1 00 - All My Ch1ldren 6, 13 , 0 1\lorce Court 81 News, Weather,

Sports 3, Flippo at !he Fatr tO , To Be Announced 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3. 4, 15 , Let"s Make a Deal 6, 13 ; As The
World Turns 8. 10, Sewing Sktlls 33
2·00 - Days of our Ltves 3. 4, IS . Newlywed Game 13. Love
Spiendored Thing 8. 10.
2 30 - Dattng Game 13. Guidtng Ltght 8. 10. Docfors3, 4, IS.
3 110 - Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15 ; One Life to Live 6, Edge
of N1ght 8.10. Jeff's Collie 13 , Sportscope33
4 110 - Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 4, 15 , Huckleberry Hound 6;
Batman 8, Fiintstones 13. Movie "'Devil Makes Three" 10;
Sesame St 33.
4 30 - Green Acres 3, Merv Griffin 4; l Love Lucy 6, Death
Valley Days 8 , Password 13, Andy Griffith 15.
5 00 - Wagon Train 3. big Valley 6; Mr. Rogers 33; Tarzan 13.
DICk Van Dyke15, To Be Announced 4, Merv GriffinS
5·30- Elec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15.
6 00 - News 3, 4, 8. 10; Truth or Conseq 6, t Dream of Jeannie
13, News 15, Hathayoga 33
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News6, 13, CBS News8, 10; Folk
Guitar 33
7 110 - Elec Co. 20 . News 6, It Takes A Thief 3, Dick Van Dyke
4, What's My Line 8, Saints IS Off The Record 33; Wild, Wild
West 13.
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6; Traffic Court 10; Edpisode· Action
33; I Dream of Jeannie 4, Dragnet 8
8 00- Gunsmoke 8, 10; Baseball 3, 4, 15, Summer Olympics 6.
13 , The Old Maid and The Thief 33.
9 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10 , Boboquivarl 33
9:30 - Doris Day 8, 10, Toy That Grew Up 33
10:00 - Cade's County 8. 10, Something Else 10
10 30 - Human Dimensions 33
11 00 - News3, 4.6 ; News8.10. IS
11·30 - Dick Cavett'6 . Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15; Movie "S O.S
Pacific" 8, Movie "The Sevbnth Sin"' 10; Movie "The Steel
Trap"' 13.
1 00 - Focux on Columbus 4
1 30 - News 13.

loday·s FUNNY

Timely Quotes
Maryland, announcing
after mediating two prison

disturbances that he will

RACINE - The Sayre
reun ion was held Aug. 6 at the
Racme Shnne Park A ptcmc
lunch. fun and games were
en JOyed Offcers elected for the
commg year are W1lma Styer,
prestdent, and
Alberta
SaWJders, secrel.ary-!reasurer
Attendmg were Mrs Freddte
Arthur, Dan Sayre, Path
Ftscher, Mr and Mrs Jack
Wilhs and famtly, Mr and Mrs
James Cox and Mrs. Maxme
Camp and Sharon, Columbus;
Mr and Mrs Brian Simpson
and famlly, Baltimore, Ohto,
Mr and Mrs Rodertek Grmm,
Mr and Mrs, Larry Evans, Mr
and Mrs Chester S1mpson,

acolyte
For the weddmg trtp, Mrs
Stms changed to a whtle
polyester kntt dress wtlh pastel
lrtm. She wore a corsage of
blue and wh1te pompons from
her brtdal bouquet.
The bnde ts a 1971 graduate
of Galha Academy and wtll be
a sophomore at Ashland
College, Ashland, Ohw. The
brtdegroom is a 1970 graduate
of Gallia Academy and a 1972
graduate of the Cleveland
Engmeertng Institute He ts
presently employed at Shylo
Tool Co., Mansfteld
The couple will reside at
Route 2, Greenwtch, Ohio.

'

~

-d'

,

Mtke !hie, Mrs Joyce Manual
GALLIPOLIS
The
and children, Mrs Isabel
Galltpohs
branch
of
he
Simpson, Mr and Mrs Hebert
Sayre, Dav1d Sayre, Mr. and Amertcan Assoctatton of
Mrs Ronald Hart, Mrs Umverstly Women (( AAUW)
Dorothy Glenn and Mr. and has planned tls annual
Mrs. Charles Pyles and famtly, membership buffet dmner
Racme , Mr and Mrs Norman meeting Monday, Sept 11, at
Styer, Waterford; Mr Howard 6 30 p.m The event wtll be held
and Mrs. Brooks Sayre, at the home of Mrs Rtchard G
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs Gerald Patterson, 47 Holcomb Htll,
Hart and famtly, Neward; Galhpolts, and will mclude a
Mrs M1ke Swatzel, Marietta; revtew of the programs for thts
Mr and Mrs Paul North, Mrs commg year Prospecttve
Alberta SaWlders, Terry and members are cordially InVIted
Roger, Mr and Mrs . James to attend
The local AAUW umt ts
Sayre, Mr &gt;Q(ld Mrs. Dav1d
McDamel and'Mr and Mr-s. concerned prtmartly wtlh
Jerry Bradley and family, enhancmg the mtelleclual and
Galhpolts; Donna Theiss, cultural growth of tts memDorcas, Ohto; Jtll, Aprtl and hers, offers fellowships for
Todd Burris, Pt Pleasant, w women scholars and works to
Va , Mrs Bobbie Grttter, provtde other educattonal
Grove c1ty, Mr and Mrs opporiWltltes lor lhe people of
Roger Wolfe and family, the communtty
Ashtabula; Antla Bradley,
Meetings are held m the
Covmgton, Ky , Paul Sayre, · evemngs, usua lly the first
Fatrvtew; Mr and Mrs. Monday of the month, SepChester and lam1ly, North
Ktngsvtlle, Ohto, and Mr and
Mrs Kelly Sayre and Gregg,
Pataskala
McCALL REUNION
CENTENARY - The annual
McCall reWJion wtll be Sept 3
at Centenary wtth a basket
dmner at noon. Friends and
relattves are invited

tember
through
June
Programs feature mlerestmg
speakers and deal wtth v1tal
Issues Toptcs selected for lhts
year are ''We, the People 1' and
"A Dollar's Worth. "
Part1ctpalton and Involvement Will bring new
fnends and new tnterests The
opemng meelmg promtses to
be an mterestmg and enjoyable
cvemng ReservatiOns are
requested and can be made
from now through Sept. 5 by
calltng Mrs Paul Stewart, 4464793 , Mrs James Yocum, 4461250 or Mrs Stephen Carter,
446-2497 Eltgtbthly may also
be checked at lh1s tline

,

l"lw1111 •

The Almanac
By Umted Press Intemal1onat
TONIGHT THRU
Today IS Sunday, A'Ug 27, the
WEDNESDAY
240th day of 1972 wtth 126 to
follow
WALT DISNEY
produollona"
The moon 1s between tis full ~
phase and last quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Venus and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mars
and Juptter
Those born on thts date are
under the stgn of Vtrgo.
~'ormer Prestdent Lyndon
Johnson was born Aug 27, 1908
On lhts day m htstory
In 1859, the first otl well tn
&lt;m l!lli"E£I/Nit:l1fil '
........ . ...
l. oil! .., • ..__
the Umted States was drtlled
~

near Titusville , Pa

~ l ~ll l!lihJ• rG II(

CARTOON

In 1928, the Kellogg-Bnand
pact to outlaw war was s1gned
by 15 natwns m Pans.
In 1939, Adolf Httler served
noltce on England and France
!hat Germany wanted Danztg
and the Pohsh Corridor.

and
~~ramoun!

A

Production

"liAR
IPI.I IIiiD
,

Mon , Tues
Aug 27 28-29
Double Feature
Program
11

Pte furl!~ p •e 5en l~

HOWARD W. KOCH

8east Of The

Yellow Night"
- Plus-

{;1

Creature W1th

~
~

The Blue Hand"

Color~~ Mov.elab ~

APN11mCu111P1Ciu re

~' .
r;~

PLUS

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght, Man , Tues.

Augu.t 27 28-29

Walt Disney 's

NOW YOU SEE HIM,
NOW YOU DON'T
Techn1color
Kurt Russell
Cesar Romero

ALSO
SEAR COUNTRY

(Gl

COLOR CARTOON ·
Double Drlbbto,...
Admission· $1 SO Adults
Children. 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 PM.

1

SPEARS REUNION
A Spears reumon will be held
at Lake Jackson Sept. 3 with a
basket dmner to be served at
noon. All frtends and relahves
are welcone .

Running Mates [or

FALL '72 ,
Here's a new plank for

TERRY
JOHNSON

your fash ion platform
The super look of
suede and

Sporty

.

•

l

l
l
1
.j

MOBILE

on

a

htgher, sturdier heel.
Navy suede w Blue
smooth,
B1tter

new mob1le home com-

pletely equipped, at a cost,
including a monlt1ly rental
of a modern home site, that
is less than most mortgage
or rental payments. on a
conventional home and it's
furnishings, with comparable advantages
Whatever your budget,
whatever the price, mobile
homu are available to suit
your needs, with very
reasonable credit terms
When you invest in a
mobile home. you Invest In
a complete home The
home itself and also major
appliances, · furniture.
droperlu, carpeting and
tamps, ali Included tn one
single payment.
Stop In and let us Introduce you to the mobile
home. You will agree It Is
unexcelled in beauty, style,
and design and what's
more It can be yours.

leather

. classic

tailored

Compare this tor value.
You can own a b&amp;autlful

\

St, CI..... M, Oh1o .. 113.

COLO\\ ·

By

no longer play that role.

Todor'• FUNNY will poy $1 00 for
todt orltiMI "hln•r" •N•. Sud gagl
hi: Tt4op't FUNI'4Y, 1200 Welt fh,r4

GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs H. Rtchard Suns St Rt
141, are announcmg lbe engagement and for ... Arung
mamage of thetr daughter, Cathy Ann, to Ronald William
Wray,son of Mrs. Alta Wray, Bidwell. The wedding will take
place Sept 2 at 7:30pm. at the Grace Untied Methodist
&lt;llurch with the Rev. Robert Colvm olf1ctating Tbe gractous
custom of open church wtll be observed.

Relatives Meet At AA UW Plans Annual
Racine Shrine Park Membership Dinner

I nominate COnnie·
-.,

and Youth, Mrs. Aldeth Wh1te ;
Commumty Serv1ce, Mrs
Harry Maggted, Ctvtl Defense,
Mrs Dorothy Hecker; Foretgn
Relaltons, Mrs. Wilham J
Brown, Legislaltve, MISS Magaret Toppmg, Nattonal
Secunty, Mrs. Edna Bulterlteld, Membership, Mrs
Dann Tabor; Poppy , M~s
Wanda Thomas, Pubhctly,
Mrs Wilham J. Brown ,
Ve terans
Servtce
and
Rehabtltlalton, Mrs L G
Marcht; Umt Acltvtltes, Mrs.
W1Iltam J Brown and Flowers
and Cards , Mrs Dorothy
Hecker
Offtcers of the Post Installed
by J J Panna baker were
Howard Lee, commander,
John Hood, ftrst vtce commander, Douglas Johnson,
second v&amp;ce commander, J J
Pannabaker, ftnance olftcer
and Charles Huber, adjutant
In a short mformal busmess
meetmg, the Auxtltary Umt
made plans to hold a rummage
sale September 21-23 and to
have a booth at Bob Evans
Farm Days Octber 13-15 at
wh1ch they wtll display and sell
arltcles made by veterans at
Ch1lltcothe V A Hosp1tal The
Arnencamsm Chairman, Mrs
Stlas Hamtllon, announced that
the gtrls who were delegates to
Buckeye G1rls Stale wtll g1ve
thetr reports at the next
meetmg of the Umt which wtll
be Sept 26

Tonoght

SUEDE 'n' LEATHER

I'm not gomg tote on ' will
call' for the pr1son3rs
,
1

-Gov. Mar v 1 n Mandel ot

generatwns She also wore her
mother's blue star sapphire
nng.
Cathy M1ller, ma1d of honor,
wore an A-hne prmcess style
gown of pale blue dotted sw1ss
Accenltng the vtclonan
neckline, puffed sleeves and
bow was a damty blue and
whtte flower trim Mrs.
Rodertck Hook and Mtss Billy
Sue
Oatley,
former
classmates, served as brtdesma!ds Both g1rls wore dresses
ldenltcaltu the ma1d of honor's
m deeper shades of blue Each
gtrl earned a smgle pale
yellow long stemmed rose w1th
yellow saltn streamers.
Servmg as best man for the
bridegroom was Tom Stms,
Galhpohs, brother of the
groom Ushers were Robert
Hunt and Andrew Hout,
brothers of the brtde
For her daughter 's weddmg,
Mrs• Hout wore a pale yeUow
Butte kmt ensemble wtlh black
accessortes . Th.e groom's
mother, Mrs. S1ms, wore a blue
kmt ensemble wtlh black accessortes Both molhers wore
gardema corsages
Followtng the ceremony, a
receplton was held tn the
church parlor The bnde's
table featured a Lady Wmdemere cake wtth four small
cakes on revolving stands set
off by three tiers decorated
w1th clusters of small blue
ruses The cake was topped by
m1mature brtde and groom
under ratnbow arches. The
four small cakes were topped
wtth angels and a heart-shaped
nngbox featurmg two weddmg
nngs Mtsses Carol and Mana
Hansen presided al the table.
Mtss Elame Suns registered
the guests and Kevm Stms was

at Holzer Medical Center and 1s
now a full lime employee m
that department
M1ss Barron worked m the
office of Drs R D and Wtlltam
B Thomas, optometrists, the
past school year She wtll be
enrolled m the Med1cal
Labo1 a tor Technology
Program offered by Rw
Grande College and Holzer
Medtcal Center
Instructor-Coordmator of the
DHO program at GAHS is Mrs
Janet Wetherholt

GALLIPOLIS - A jotnl
~1eeting and ptcnic was held by
Lafayette Post No
27,
Amertcan
Legton
and
Amertcan Legton Auxthary
Wednesday evening, Aug. 23,
at the home of Mr and Mrs. L
G March1 on Chtlhcothe Road.
Followmg the bounteous
ptcntc supper, George Ftsh, the
Post's delegate to Buckeye
Boys State. was introduced and
told of hts expenence at Boys
State Elected treasurer of h1s
ctty, he sa1d he was sorry that
more boys could not participate tn this expertence m
Amencan Government.
Wtth Mrs George Lear as
mstalhng off1cer, the officers
of Lafayette Umt were seated
Installed were Mrs. Clarence
Jones, prestdent; Mrs. Dann
Tabor, first v1ce president,
Mrs Wanda Thomas, second
v1ce prestdenl; Mrs. Wtlham J.
Brown, secretary, Mrs.
Dorothy Hecker, treasurer ,
Mrs L G Marcht, htstortan ,
Mtss Margaret Toppmg.
chaplam, and Mrs Aldeth
Whtte, sergeant-at-arms
M1ss Toppmg was presented
wtlh a Past Prestdenl's Ptn and
Mrs George Lear with an
Honor Guard pm tn recogmtton
of her 40 years service to the
Aux1hary Umt.
Mrs Jones announced her
commtltee cha1rmen lor the
year. These are AmerJcamsm,
Mrs Stlas Hamtlton; Chtldren

Cathy Sims-Ronald
Wray Are Engaged

Chocolate suede wBrown smooth or

Black suede w Black
smooth. 516.95

SAVE

SAVE

$60

On the k ng S1zn Sacropt&gt;d c
lmpt r!al (] P•CCC CI\SC,' II')

$50
On Ihe

*259.90

N11t1on• Hr

a d~e• lisod

Jl S319 go

O ~ tcn

Sltl! SiiCJO pC!Q c

lmpo riJ! (2 pn~c c c nsr!m blc)

'169.90
N31oo nally tdwllhud al $219 90

SAVE

$40
On lht! Full or Tw in

Sil OSiltrOpcdiC

tmprmJI (2 piece crucmbte ~

'119.90

N;~llor~nll y ad vertiSed ~1 $ 159 ~0

Bemco s 'once a-year Sacroped1c lmper al manre ss sale
IS on nght now And lhat means spec1a1 savtngs on the

mauress of yoor dreams

Bemco makes lhe Sacroped 1c lrnper1 al with f1rm Umlused'
Constructton lor extra support So you and your back both
wake up refresh eCJ
Sttetcl'l out on a 5acroped•c lmper1el mattress set now
And enjoy healthy uvlngs on a healthy nrghl s rest

'

Open Monday
'

\

Night Til 8 P.M.
llltlrl the lllollJ '""' . . . .
321 SttDIMI Att
GIJIIIIIOlls, 0

Friday9:3Dto8 P.M.
Thursday 9:30 to 12 Noon
Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30 to 5 PM

INNERSPRI~G

Md ttl of ltmeo Oullroum•' nw rr ~tllt l
1/lf Wu11d'J Cruwu 5/roepm,

MAnRESSES
$
OR 80X SI'RING$......·............................

,,lit•

tS

29 up

�' -The 'l'lmel!o8entinel, Sunday, Aug. 2'1, 1972

t - The Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. Tl, 1972

A fhaalbt for thl dl!y: Britlllh ·hen for 10 laiC, that lbe eaaJd
writer Rlldyard KlpHng llld, not pert with it."
"Youth had been a habit of

Mrs; Spears Hosts
'
~ Golden Rule Class
GALUPOUS - The Golden
Rule Class of the Old Kyger
Church met Wednesday
evening, 'Aug. 23, with Mrs.
Edward Spears. The ineeting
~ned with all singing "Sweet
1
Hour of Prayer." Mrs. Dale
Mulford, president, read the
first chapter of Proverbs and
the Lord's Prayer Was said in
Unison.
~ach member gav e her
~ monthly Bible verse and an .
; educational discussion was
~ held on "forgiving'·' and
"forgetting." The secretary's
~ and treasurer's reports were
: given. The ladies plan to make
applebutter in October to sell.
l Mrs. Mulford asked the Bible
\. questions after which readings
~ were given. These were
: "Today" by Mrs. George
Gardner ; "Happiness" by

Mollie

Johnson ;

1

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Held August 20
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
Easton family reunion was
held Sunday, Aug . 20, at Clark
Chapel Acres. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs . Ballard Easton
and Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Easton, Greg and Rhonda,
Tampa, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Easton, Renee,
Candy, C. H. and Tina, Fair·
born; Mr, and Mrs. Gary
Reynolds and Eddie and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Custer and
Tresa, Columbus; . Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Fairchild and Bryan
Esser, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs.
Margaret Calhoun and Danny,
Kathryn Marshall, P&gt;lty and
Rhonda Kiser, Teresa Roberts,
Bonnie, Marjie and Tommy
Stephens and Lou Gayhart,
Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. Coleus
Reynolds, Mrs. Lexie Easton,
Bill Easton, Danny, Tami and
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs. Mac
Ward, Jeff and Carl, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Swisher, Joyce
and Eddie, Leo Swisher, Mr.
and Mrs. Tony Elkins and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Elkins and
Larry, Jr., Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. William Reynolds, Kim
and Karen, Vinton, and Mrs.
Lucy Hamilton, Gallipolis.

Take 1 "RED CARPET
HOLIDAY" at lhe

~

j RED CARPET INN

\

'
t

\

(

!!

:' '\
'I
'

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Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
Labor Day Weekend
Sept. 1 thru 4th
luxurious accommodations
Swimming &amp; Tennis
Superb dining room

Lounge
Planned activities

CocktctJis on arrival

Great entertainment
Swim Show

'
I

I

All FOR
AS LIITLE
As $30.00 per person
Plus accommodations: Call
or write now for reservations, Red Carpet Inn,

Dhlo River Rd.. Pt.
Pleasont, w. Va . 25550,
phone 304·675·5007.

TAKEN IN BLAZERSBURG JUNE 4, 1904, this picture
hils been kept by Jo!!fph Kemp, 1018 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Shown in it are his Civil War buddies (back row,!. tor.), Mr.
Martin, Mr. Holly, Sam Glover, Mr, Roush, Hugh Nibert and
David McDaniel and (front row), an unidentified man, Mr.
Nibert, Hollar Martin and Joseph Kemp, who iS 00 years old.

CROWN CITY - Rev.
Charles Lusher will be the
. guest speaker lor weekend
revival meellngs Sept. 1-4 at
the new Good Hope Church
on Rt. 218 (Crown City, Rt.
I I. Services will begin at 7:30
each evening. The publlc Is
Invited to attend.

Harrisons Have
Family .Reunion
DELAWARE - The third
annual Harrison reunion was
held Aug . 20 at the Delaware
(Ohio) Fairgrounds with 81
persons present. After a most
delicious dinner , games and
swimming were enjoyed.
A poem submitted by Mrs.
Faye Harrison entit:ed "My
Get Up and Go Has Got Up and
Gone" was read by lrwon
I Pete) Harrison.
Attending were Mrs. Faye
· Harrison , Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Slagle and Christopher, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold H. Harrison ,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold C.
Harrison, Beverly Harrison,
Mr. and Mrs. Daryl
K.
Shoemaker and Bobby, Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Burlile, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Harrison, Brett
and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Porter and Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Harrison, Gallipolis;
Mr . and Mrs. Glenn Ward and
daughter, Sherri, and Tina
Adkins, Rio Grande ; Mr. and
Mrs. Irwin Harrison and sons,
Russell Harrison, daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Harrison

fl

and Mrs. Clara Harrison ,
Toledo ; Mrs. Mary Porter, Mr .
and Mrs . Richard Peck and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Britton and Mrs. Mary Alice
Leaper, Marion; Mr . and Mrs.
Buss Porter, Stow ; Mr. and
Mrs. William Mangold and
family, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Smith, Westerville; Sam
Lewis, ·West Jefferson ; Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Harrison and
family , Oregon, Ohio ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Harrison and family,
Mrs. Francis Belt, Mrs. Mary
Starling and daughter and
Fred Leaper, Delaware, Ohio;
Mr . and Mrs. R. E. Counts,
Columbus; Bob Harrison,
California; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Harrison, Missy, Matt
and Mark, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Shifflet and son,
Prospect; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Harrison and Susan,
Vandalia; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Hossalla, Decatur,
Dl.; and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Parsons and Mrs. Lucille
Porter, Springfield.

(ALL DAY)

ICalendar!

·Dv.,nce r Will Hold
Ballet and jazz
Classes In Home

1 I

Can Marijuana Cause Acne?

EvePY SundaY

~ Social ~

Mrs. J T. Griffin

By Helen and Sue Hottel
. .

onlY

. WEST
.KQJ97J

Dear Rap :
Is there such a thing as being allergic to marijuana? And is it
true that it can cause skin trouble' Ukeacne?
I have hay fever, especially around lawn cuttings and certain
flowers. My eyes water and turn red and I can't get my breath,
but this usually sinuners down to sneezing by late summer .
I started smoking pot recently. And all my hay fever symi&gt;'
toms are back. Whenever I'm around people who smell of It, my
eyes pour water, unless I load up on hay fever pills and then I ,
don't know whether it's the pot or the pills that make me sort of
float.
Also I've noticed a lot of people who blow weed have bad
acne. A friend of mine (who doesn 't smoke) says marijuana is
bad for the skin. I can't ask a doctor about this, so would you
please find out for me?-SNEEZV
Dear Sneezy :
'
1 CHEESEBURGER
My doctor -siys marijuana is a kind of grass;
many grasses initiate hay fever attacks; therefore it's quite
possible you can be allergic to pot.
As for skin problems, H. L. Herschensohn, M.D., a well
known medical writer, says, "Marijuana has a bad effect on the
sebaceous glands so that pimples, water blisters, ·blackheads,
inflamed nodules and infected cysts occur ... It is also known to
cause seborrhea, a greafY disease of the skin, and dandruff.
When these symptoms occur together with swelling of the
eyelids, marijuana is a most likely cause. In some cases, there is
swelling on top of the hands between the knuckles and the wrist,
another telltale sign of pot use ... A doctor can often tell just by
1503 EASTERN AVENUE the appearance of the skin whether or not his patient is abusing
any of the mind~ltering drugs."
Acne was a teenage problem long before pot became one, but
. doctors are begiming to note a correlation between heavy users
and stubborn belmishes, Dr. Kerscbensohn adds in his
newspaper column, "Medical Memos.-HELEN

:GAlLIPO(iS.

U

BY NANCI LAYNE
GALLIPOUS - A ballet
studio is being introduced in
Gallipolis. Where? It will be in
the front room of the J. T.
Griffin home, 13 Court Street,
and will be used by students
interested in taking ballet and
jazz after Labor Day. J . T.'s
wife, Dorothy, will be lhe in·
structor.
Dorothy, a tall young lady
and mother with a sparkiing
personality , has always
wan ted a studio of her own in
which to teach dance and her
dream is beginning to become
a reality. She will be accepting
student enrollment Thursday,
Aug. 31, for children eight and
up in ballet, and teens and
adults in jazz.
'Mrs . Griffin '" ' a mo; t
qualified teacher as she has
been dancing about 20 years.
Her mother, the late Mrs.
Warren A. Ketterer, Concord,
Calif., was a professional
dance and "like mother - like
daughter, " Dorothy developed
her own interest in the
profession at a very young age.
Born July 25 , 1947, in
Chicako, 01., Dorothy and her
parents, Dr. and Mrs . Warren

Ketterer, moved to Concord,
Calif., when she was nine
weeks old. Dorothy and her
brother, Daniel, who is two
years younger than she, at·
tended Mt. Diablo High School
in Concord where·she won the
Fine Arts Scholarship from the
Bank of America. One of the
highlights of young Dorothy's
life was the passing with
honors the examination in
dance given by the Royal
Academy of England.
Eugene Loring, professor of
dance at the Irvine branch of
the University of California,
was Dorothy's instructor in
ballet.
She left
the
Irvine branch college to
attend Mills College in
Oakland, Calif. , where she
received her Bachelor of Arts
degree in dance and graduated
with a music minor.
While at Mills College, Mrs.
Griffin studied jazz under the

training of Alvin Ailey. Before
she could receive her BA
degree, the ballet and jazz
honor student was required to
originate a complete dance
production, including casting
costuming, choreographing
and directing. In her words,
this production was a
"culmination of 15 years '
work" and was very
challenging.
Dorothy Ketterer and J. T.
Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Griffin, Gallipolis, were
married in September, 1967,
and lived in San Francisco five
years before moving to
Gallipolis ,
his
former
hometown in October, 1971.
They are the parents of a son,
Shawn, : ( 21&gt;, and a six
month d h~ ~lt.
Mrs. Griffin is truly qll&amp;llfied
through her experiences and
training in ballet and jazz and
with her radiant personality
will be a wonderful teacher and
person to know.

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING and hymn
sing Sunday, Aug. 27, at the
Stiversville Community
, Church. Rev. Edsel Hart is
: pastor. Everyone welcome.

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For The Forever Young Set

by PURITAN
If you want a dreu that goes , goes and gats, twelve monfht
a year your desire is granted . Forever Young tomes up with
the silhouette of the year . Buy it now, wear It now, Wear it

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the right places , con do wonders for you. Washable? And

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$20.00

Forever Young, a Division of the Purit.an Oren Company

HERE'S HOW TO IOOH
rORICHOOl

;Grange Holds
\Family Supper
: PATRIOT -A family supper
Iwas held at the Patriot Grange
:Hall Wednesday evening, Aug.
Jill· by lhe Patriot Ladies Aid.
1The club motioned to pay $50
'toward the painting of the
'GranMe Hall.
Present were Mrs. Pearl
IU'nett, Gladyli BooUc, Luthor
nd Sherrie Burnett, Mabel
ahan 1 Gertrude Davis,
.Garnet Jones, Mary, Robin,
:~oger and Christy Crews,
Frank and Marsha Shriver and
'"" . and Mrs. Ted Barker and
Jrandson.
The next meet ng will be
lept. II at the hall.

The Gallia
~ounty Retired Teachers
ociation will meet at Camp
ancls Asbury Thursday,
pt. 7,at 12noon. Please bring
!able service and a covered
,;ish.
Mrs. Marjorie Snider of New
•LeliQgton, the Southeastern
.: District Director, will be
'present. The 25th an·
'nlversaries of N.R.T.A. and
O.R.T.A. will be observed.
All members are urged to
attend and any other retired
teachers in the county are
cordially invited to come and
the group. .

E

JEANS
Select from twill .
and hopaack In
permiMnt prlll

11y1.a. Mttlr CIDiort ·

In, lim " to t•..

. • AJ2

3.

4+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4. 5.

Dble

Pass

Opening lead- • K

Soulh stayed low and West
was on lead with the queen.
He led a heart. East's jack
forced South's king and after
playing a few rounds of
trumps South had gone to
dummy with the ace of
hearts and lost a club finesse
to West's king.
Soulh could have made the
hand by a squeeze. He should
have led a diamond to
North's ace and ruffed a
spade; repeated with a
trump to the queen to ruff
another spade just in case
West only held five .
Then he could have run
the rest of the trumps
leaving a spade, a club and
the ace of hearts in dummy.
A heart to the ace would now
squeeze West out of either
the high spade or protection
for the club king.

DEAR ·POLLY- I broke the shank of( the back of one of
the large glass buttons on a robe. To be able to use the
button again, l first sewed a smaller flat button on the
robe and then cemented the top of the decorative button
on it. This saved me from having to buy all new button&gt;.
- CLARA
(NEWSPAPER. EHTEAf&gt;RI$£ ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
bomemaldQg Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly'&amp; Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Could've Squeezed Game
trick and that four spades
would only have been one
down·
Things were quieting down
when a kibitzer caused real
trouble by saying that South
could have made his contract
and should have done so after
East pinpointed the club
holding for him .
We never excuse a kibitzer
for speaking. They should be
seen and not heard, but his
analysis was correct.
East had won the spade
lead with the ace and re·
turned the seven of clubs.

vulnera ble
North Easl South
Pass 3 +

West

~~AP.IIIHMit~:Mm&gt;~'&lt;_..~(~'l&lt;ll'lw.'Y.-H-.-~;:'S:·-... ~-;..~-..;.

The bidding has been:
West North
East
South
1t
Dhle
Pass
?
You, South , hold:
.87«3 ¥2 tAK943 .762
What do you do now ?
A-Bid one spade only. We
like this action best, but we

would not criticize either a pass
or a two-spade bid.

.

Otto, Canal Winchester ; Mary,
Ginger and Kathy Myers and
Billy Dunn, Cuyahoga Falls;
Mr. and Mrs. Ted McCully, Mr .
and Mrs. J. C. Stout and
daughters, Christia · and
Mellayne, Mr . and Mrs. Elmo
Flowers, Mr . and Ms. John
Denney and boys, Chuckie and
Johnny, Mrs. Margaret Ed·
wards, Mrs. Marie Hively and
sons, Marlin and Danny, and
friend, Judy Young , Mrs.
Margaret Denney and sons,
John Robert and Jimmie,Mr.
and Mrs. Don Denney and
girls, Debbie and Denise
and Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Denny and son Charles,
Bidwell ; Mr . and Mrs .
Donnie Shupe and children,
Donna Jean, Karen, Donald
and Geraldine, Vinton ; Mr.
and Mrs. Billy George and
children, Greg, Nikki, Vickki,
Rita and Robin, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith, sons, Chris,
Brian and Kevin, Mr ..and Mrs .

Charles Kuhn , and Mr . and
Mrs .
Vernon
Halley,
Gallipolis; Mr. and llirs. AI
Barthlomew and childre n,
Jimmie, Robin and Suzy ,
Gahanna, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lauchy McCoy, Ewington .
Births this past year include
Mellayne Nicole Stout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J .C. Stout
August 29, 1971, and Billy
Glenn .McCulty II, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Billy G. McCully,

Since 1859
Sunday - Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday

tmd Thursday Only/
Eve
g Is
Guaran1eed
To SatisfyOr Money Bac

FOOTLONGS
Fixed The
Way
You
Like 'em

Pepsi
.Cola

.
8

No Coupons - No Limit

16 oz.
btls.

!qakr

69~

~qnppr

'1HAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

. Plus Deposit

,.·

'

SCHOOL

Januar y 25, 1972 . Those
traveling the farlhest for the
reunion were Mary, Gin ger
and Kathy Myers and· Billy
Dunn, Cuyahoga Falls. The
largest fain ily present was Mr.
and Mrs. Billy George and
children, Grag, Nickki, Vickki,
Rita and Robin.
The treasurer's report for
use of upkeep of the Denney
Cemetery was · $13.47 with a
balance of $11.06.

GAUIPOLIS, QiiO
•'

3 BIG DAYS

PLUS YOU

THURS•.fRI.·SAT.
AUG. 31st thru SEPT.

GET
TOP VALUE STAMPS!

Thursday.

a.m. to 12 Noon
Friday
9:30a. m. lo 7p.m.
Lunch 1 to2 &amp; Slo6
Saturday
9:30a.m. to 4p.m,
Lunch 1 to 2

UD

Fun Fur

Pant Coats

DEPARTMENT STORE

Cloud-light but

toasty warm
Cire nylOn
PANT COAT

Machine Washable!
Soft, warm acryli~ pile fur•
look in double breasted atyl·
ing. Unbelted ond bock belts.
A coot thot oinll give a lot 'of
budget minded 1ervice be·
cause il is machine washable~
Get it in navy, whife .or brown.

WITH

QUILT UNING.

WOMEN'S

Sizes S,M.L

Sizes 8·.16.

$}5!19

GIRLS'
SIZES 7·14 .

~d Fleer Fabloa Cater

FOR YOUR
PerfeCt Quality Agilon Nylon

ChOoit from 1trlp. .,
dltidla, plllds or IDIIdl
In no-Iron fabrics. SI-

Ho 20.

BIIICk or white Ill
regular or low cut·
lty.... .

4.50

' Gylri SoCks.:

u

PantyHose

The tromondouoly
populor mach·lnt
weolwlbto Clro' nylon
,.nt coot with potynter
ftlted quill lining. Water
repettont ~nd wind
,..,,t•nt. Cinch waist
otyttng with ;.ripper
..-P front. Glrlo' In rid · .

...

8xl0in,

Living Color
Portrait of your Child

Manvlodurwr's
Oos.ou#ol

only88
~~Ius
.
Film

,.,.,,_,,_

or.; nevy, women's In
rld;nlvy, brown, plum.

All aru-h mlly l t'OUPI, too-l 8aJ O eolor,
unly 88tl, pl us ~O e rll m rH, eaeh eh ild taken
~ l nth• or l 8llil0 Group only 11.00 per
ehlld. pl us one 50f film tee-Limit on•
IDtelal per p•r•on .

Femoue brlnd with

cOntrolled

lhrlllkllge to hakl·

e90 DAY
CERTIFICATES
eGOLDEN PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

•l·YEAR
CERTIFICATES

Valley Battle

•2-YEAR
CERTIFICATES

... well
wl'h
lndlvldllll
num•·•·WIIhlbll
lhlrt ind short In
ali.. X..S.M-l

Your bahy'a IJifll lll charm c:a ptund by

~·

our IJH!Cialltt In c:hUd phololr&amp;phy- Ju.at

794 • $1.50

You'll see flnlahed p lduru- NOT PROOFS
-i n j u ~t n lew da y1, Ch0011 e 8:t l 0's, 5~1 '11
or wa llel ni 1e--an(l_ our Jl)l! ~l a l ''Twln- pak"
cR mtra• mran1 you n n buy por l tait&amp; in

the ritt f or everyone In the famtiJI

BACK TO SCHOOL
. INSTYLE
IJRGE ASSORTMENT OF

·Stock up now on llciys t.
Slllrb lnd lrllft . far
ldlaol ..... Sl-:~11

3J• 2.59
.

'

tie

CLARK'S ·
JEWEUIY

"the now bank rhat appreciates your bu11ine~s"

IIOIIIYIAII

420 THIRD AVENUE

Member : Fcd!:ntl Deposit lruurancc Corpor•tlm

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

"

NEW LIFE

~.98

•PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

Ne xt year's meeting will be
hel.d at the John Denney home
on State Rou\e 554 the second
Sunday in .{ugust 1973. The
same office rs will continue
an other year with a program
committee including Sandra
Kay (Knotts) Heister, Margida
(Edwards) Barthk "·" ' and
Mildred (Denney) George.
A poem entiUed "Reunion"
was read by Kathryn Knotts.
Baseball was enjoyed by the
men and boys and Bill Knotts
entertained with music on the
dulcimt:r. Singing of old songs
was enjoyed by all.
.

i;:;:::;;;;.-

1

BACK
TO

SPORT SHIRTS

YOUR SAVINGS EARN MORE AT

.16 3

North~South

\'.E:~~:~~~~~~. ~~.!.;.__~,=·=·"~"''" "···~ .
DEAR POLLY-I would suggest that Mrs . s. place her

Teachers Plan
IGALLIPOUS -

Focus in on the new
lltmester with a wide·
ranged wardrobe of the
latest looks by far
All in a super selection awaiting you,
here.

4KQ85
SOUTH

YKJ
t KJ 1097 54

i

Thursday Meet

• 8 32

•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
North didn't approve of
South's three-diamond openin~ . He said so with appropnate .explanations t h a t
when you have the cards for
a normal opening you open
with one. North also pointed
out that if South had not rebid his preempt, North would
have doubled and set West at
four spades.
South replied that there
was nothing wrong with the·
five-diamond contract exc~pt
that West had held both club
honors to defeat South one

¥QJ 8 75

t6

.2

WIN AT BRIDGE
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT WCTU
annual picnic will be held
Monday evening Aug. 28 at 6
1 o'clock at the Legion Park, Mill
1 Street. firing own table service.
i ISAAK WALTON League
· Monday.; .7 p. m.

EAS1' (0)

.A !O

• 62

·~£1!1111i1Miii!iii!l!llii Polly's Problem &lt;1i:6¥'rr;.;:.ct "''' .
i~
DEAR POLLY- I like to hang my laundry, par·
~ ticularly the white things, in the back yard to dry
''· but within half an hour it has purple spots scattered
~ all over, especially the ~eets. These spots are left
!i by flying birds, and even though I wash them again
~! the stains remain. Anyone have a solution to in1·
r~

26

YAl0 9 4
tAQ
410 9 4

hard raisins in a large strainer or colander and let it
stand, for a very . few minutes, in a pan of boiling hoi
.,., -· - r ·==t- ·····"::!·~ water. Drain and let them dry spread out on paper towels.
Be sure to drairi well so that extra moisture will not be
added to whatever the cook is baklng.- MRS. T. R. K.

'

Generation Rap

Family Pack
Includes these •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders
of french fries.

NORTH
• 8·6 5 4

'

i

j

' For the second ye3r, I have a sp~dal
DEAR POLI.,YPeeve with the billing methods regarding colleg~ tuition.
All hkely expenses shou.ld be listed on the . original bill
because once the arrangements have been complet~d
Uoans) the finances are indeed finalized . However it
happens that the matter of books testit ... :1 t~~ $1501 plus
room reservation of $100 (for the next year) were details
omitted from the proposed budget. And then what? Since
experience teaches parents, why not spare embal'l'ass·
ment for prospective students by stating the lacts·•MRS. K. W.
..

'God"

Easton Reunion

KERR - The 62nd annual
Denney reunion was held a Mr.
and Mrs. Gilmer Knotts
residence on Kerr-Harrisburg
Road Aug . 13 wilh 69 family
members present.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Gilmer Knotts, Kerr ; Mr . and
Mrs. Noel Heister and son,

By POLLY C.RAMER

Gallipolis. Ohiq

412-414 Second Ave.

by Mrs . Ben Rupe ; "Thoughts
for
Our
Good "
by
M'rs . Mulford; " God, Who
Loveth All " by Mrs.
Hortie Roush and "The Bread
of Life " by Mrs. Spears.
Mrs. Spears closed the
meeting with playing hymns.
Refreshments of apple pie, ice
cream and punch were served
by the hos tess.

I

Peeved with College
Tuition Billing Method;;

· ~-

Mrs . Kati e Gordon; " The
Empty Tomb" and "Gateway
to Glory" by Mrs . Leona
Spires ; " Choose Lire" by

er
Gilmer -Knotts Host Denney ·Get-~016o:et
' h

POLLY'S POINTERS

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN IOfiDAY I FRIIMY 'Ill i P.l.
' •,

:PURSES··
. All STYLES

AND·· PATJERNS

'4 TO '10 ·
STREET FLOOR

BLACK &amp; WHITE TOO!
At un bclitvBbly low pricu,

*BRING AFRIEID!

. Beautiful Ailllon nylon stretch panty ·hose that are
' seam free, garter free and girdle free. Sizes Ill 5'3" to
. 5'8". You'll wantlots oflheselor yourself and for gills.
Dust, suntan, expresso, off·black. ·

3DAYS
ONLY!

DEPARTMENT SlllRE
GALLIPOLIS. 0.

�' -The 'l'lmel!o8entinel, Sunday, Aug. 2'1, 1972

t - The Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. Tl, 1972

A fhaalbt for thl dl!y: Britlllh ·hen for 10 laiC, that lbe eaaJd
writer Rlldyard KlpHng llld, not pert with it."
"Youth had been a habit of

Mrs; Spears Hosts
'
~ Golden Rule Class
GALUPOUS - The Golden
Rule Class of the Old Kyger
Church met Wednesday
evening, 'Aug. 23, with Mrs.
Edward Spears. The ineeting
~ned with all singing "Sweet
1
Hour of Prayer." Mrs. Dale
Mulford, president, read the
first chapter of Proverbs and
the Lord's Prayer Was said in
Unison.
~ach member gav e her
~ monthly Bible verse and an .
; educational discussion was
~ held on "forgiving'·' and
"forgetting." The secretary's
~ and treasurer's reports were
: given. The ladies plan to make
applebutter in October to sell.
l Mrs. Mulford asked the Bible
\. questions after which readings
~ were given. These were
: "Today" by Mrs. George
Gardner ; "Happiness" by

Mollie

Johnson ;

1

Il'
,

\

..---.....

Held August 20
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
Easton family reunion was
held Sunday, Aug . 20, at Clark
Chapel Acres. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs . Ballard Easton
and Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Easton, Greg and Rhonda,
Tampa, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Easton, Renee,
Candy, C. H. and Tina, Fair·
born; Mr, and Mrs. Gary
Reynolds and Eddie and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Custer and
Tresa, Columbus; . Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Fairchild and Bryan
Esser, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs.
Margaret Calhoun and Danny,
Kathryn Marshall, P&gt;lty and
Rhonda Kiser, Teresa Roberts,
Bonnie, Marjie and Tommy
Stephens and Lou Gayhart,
Ashland, Ky.; Mrs. Coleus
Reynolds, Mrs. Lexie Easton,
Bill Easton, Danny, Tami and
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs. Mac
Ward, Jeff and Carl, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Swisher, Joyce
and Eddie, Leo Swisher, Mr.
and Mrs. Tony Elkins and
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Elkins and
Larry, Jr., Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. William Reynolds, Kim
and Karen, Vinton, and Mrs.
Lucy Hamilton, Gallipolis.

Take 1 "RED CARPET
HOLIDAY" at lhe

~

j RED CARPET INN

\

'
t

\

(

!!

:' '\
'I
'

\

I'
't

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
Labor Day Weekend
Sept. 1 thru 4th
luxurious accommodations
Swimming &amp; Tennis
Superb dining room

Lounge
Planned activities

CocktctJis on arrival

Great entertainment
Swim Show

'
I

I

All FOR
AS LIITLE
As $30.00 per person
Plus accommodations: Call
or write now for reservations, Red Carpet Inn,

Dhlo River Rd.. Pt.
Pleasont, w. Va . 25550,
phone 304·675·5007.

TAKEN IN BLAZERSBURG JUNE 4, 1904, this picture
hils been kept by Jo!!fph Kemp, 1018 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Shown in it are his Civil War buddies (back row,!. tor.), Mr.
Martin, Mr. Holly, Sam Glover, Mr, Roush, Hugh Nibert and
David McDaniel and (front row), an unidentified man, Mr.
Nibert, Hollar Martin and Joseph Kemp, who iS 00 years old.

CROWN CITY - Rev.
Charles Lusher will be the
. guest speaker lor weekend
revival meellngs Sept. 1-4 at
the new Good Hope Church
on Rt. 218 (Crown City, Rt.
I I. Services will begin at 7:30
each evening. The publlc Is
Invited to attend.

Harrisons Have
Family .Reunion
DELAWARE - The third
annual Harrison reunion was
held Aug . 20 at the Delaware
(Ohio) Fairgrounds with 81
persons present. After a most
delicious dinner , games and
swimming were enjoyed.
A poem submitted by Mrs.
Faye Harrison entit:ed "My
Get Up and Go Has Got Up and
Gone" was read by lrwon
I Pete) Harrison.
Attending were Mrs. Faye
· Harrison , Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Slagle and Christopher, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold H. Harrison ,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold C.
Harrison, Beverly Harrison,
Mr. and Mrs. Daryl
K.
Shoemaker and Bobby, Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Burlile, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Harrison, Brett
and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Porter and Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Harrison, Gallipolis;
Mr . and Mrs. Glenn Ward and
daughter, Sherri, and Tina
Adkins, Rio Grande ; Mr. and
Mrs. Irwin Harrison and sons,
Russell Harrison, daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Harrison

fl

and Mrs. Clara Harrison ,
Toledo ; Mrs. Mary Porter, Mr .
and Mrs . Richard Peck and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Britton and Mrs. Mary Alice
Leaper, Marion; Mr . and Mrs.
Buss Porter, Stow ; Mr. and
Mrs. William Mangold and
family, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Smith, Westerville; Sam
Lewis, ·West Jefferson ; Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Harrison and
family , Oregon, Ohio ; Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Harrison and family,
Mrs. Francis Belt, Mrs. Mary
Starling and daughter and
Fred Leaper, Delaware, Ohio;
Mr . and Mrs. R. E. Counts,
Columbus; Bob Harrison,
California; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Harrison, Missy, Matt
and Mark, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Shifflet and son,
Prospect; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Harrison and Susan,
Vandalia; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Hossalla, Decatur,
Dl.; and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Parsons and Mrs. Lucille
Porter, Springfield.

(ALL DAY)

ICalendar!

·Dv.,nce r Will Hold
Ballet and jazz
Classes In Home

1 I

Can Marijuana Cause Acne?

EvePY SundaY

~ Social ~

Mrs. J T. Griffin

By Helen and Sue Hottel
. .

onlY

. WEST
.KQJ97J

Dear Rap :
Is there such a thing as being allergic to marijuana? And is it
true that it can cause skin trouble' Ukeacne?
I have hay fever, especially around lawn cuttings and certain
flowers. My eyes water and turn red and I can't get my breath,
but this usually sinuners down to sneezing by late summer .
I started smoking pot recently. And all my hay fever symi&gt;'
toms are back. Whenever I'm around people who smell of It, my
eyes pour water, unless I load up on hay fever pills and then I ,
don't know whether it's the pot or the pills that make me sort of
float.
Also I've noticed a lot of people who blow weed have bad
acne. A friend of mine (who doesn 't smoke) says marijuana is
bad for the skin. I can't ask a doctor about this, so would you
please find out for me?-SNEEZV
Dear Sneezy :
'
1 CHEESEBURGER
My doctor -siys marijuana is a kind of grass;
many grasses initiate hay fever attacks; therefore it's quite
possible you can be allergic to pot.
As for skin problems, H. L. Herschensohn, M.D., a well
known medical writer, says, "Marijuana has a bad effect on the
sebaceous glands so that pimples, water blisters, ·blackheads,
inflamed nodules and infected cysts occur ... It is also known to
cause seborrhea, a greafY disease of the skin, and dandruff.
When these symptoms occur together with swelling of the
eyelids, marijuana is a most likely cause. In some cases, there is
swelling on top of the hands between the knuckles and the wrist,
another telltale sign of pot use ... A doctor can often tell just by
1503 EASTERN AVENUE the appearance of the skin whether or not his patient is abusing
any of the mind~ltering drugs."
Acne was a teenage problem long before pot became one, but
. doctors are begiming to note a correlation between heavy users
and stubborn belmishes, Dr. Kerscbensohn adds in his
newspaper column, "Medical Memos.-HELEN

:GAlLIPO(iS.

U

BY NANCI LAYNE
GALLIPOUS - A ballet
studio is being introduced in
Gallipolis. Where? It will be in
the front room of the J. T.
Griffin home, 13 Court Street,
and will be used by students
interested in taking ballet and
jazz after Labor Day. J . T.'s
wife, Dorothy, will be lhe in·
structor.
Dorothy, a tall young lady
and mother with a sparkiing
personality , has always
wan ted a studio of her own in
which to teach dance and her
dream is beginning to become
a reality. She will be accepting
student enrollment Thursday,
Aug. 31, for children eight and
up in ballet, and teens and
adults in jazz.
'Mrs . Griffin '" ' a mo; t
qualified teacher as she has
been dancing about 20 years.
Her mother, the late Mrs.
Warren A. Ketterer, Concord,
Calif., was a professional
dance and "like mother - like
daughter, " Dorothy developed
her own interest in the
profession at a very young age.
Born July 25 , 1947, in
Chicako, 01., Dorothy and her
parents, Dr. and Mrs . Warren

Ketterer, moved to Concord,
Calif., when she was nine
weeks old. Dorothy and her
brother, Daniel, who is two
years younger than she, at·
tended Mt. Diablo High School
in Concord where·she won the
Fine Arts Scholarship from the
Bank of America. One of the
highlights of young Dorothy's
life was the passing with
honors the examination in
dance given by the Royal
Academy of England.
Eugene Loring, professor of
dance at the Irvine branch of
the University of California,
was Dorothy's instructor in
ballet.
She left
the
Irvine branch college to
attend Mills College in
Oakland, Calif. , where she
received her Bachelor of Arts
degree in dance and graduated
with a music minor.
While at Mills College, Mrs.
Griffin studied jazz under the

training of Alvin Ailey. Before
she could receive her BA
degree, the ballet and jazz
honor student was required to
originate a complete dance
production, including casting
costuming, choreographing
and directing. In her words,
this production was a
"culmination of 15 years '
work" and was very
challenging.
Dorothy Ketterer and J. T.
Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Griffin, Gallipolis, were
married in September, 1967,
and lived in San Francisco five
years before moving to
Gallipolis ,
his
former
hometown in October, 1971.
They are the parents of a son,
Shawn, : ( 21&gt;, and a six
month d h~ ~lt.
Mrs. Griffin is truly qll&amp;llfied
through her experiences and
training in ballet and jazz and
with her radiant personality
will be a wonderful teacher and
person to know.

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING and hymn
sing Sunday, Aug. 27, at the
Stiversville Community
, Church. Rev. Edsel Hart is
: pastor. Everyone welcome.

'

,

I

I

ANYTHING-ANYTIME-EVERY WEAR
For The Forever Young Set

by PURITAN
If you want a dreu that goes , goes and gats, twelve monfht
a year your desire is granted . Forever Young tomes up with
the silhouette of the year . Buy it now, wear It now, Wear it

later. Built on o high rise plan , Polyester dot and solid , in
the right places , con do wonders for you. Washable? And

howl
""'wn, IJU.., Red , Green
1

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.,,. ' "

I

, ., •

'I

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Sizes ; 14-20

$20.00

Forever Young, a Division of the Purit.an Oren Company

HERE'S HOW TO IOOH
rORICHOOl

;Grange Holds
\Family Supper
: PATRIOT -A family supper
Iwas held at the Patriot Grange
:Hall Wednesday evening, Aug.
Jill· by lhe Patriot Ladies Aid.
1The club motioned to pay $50
'toward the painting of the
'GranMe Hall.
Present were Mrs. Pearl
IU'nett, Gladyli BooUc, Luthor
nd Sherrie Burnett, Mabel
ahan 1 Gertrude Davis,
.Garnet Jones, Mary, Robin,
:~oger and Christy Crews,
Frank and Marsha Shriver and
'"" . and Mrs. Ted Barker and
Jrandson.
The next meet ng will be
lept. II at the hall.

The Gallia
~ounty Retired Teachers
ociation will meet at Camp
ancls Asbury Thursday,
pt. 7,at 12noon. Please bring
!able service and a covered
,;ish.
Mrs. Marjorie Snider of New
•LeliQgton, the Southeastern
.: District Director, will be
'present. The 25th an·
'nlversaries of N.R.T.A. and
O.R.T.A. will be observed.
All members are urged to
attend and any other retired
teachers in the county are
cordially invited to come and
the group. .

E

JEANS
Select from twill .
and hopaack In
permiMnt prlll

11y1.a. Mttlr CIDiort ·

In, lim " to t•..

. • AJ2

3.

4+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

4. 5.

Dble

Pass

Opening lead- • K

Soulh stayed low and West
was on lead with the queen.
He led a heart. East's jack
forced South's king and after
playing a few rounds of
trumps South had gone to
dummy with the ace of
hearts and lost a club finesse
to West's king.
Soulh could have made the
hand by a squeeze. He should
have led a diamond to
North's ace and ruffed a
spade; repeated with a
trump to the queen to ruff
another spade just in case
West only held five .
Then he could have run
the rest of the trumps
leaving a spade, a club and
the ace of hearts in dummy.
A heart to the ace would now
squeeze West out of either
the high spade or protection
for the club king.

DEAR ·POLLY- I broke the shank of( the back of one of
the large glass buttons on a robe. To be able to use the
button again, l first sewed a smaller flat button on the
robe and then cemented the top of the decorative button
on it. This saved me from having to buy all new button&gt;.
- CLARA
(NEWSPAPER. EHTEAf&gt;RI$£ ASSN.)

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
bomemaldQg Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly'&amp; Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Could've Squeezed Game
trick and that four spades
would only have been one
down·
Things were quieting down
when a kibitzer caused real
trouble by saying that South
could have made his contract
and should have done so after
East pinpointed the club
holding for him .
We never excuse a kibitzer
for speaking. They should be
seen and not heard, but his
analysis was correct.
East had won the spade
lead with the ace and re·
turned the seven of clubs.

vulnera ble
North Easl South
Pass 3 +

West

~~AP.IIIHMit~:Mm&gt;~'&lt;_..~(~'l&lt;ll'lw.'Y.-H-.-~;:'S:·-... ~-;..~-..;.

The bidding has been:
West North
East
South
1t
Dhle
Pass
?
You, South , hold:
.87«3 ¥2 tAK943 .762
What do you do now ?
A-Bid one spade only. We
like this action best, but we

would not criticize either a pass
or a two-spade bid.

.

Otto, Canal Winchester ; Mary,
Ginger and Kathy Myers and
Billy Dunn, Cuyahoga Falls;
Mr. and Mrs. Ted McCully, Mr .
and Mrs. J. C. Stout and
daughters, Christia · and
Mellayne, Mr . and Mrs. Elmo
Flowers, Mr . and Ms. John
Denney and boys, Chuckie and
Johnny, Mrs. Margaret Ed·
wards, Mrs. Marie Hively and
sons, Marlin and Danny, and
friend, Judy Young , Mrs.
Margaret Denney and sons,
John Robert and Jimmie,Mr.
and Mrs. Don Denney and
girls, Debbie and Denise
and Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Denny and son Charles,
Bidwell ; Mr . and Mrs .
Donnie Shupe and children,
Donna Jean, Karen, Donald
and Geraldine, Vinton ; Mr.
and Mrs. Billy George and
children, Greg, Nikki, Vickki,
Rita and Robin, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith, sons, Chris,
Brian and Kevin, Mr ..and Mrs .

Charles Kuhn , and Mr . and
Mrs .
Vernon
Halley,
Gallipolis; Mr. and llirs. AI
Barthlomew and childre n,
Jimmie, Robin and Suzy ,
Gahanna, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lauchy McCoy, Ewington .
Births this past year include
Mellayne Nicole Stout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J .C. Stout
August 29, 1971, and Billy
Glenn .McCulty II, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Billy G. McCully,

Since 1859
Sunday - Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday

tmd Thursday Only/
Eve
g Is
Guaran1eed
To SatisfyOr Money Bac

FOOTLONGS
Fixed The
Way
You
Like 'em

Pepsi
.Cola

.
8

No Coupons - No Limit

16 oz.
btls.

!qakr

69~

~qnppr

'1HAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

. Plus Deposit

,.·

'

SCHOOL

Januar y 25, 1972 . Those
traveling the farlhest for the
reunion were Mary, Gin ger
and Kathy Myers and· Billy
Dunn, Cuyahoga Falls. The
largest fain ily present was Mr.
and Mrs. Billy George and
children, Grag, Nickki, Vickki,
Rita and Robin.
The treasurer's report for
use of upkeep of the Denney
Cemetery was · $13.47 with a
balance of $11.06.

GAUIPOLIS, QiiO
•'

3 BIG DAYS

PLUS YOU

THURS•.fRI.·SAT.
AUG. 31st thru SEPT.

GET
TOP VALUE STAMPS!

Thursday.

a.m. to 12 Noon
Friday
9:30a. m. lo 7p.m.
Lunch 1 to2 &amp; Slo6
Saturday
9:30a.m. to 4p.m,
Lunch 1 to 2

UD

Fun Fur

Pant Coats

DEPARTMENT STORE

Cloud-light but

toasty warm
Cire nylOn
PANT COAT

Machine Washable!
Soft, warm acryli~ pile fur•
look in double breasted atyl·
ing. Unbelted ond bock belts.
A coot thot oinll give a lot 'of
budget minded 1ervice be·
cause il is machine washable~
Get it in navy, whife .or brown.

WITH

QUILT UNING.

WOMEN'S

Sizes S,M.L

Sizes 8·.16.

$}5!19

GIRLS'
SIZES 7·14 .

~d Fleer Fabloa Cater

FOR YOUR
PerfeCt Quality Agilon Nylon

ChOoit from 1trlp. .,
dltidla, plllds or IDIIdl
In no-Iron fabrics. SI-

Ho 20.

BIIICk or white Ill
regular or low cut·
lty.... .

4.50

' Gylri SoCks.:

u

PantyHose

The tromondouoly
populor mach·lnt
weolwlbto Clro' nylon
,.nt coot with potynter
ftlted quill lining. Water
repettont ~nd wind
,..,,t•nt. Cinch waist
otyttng with ;.ripper
..-P front. Glrlo' In rid · .

...

8xl0in,

Living Color
Portrait of your Child

Manvlodurwr's
Oos.ou#ol

only88
~~Ius
.
Film

,.,.,,_,,_

or.; nevy, women's In
rld;nlvy, brown, plum.

All aru-h mlly l t'OUPI, too-l 8aJ O eolor,
unly 88tl, pl us ~O e rll m rH, eaeh eh ild taken
~ l nth• or l 8llil0 Group only 11.00 per
ehlld. pl us one 50f film tee-Limit on•
IDtelal per p•r•on .

Femoue brlnd with

cOntrolled

lhrlllkllge to hakl·

e90 DAY
CERTIFICATES
eGOLDEN PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

•l·YEAR
CERTIFICATES

Valley Battle

•2-YEAR
CERTIFICATES

... well
wl'h
lndlvldllll
num•·•·WIIhlbll
lhlrt ind short In
ali.. X..S.M-l

Your bahy'a IJifll lll charm c:a ptund by

~·

our IJH!Cialltt In c:hUd phololr&amp;phy- Ju.at

794 • $1.50

You'll see flnlahed p lduru- NOT PROOFS
-i n j u ~t n lew da y1, Ch0011 e 8:t l 0's, 5~1 '11
or wa llel ni 1e--an(l_ our Jl)l! ~l a l ''Twln- pak"
cR mtra• mran1 you n n buy por l tait&amp; in

the ritt f or everyone In the famtiJI

BACK TO SCHOOL
. INSTYLE
IJRGE ASSORTMENT OF

·Stock up now on llciys t.
Slllrb lnd lrllft . far
ldlaol ..... Sl-:~11

3J• 2.59
.

'

tie

CLARK'S ·
JEWEUIY

"the now bank rhat appreciates your bu11ine~s"

IIOIIIYIAII

420 THIRD AVENUE

Member : Fcd!:ntl Deposit lruurancc Corpor•tlm

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

"

NEW LIFE

~.98

•PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

Ne xt year's meeting will be
hel.d at the John Denney home
on State Rou\e 554 the second
Sunday in .{ugust 1973. The
same office rs will continue
an other year with a program
committee including Sandra
Kay (Knotts) Heister, Margida
(Edwards) Barthk "·" ' and
Mildred (Denney) George.
A poem entiUed "Reunion"
was read by Kathryn Knotts.
Baseball was enjoyed by the
men and boys and Bill Knotts
entertained with music on the
dulcimt:r. Singing of old songs
was enjoyed by all.
.

i;:;:::;;;;.-

1

BACK
TO

SPORT SHIRTS

YOUR SAVINGS EARN MORE AT

.16 3

North~South

\'.E:~~:~~~~~~. ~~.!.;.__~,=·=·"~"''" "···~ .
DEAR POLLY-I would suggest that Mrs . s. place her

Teachers Plan
IGALLIPOUS -

Focus in on the new
lltmester with a wide·
ranged wardrobe of the
latest looks by far
All in a super selection awaiting you,
here.

4KQ85
SOUTH

YKJ
t KJ 1097 54

i

Thursday Meet

• 8 32

•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
North didn't approve of
South's three-diamond openin~ . He said so with appropnate .explanations t h a t
when you have the cards for
a normal opening you open
with one. North also pointed
out that if South had not rebid his preempt, North would
have doubled and set West at
four spades.
South replied that there
was nothing wrong with the·
five-diamond contract exc~pt
that West had held both club
honors to defeat South one

¥QJ 8 75

t6

.2

WIN AT BRIDGE
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT WCTU
annual picnic will be held
Monday evening Aug. 28 at 6
1 o'clock at the Legion Park, Mill
1 Street. firing own table service.
i ISAAK WALTON League
· Monday.; .7 p. m.

EAS1' (0)

.A !O

• 62

·~£1!1111i1Miii!iii!l!llii Polly's Problem &lt;1i:6¥'rr;.;:.ct "''' .
i~
DEAR POLLY- I like to hang my laundry, par·
~ ticularly the white things, in the back yard to dry
''· but within half an hour it has purple spots scattered
~ all over, especially the ~eets. These spots are left
!i by flying birds, and even though I wash them again
~! the stains remain. Anyone have a solution to in1·
r~

26

YAl0 9 4
tAQ
410 9 4

hard raisins in a large strainer or colander and let it
stand, for a very . few minutes, in a pan of boiling hoi
.,., -· - r ·==t- ·····"::!·~ water. Drain and let them dry spread out on paper towels.
Be sure to drairi well so that extra moisture will not be
added to whatever the cook is baklng.- MRS. T. R. K.

'

Generation Rap

Family Pack
Includes these •
4 sandwiches •
and 4 orders
of french fries.

NORTH
• 8·6 5 4

'

i

j

' For the second ye3r, I have a sp~dal
DEAR POLI.,YPeeve with the billing methods regarding colleg~ tuition.
All hkely expenses shou.ld be listed on the . original bill
because once the arrangements have been complet~d
Uoans) the finances are indeed finalized . However it
happens that the matter of books testit ... :1 t~~ $1501 plus
room reservation of $100 (for the next year) were details
omitted from the proposed budget. And then what? Since
experience teaches parents, why not spare embal'l'ass·
ment for prospective students by stating the lacts·•MRS. K. W.
..

'God"

Easton Reunion

KERR - The 62nd annual
Denney reunion was held a Mr.
and Mrs. Gilmer Knotts
residence on Kerr-Harrisburg
Road Aug . 13 wilh 69 family
members present.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Gilmer Knotts, Kerr ; Mr . and
Mrs. Noel Heister and son,

By POLLY C.RAMER

Gallipolis. Ohiq

412-414 Second Ave.

by Mrs . Ben Rupe ; "Thoughts
for
Our
Good "
by
M'rs . Mulford; " God, Who
Loveth All " by Mrs.
Hortie Roush and "The Bread
of Life " by Mrs. Spears.
Mrs. Spears closed the
meeting with playing hymns.
Refreshments of apple pie, ice
cream and punch were served
by the hos tess.

I

Peeved with College
Tuition Billing Method;;

· ~-

Mrs . Kati e Gordon; " The
Empty Tomb" and "Gateway
to Glory" by Mrs . Leona
Spires ; " Choose Lire" by

er
Gilmer -Knotts Host Denney ·Get-~016o:et
' h

POLLY'S POINTERS

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

OPEN IOfiDAY I FRIIMY 'Ill i P.l.
' •,

:PURSES··
. All STYLES

AND·· PATJERNS

'4 TO '10 ·
STREET FLOOR

BLACK &amp; WHITE TOO!
At un bclitvBbly low pricu,

*BRING AFRIEID!

. Beautiful Ailllon nylon stretch panty ·hose that are
' seam free, garter free and girdle free. Sizes Ill 5'3" to
. 5'8". You'll wantlots oflheselor yourself and for gills.
Dust, suntan, expresso, off·black. ·

3DAYS
ONLY!

DEPARTMENT SlllRE
GALLIPOLIS. 0.

�•

'

...

6 - The Times..sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 1972

TH ANNIVERSARY SALE·
'

M&amp;R IGA FOODLINER

REGISTER EVERY DAY
WI.TH. .ENTRY . BLANK
THIS PAPER

.

'

'

BUCKET "0" CHICKEN
16 BEST PIECES

. ~ LB. ·

4 THIGHS 4 WINGS
4 LEGS . 4 BREASTS

¢

JELLO

WITH THIS
COUPON

6 BOXES

R~. BIG"

AU FLAVORS SAVE 16'
LIMIT 6 BOXES
EXP. 9/2

3 oz.

WEEK

COUPON

PEPSI-CO
SAVE

20~

¢

CARTON OF

'

16 oz.

FAIRMONT

Chocolate
Milk QT.

8BOTTLES
GALLON

PLUS DEPOSIT

J

DRIVE

· I.G.A.

12

oz.

WHIT

SOAP
POWDER

SLICED
CHEESE .

BREAD
1 LB. LOAF ·

KIN·GSIZE

¢

SAVE $1°0

. KRAn
SQUEEZE MUSTARD

5

oz.

e
49

6 oz.

49e

AUNT JANE

1011

HOT DOG

MAXWElL
HOUSE
INSTANT
COFFEE

16 oz.
KRAFT
MARSHMALLOWS

Hamburger Sliced Dills

32

I.G.A. STUFFED OLIVES

IN THIS PAPER

.

WITH COUPON ON CANNED SWIFT'S HAM

PRINGLE$ POTATO CHIPS

BUNS,2PKG.•

JWI.N4BACK----n
•

8's

9 OZ.

2 PKGS.

FOR

U. S. NO. 1

Potatoes
LB. BAG
20 ONLY

10 OZ. JAR

NESTEA

WITH THIS COUPON

I

INSTANT
TEA

'·

EXP. 9/2

COUPON

~ M&amp;R

SHOPPING CENTER

OPEN 9-9 EVERY DAY SUNDAY 12-6
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

3 OZ. JAR ·

1 OFF WITH THIS COUPON
ON 4 LB. CAN SWIFl'S HAM
WITH
7
ONLY
THIS ·
9

1 00

REG.
14.79

$3

LIM.IT 1

COUPON

FOODLIN ER

PRESTONE

DI-GEL

12 OZ. BOTTLE

CHILDREN ASPI
'

REG.

'

SIMILAC

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39~ ·

CARTON

OF

GAL

DI·GEL'
LIQUID

Anti-Gil

Anblcld

6-4

jijJ~

BOTTLES

AUTOMATIC
ELECTRIC

BATTERIES
PKG.
OF 4

oz.

IMILAC . .R:YTO

'(\J .....-.

COOKER &amp;
DEEP FRYER
~I

COUPON

IRON OR REG.

'

WHILE THEY LAST

9/2

50

~· OFF ON THE

.PURatASE OF ANY

BEEF ROAST

3 LB. OR MORE .

LIMIT 1 COUPON
M&amp;R FOODLINER

9/2

COUPON

SAVE 35'

~ PKk 29~
Ns 8s

WITH THIS COUPON
9/2

COUPON .

FOLGER'S.
99~ WITH THIS
10
INSTANT
oz.
COUPON.
COFFEE
UMIT 1
SAVEll•

EXP. 9/2

�'.
, - 'flle Times....,nunet, bunaay,
. 8 - The Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 1972

'was new club· member, . Mrs .

RUTLAND - Plan~ .were
completed for "A Summer
Weddin g" ' of horticulture
specimens and artistic designs
when the Rutland Friendly
Gar deners met Wednesday
evening at the home of Mrs.
T•m Stewart, with Mrs.
William Willford, hosmss.
The event will be held at the
Rutland Elementary School on
College
Ave ., Rutland,
Saturday, Sept. 16, from I to 6
p.m. The show chairmen, Mrs.
Homer Parker and Mrs .
Howard Birchfield, invim the
public to participate by entering .the invitational artistic
design classes, "The Wedding
Gifts," a· modern interpretive
design with card to state the
in te rpre t ation, and

., '

·.·
•,•

''

.. '

'
'

I

'

ol•

" Honeymoon

at

Niagara

Falls," a design showing

motion.

the artistic division, as
determined by the judge.
The show room will open for
placement at 9 a:m., Sept. 16,
and all entries and completed
cards must be in place by noon,
wi th oral judging to begin all
p.m., according to the OAGC
standard system. Entries may
be removed at 6 p.n): that day.
No artificial plant material is
permitmd and no painted or ·
artificia ll y colored plant
material is allowed, except as
allowed by the schedule .
Bases, mats and accessories
will be allowed in any class
unless otherwise prohibimd by
the schedule. No other background other than the green
provtsed by the show committee is permitted.
Entran ts in the hor.ticulture
division are reminded foliage
is not to be removed from the
specimen, but that it should be
disbudded, except for sprays of
chrysa nth emum; that the
entry tag must include the

All classes of the horticulture
division are open to the public
for entry. These include
cla&amp;'"s for Hybrid Tea Rose,
zinnia, marigold, Chrysan· specimen variety name. The
themum and unclassified exhibitor must provide a
specimens, as well as blooming suitable container for the
specimen, to avoid crowding
and foliage houseplants.
Juniors are welcome to enmr foliage or topheaviness. A
the artistic classes, "The Ring Horticulture Sweepstakes
Bearer/ ' a cresceot design for award will be given to the
those 10 years to 18 years, and exhibitor totaling the highest
"The Flower Girl," your number of points for specimen
favorite arrangement for those and houseplant winners.
Entries from the public are
under 10. They need not belong
invited for three special
also
to any garden club. Juniors .
may enter classes for zinnia, display classes, entitled,
mari go ld , or unclassified "Let's Take a Honeymoon Trip
specimens, with a new Green To ... /' places like "Cypress
Thwnb Award to be given for Gardens" for dishgardens, list
the best specimen entry by a plant names; 0 Appalachia" junior , to be selected by the handcrafted or homemade
containers, three or more, and
judge.
Persons may make as many " Wayn e Na tional Forest,"
entries as desired in each of the lhree or more pieces of
horticulture classes, bul only weathered and-or driftwood.
one entry per class in the arThose unable to enter the
show
are invited to view lhe
tistic designs. The Best of Show
ribbon will be given to the best display from 1-6 p.m. Sept. 16.
of the blue ribbon winners ln

...,.,.

........

..,.
•"

••

:l:~:'

..

~:-

·--

Classes open only to !he Willford and Mrs. Parker. The removed, cultivate and · sow
sponsoring club indude !he publicity book received a cover crops ; water hardy
chrysanthemums, hardy
following: "A t · A Country perfect scor" of 100 points and asters and Other fall -bloomers,
Church," with religious won first in tQe 'State.
newly set evergreens and
The garden therapy work recently planted shrubs and
feeling, no fi gurine ; "The
trees; gather pods of wildWeddi ng Guests," a mass with special education students flowers
and garden subjects to
design; "The Bridegroom at Rutland Elementary won dry and store fgr winter ,
Awaits, 11
tall
line second in the state; while !he bouquets; sow hardy annual
seeds where they are to grow.
arrangement, featuring black program book was third .. Mrs. such
as calllopsls, Callfornla
and white (painted· or ar- Willford said next year an poppy, cornflower, larkspur,
tificially colored material undetermined number of and Shirley poppy ; stop fertllizlng roses and shrubs to
permitted); "Here Comes The points will be alloted for cover encourage
dormancy.
Bride," with rhythm, using design, and a chairman for
Mrs . Wolfe gave a review. of
some white flowers; " The every program part must be " Perenn.lats ThatTake Care of
by Russell
Beautiful Bridesmaids," twin listed, as well as the departur.e Themselves:•
Webber. To be In cluded In such
arrangemenls, not necessarily point and time for all tours.
a ·list a perennial must .meet
identical: ,"A Band or Gold," a ' Clubs will be allotWd credit several requirementS: tt must
and for contributing to the wild· really be perennial, requiring
cresce nt design, "
no special soli, be drooghl
"Something Old, Something £lower book fund, and .resistant require no staking
New," using weathered wood magazine articlE: rev iew~ .wiU and bloom over a long p~rlod.
not receive credit only garden!- ~eslrable
charactenstl.cs
and fresh Dowers.
.
'
mclude
gpod cut flowers,
Other special displays will book rev1ews.
fragrance, food foliage, shade
include making a wedding
Four members who entered tolerance , easy to grow: from
corsage, doing garden therapy the Meigs County Fair Flower seed, easy to divide and rapid
The best scoring
work, and work by the Merry Show were Mrs. Smwart, Mrs. grower.
perennial. according to Mr.
Gardeners Junior Club, as well Carpenter, Mrs. Parker and Webber, Is one that rarely any
as a show theme bridal setting. Mrs. Snowden with Lorri one . grows, the hardy
'
geranium.
Commitmes for the show will Snowden and Jay
Carpenter
This Is not the typical
include, staging, Mrs. Fred winning in the junior division. houseplant (correctly called
Williamson and Mrs. William Club members won six blue, Petargonium); but a blue.
. .
flowered l B Inch plant tha t
Brown ; placement, Mrs. Tom ~IX
red and four ~M~ nbbons grows In cold places like the
Stewart; horticulture, Mrs. Joe m the artistic diviSIOn , four Pyrenees Mountains and
Bolin; junior entries, Mrs. blue two red and three white Northern Asia. A single plant
' .
will quickly spread to three
Larry Edwards; judges and [or horticulture,
and two blue teet, with " Buttercup" foliage
clerks, Mrs. Howard Birch- and one red for specJal that smothers weeds.
field, Mrs. Harold Wolfe and displays.
Another good perennial is
Ec~inops humilus, the globe
Mrs. James Quillen ; awards,
For roll call, each member thistle, which is tough, has
Mrs .
James
Quillen ; brought a perennial plant, beautiful foliage, large roond
schedules, Mrs. James Car· after which an exchange was steel-blue flowers, and If cub
held with Mrs. Stewart In back· afler blooming In May
penter; publicity, Mrs. Homer charge.
and June It will bloom again.
Parker ; hostess, Mrs. Bruce
Gardening tips for Sep. Potentilla has bright yellow
Davis; guest registration, Mrs. tember by Mrs. Fetty In- flowers, Is long-lived and. free
Richard Fetty, Jr. ; edu- cluded: Divide and replant of troubles ; cushion spurge
early -blooming perenni~ls ; (Euphorbia eplthymoldes l Is
cational
and
special Clean up beds from which dead related
to snow -on -thedisplays,
Mrs.
Robert or matured plants have bee" mountain , po insett ia and
Snowden, Mrs. William Willford,
and Mrs. · Larry
Edwards; photography, Mrs.
James Carpenter, and cleanup,
all members.
·
The meeting was opened
with the group collect and
devotions by Mrs. Willford
were based on " Golden
Goldenrod." Dues for the
coming year were paid, and the
group voted not to participam
in a garden therapy program
at Gallipolis State Institute this
year.
Correspondence from Mrs . .
Robert Hoeflich of the Daily
Sentinel was read, requesting
Green Thumb articles for
publication, with Mrs. Wolfe
appointed to do the imm. A
letter from Mrs. Gordon
•
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Shepheril, state chaihnan for .
!he Victor Reis Outstanding_
Garden Club Award was read
acknowledging the early
receipt of the club's information sheets and stating
!hal as of Oct. I the chairman
of this award will be Mrs.
Dwight DeVoss, to whom all
information should be sent.
· Civic park maintenance for
the monlh of August was
delegated to Mrs. Willford and
Mrs. Snowden, with Mrs. Davis
-and Mrs. Edward appointed for
September work . Bank
arrangements for the month of
September will be furnished by
Mrs. Birchfield, Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart and Mrs .
Snowden.
Mrs. Davis mentioned the
need for trimming several
flowering crabapple trees in
town which were planted by the
club, as some are blocking
traffic views and club members agreed to do this. Mrs.
Davis is to arrange for the
annual Nature tour and picnic,
tentatively set for Sept. 21. Also
planned is a tour of dahlia
gardens, with a date to be
announced later.
A report on the OAGC State
Convention held in August at
Denison University at Granville, was given by members
attending it, Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.

crown-of·tho.r : .io. has early

purplish green foliage, yellow

flowers, arld' Is 18 Inches tall ;
Lythrum
vlrgatum and
lythrUm salicarl_a can be grown
in ordinary · border conditions

,

1J

...

Q '

as rudbecklas. "eronicas.

Monardasand astltbe's because

they requli"e too frequent
replanting . Phloxes are fussy
about soil, and chrysan·

,,

Mrs. Fetty and Mrs. Stewart ' " Peonies Are Forever," wllh a
served as guest demonstrators . demonstration of "DivldlnP,
at a recent meeting of the and Transplanting P10111es •

themums really · need to be ·

·'·

19.i cu.ft. Side~by•Side Refrigerator-Freezer

year to flower profusely. He

$ayS

NO
. DEFROSTINl;

he Still grows some of

these perennials that toke

EVER

more care but his favorites are
those that seem to flourish on

• 245-lb. Clfl'Cilj lreozor

nOthing but his lavish praise.
Mrs. Bolin displayed a
number of blooming perennials

•l slidine frHztr bnkeh
• 5-treim shelwes

• 41reezer door shelves

Including: hydrangea, flame
honeysuckle, sweet pea, sliver
lace clematis, butterfly weed,
ironweed, Queen · Anne's lace,

• Phil~ POwer SaYtf t.ontrol
• Adjustable cold controls
•ledjuslabt~ t1nlitewer
$helves in retri~t~ator
• Ph lito door closers

tansy, goldenrod, har~y dahlia,
whitetop. wild beebalm, hosta,
hardy amary lli s, lythrum.
shasta
daisy ,
phlox,

matrimony vine, variegated
and plain live forever, and.

hardy·sunflower.

·.

The traveling prize, brought

White. Avocado, Gold or
Shaded Copper Clblllt1

by Mrs. Edwards. was won by
Mrs. Willford with Mrs: Birchfield and a gues.t. Mrs. Charles
Lathey, winning door prizes. A

sa lad course was served from a

gold lace covered fable by Mrs .

Willford , ass isted by Mrs .
Stewart. Favors. were small
float ing candles.

Arrangements

PHILCO

G§)
The better Idea peopt. In relrlgerato,..•

Mrs. Willford, Mrs . Wlllamson,
Rutland

0.

Post Office and

was repeated in Wlison . Mrs.

Miss Jean

,,

A GOOD
COMBINATION

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rose
Garden Club of Tuppers Plains
met recently at the home of
Mrs . Clarence Headley . Mrs .

TWO floor heat outlets.,.t ('.ndo
~

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:I

••'f'

Mr. and Mrs. Rex F. Cumings

.

••
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Moore-Cumings
Vows Taken

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MIDDLEPORT - Kathy matching satin ribbon around
Jean nette Moore of Mid· th e collar and waist . Acdl eport, daughte r of Mrs. cessories were whim picture
Kathryn Denison of Middleport hats with matching ribbon
and Edward G. Moore of arou nd the brim and
Gallipolis, and Re• Fletci1er · streamers, and white gloves .
Cun1ings, Pomeroy, son of Mr.
Judy Webb, sister of the
and Mrs. David Cumings of bride, a matron of honor, and
Pomeroy , were united in Kay Walker, a matron of
marriage at 3:30p.m. June 10 honor, wore matching lavender
at the Pomeroy Nazarene gowns. Kathy Moore, sister-inChurch. The Rev . Clyde law of lhe bride ; Janelle
Hendersonreadthedoublering Cumings, sismr of the groom,
ceremony .
and Mary Fry, bridesmaids
Arch ca ndelabra covered wore matching yellow gowns
with lily vi !he valley, and two and all carried bouquets of
seven-branch candelabra and mixed spring flowers with
two whim pillar vases of white matching streamers.
gladiola
formed
the
Rose Ann Jenkins was
background. Aisle decorations organist for these selections :
were two hurricane lantersn. "More," "Theme Song £rom
The bride, given in marriage Love Story" . "Love Is A Many
by her father, wore a formal Splendored Thing," "0 Perfect
Jenglh gown of white organza. Loye," and "Bridge Over
The empire bodice was ac- Troubled Waters ." Johnny
cented by an organza and Lisle, soloist, sang, " The
venice !ace ruffle, giving a Lord's Prayer," "A Time For
pinafor e effect. The bishop Us" and " The Weddi ng
sleeves and skirt were ap- . Prayer ."
pliqued in white venice lace
Best man was David
daisies; the skirt accenmd with Cwnings, Pomeroy, father of
a deep rutre edged with venice the groom.
lac.eas ap; . red on the bodice.
Ushers were Allen Gibson,
Her veil was mantilla style, Columbus; Edward G. Moore,
edged with matching venice Circleville; Daniel L. Webb,
lace and ribbon. She carried a Springfield, and Guy Sargent
bouqet of white rosebuds and and Mike Will, Pomeroy.
white ribbon Ued wilh lover's
The bride's molher wore a
knots. Her only jewelry was a floor length dress of turquoise
cameo ring, a gill of the groom. polyesmr knit wilh white acMlss Patsy Snader, Cin- cessories and a corsage of
cinnall, maid of honor, wore a white roses. The bridegroom's
green empire waisted gown mother wore a floor length
with puff sleeves and high neck dress of polyester knit with
with trim interlaced with matching accessories, and

I .

corsage of whim roses.
Following the ceremony a
reception was held in the Or·
chid Room of Meigs Inn. The
bride's table was cenmred with
a four-tiered wedding cake,
encircled wilh leather leaf ivy.
Carol Ann Moore and Linda
Jean Moore, nieces of the
bride, registered the guests.
Mrs. Beverly Long, Mrs .
Virginia Sayre, Miss Carmen
Jewett and Miss Debbie Jewett
served . ·
For her going away costume,
the bride wore an empire
waisted dress with sleeves and
bodice of white bubble
material, and a Oared skirt of
lavender polyester knit with
matching accessories and the
corsage fr om her bridal
bouquet.
Following a honeymoon trip
to Columbus and scenic areas
of West Virginia, the couple is
at home in Bradbury.
Mrs. Cumings is a graduate
of Meigs High School, class of
1971, ~n6 attepded Mount
Vernon Nazarene College. Mr.
Cumings is a graduate of
Pomeroy High School, class of
1966. He served fo1u- years in
the U. S. Air Force and is
employed by !he Ohio Power
Co.

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Tina Spires Engaged
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Spires of Rutland
are announclng the engagement of their daughter, Tina, to
Mr. JWbert T. Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 0 .
Stewart, Rutland, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School. Miss
Spires iB a junior at Meigs High School. Wedding plans are
Incomplete .

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It pays for Itself with

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Relax .. . Drive in for a Delicious
Moo Burger. Best yet for the . united
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MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
long Bottom, 0.

Supreme Comfort
•
tn luxurious quilted
Masterpieces ...

been completed.
Maid of honor will be Miss
Diania Tolbert, New Haven
and bridesmaids will be Miss
Sharon Roach, New Haven;
Miss Mary Jane Scites, Letart,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Alice Hunter,
Columbus, Ohio. Best man will
be Ted Kutzlo, Memphis,
Tenn., Gary Norris, Letart,
Ohio , and Pete Simpson ,
Racine, Ohio. The pianist will
be Mrs. Paul Powell .
The wedding will be an event
of September 9 at 2:30p.m. at
!he Graham Baptist · Church
with !he Rev. Bud Hatfield
officiating. The gracious
custom of an open church will
be observed . Immediately
following the ceremony a
reception wlll be held in the
dining· room at Roush's DriveIn, Letart, W. Va.

PHONE 992-2181

Methodist Women Meet
RACINE - The United
Wesleyan Methodist Women of
Racine met at the suburban
summer home of Mr . and Mrs.
Gordon West in the Dorcas
vicinity, a beautiful wooded
area .
After a bountiful picnic
luncheon, a short . business
meeting was held. The Sep·
tember meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Ruth Stearns.

NEW OR USED

51

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

student of Mrs. Judy Riggs,
and a member of the "Riggs
Royal Kad-ette Baton Corps."

Elson Spencer, Racine, have

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a new standard
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and two trophies

NEW HAVEN - Wedding
plans for \he forthcomipg
maNrlage of Linda June
Weaver: New Haven, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S.
Weaver , to David Henry
Spencer, son of Mr. and :\Irs.

DOUBLE THE H'EAT·
OVER YOUR FLOORS!

'·

clothing and style reviews and
has served as chairman of the
Mei gs County 4-H Style Review
for two years. An active Junior
leader she has served on !he
Junior Fair Bo&amp;. .: .&gt;erved as
chairman of the Meigs county
4·H advisory committee, and
attended
Ohio
Junior
Leadership Camp.
Supervisors of the Fashion
Board arc Dr. Virginia Evans
assistant 4-H State Leader,
along with Ohio State
Un iversity and O.S.U. Extension clothing specialists,
Mrs. Orena Haynes and Mrs.
Norman Deyo . Miss Whitehea&lt;l
will join the faculty board
members and supervisors at a
dinner Wednesday eveni ng
before retiring as a member of
the board.

Wedding
Announced.

FROM LANDMARK
11

Clarence Headley read the
verse of the month. Roll call
was to name a flower for an
outdoor container.
Mrs. Betty Dean was guest
demonstrator and brough t
many original and unusual con tain ers, makin g
several
beautiful
arrangement s depicting
classes to be used in the flower
show at the Meigs County fair.
Mrs. Glen Stout brought the
Whitehead
traveling prize which was
awarded Mrs. Robert Dorst.
Mrs. Dorst will prepare Green
Thumb notes for September .
September meeting will be
Ca rl Barnhill, pres ident, held at the home of Mrs. John
conducted the business Arbaugh. Refreshments were
meetint A devoional reading served 13 members and a
was presented by Mrs. Charles guest.

Mrs. Headley Hosts Club

Cindy was eligible to
represent Ohio after making a
clean sweep in her age
divisions at the Ohio state
championships where she won
!he titles of "Wee Majorette ·
Princess of Ohio, " "Ohio's
Most
Beautiful
Wee
Majorette" and the Juvenile
State Twirling and Strutting
championships.
While Cindy was in North
Car91ina , she received a
telegram from !he Governor of
Cindy Panerson
Ohio "wishing her luck" in the
fin"f.s after her selec tion to the her slate well."
"top 10" list, and saying he,
Cindy attends Syracuse
"Knew she would represent
Elementary School, is a baton

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Parker ;

Carr and the Lord's Prayer

thirty-min ute show for a

general audience at the Arts
$d Crafts building and Qther
brief style reviews. They are
scheduled for pictures to be
developed into a slide set based
on "Fashion Direction" points
£or use in the counties next
year.
Miss Whitehead will be
a sophomore at Ohio State
University th is fall where she
ts maJonng in Medical
Technology. She was selected
for the 4-H Fashion Board at
the Ohio State Fair last August.
This is the third time she has
participated in the Ohio State
Fair Style Review, having
received "outstanding of the
day '' for two years.
She has received five county
championships awards in

nation .

were

provided lor various places
during the month , including
Pomeroy Nat ional Bank,
Rutland Branch - Mrs. Davis,

REEDSVILLE - Miss Jean
Whitehead, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead of
Reedsville, is attending Ohio
State Fair this week as a
member of the 1972 Ohio
Fashion board.
Members will be involved in
many activities dealing with
clothing projects. During the
week the fashion board will
teach modeling to 4-H style
review participants~ give a

SYRACUSE - Cindy Patterson, !I)-year old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Patterson of
Syracuse, di splays two
trophies she won recently at
the "International Baton
Twirling Championships" held
at the University of North
Carolina in Ashville.
. The state and regional
champions from all over the
nation met there to take part in
the week-long competitions.
Cmdy represenmd Ohio in the
8-10 year old divisions won
third pl ace in the' " International Solo Championships, " and was fourth
runner·up to the " Wee
Majorette
Princess
of .
America" 1972.
This title was won on the
overall totals of five different
divisions which were Solo
Fancy and Military Struttin~.
Beauty, and a talent routine
other than twirling.
Cindy's. talent routine was a
novelty song and dance
number composed by her
dancing teacher, Mrs. Judy
Frazer.
Cindy also won fourth place
in Military Bes t Appearing and
mnlh in fan cy strutting in the

PH Itco·No-Frost

grown from new cuttings. each

Miss Whitehead on Board

ri

given by Mrs. Fred WilliamHomestead Garden Club of son.
Mrs. Brown will · give
Langsville. They gave basic
October
gardening tips and
purple. Evenfng primrose design Instruction on several
!Oenothera mlssourie~sls') Styles of arranging, ranging arrangements on , the theme
blooms during the day with from tralditlonal to modern, "Touch Down,'' will be brought
showy yellow floviers from using the Meigs County Fair for fudging by designated
July to September.
Flower Show schedule classes members.
· Mr. Webber does not llsf·
,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'
many of the old favorites such
..r1

or near gard,. 'pools and come
In Intense shades of pink and

1972

Cindy Patterson Wins
1nternational Trophies

as o guide.
Mrs. William ' Brown was
welcomed back lhto active
membership and also present

James Quillen.
Hostess tor the September
meeting wilt bt Mrs. Homer
Parker. ·During thtt meeting, '
·the
officers tor !he coming year
Rutland Church of Christ, Mrs.
Carpenter and Mrs. Parker ; will be Installed. Mrs. ,Birchseveral mem~rs for shut-Ins. field will present I paper,

Alljl . Zl,

fuel it saves I .

SIEGLER
FUEL OIL HEATER
Ill

POMER.OY

Aall your friond1 or noi1hbon who own 1 Sittler HoN Heater how
thoy 111ioy Sio1lor'1 ~·rill floor ~-fort. They'll toll you. iutf ••
they.toll ut, Sioglor gi'lot thom moro comfort, more h01t and more
depondale ..,..,ieo thart they had hoped for. Aak for a d0111oitltr1·
tion- y011'll be con¥irtco4.

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
· Serving Meigs, Ga Ilia &amp; Mason
Ph. 992-2181

WE DELIVER -WE SERVICE- WE FINANCE

'·

Co.untle~

Open Mon.-Sat. Utltil6 p.m.

Present were Mrs. Lavonia
Simpson , Mrs. Virginia Rees
and children, Mrs. Frances
Roberta, Mrs. Robyn Reiber,
Mrs. Esta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Ruth Stearns, Mrs. Allyne
Rees and Janey and Bertha
Spencer; Mr . and Mrs. Rush
Philson and family, and Mr .
and Mrs . Gordon West and
family .

Miss Libby Brown
Sets Wedding Date

Plans have tieen c?mpl~ted
for the wedding of M1ss Libby
•BroWn daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. . Donald c. Brown of
Haven Heights, New Haven
ahd PFC. Dennis E. Dudding,
sonofM,Sgt. and Mrs. Gale A.
. ouddlng of Fort Knox, Ky •
The custom of open church
will be observed when the
•1 couple exchange vows at 1:30
in the afteiTIOOI'I at Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy, 0.
September 4. .
\

,.

Miss Brown, a graduate of
Wahama High School, iB a
sophomore at Marshall
University and has been
employed ln the office of Dr.
Harold
Brown, D.D.S.
during the summer months:
PFC Dudding iB a 1970
graduate of the American
Military School In Germany
and eXpects to be assigned in
Gennany with the U.S. anned
Forees later this fall.

D:

Hazzard Will
Teach Trumpet
MIDDLEPORT Don
Hazzard, son-in-law of Dr. and
Mrs. J. J. Davis, has accepWd
the position of trumpet in·
structor at Florida State
Universi.ty, Tallahassee, and
will reside in that city.
Mr . and Mrs. Hazzard's
former home was in Durham,
N. C., where he played in the
North Carolina Symphony
Orchestra last year. The
couple campleted a nine-week
session at the Aspen Music
School and Festival in Aspen,
Colo ., recently and attended a
symposium ln Denver. They
toured England, Belgium,
Germany and France ln May
and June, visiting hom factories and museums which
emphasized historical musical
instruments . and attended
various performances ln each
country. The horn players' trip
was sponsored by Central
Michigan University.
Following a visit with Dr.
· and Mrs. DaVis, they lett
Thursday for Tallahassee.

.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Soulhem
Local Band Booslers will meet
Tuesday, August 29, at 8 p.m.
All members are urged to
attend.

your choice of full sin sofa

Handsome matching .love seats, your choice

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An exciting co ll ection of re gal patterned ve lvels, vermicelli
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�'.
, - 'flle Times....,nunet, bunaay,
. 8 - The Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 1972

'was new club· member, . Mrs .

RUTLAND - Plan~ .were
completed for "A Summer
Weddin g" ' of horticulture
specimens and artistic designs
when the Rutland Friendly
Gar deners met Wednesday
evening at the home of Mrs.
T•m Stewart, with Mrs.
William Willford, hosmss.
The event will be held at the
Rutland Elementary School on
College
Ave ., Rutland,
Saturday, Sept. 16, from I to 6
p.m. The show chairmen, Mrs.
Homer Parker and Mrs .
Howard Birchfield, invim the
public to participate by entering .the invitational artistic
design classes, "The Wedding
Gifts," a· modern interpretive
design with card to state the
in te rpre t ation, and

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" Honeymoon

at

Niagara

Falls," a design showing

motion.

the artistic division, as
determined by the judge.
The show room will open for
placement at 9 a:m., Sept. 16,
and all entries and completed
cards must be in place by noon,
wi th oral judging to begin all
p.m., according to the OAGC
standard system. Entries may
be removed at 6 p.n): that day.
No artificial plant material is
permitmd and no painted or ·
artificia ll y colored plant
material is allowed, except as
allowed by the schedule .
Bases, mats and accessories
will be allowed in any class
unless otherwise prohibimd by
the schedule. No other background other than the green
provtsed by the show committee is permitted.
Entran ts in the hor.ticulture
division are reminded foliage
is not to be removed from the
specimen, but that it should be
disbudded, except for sprays of
chrysa nth emum; that the
entry tag must include the

All classes of the horticulture
division are open to the public
for entry. These include
cla&amp;'"s for Hybrid Tea Rose,
zinnia, marigold, Chrysan· specimen variety name. The
themum and unclassified exhibitor must provide a
specimens, as well as blooming suitable container for the
specimen, to avoid crowding
and foliage houseplants.
Juniors are welcome to enmr foliage or topheaviness. A
the artistic classes, "The Ring Horticulture Sweepstakes
Bearer/ ' a cresceot design for award will be given to the
those 10 years to 18 years, and exhibitor totaling the highest
"The Flower Girl," your number of points for specimen
favorite arrangement for those and houseplant winners.
Entries from the public are
under 10. They need not belong
invited for three special
also
to any garden club. Juniors .
may enter classes for zinnia, display classes, entitled,
mari go ld , or unclassified "Let's Take a Honeymoon Trip
specimens, with a new Green To ... /' places like "Cypress
Thwnb Award to be given for Gardens" for dishgardens, list
the best specimen entry by a plant names; 0 Appalachia" junior , to be selected by the handcrafted or homemade
containers, three or more, and
judge.
Persons may make as many " Wayn e Na tional Forest,"
entries as desired in each of the lhree or more pieces of
horticulture classes, bul only weathered and-or driftwood.
one entry per class in the arThose unable to enter the
show
are invited to view lhe
tistic designs. The Best of Show
ribbon will be given to the best display from 1-6 p.m. Sept. 16.
of the blue ribbon winners ln

...,.,.

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Classes open only to !he Willford and Mrs. Parker. The removed, cultivate and · sow
sponsoring club indude !he publicity book received a cover crops ; water hardy
chrysanthemums, hardy
following: "A t · A Country perfect scor" of 100 points and asters and Other fall -bloomers,
Church," with religious won first in tQe 'State.
newly set evergreens and
The garden therapy work recently planted shrubs and
feeling, no fi gurine ; "The
trees; gather pods of wildWeddi ng Guests," a mass with special education students flowers
and garden subjects to
design; "The Bridegroom at Rutland Elementary won dry and store fgr winter ,
Awaits, 11
tall
line second in the state; while !he bouquets; sow hardy annual
seeds where they are to grow.
arrangement, featuring black program book was third .. Mrs. such
as calllopsls, Callfornla
and white (painted· or ar- Willford said next year an poppy, cornflower, larkspur,
tificially colored material undetermined number of and Shirley poppy ; stop fertllizlng roses and shrubs to
permitted); "Here Comes The points will be alloted for cover encourage
dormancy.
Bride," with rhythm, using design, and a chairman for
Mrs . Wolfe gave a review. of
some white flowers; " The every program part must be " Perenn.lats ThatTake Care of
by Russell
Beautiful Bridesmaids," twin listed, as well as the departur.e Themselves:•
Webber. To be In cluded In such
arrangemenls, not necessarily point and time for all tours.
a ·list a perennial must .meet
identical: ,"A Band or Gold," a ' Clubs will be allotWd credit several requirementS: tt must
and for contributing to the wild· really be perennial, requiring
cresce nt design, "
no special soli, be drooghl
"Something Old, Something £lower book fund, and .resistant require no staking
New," using weathered wood magazine articlE: rev iew~ .wiU and bloom over a long p~rlod.
not receive credit only garden!- ~eslrable
charactenstl.cs
and fresh Dowers.
.
'
mclude
gpod cut flowers,
Other special displays will book rev1ews.
fragrance, food foliage, shade
include making a wedding
Four members who entered tolerance , easy to grow: from
corsage, doing garden therapy the Meigs County Fair Flower seed, easy to divide and rapid
The best scoring
work, and work by the Merry Show were Mrs. Smwart, Mrs. grower.
perennial. according to Mr.
Gardeners Junior Club, as well Carpenter, Mrs. Parker and Webber, Is one that rarely any
as a show theme bridal setting. Mrs. Snowden with Lorri one . grows, the hardy
'
geranium.
Commitmes for the show will Snowden and Jay
Carpenter
This Is not the typical
include, staging, Mrs. Fred winning in the junior division. houseplant (correctly called
Williamson and Mrs. William Club members won six blue, Petargonium); but a blue.
. .
flowered l B Inch plant tha t
Brown ; placement, Mrs. Tom ~IX
red and four ~M~ nbbons grows In cold places like the
Stewart; horticulture, Mrs. Joe m the artistic diviSIOn , four Pyrenees Mountains and
Bolin; junior entries, Mrs. blue two red and three white Northern Asia. A single plant
' .
will quickly spread to three
Larry Edwards; judges and [or horticulture,
and two blue teet, with " Buttercup" foliage
clerks, Mrs. Howard Birch- and one red for specJal that smothers weeds.
field, Mrs. Harold Wolfe and displays.
Another good perennial is
Ec~inops humilus, the globe
Mrs. James Quillen ; awards,
For roll call, each member thistle, which is tough, has
Mrs .
James
Quillen ; brought a perennial plant, beautiful foliage, large roond
schedules, Mrs. James Car· after which an exchange was steel-blue flowers, and If cub
held with Mrs. Stewart In back· afler blooming In May
penter; publicity, Mrs. Homer charge.
and June It will bloom again.
Parker ; hostess, Mrs. Bruce
Gardening tips for Sep. Potentilla has bright yellow
Davis; guest registration, Mrs. tember by Mrs. Fetty In- flowers, Is long-lived and. free
Richard Fetty, Jr. ; edu- cluded: Divide and replant of troubles ; cushion spurge
early -blooming perenni~ls ; (Euphorbia eplthymoldes l Is
cational
and
special Clean up beds from which dead related
to snow -on -thedisplays,
Mrs.
Robert or matured plants have bee" mountain , po insett ia and
Snowden, Mrs. William Willford,
and Mrs. · Larry
Edwards; photography, Mrs.
James Carpenter, and cleanup,
all members.
·
The meeting was opened
with the group collect and
devotions by Mrs. Willford
were based on " Golden
Goldenrod." Dues for the
coming year were paid, and the
group voted not to participam
in a garden therapy program
at Gallipolis State Institute this
year.
Correspondence from Mrs . .
Robert Hoeflich of the Daily
Sentinel was read, requesting
Green Thumb articles for
publication, with Mrs. Wolfe
appointed to do the imm. A
letter from Mrs. Gordon
•
'
~
'
_
, .. ,.
Shepheril, state chaihnan for .
!he Victor Reis Outstanding_
Garden Club Award was read
acknowledging the early
receipt of the club's information sheets and stating
!hal as of Oct. I the chairman
of this award will be Mrs.
Dwight DeVoss, to whom all
information should be sent.
· Civic park maintenance for
the monlh of August was
delegated to Mrs. Willford and
Mrs. Snowden, with Mrs. Davis
-and Mrs. Edward appointed for
September work . Bank
arrangements for the month of
September will be furnished by
Mrs. Birchfield, Mrs. Bolin,
Mrs. Stewart and Mrs .
Snowden.
Mrs. Davis mentioned the
need for trimming several
flowering crabapple trees in
town which were planted by the
club, as some are blocking
traffic views and club members agreed to do this. Mrs.
Davis is to arrange for the
annual Nature tour and picnic,
tentatively set for Sept. 21. Also
planned is a tour of dahlia
gardens, with a date to be
announced later.
A report on the OAGC State
Convention held in August at
Denison University at Granville, was given by members
attending it, Mrs. Bolin, Mrs.

crown-of·tho.r : .io. has early

purplish green foliage, yellow

flowers, arld' Is 18 Inches tall ;
Lythrum
vlrgatum and
lythrUm salicarl_a can be grown
in ordinary · border conditions

,

1J

...

Q '

as rudbecklas. "eronicas.

Monardasand astltbe's because

they requli"e too frequent
replanting . Phloxes are fussy
about soil, and chrysan·

,,

Mrs. Fetty and Mrs. Stewart ' " Peonies Are Forever," wllh a
served as guest demonstrators . demonstration of "DivldlnP,
at a recent meeting of the and Transplanting P10111es •

themums really · need to be ·

·'·

19.i cu.ft. Side~by•Side Refrigerator-Freezer

year to flower profusely. He

$ayS

NO
. DEFROSTINl;

he Still grows some of

these perennials that toke

EVER

more care but his favorites are
those that seem to flourish on

• 245-lb. Clfl'Cilj lreozor

nOthing but his lavish praise.
Mrs. Bolin displayed a
number of blooming perennials

•l slidine frHztr bnkeh
• 5-treim shelwes

• 41reezer door shelves

Including: hydrangea, flame
honeysuckle, sweet pea, sliver
lace clematis, butterfly weed,
ironweed, Queen · Anne's lace,

• Phil~ POwer SaYtf t.ontrol
• Adjustable cold controls
•ledjuslabt~ t1nlitewer
$helves in retri~t~ator
• Ph lito door closers

tansy, goldenrod, har~y dahlia,
whitetop. wild beebalm, hosta,
hardy amary lli s, lythrum.
shasta
daisy ,
phlox,

matrimony vine, variegated
and plain live forever, and.

hardy·sunflower.

·.

The traveling prize, brought

White. Avocado, Gold or
Shaded Copper Clblllt1

by Mrs. Edwards. was won by
Mrs. Willford with Mrs: Birchfield and a gues.t. Mrs. Charles
Lathey, winning door prizes. A

sa lad course was served from a

gold lace covered fable by Mrs .

Willford , ass isted by Mrs .
Stewart. Favors. were small
float ing candles.

Arrangements

PHILCO

G§)
The better Idea peopt. In relrlgerato,..•

Mrs. Willford, Mrs . Wlllamson,
Rutland

0.

Post Office and

was repeated in Wlison . Mrs.

Miss Jean

,,

A GOOD
COMBINATION

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rose
Garden Club of Tuppers Plains
met recently at the home of
Mrs . Clarence Headley . Mrs .

TWO floor heat outlets.,.t ('.ndo
~

~
:I

••'f'

Mr. and Mrs. Rex F. Cumings

.

••
••'

Moore-Cumings
Vows Taken

·''
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"••

~

"'••

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..•
~·

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••
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:
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:
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MIDDLEPORT - Kathy matching satin ribbon around
Jean nette Moore of Mid· th e collar and waist . Acdl eport, daughte r of Mrs. cessories were whim picture
Kathryn Denison of Middleport hats with matching ribbon
and Edward G. Moore of arou nd the brim and
Gallipolis, and Re• Fletci1er · streamers, and white gloves .
Cun1ings, Pomeroy, son of Mr.
Judy Webb, sister of the
and Mrs. David Cumings of bride, a matron of honor, and
Pomeroy , were united in Kay Walker, a matron of
marriage at 3:30p.m. June 10 honor, wore matching lavender
at the Pomeroy Nazarene gowns. Kathy Moore, sister-inChurch. The Rev . Clyde law of lhe bride ; Janelle
Hendersonreadthedoublering Cumings, sismr of the groom,
ceremony .
and Mary Fry, bridesmaids
Arch ca ndelabra covered wore matching yellow gowns
with lily vi !he valley, and two and all carried bouquets of
seven-branch candelabra and mixed spring flowers with
two whim pillar vases of white matching streamers.
gladiola
formed
the
Rose Ann Jenkins was
background. Aisle decorations organist for these selections :
were two hurricane lantersn. "More," "Theme Song £rom
The bride, given in marriage Love Story" . "Love Is A Many
by her father, wore a formal Splendored Thing," "0 Perfect
Jenglh gown of white organza. Loye," and "Bridge Over
The empire bodice was ac- Troubled Waters ." Johnny
cented by an organza and Lisle, soloist, sang, " The
venice !ace ruffle, giving a Lord's Prayer," "A Time For
pinafor e effect. The bishop Us" and " The Weddi ng
sleeves and skirt were ap- . Prayer ."
pliqued in white venice lace
Best man was David
daisies; the skirt accenmd with Cwnings, Pomeroy, father of
a deep rutre edged with venice the groom.
lac.eas ap; . red on the bodice.
Ushers were Allen Gibson,
Her veil was mantilla style, Columbus; Edward G. Moore,
edged with matching venice Circleville; Daniel L. Webb,
lace and ribbon. She carried a Springfield, and Guy Sargent
bouqet of white rosebuds and and Mike Will, Pomeroy.
white ribbon Ued wilh lover's
The bride's molher wore a
knots. Her only jewelry was a floor length dress of turquoise
cameo ring, a gill of the groom. polyesmr knit wilh white acMlss Patsy Snader, Cin- cessories and a corsage of
cinnall, maid of honor, wore a white roses. The bridegroom's
green empire waisted gown mother wore a floor length
with puff sleeves and high neck dress of polyester knit with
with trim interlaced with matching accessories, and

I .

corsage of whim roses.
Following the ceremony a
reception was held in the Or·
chid Room of Meigs Inn. The
bride's table was cenmred with
a four-tiered wedding cake,
encircled wilh leather leaf ivy.
Carol Ann Moore and Linda
Jean Moore, nieces of the
bride, registered the guests.
Mrs. Beverly Long, Mrs .
Virginia Sayre, Miss Carmen
Jewett and Miss Debbie Jewett
served . ·
For her going away costume,
the bride wore an empire
waisted dress with sleeves and
bodice of white bubble
material, and a Oared skirt of
lavender polyester knit with
matching accessories and the
corsage fr om her bridal
bouquet.
Following a honeymoon trip
to Columbus and scenic areas
of West Virginia, the couple is
at home in Bradbury.
Mrs. Cumings is a graduate
of Meigs High School, class of
1971, ~n6 attepded Mount
Vernon Nazarene College. Mr.
Cumings is a graduate of
Pomeroy High School, class of
1966. He served fo1u- years in
the U. S. Air Force and is
employed by !he Ohio Power
Co.

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Tina Spires Engaged
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Spires of Rutland
are announclng the engagement of their daughter, Tina, to
Mr. JWbert T. Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 0 .
Stewart, Rutland, a 1971 graduate of Meigs High School. Miss
Spires iB a junior at Meigs High School. Wedding plans are
Incomplete .

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been completed.
Maid of honor will be Miss
Diania Tolbert, New Haven
and bridesmaids will be Miss
Sharon Roach, New Haven;
Miss Mary Jane Scites, Letart,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Alice Hunter,
Columbus, Ohio. Best man will
be Ted Kutzlo, Memphis,
Tenn., Gary Norris, Letart,
Ohio , and Pete Simpson ,
Racine, Ohio. The pianist will
be Mrs. Paul Powell .
The wedding will be an event
of September 9 at 2:30p.m. at
!he Graham Baptist · Church
with !he Rev. Bud Hatfield
officiating. The gracious
custom of an open church will
be observed . Immediately
following the ceremony a
reception wlll be held in the
dining· room at Roush's DriveIn, Letart, W. Va.

PHONE 992-2181

Methodist Women Meet
RACINE - The United
Wesleyan Methodist Women of
Racine met at the suburban
summer home of Mr . and Mrs.
Gordon West in the Dorcas
vicinity, a beautiful wooded
area .
After a bountiful picnic
luncheon, a short . business
meeting was held. The Sep·
tember meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Ruth Stearns.

NEW OR USED

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and a member of the "Riggs
Royal Kad-ette Baton Corps."

Elson Spencer, Racine, have

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NEW HAVEN - Wedding
plans for \he forthcomipg
maNrlage of Linda June
Weaver: New Haven, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S.
Weaver , to David Henry
Spencer, son of Mr. and :\Irs.

DOUBLE THE H'EAT·
OVER YOUR FLOORS!

'·

clothing and style reviews and
has served as chairman of the
Mei gs County 4-H Style Review
for two years. An active Junior
leader she has served on !he
Junior Fair Bo&amp;. .: .&gt;erved as
chairman of the Meigs county
4·H advisory committee, and
attended
Ohio
Junior
Leadership Camp.
Supervisors of the Fashion
Board arc Dr. Virginia Evans
assistant 4-H State Leader,
along with Ohio State
Un iversity and O.S.U. Extension clothing specialists,
Mrs. Orena Haynes and Mrs.
Norman Deyo . Miss Whitehea&lt;l
will join the faculty board
members and supervisors at a
dinner Wednesday eveni ng
before retiring as a member of
the board.

Wedding
Announced.

FROM LANDMARK
11

Clarence Headley read the
verse of the month. Roll call
was to name a flower for an
outdoor container.
Mrs. Betty Dean was guest
demonstrator and brough t
many original and unusual con tain ers, makin g
several
beautiful
arrangement s depicting
classes to be used in the flower
show at the Meigs County fair.
Mrs. Glen Stout brought the
Whitehead
traveling prize which was
awarded Mrs. Robert Dorst.
Mrs. Dorst will prepare Green
Thumb notes for September .
September meeting will be
Ca rl Barnhill, pres ident, held at the home of Mrs. John
conducted the business Arbaugh. Refreshments were
meetint A devoional reading served 13 members and a
was presented by Mrs. Charles guest.

Mrs. Headley Hosts Club

Cindy was eligible to
represent Ohio after making a
clean sweep in her age
divisions at the Ohio state
championships where she won
!he titles of "Wee Majorette ·
Princess of Ohio, " "Ohio's
Most
Beautiful
Wee
Majorette" and the Juvenile
State Twirling and Strutting
championships.
While Cindy was in North
Car91ina , she received a
telegram from !he Governor of
Cindy Panerson
Ohio "wishing her luck" in the
fin"f.s after her selec tion to the her slate well."
"top 10" list, and saying he,
Cindy attends Syracuse
"Knew she would represent
Elementary School, is a baton

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT

Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Parker ;

Carr and the Lord's Prayer

thirty-min ute show for a

general audience at the Arts
$d Crafts building and Qther
brief style reviews. They are
scheduled for pictures to be
developed into a slide set based
on "Fashion Direction" points
£or use in the counties next
year.
Miss Whitehead will be
a sophomore at Ohio State
University th is fall where she
ts maJonng in Medical
Technology. She was selected
for the 4-H Fashion Board at
the Ohio State Fair last August.
This is the third time she has
participated in the Ohio State
Fair Style Review, having
received "outstanding of the
day '' for two years.
She has received five county
championships awards in

nation .

were

provided lor various places
during the month , including
Pomeroy Nat ional Bank,
Rutland Branch - Mrs. Davis,

REEDSVILLE - Miss Jean
Whitehead, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead of
Reedsville, is attending Ohio
State Fair this week as a
member of the 1972 Ohio
Fashion board.
Members will be involved in
many activities dealing with
clothing projects. During the
week the fashion board will
teach modeling to 4-H style
review participants~ give a

SYRACUSE - Cindy Patterson, !I)-year old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Patterson of
Syracuse, di splays two
trophies she won recently at
the "International Baton
Twirling Championships" held
at the University of North
Carolina in Ashville.
. The state and regional
champions from all over the
nation met there to take part in
the week-long competitions.
Cmdy represenmd Ohio in the
8-10 year old divisions won
third pl ace in the' " International Solo Championships, " and was fourth
runner·up to the " Wee
Majorette
Princess
of .
America" 1972.
This title was won on the
overall totals of five different
divisions which were Solo
Fancy and Military Struttin~.
Beauty, and a talent routine
other than twirling.
Cindy's. talent routine was a
novelty song and dance
number composed by her
dancing teacher, Mrs. Judy
Frazer.
Cindy also won fourth place
in Military Bes t Appearing and
mnlh in fan cy strutting in the

PH Itco·No-Frost

grown from new cuttings. each

Miss Whitehead on Board

ri

given by Mrs. Fred WilliamHomestead Garden Club of son.
Mrs. Brown will · give
Langsville. They gave basic
October
gardening tips and
purple. Evenfng primrose design Instruction on several
!Oenothera mlssourie~sls') Styles of arranging, ranging arrangements on , the theme
blooms during the day with from tralditlonal to modern, "Touch Down,'' will be brought
showy yellow floviers from using the Meigs County Fair for fudging by designated
July to September.
Flower Show schedule classes members.
· Mr. Webber does not llsf·
,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"'
many of the old favorites such
..r1

or near gard,. 'pools and come
In Intense shades of pink and

1972

Cindy Patterson Wins
1nternational Trophies

as o guide.
Mrs. William ' Brown was
welcomed back lhto active
membership and also present

James Quillen.
Hostess tor the September
meeting wilt bt Mrs. Homer
Parker. ·During thtt meeting, '
·the
officers tor !he coming year
Rutland Church of Christ, Mrs.
Carpenter and Mrs. Parker ; will be Installed. Mrs. ,Birchseveral mem~rs for shut-Ins. field will present I paper,

Alljl . Zl,

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they.toll ut, Sioglor gi'lot thom moro comfort, more h01t and more
depondale ..,..,ieo thart they had hoped for. Aak for a d0111oitltr1·
tion- y011'll be con¥irtco4.

Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
· Serving Meigs, Ga Ilia &amp; Mason
Ph. 992-2181

WE DELIVER -WE SERVICE- WE FINANCE

'·

Co.untle~

Open Mon.-Sat. Utltil6 p.m.

Present were Mrs. Lavonia
Simpson , Mrs. Virginia Rees
and children, Mrs. Frances
Roberta, Mrs. Robyn Reiber,
Mrs. Esta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Ruth Stearns, Mrs. Allyne
Rees and Janey and Bertha
Spencer; Mr . and Mrs. Rush
Philson and family, and Mr .
and Mrs . Gordon West and
family .

Miss Libby Brown
Sets Wedding Date

Plans have tieen c?mpl~ted
for the wedding of M1ss Libby
•BroWn daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. . Donald c. Brown of
Haven Heights, New Haven
ahd PFC. Dennis E. Dudding,
sonofM,Sgt. and Mrs. Gale A.
. ouddlng of Fort Knox, Ky •
The custom of open church
will be observed when the
•1 couple exchange vows at 1:30
in the afteiTIOOI'I at Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy, 0.
September 4. .
\

,.

Miss Brown, a graduate of
Wahama High School, iB a
sophomore at Marshall
University and has been
employed ln the office of Dr.
Harold
Brown, D.D.S.
during the summer months:
PFC Dudding iB a 1970
graduate of the American
Military School In Germany
and eXpects to be assigned in
Gennany with the U.S. anned
Forees later this fall.

D:

Hazzard Will
Teach Trumpet
MIDDLEPORT Don
Hazzard, son-in-law of Dr. and
Mrs. J. J. Davis, has accepWd
the position of trumpet in·
structor at Florida State
Universi.ty, Tallahassee, and
will reside in that city.
Mr . and Mrs. Hazzard's
former home was in Durham,
N. C., where he played in the
North Carolina Symphony
Orchestra last year. The
couple campleted a nine-week
session at the Aspen Music
School and Festival in Aspen,
Colo ., recently and attended a
symposium ln Denver. They
toured England, Belgium,
Germany and France ln May
and June, visiting hom factories and museums which
emphasized historical musical
instruments . and attended
various performances ln each
country. The horn players' trip
was sponsored by Central
Michigan University.
Following a visit with Dr.
· and Mrs. DaVis, they lett
Thursday for Tallahassee.

.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Soulhem
Local Band Booslers will meet
Tuesday, August 29, at 8 p.m.
All members are urged to
attend.

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10 - The 'l'lmei-Senlllll, Sunday, AUII. 27, 1t72

l

Carnahans in Blue
Ribbon Competition
BY KATIE CROW
RACINE - The James Carnahan
family of Racine RD has been chosen as
the "Blue Ribbon Farm Family" and will
represent Meigs County at the Ohio State
Fair on Wednesday, Aug. 30. The program
is sponsored by the Colwnbus Dispatch
with a farm family chosen from each of the
88 counties in Ohio. Shown in the milking

parlor at the Carnahan ·!arm- lower right
- are Mr. and Mrs. Carn ahan and
children, Tony and Janis.
Jim Carn ahan , upper left, presently
milking 72 cows daily, has spent his entire
life at Sunnysage Farm . Jim and his
father, Harold Carn ahan, had a lather-son
operation un til two years ago when Harold
retired. Jim now works the dairy farm

enough to keep !he routinely
partisan faithful content.
The real word, the name-&lt;&gt;f·
the-game word, has been the
word "nationaL"
Never before has one party
work ed so openly and so
skillfully to form a strictly
bi pa r t Is a ri , '' ii ii !i on wfd e

with the assistance of his wife, Nancy, and
their two children, Janis and Tony. Jim "
attempts to raise every heifer born on the
farm. Of the 730 acres 1110 to 125 acres is in
corn raised lor feeding of the livestock.
Jim's lather started with Guernsey cattle
in 1928.
Jim says there .is a personal satisfaction
in raising cattle and working on a dairy
farm.
Jiffi is a member of Racine Grange 2606,
Dairy Service Uni t and Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM and Mrs. Carnahan is an active
member of the Racine Baptist Church.
Jim in addition to his farming is a
professional auctioneer. The Carnahan
family was chosen for the award by C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County Agricultural
Extension Age nt ; Virgil Atkins, Grange
Deputy Master, and Henry Frank,
president of the Meigs County Farm
Buraau.
Sunnysage Farm, above, is loca ted on
Bashan Road, Rt. 1, Racine. On the left is
the home of Harold Carnahan , and high on
the hill , on the right is Jim's and his
fam ily's home. Sunnysage Farm,
primarily a dairy farm , contains 730 acres.
The farm is owned by Harold an d son, Jim,
but is managed by Jim since his fa ther
retired two years ago.
·

3 Gridders
In Hospital

'• j
I .

coalition with so large and so sym bolic beast of the ,
ang ry a section in troubled Democrats. A cross-breed that
alienation from an officially is a biological impossibility is
opposition party.
nevertheless plainly a political
The G.O.P. is on the march reality.
- but the elephant has
The forces of Sen. George
remarkable similarities to the McGovern smashed the old
donkey that th rouglY ·the.. Democratic party he~e in Julv
generations' 'has been !he throwing in to the dustbin th~
'

r;wSoci~I~:::: :::I' DeMo lay Boys Honored Mothers
\1\

Calendar!

SUNDAY
TRI-ADV!SORY Coun cil picnic
at Woods cabin in Cora, 12:30
p.m.
BARCUS FAMILY reunion at
noon on Fortification Hill.
FIFE RE UNION at File
Shel!A!r House . All friends and
relatives welcome.
SPE CIAL YOUTH se rvices
wi th Rev. Delbert Allison ,
Chilli co the, at Ewington
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, 7:30 p. m.
POPLAR RIDGE homecomin g
with basket dinner at noon.
Rev. Elmer Hill and Rev.
Charles Lusher, speakers; the
Gospelaires to provide special
musicat l :30 p. m.
~
OLD BAPTIST Church
homecoming on Greasy Road.
KI NG CHAPEL Church
homecoming with Rev. Jack
Rankin and Rev. Floyd Fry
speaking. A basket dinner to
be served at noon. Rev. Ernest
Baker is the pastor . .
DI C KEY
C HAPEL
homecoming beginning at 10 a.
m. basket dinner at noon. Rev.
Jeff Butcher, guest speaker.
HOMJ&gt;COMING at Paint Creek
Bap tist Church beginning at

The
MIDDLEPORT Mothers' Club of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay,
was honored by the boys of the
chapter Wednesday evening at
the Mlddeport Masonic temple,
beginning with a 6 p.m. dinner.
William Quickel, PMC of
Ches hire, presided and
welcomed mothers and guests.
Introduced were officers of
the club, the president, Mrs.
Hilda Quickel; vice president,
Mrs. Bessie Kin g; secretary,
Ma ry Carson; treasurer, Mary
Kay Yost ; chap lain , Mrs.
Sarah Moshier , and Mrs.
Norman Will, mother of the
present Master Coun cillor ,
Duane Will ; past president lla
Darnell of Pomeroy, and the
District 11 and Meigs Chapter
swee theart, Sherry King.
Two selec ti ons from the
Sound of Music by Sherry King
were a part of the entertai nment. Dad Adv isor
Bi ble School. Meat, drink and
dessert will be furnished by the
sc hool and members are to
bring covered dish vegelable
or salad.
MONDAY
GAH S BAND BOOSTERS
general mee ting, 7:30 p.m.,
band room . All Cadet and
Senior members' parents are
ur ged to at!A!nd.

Robert King ann ounced some
of the events of the State
Conclave held at Akron when
PMC Quickel received a state
appointment of Seventh
Preceptor and Mrs. Quickel
was appointed 11th District
represe ntative of th e Ohio
State Federation of Mothers
Clubs. Burt Moshi er of
Gallipolis, a member of the
Meigs Chapter, placed second
in the chess competition held at
the State-Conclave.
Mrs. Quickel, president of
the Mothers Club, thanked the
chapter for the honor and
appreciation shown the club.
A humorous skit presented
by Wm . Quickel and Herman
Carson, Sr ., Advisory council
me mber , concl uded the
program.
Table grate was given by
Jon Bunce, Jr ., Coun cilor of the
Chapter, who also gave the
Ohio State Rose Talk.
Mrs. Quickel had charge of
table decorations and favors
using color scheme or hot pink
and lavender.
Present were Mrs . Lena
Bunce , Mrs. Lawre nce
Stewart, Mr . and Mrs. William
King and Kevin, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Chesher, Paul Darnell ,
Charles Yost, Delmar Quickel,
Mrs . Denzil McCoy , Mrs.
Oli ver Taylor and Mrs. Ruby

Vaughan and family.
DeMolay se rvin g were
Herman Carson, Jr. , Quickel,
Bunce, Tim King, Paul Darnell, Jr., David Mattox, David
McCoy , Oliver Taylor, Burt
Moshier, Ken Gilkey, Herbert
Carson and Don Vaughan.

Eddy 's Scheduk
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's Schedule lor Meigs
County, September 5-.!1 :
Tuesday - Pearl Street, 911 : 30 ; Middlepor t Library ,
12:1:;.12:45; Rutland , 7:45-.!1: 15.
Wednesday- WMPO, 7:30-8.
Thursday - Salem Center,
5:45-6 ; Hysell Run, 6:3().7:30;
Hyland Church, 8-8 : IS.
Friday _ Central ; 9-10; s.
3rd Avenue, 1().11 :30; Racine
Whi stle Stop, 12 :30-12: 45;
Grea t Bend, 2-2 :30; Portland,
3-3:30; Stiversvill e, 4-5 ;
Whistle Stop , 5:15-5:30;
Rizer 's, !H: :30; Syracuse P.O. ,
6:45-7:15; Minersville (Arms),
7:45-8 :15.

MASON - Three Wahama White
Falcon football team members, Vernon
Roush, Jr ., Randy Grinstead and Don
Machlr, were reported In satisfactory
condition at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy Saturday.
Three 17 year-old veteran gridders
were taken to the hospital Friday
afternoon by Mason and New Haven
Emergency Squadmen reportedly
suffering from heat exhaustion.
The Mason squad Wlit was also
summoned Friday evening for 11
months-old Christopher Lee, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Lee, New Haven,
after the chlld had eaten part of a bar of
deodorant. The youngster was taken to
Hol2er Medical Center by squadamen.

I

PH. 992-3629

so me wha t nonpoli t i c al November. Down below they compulsive leftward lurch of
leade rs hip was not gladl y have an authentic, nostalgic tne national Democ ratic
suffered by the Republican fellow feeling with one-time party."
regula~s, Mr. Nixon 's insistent Democratic leaders now
In what has gone on here
mvotatoons to the Democrats scorned by the McGovernite. A some have seen a long-term
have the approval of every Harry Truman and a Barry purpose to reorganize the
wing of the G.O.P.
• Goldwater,_p o flla\!llr th~gull whP.le ~JiHfi!L.s11;u~lliJ:.!!.u:lnto
,,~ .. Thelli.eentrai:: 1 Wldti~~-,. Uof !., 10H is..fide~~tHBt"'~~{g~;.. hem, ll ~~8' 1fneyt'\ pii-lles. 1fl18"1:i .tpo
course, Is vote-catching; but are in hwnan terrlls far closer large a notion. The old twothe thing really d?"s go deeper than''either could be, in those party system will rise again.
than that. Republicans runntng terms, to a George McGovern. The meaning of the Republican
from Nelson Rockefeller on the
Thus,
an
os tens ible thrus t Is more nearly to
left to Barry Gold~ater oh the Republican convention pays promote its salvation than its
rtght are hterally m terror at tribute to past Democratic destruction.
any thought of a McGovern Presidents whose names
For those kicked out of the
victory in November ·
evoked no cheers, no affection, Democratic party in July by
They feel thetr deepest no remembran ce from harsh young zealots will return
. values to be under challenge. McGovern forces bent only in due course to their old
To . the~: Mcao~ern's "new upon burying the past without house. And If McGovern ts
pohbcs IS a ge~~ne _ threat to reading even the funerallnes . heavil y · defea ted ,
the
Thus,
an
ostensibly restoration will come sooner
a responSible pohl!csotseUand
not solely to thetr own surv1val. Republican platform at the rather than later. The pieces
They do not _go out of their very outset appeals to "our will have to be picked up by
way to pra1se such old troubled fr iends of other somebody; and it so happellll
Democrats as Harry Truman political affiliations " _ and that this will require political ·
and Lyndon Johnson onl y spedically of the Democratic know-how - the know-how of
because they seek old "affiliation" - "who will not th e now-excommunicated proe,
Democratic
help
lor and cannot take part In the the responsibles.

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MEIGS
INN
POMEROY, OHIO

bulk of its elected leaders and
an incalculable num ber of its
tradition-minded rank and file.
The Republicans, who have
no sli ghtest temptation to
regard professionalism in the
profession of politics as evil or
outdated, have rewritten
McGovern's own slogan and
shouted it back at him. "Cone
home, America !" he cried out
here in July. " Come over to us,
you regular Democrats!" The
Republica ns have retorted in
stentorian calls in August.
So the Nixon people - and, of
co urse, this has bee n his
convention gavel to gavel, as
some of the TV fe llows like to
say - are opening wide arms
and their party to displaced
Democrats in a way not see n
before in this country. The
Eisenhowerites did something
similar in 1952 and 1956; but the
difference between the two
eras is immense.
Where Dwight Eisenhower's

•
••
GO VISITING
DARWIN - M r. and Mrs. •
Elmer Bailey of Darwin visited •
recently in Charleston, W. Va. •
with their sister and brother- •
in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll •
Teaford.
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The New

4t

Re&lt;,dy to go to ba t wi l h striped-out
•

•• Rea l champions, whatever
••• your game.
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10 P.M. • 2 A.M.
The Amber Lounge Opens

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Have a ball in big league sport lookS.

•• . jea ns and palched-o n body shirls.

SATURDAY NIGHT
11:00 A.M.

LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINN&amp;RS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet Luncheon 11 : 00 to 1: 30, M onday thru Salurday)

:

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW. MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
.PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION
'

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Pollution
(Continued. (rom Page 1)
of Health, Division of Engineeruig revised
home sewage disposal regulall..;, and a
plan f?r the implementation · of the
regulattons. These regulations shall take
mto consideration the so'il characteristics
of the areas in question ·and shall be
des1gned to preclude discharge into waters
of the state;
· That ,the Meigs County Commissioners
shall submit lor approval· by the Ohio
. Department of Health, subdivision
regulations that will require sewerage and
wastewater ·treament facilities that will
attain applicable water quality starictarda,
and that the procedure lor the county
commissioners accepting ownership and
operation of central wastewater treatment
facllities shall also be submitted lor ap.
proval by the Ohio Department of Health ·
That the Meigs County Commissioner~
shall submit a copy of a resolution
establishing a building pennit and Jn.
spection procedure and a plan for imple~enUng said procedures, and That the
Me1gs County Health Department and
Meigs County Commissioners submit
reports as to compliance with the above
orders applicable on each July 1, and
January I, until such time as conununity
sewerage and wastewater treatment
facilities are provided.

Republicanism Muted at Miami to Draw Dissident Democrats
By WILLIAM S. WHITE
MIAMI BEACH - Only in
the most literal sense was the
re cent gathering here th e
Republican National Convention. By direction from the
top - from President Nixon
himsell
the
word
"Republican" has been muted
here and Indeed used only

II - The Tlmea Sentinel, Sallday, Alii!- 11, 1872

.i

....

THE SHOE 101

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Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced :

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N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Ohio :
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Can We
Really Not Care?
.
,

(Continued from Page 1)
setting a table. ll'oprobablethat IOJile day they could set 1118"1 :.ablea, wash
diahel, make bedlu pollible employment. More important, they ha.ve had
restored to them human dignity liJid decency. Like the rest of us they go
throo&amp;h thliJ U!e juJt cmce. Tiley cBd not choo11e to be mentally retarded..They
would limply Uke to have the chance to be a h1D118o being with the civil arK!
human rlghta most of us enjoy. Some are lea~ to talk, Many 100re will,
unless tile programa have to be stopped because Ollack of lunda. These same
·children were caiiad ''untouchable." the "le!Wvers," and were hidden away
to rot on urine drenched cement floors where the public could not see.
"Prospel'OWI Ohio baa felt the disgrace of ranking at the bottom of states
in providing any kind of care lor their retarded. Can we afl~)o rank near
the bottom of states ID the rate we tax ourselves? Can It be that we; the
citlzelll of Ohio, really DO NOT CARE???"

Co•Chairmen Appointed
PT. PLEASANT - Five co·
chairmen of the Mason County
Republican Executive Committee have
been appointed and a committeeman
vacancy was filled by members of.this
group in a meeting Friday night.
Co-Chairmen to work actively with
Chairman John Musgrave in the
committee were named to represent
several areas of the county.
Dayton Raynes will represent the
bend area, Basil Robinson, south of
Kanawha River; Sidney Boggess,
Routes 2 1111d 87 vicinity; Robert G.
Butcher, Point Pleasant and Charles
Burdette, Leon.
A vacancy in a committee post from
Robinson District was filled by the
appointment of Reid Doolittle. This was
formerly held by Clifford Carder who
did not seek reelection.
Several persons were in attendance
and Included some of the COWity's GOP
candidates. Among these were Michael
Shaw, seeking a seat in the House of
Delegates, Don Kingery, Prosecuting
Attorney; Bill Rardin Jr. County
Commissioner ; Elvin E. " Pete"
Wedge, Sheriff ; Orville " Buck"
Sturgeon, Assessor.
The meeting was also highlighted
with planning of forthcoming events
with times and places to be announced
later.
Marguerete Engel, president of the
Mason County Republlcan Women's
Organization and Damon Morgan Jr.,

president of the Teenage Republicans
gave organization reports.
Barbara Minton, also took an active
part in the meeting in behalf of
candidates.
Refreshments were furn ished by
candidates to those attending.

Six Arrested
PT . PLEASANT - Six persons, all
charged with intoxication, were
arrested by state police within the past
24 hours and bookings were made at the
Mason County jail.
These include : Carl Blain, 22,
Henderson ; JoAnn McDonald, 37,
Ravenswood ; Wetzel Stickler, Point
Pleasant ; Eli H. Siders, Henderson;
William Robinson , Pliny; Harry Clay
Simpkins, 24, 112 Walnut Street, Point
Pleasant.

MIDDLEPORT - Gloria
Buck Wallace left ColwnbUB
last Tuesday by plane for
"'K~'I'ema w~e
0 ~ti!nJiJilnCI ~

!Jbe '!!'Ill

'lJr"the' 1Ur
• 'tel-national Miss Charm
·Pageant. She will also attend a
board of directors meeting of
Miss Charm INC.
Two girls from the area won
Miss Charm of Ohio titles lut
were unable to participate In
the International pageant,
although they · quaUiled. They
were Tammy Ei~er. who Ia
Mtsa Charm lor age 7 to 9, and
Jane Stowers who ts Mtsa
Charm for age 14 to 18. Mtsa

POMEROY - Joyce Melanie
Hall, 21, Route 4 Pomeroy, is
listed in satisfactory condition
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday morning with
lacerations below the left knee
and right elbow she suffered' in
a one-&lt;:ar accident at 12:20
a.m. Saturday.
According to ~ report by the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, Ralph Eugene
Hall, 26, Route 4 Pomeroy, w3s
traveling north on County Road
51n Bradbury three tenlhl of ..
mile north of the Route 7
Bypass at excessive speed
when he ran off the right side of
the highway, Into a three foot
wall, 50 feet alonA the wall,
8CI'OIII the highway, cNaed a
lour-foot deep ditch, and hit a
tree in the yard of Richard
Poulin, Route 1 Middleport!
The Pomeroy Emergency
squad answered the can to the
mishap and took both of the
Halls to the hospital. Mr. Hall
was treated lor lacerations and
releued. The car was
demoll.shed. He was cited lor
rec:klell opntlon.

CHESHIRE - C. C. Bradbury Local Superintendent of
the 'Kyger Creek Schools,
Saturday announced a free and
reduced price lunch policy for
the children of the district who
are unable to. pay the full price
of a meal.
Local school officials have
adopted the lamlly size and
income scale to assist them in
determining eligibility.

hardships may apply lor free
or reduced price lunches lor
. their children. They may do so
by filling out an application
form sent home In a letter to
parents. AdditiQnal copies are
· avaUable at the principal's
office in each school. Ap.
plications may be aubmitted
any time during the school
year. The form itself is simple
to complete and req~ests information needed to determine
Families falling within the economic need based on the
scale or those suffering from income, number of persons in
unusual circumstances or the family, number of children

In school and any unusual
circumstances or hardships
which affec t the family's
ability to pay lor school
lunches. The information
provided on the applicati on
will
be
confi dential and will be Used only
lor the purpose of determining
eligibility.
Under the provisions of the
. policy the principal of each
school will review applications
and determine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the

By the Popular Success of Our Noon

12 Cases Tenninated in

Buffet . ..

Gallia Municipal Court

WEDDING CANCELED
The wedding of Debra Pauley and
Steve Nibert, scheduled lor September
2, has been canceled.

THERAPIST HIRED
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs,
Susan Lynn Evans, 12¥,
Maple Dr., Athens, has been
employed as a speech and
hearing therapist wJth the
,Gallla , Covnty Board of
Education.
Mrs. Evans, a native of
West Virglola, obtatDed her
B.S. and Masters Degree In
Speech Pathology from Ohio
University, She will be
working in all lour eoWIIy
school dlstrlels. Mrs. Evans
replaces Craig Parker.

AN EVENING

William Gerald Cox, 28,
Northup, $23 speed; Betty L.
Anderson, Rt . 1, Proctorville,
$18 failur e to display
registration ; Jack Owen, 46,
Rodney, $66 overload; Penny
L. Shirley 24, Gallipolis, $28left
of center ; George L. Triplett,
31, Rt. I, Crown City, $33
reckless operation; Regina S.
Johnson, 20, Gallipolis, $28 left
of center and William C.
Martin , 52, Jackson, $28
passing without the assured
clear distance.

GALLIPOLIS - Twelve
cases were terminated Friday
in Municipal Court.
Judge Robert S. Betz lined
James R. Myers, 22, Rt. 3, Oak
Hill , $173 and costs lor
overload. Leon Dana George,
47, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was lined $50
and costs lor intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were Ar·
nold Byrge, 36, address not .
listed, $28 intoxication ; Don A.
Jett, 34 , Pomeroy , $33
overload; David Thomas Day,
21, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $18 speed;

White Falcon Athletic Boosters will
meet Monday at 7:3ll p.m. at Wahama
High School. An important agenda has
been set up and all members are urged
to be present.

Stowers was also voted Miss taking part ill the event in
PersonaUty by aU the other Teus, Sle will perform a jazz
girts In the pageant.
dance dressed In a red sequin
T•.lllW .. ~!E~!n&amp;,W .; ~aa, \, .coalYIJI" ,wlth ,bellllotloml Me,
~spo~sorecf by New York will use props of devlls
Clothing Store ' ot Pomeroy. pitchforks, and background of
Jane Stowers waollpoll80red by imitation lire. Susan was also a
Grovers Studio, Neal• In· talent winner in Ohio's Our
surance Agency, and Central Utile Misa Pageant earlier th1s
Soya of Gallipolis.
year.
Ten-yeat old Suzan Schlmph
Gloria and Susan will return
of Newark, winner of Miss to Ohio from Texas Sunday
O!arm lor 10 to 13 will be evening.

Two Injured
In Accident

Lunch Policy is Announced

BOOSTERS TO MEET

Otarm Pageant on in Texas

'' ruling of the local olflcLW he
may make a request either
orally or in writing for a
hearing to appeal the decision.
· Mr. Bradbury has been
designated as the Hearing
Official. Hearing procedures
are oullined in the policy.
The policy also provides that
there will be no identification
of or discrimination against
any student unable to pay the
·full cost of a lunch.
Acomplete copy of the policy
is on file in each school and In
the ollice of the loca l
superintendent where it may
be reviewed by any Interested
person .

No One is Injured
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured in three traffic accidents investigated Friday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 3:45
p.m. on Rt. 7, four miles south
of Rt. 218 where Leslie T.
Luca s, 37, Lucasville, lost
control of his car which ran off
the right side of the hi ghway
striking a guardrail. There was
moderate damage to his car.
No charge was filed.
Billy W. Lynch, 40, Bell, W.
Va ., was cited lor failure to
stop within the assured clear
distance following a traffic
accidental 4:30p.m. on Rt. 7 at

BUFFn

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
s to 9: 30--52.50 all you can eat , (or A I a Car t e).

Dri nks and

Menu
Choice

Wide

Tiny 's Supermarket.
OffiCers said Lynch's car
struck the rear of an auto
operated by Walter 0 . Muncy,
52, Bell, W. Va . Again,
moderate damage resulted.
The third accident occurred
on Rt. 7, one and lour tenths
miles south of Cheshire where
gravel and concrete came from
the hopper of a cement mixer
Y'uck driven by Kenneth A.
Brown , 19, Galllpolis , and
struck cars driven by Harold
W. Brown, 60, Albany, Ohio,
and Rita B. Buckley, 47, of Rt.
I, Cheshire. Ken Brown was
cited to Municipal Court on a
charge of insecure load.

Dessert Extra.

Order ou r r egular m enu ev er y night 5 to 10.

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4 lO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
You'll be happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629

POMEROY

Carolyn Sue Haky Will be Wed
MIDDLEPORT- Mrs. WIUlam Board, Middleport, is announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of her
daughter, Carolyn SUe Haley, Middleport, to Ronald M. Young,
Racine,80ll of Mr. andMrs.JohnYOWIS, Rt.1, Racine.
The wedding will take place Sablrday, October 7, at the
Nuarene O!urch in Middleport. An open church wedding will be
observed.

17 Fined iri Court

POMEROY - Seventeen
· defendants were lined and six
others forfeited bonds in Judge
Frank Porter's Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Friday.
.Fined were Fred J. Arnett,
New Matamoras; Forrest R.
Barnett, Tvppers Plains;
Julius Nalipa, Poland ;
Raymond ' Gooch, Gallipolis;
Eula M. Rodgers, Erie, Pa.;
Aaron R. Turner, HWitington,
W. Va.; Schuyler F. Emmett,
St. Clairsville, and James C.
Townsend,
Belpre , all
speeding, all $10 and costs ;
Mildred L. mevlns, Route 3
. Pomeroy, no operator's
license, $15 and coeta; Bernice
L. SWan, IIAlllte 2 Pomeroy,
expired driver's license, $10
and costs; James W. Price,
Huntington, W. Va., paulng In
a curve (pleaded not guilty,
found guilty), costs only; Fred
L. Miller, Route 2 Racine,
driving while Intoxicated, $150
and coeta, three days confinement, and all months
license suspension; Charles F.
DAMAGE LIGHT
Kim, Tuppers Plallll. failure to
GALLIPOtiS - Damage yield \2 roadway, $10 and
was estimated at $251n a lire at costs; Richard Maynard,
4:40p.m. Friday at the mobile Wilkesville, defective muffler,
home rented by Dorothy
Clonch, 1626 Chatham Ave.
Fire Chief James A. Northup
uld the blaze was cauaed by an
electrical short In a fan which
RECEIPTS IN
cauaed !llll&lt;lke to enter the
POMEROY - Melg.s CoWity
' trailer owned by Malcolm Court rec:elpta lor the months
OrebeUIIh. Four men answered of July totaled $3,31~.25 acthe 98th alann of the year.
cordlnl to Betty llollltetter,
clerk. Receipts were dilbaraed
aa follows: finlll to alate,~
U,040.03; feea to aberill,
IJONS TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pmneroy ~.50; nnea and CGeta to
fund
• Middleport UON Club wiU covnty • general
t
hold a dlrecton' meellril at ~ $1,282.44; law library fund,
p.m. Mlllda7, AIIIUIUI. at IIIII tNI-N; auto license and 111
fund, ..1.74,
C.1nhla 0.. Co. aiiJot,
~

ATTEND FUNERAL
MIDDLEPORT - Relatives
attending th~ funeral of the late
Dale Swift which was held
Friday at Rawlings Coats
Funeral Home with burial in
Hebbardsville cemetery were :
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Clark and
Mrs . Larry Richards, all of
New Albany; Mr . and Mrs .
Dwight Gaskill of Cuyahoga
Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Byron
Gaskill of Munroe Falls ; Mr .
and Mrs. Charles McAfee, Sr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
McAfee, Jr. of Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Swill, Jerry, Vickie,
Michael and Randy of
Bellaire; Mr. and Mrs. Roland
Swift, David, Mary and
Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Swift, Joe, Danny, Bruce and
Rhonda of Shadyside; Mr. and
Mrs. William Swift, Brad and
Cynthia of Bridgeport ; Mr . and
Mrs . Harold Hinkle of
Chesapeake .

$5 and costs; Gerold Taylor,
Route Wellston, 1115eC111'e load,
$5, costs; Donald R. Bamhart, Route 1 Reedsville,
failure to transfer registration,
costs only, and Stephen D.
Brooks, Albany, no operator's
license, $10 and costs.
Forfeiting bonda were Roger
D. Luikhart, Kirby, Ohio,
failure to yield; Herbert p;
Moore, Canton, 'speeding ;
Garnet Milliron, Gallipolis ;
Debra K. Hill, Rt. 2, Racine,
speeding, and John W. Harmon, Huntington, W. Va.,
passing at an intersection, all
Marriage Uceose
$27.50, and James M. Hood,
POMEROY Stanley
Founl!'in Valley, Calif., no Everett Starcher, 36, Ro11te 1
safety equipment, $17.50.
Middleport, dozer operator,
and Dorts Ann Priddy, 24,
Rutland RD 1; .Gary Paul
Mitch, 21, Pomeroy, unemMINOR ACCIDENT
ployed, and Sandra Lynn
GAUJPOUS - City pollee Wolfe , 17, Racine ; Lester
Investigated a minor backing
William Wise, 38, Middleport,
accidental 4:45p.m. Friday on drill PTD, and Betley Ann
Second Ave. at the A&amp;P Romines, 31, Route 1 Mid·
l"'rking lot. omcers said cars dleport ; Donald Lee Dailey,19,
driven by Elmer E. Caldwell, Route 1 Middleport, mechanic,
70, 1068 First Ave., and Terri and Kathy Eloi11e Matson 17
Ann Hall, 17, Bell, W. Va.,
Route 1 Rutland, stud~nt :
collided as both drivers were Timothy David Michael, 22:
backing from parking spaces. Route 2 Pomeroy, laborer, and
There was minor damage. No Patricia Ann Capehart, 22,
one was Injured or cited.
Rovte 4 Pomeroy.
.

SUSPECT JAILED
POMEROY - William
Klein, Vale St., Pomeroy, has
been arreSted by Pomeroy
Police Clue! Jed Webster on
charges of breaking and enterlng of Simon's Plck·A·Pair
ShQe Store on Pomeroy's West
Main St. 1everal days ago, An
undetermined amount of
money waa taken. Klein Ia
ladled In Meig.s County Jail.

LAD INJURED
POMEROY - The lour year
old 1011 of Mr; and Mra. Carl
Roach, Wright St., Pomeroy,
was taken by private vehicle to
the Veterans Memorial
. Hospital lor Injuries suffered
when he leU into a 10 fool hole
onto cement at home. The child
111flered laceratiilna. The hole
was being dug for the addition
of rooms on!I! the Roaches •

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PHONE44t-49t5

17 OLIVE ST.

OAUIPOLIS, OHIO

hou~~e .

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10 - The 'l'lmei-Senlllll, Sunday, AUII. 27, 1t72

l

Carnahans in Blue
Ribbon Competition
BY KATIE CROW
RACINE - The James Carnahan
family of Racine RD has been chosen as
the "Blue Ribbon Farm Family" and will
represent Meigs County at the Ohio State
Fair on Wednesday, Aug. 30. The program
is sponsored by the Colwnbus Dispatch
with a farm family chosen from each of the
88 counties in Ohio. Shown in the milking

parlor at the Carnahan ·!arm- lower right
- are Mr. and Mrs. Carn ahan and
children, Tony and Janis.
Jim Carn ahan , upper left, presently
milking 72 cows daily, has spent his entire
life at Sunnysage Farm . Jim and his
father, Harold Carn ahan, had a lather-son
operation un til two years ago when Harold
retired. Jim now works the dairy farm

enough to keep !he routinely
partisan faithful content.
The real word, the name-&lt;&gt;f·
the-game word, has been the
word "nationaL"
Never before has one party
work ed so openly and so
skillfully to form a strictly
bi pa r t Is a ri , '' ii ii !i on wfd e

with the assistance of his wife, Nancy, and
their two children, Janis and Tony. Jim "
attempts to raise every heifer born on the
farm. Of the 730 acres 1110 to 125 acres is in
corn raised lor feeding of the livestock.
Jim's lather started with Guernsey cattle
in 1928.
Jim says there .is a personal satisfaction
in raising cattle and working on a dairy
farm.
Jiffi is a member of Racine Grange 2606,
Dairy Service Uni t and Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM and Mrs. Carnahan is an active
member of the Racine Baptist Church.
Jim in addition to his farming is a
professional auctioneer. The Carnahan
family was chosen for the award by C. E.
Blakeslee, Meigs County Agricultural
Extension Age nt ; Virgil Atkins, Grange
Deputy Master, and Henry Frank,
president of the Meigs County Farm
Buraau.
Sunnysage Farm, above, is loca ted on
Bashan Road, Rt. 1, Racine. On the left is
the home of Harold Carnahan , and high on
the hill , on the right is Jim's and his
fam ily's home. Sunnysage Farm,
primarily a dairy farm , contains 730 acres.
The farm is owned by Harold an d son, Jim,
but is managed by Jim since his fa ther
retired two years ago.
·

3 Gridders
In Hospital

'• j
I .

coalition with so large and so sym bolic beast of the ,
ang ry a section in troubled Democrats. A cross-breed that
alienation from an officially is a biological impossibility is
opposition party.
nevertheless plainly a political
The G.O.P. is on the march reality.
- but the elephant has
The forces of Sen. George
remarkable similarities to the McGovern smashed the old
donkey that th rouglY ·the.. Democratic party he~e in Julv
generations' 'has been !he throwing in to the dustbin th~
'

r;wSoci~I~:::: :::I' DeMo lay Boys Honored Mothers
\1\

Calendar!

SUNDAY
TRI-ADV!SORY Coun cil picnic
at Woods cabin in Cora, 12:30
p.m.
BARCUS FAMILY reunion at
noon on Fortification Hill.
FIFE RE UNION at File
Shel!A!r House . All friends and
relatives welcome.
SPE CIAL YOUTH se rvices
wi th Rev. Delbert Allison ,
Chilli co the, at Ewington
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, 7:30 p. m.
POPLAR RIDGE homecomin g
with basket dinner at noon.
Rev. Elmer Hill and Rev.
Charles Lusher, speakers; the
Gospelaires to provide special
musicat l :30 p. m.
~
OLD BAPTIST Church
homecoming on Greasy Road.
KI NG CHAPEL Church
homecoming with Rev. Jack
Rankin and Rev. Floyd Fry
speaking. A basket dinner to
be served at noon. Rev. Ernest
Baker is the pastor . .
DI C KEY
C HAPEL
homecoming beginning at 10 a.
m. basket dinner at noon. Rev.
Jeff Butcher, guest speaker.
HOMJ&gt;COMING at Paint Creek
Bap tist Church beginning at

The
MIDDLEPORT Mothers' Club of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay,
was honored by the boys of the
chapter Wednesday evening at
the Mlddeport Masonic temple,
beginning with a 6 p.m. dinner.
William Quickel, PMC of
Ches hire, presided and
welcomed mothers and guests.
Introduced were officers of
the club, the president, Mrs.
Hilda Quickel; vice president,
Mrs. Bessie Kin g; secretary,
Ma ry Carson; treasurer, Mary
Kay Yost ; chap lain , Mrs.
Sarah Moshier , and Mrs.
Norman Will, mother of the
present Master Coun cillor ,
Duane Will ; past president lla
Darnell of Pomeroy, and the
District 11 and Meigs Chapter
swee theart, Sherry King.
Two selec ti ons from the
Sound of Music by Sherry King
were a part of the entertai nment. Dad Adv isor
Bi ble School. Meat, drink and
dessert will be furnished by the
sc hool and members are to
bring covered dish vegelable
or salad.
MONDAY
GAH S BAND BOOSTERS
general mee ting, 7:30 p.m.,
band room . All Cadet and
Senior members' parents are
ur ged to at!A!nd.

Robert King ann ounced some
of the events of the State
Conclave held at Akron when
PMC Quickel received a state
appointment of Seventh
Preceptor and Mrs. Quickel
was appointed 11th District
represe ntative of th e Ohio
State Federation of Mothers
Clubs. Burt Moshi er of
Gallipolis, a member of the
Meigs Chapter, placed second
in the chess competition held at
the State-Conclave.
Mrs. Quickel, president of
the Mothers Club, thanked the
chapter for the honor and
appreciation shown the club.
A humorous skit presented
by Wm . Quickel and Herman
Carson, Sr ., Advisory council
me mber , concl uded the
program.
Table grate was given by
Jon Bunce, Jr ., Coun cilor of the
Chapter, who also gave the
Ohio State Rose Talk.
Mrs. Quickel had charge of
table decorations and favors
using color scheme or hot pink
and lavender.
Present were Mrs . Lena
Bunce , Mrs. Lawre nce
Stewart, Mr . and Mrs. William
King and Kevin, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Chesher, Paul Darnell ,
Charles Yost, Delmar Quickel,
Mrs . Denzil McCoy , Mrs.
Oli ver Taylor and Mrs. Ruby

Vaughan and family.
DeMolay se rvin g were
Herman Carson, Jr. , Quickel,
Bunce, Tim King, Paul Darnell, Jr., David Mattox, David
McCoy , Oliver Taylor, Burt
Moshier, Ken Gilkey, Herbert
Carson and Don Vaughan.

Eddy 's Scheduk
POMEROY - Mr. Eddy
Educator's Schedule lor Meigs
County, September 5-.!1 :
Tuesday - Pearl Street, 911 : 30 ; Middlepor t Library ,
12:1:;.12:45; Rutland , 7:45-.!1: 15.
Wednesday- WMPO, 7:30-8.
Thursday - Salem Center,
5:45-6 ; Hysell Run, 6:3().7:30;
Hyland Church, 8-8 : IS.
Friday _ Central ; 9-10; s.
3rd Avenue, 1().11 :30; Racine
Whi stle Stop, 12 :30-12: 45;
Grea t Bend, 2-2 :30; Portland,
3-3:30; Stiversvill e, 4-5 ;
Whistle Stop , 5:15-5:30;
Rizer 's, !H: :30; Syracuse P.O. ,
6:45-7:15; Minersville (Arms),
7:45-8 :15.

MASON - Three Wahama White
Falcon football team members, Vernon
Roush, Jr ., Randy Grinstead and Don
Machlr, were reported In satisfactory
condition at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy Saturday.
Three 17 year-old veteran gridders
were taken to the hospital Friday
afternoon by Mason and New Haven
Emergency Squadmen reportedly
suffering from heat exhaustion.
The Mason squad Wlit was also
summoned Friday evening for 11
months-old Christopher Lee, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Lee, New Haven,
after the chlld had eaten part of a bar of
deodorant. The youngster was taken to
Hol2er Medical Center by squadamen.

I

PH. 992-3629

so me wha t nonpoli t i c al November. Down below they compulsive leftward lurch of
leade rs hip was not gladl y have an authentic, nostalgic tne national Democ ratic
suffered by the Republican fellow feeling with one-time party."
regula~s, Mr. Nixon 's insistent Democratic leaders now
In what has gone on here
mvotatoons to the Democrats scorned by the McGovernite. A some have seen a long-term
have the approval of every Harry Truman and a Barry purpose to reorganize the
wing of the G.O.P.
• Goldwater,_p o flla\!llr th~gull whP.le ~JiHfi!L.s11;u~lliJ:.!!.u:lnto
,,~ .. Thelli.eentrai:: 1 Wldti~~-,. Uof !., 10H is..fide~~tHBt"'~~{g~;.. hem, ll ~~8' 1fneyt'\ pii-lles. 1fl18"1:i .tpo
course, Is vote-catching; but are in hwnan terrlls far closer large a notion. The old twothe thing really d?"s go deeper than''either could be, in those party system will rise again.
than that. Republicans runntng terms, to a George McGovern. The meaning of the Republican
from Nelson Rockefeller on the
Thus,
an
os tens ible thrus t Is more nearly to
left to Barry Gold~ater oh the Republican convention pays promote its salvation than its
rtght are hterally m terror at tribute to past Democratic destruction.
any thought of a McGovern Presidents whose names
For those kicked out of the
victory in November ·
evoked no cheers, no affection, Democratic party in July by
They feel thetr deepest no remembran ce from harsh young zealots will return
. values to be under challenge. McGovern forces bent only in due course to their old
To . the~: Mcao~ern's "new upon burying the past without house. And If McGovern ts
pohbcs IS a ge~~ne _ threat to reading even the funerallnes . heavil y · defea ted ,
the
Thus,
an
ostensibly restoration will come sooner
a responSible pohl!csotseUand
not solely to thetr own surv1val. Republican platform at the rather than later. The pieces
They do not _go out of their very outset appeals to "our will have to be picked up by
way to pra1se such old troubled fr iends of other somebody; and it so happellll
Democrats as Harry Truman political affiliations " _ and that this will require political ·
and Lyndon Johnson onl y spedically of the Democratic know-how - the know-how of
because they seek old "affiliation" - "who will not th e now-excommunicated proe,
Democratic
help
lor and cannot take part In the the responsibles.

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MEIGS
INN
POMEROY, OHIO

bulk of its elected leaders and
an incalculable num ber of its
tradition-minded rank and file.
The Republicans, who have
no sli ghtest temptation to
regard professionalism in the
profession of politics as evil or
outdated, have rewritten
McGovern's own slogan and
shouted it back at him. "Cone
home, America !" he cried out
here in July. " Come over to us,
you regular Democrats!" The
Republica ns have retorted in
stentorian calls in August.
So the Nixon people - and, of
co urse, this has bee n his
convention gavel to gavel, as
some of the TV fe llows like to
say - are opening wide arms
and their party to displaced
Democrats in a way not see n
before in this country. The
Eisenhowerites did something
similar in 1952 and 1956; but the
difference between the two
eras is immense.
Where Dwight Eisenhower's

•
••
GO VISITING
DARWIN - M r. and Mrs. •
Elmer Bailey of Darwin visited •
recently in Charleston, W. Va. •
with their sister and brother- •
in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll •
Teaford.
•••
••
•

The New

4t

Re&lt;,dy to go to ba t wi l h striped-out
•

•• Rea l champions, whatever
••• your game.
•••
••

10 P.M. • 2 A.M.
The Amber Lounge Opens

••
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••

Have a ball in big league sport lookS.

•• . jea ns and palched-o n body shirls.

SATURDAY NIGHT
11:00 A.M.

LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINN&amp;RS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet Luncheon 11 : 00 to 1: 30, M onday thru Salurday)

:

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW. MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
.PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION
'

----.,_.j~'

Pollution
(Continued. (rom Page 1)
of Health, Division of Engineeruig revised
home sewage disposal regulall..;, and a
plan f?r the implementation · of the
regulattons. These regulations shall take
mto consideration the so'il characteristics
of the areas in question ·and shall be
des1gned to preclude discharge into waters
of the state;
· That ,the Meigs County Commissioners
shall submit lor approval· by the Ohio
. Department of Health, subdivision
regulations that will require sewerage and
wastewater ·treament facilities that will
attain applicable water quality starictarda,
and that the procedure lor the county
commissioners accepting ownership and
operation of central wastewater treatment
facllities shall also be submitted lor ap.
proval by the Ohio Department of Health ·
That the Meigs County Commissioner~
shall submit a copy of a resolution
establishing a building pennit and Jn.
spection procedure and a plan for imple~enUng said procedures, and That the
Me1gs County Health Department and
Meigs County Commissioners submit
reports as to compliance with the above
orders applicable on each July 1, and
January I, until such time as conununity
sewerage and wastewater treatment
facilities are provided.

Republicanism Muted at Miami to Draw Dissident Democrats
By WILLIAM S. WHITE
MIAMI BEACH - Only in
the most literal sense was the
re cent gathering here th e
Republican National Convention. By direction from the
top - from President Nixon
himsell
the
word
"Republican" has been muted
here and Indeed used only

II - The Tlmea Sentinel, Sallday, Alii!- 11, 1872

.i

....

THE SHOE 101

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•
Where Shoes Are Sensibly Priced :

.

N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Ohio :
'

f ••• f t • • • • • • • • • • I • t ••• t ••• f • • f • f I f f f f f • • f • • • • • • • • I

•

I •

Can We
Really Not Care?
.
,

(Continued from Page 1)
setting a table. ll'oprobablethat IOJile day they could set 1118"1 :.ablea, wash
diahel, make bedlu pollible employment. More important, they ha.ve had
restored to them human dignity liJid decency. Like the rest of us they go
throo&amp;h thliJ U!e juJt cmce. Tiley cBd not choo11e to be mentally retarded..They
would limply Uke to have the chance to be a h1D118o being with the civil arK!
human rlghta most of us enjoy. Some are lea~ to talk, Many 100re will,
unless tile programa have to be stopped because Ollack of lunda. These same
·children were caiiad ''untouchable." the "le!Wvers," and were hidden away
to rot on urine drenched cement floors where the public could not see.
"Prospel'OWI Ohio baa felt the disgrace of ranking at the bottom of states
in providing any kind of care lor their retarded. Can we afl~)o rank near
the bottom of states ID the rate we tax ourselves? Can It be that we; the
citlzelll of Ohio, really DO NOT CARE???"

Co•Chairmen Appointed
PT. PLEASANT - Five co·
chairmen of the Mason County
Republican Executive Committee have
been appointed and a committeeman
vacancy was filled by members of.this
group in a meeting Friday night.
Co-Chairmen to work actively with
Chairman John Musgrave in the
committee were named to represent
several areas of the county.
Dayton Raynes will represent the
bend area, Basil Robinson, south of
Kanawha River; Sidney Boggess,
Routes 2 1111d 87 vicinity; Robert G.
Butcher, Point Pleasant and Charles
Burdette, Leon.
A vacancy in a committee post from
Robinson District was filled by the
appointment of Reid Doolittle. This was
formerly held by Clifford Carder who
did not seek reelection.
Several persons were in attendance
and Included some of the COWity's GOP
candidates. Among these were Michael
Shaw, seeking a seat in the House of
Delegates, Don Kingery, Prosecuting
Attorney; Bill Rardin Jr. County
Commissioner ; Elvin E. " Pete"
Wedge, Sheriff ; Orville " Buck"
Sturgeon, Assessor.
The meeting was also highlighted
with planning of forthcoming events
with times and places to be announced
later.
Marguerete Engel, president of the
Mason County Republlcan Women's
Organization and Damon Morgan Jr.,

president of the Teenage Republicans
gave organization reports.
Barbara Minton, also took an active
part in the meeting in behalf of
candidates.
Refreshments were furn ished by
candidates to those attending.

Six Arrested
PT . PLEASANT - Six persons, all
charged with intoxication, were
arrested by state police within the past
24 hours and bookings were made at the
Mason County jail.
These include : Carl Blain, 22,
Henderson ; JoAnn McDonald, 37,
Ravenswood ; Wetzel Stickler, Point
Pleasant ; Eli H. Siders, Henderson;
William Robinson , Pliny; Harry Clay
Simpkins, 24, 112 Walnut Street, Point
Pleasant.

MIDDLEPORT - Gloria
Buck Wallace left ColwnbUB
last Tuesday by plane for
"'K~'I'ema w~e
0 ~ti!nJiJilnCI ~

!Jbe '!!'Ill

'lJr"the' 1Ur
• 'tel-national Miss Charm
·Pageant. She will also attend a
board of directors meeting of
Miss Charm INC.
Two girls from the area won
Miss Charm of Ohio titles lut
were unable to participate In
the International pageant,
although they · quaUiled. They
were Tammy Ei~er. who Ia
Mtsa Charm lor age 7 to 9, and
Jane Stowers who ts Mtsa
Charm for age 14 to 18. Mtsa

POMEROY - Joyce Melanie
Hall, 21, Route 4 Pomeroy, is
listed in satisfactory condition
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday morning with
lacerations below the left knee
and right elbow she suffered' in
a one-&lt;:ar accident at 12:20
a.m. Saturday.
According to ~ report by the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, Ralph Eugene
Hall, 26, Route 4 Pomeroy, w3s
traveling north on County Road
51n Bradbury three tenlhl of ..
mile north of the Route 7
Bypass at excessive speed
when he ran off the right side of
the highway, Into a three foot
wall, 50 feet alonA the wall,
8CI'OIII the highway, cNaed a
lour-foot deep ditch, and hit a
tree in the yard of Richard
Poulin, Route 1 Middleport!
The Pomeroy Emergency
squad answered the can to the
mishap and took both of the
Halls to the hospital. Mr. Hall
was treated lor lacerations and
releued. The car was
demoll.shed. He was cited lor
rec:klell opntlon.

CHESHIRE - C. C. Bradbury Local Superintendent of
the 'Kyger Creek Schools,
Saturday announced a free and
reduced price lunch policy for
the children of the district who
are unable to. pay the full price
of a meal.
Local school officials have
adopted the lamlly size and
income scale to assist them in
determining eligibility.

hardships may apply lor free
or reduced price lunches lor
. their children. They may do so
by filling out an application
form sent home In a letter to
parents. AdditiQnal copies are
· avaUable at the principal's
office in each school. Ap.
plications may be aubmitted
any time during the school
year. The form itself is simple
to complete and req~ests information needed to determine
Families falling within the economic need based on the
scale or those suffering from income, number of persons in
unusual circumstances or the family, number of children

In school and any unusual
circumstances or hardships
which affec t the family's
ability to pay lor school
lunches. The information
provided on the applicati on
will
be
confi dential and will be Used only
lor the purpose of determining
eligibility.
Under the provisions of the
. policy the principal of each
school will review applications
and determine eligibility. If a
parent is dissatisfied with the

By the Popular Success of Our Noon

12 Cases Tenninated in

Buffet . ..

Gallia Municipal Court

WEDDING CANCELED
The wedding of Debra Pauley and
Steve Nibert, scheduled lor September
2, has been canceled.

THERAPIST HIRED
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs,
Susan Lynn Evans, 12¥,
Maple Dr., Athens, has been
employed as a speech and
hearing therapist wJth the
,Gallla , Covnty Board of
Education.
Mrs. Evans, a native of
West Virglola, obtatDed her
B.S. and Masters Degree In
Speech Pathology from Ohio
University, She will be
working in all lour eoWIIy
school dlstrlels. Mrs. Evans
replaces Craig Parker.

AN EVENING

William Gerald Cox, 28,
Northup, $23 speed; Betty L.
Anderson, Rt . 1, Proctorville,
$18 failur e to display
registration ; Jack Owen, 46,
Rodney, $66 overload; Penny
L. Shirley 24, Gallipolis, $28left
of center ; George L. Triplett,
31, Rt. I, Crown City, $33
reckless operation; Regina S.
Johnson, 20, Gallipolis, $28 left
of center and William C.
Martin , 52, Jackson, $28
passing without the assured
clear distance.

GALLIPOLIS - Twelve
cases were terminated Friday
in Municipal Court.
Judge Robert S. Betz lined
James R. Myers, 22, Rt. 3, Oak
Hill , $173 and costs lor
overload. Leon Dana George,
47, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was lined $50
and costs lor intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were Ar·
nold Byrge, 36, address not .
listed, $28 intoxication ; Don A.
Jett, 34 , Pomeroy , $33
overload; David Thomas Day,
21, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $18 speed;

White Falcon Athletic Boosters will
meet Monday at 7:3ll p.m. at Wahama
High School. An important agenda has
been set up and all members are urged
to be present.

Stowers was also voted Miss taking part ill the event in
PersonaUty by aU the other Teus, Sle will perform a jazz
girts In the pageant.
dance dressed In a red sequin
T•.lllW .. ~!E~!n&amp;,W .; ~aa, \, .coalYIJI" ,wlth ,bellllotloml Me,
~spo~sorecf by New York will use props of devlls
Clothing Store ' ot Pomeroy. pitchforks, and background of
Jane Stowers waollpoll80red by imitation lire. Susan was also a
Grovers Studio, Neal• In· talent winner in Ohio's Our
surance Agency, and Central Utile Misa Pageant earlier th1s
Soya of Gallipolis.
year.
Ten-yeat old Suzan Schlmph
Gloria and Susan will return
of Newark, winner of Miss to Ohio from Texas Sunday
O!arm lor 10 to 13 will be evening.

Two Injured
In Accident

Lunch Policy is Announced

BOOSTERS TO MEET

Otarm Pageant on in Texas

'' ruling of the local olflcLW he
may make a request either
orally or in writing for a
hearing to appeal the decision.
· Mr. Bradbury has been
designated as the Hearing
Official. Hearing procedures
are oullined in the policy.
The policy also provides that
there will be no identification
of or discrimination against
any student unable to pay the
·full cost of a lunch.
Acomplete copy of the policy
is on file in each school and In
the ollice of the loca l
superintendent where it may
be reviewed by any Interested
person .

No One is Injured
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
injured in three traffic accidents investigated Friday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 3:45
p.m. on Rt. 7, four miles south
of Rt. 218 where Leslie T.
Luca s, 37, Lucasville, lost
control of his car which ran off
the right side of the hi ghway
striking a guardrail. There was
moderate damage to his car.
No charge was filed.
Billy W. Lynch, 40, Bell, W.
Va ., was cited lor failure to
stop within the assured clear
distance following a traffic
accidental 4:30p.m. on Rt. 7 at

BUFFn

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
s to 9: 30--52.50 all you can eat , (or A I a Car t e).

Dri nks and

Menu
Choice

Wide

Tiny 's Supermarket.
OffiCers said Lynch's car
struck the rear of an auto
operated by Walter 0 . Muncy,
52, Bell, W. Va . Again,
moderate damage resulted.
The third accident occurred
on Rt. 7, one and lour tenths
miles south of Cheshire where
gravel and concrete came from
the hopper of a cement mixer
Y'uck driven by Kenneth A.
Brown , 19, Galllpolis , and
struck cars driven by Harold
W. Brown, 60, Albany, Ohio,
and Rita B. Buckley, 47, of Rt.
I, Cheshire. Ken Brown was
cited to Municipal Court on a
charge of insecure load.

Dessert Extra.

Order ou r r egular m enu ev er y night 5 to 10.

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4 lO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
You'll be happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629

POMEROY

Carolyn Sue Haky Will be Wed
MIDDLEPORT- Mrs. WIUlam Board, Middleport, is announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of her
daughter, Carolyn SUe Haley, Middleport, to Ronald M. Young,
Racine,80ll of Mr. andMrs.JohnYOWIS, Rt.1, Racine.
The wedding will take place Sablrday, October 7, at the
Nuarene O!urch in Middleport. An open church wedding will be
observed.

17 Fined iri Court

POMEROY - Seventeen
· defendants were lined and six
others forfeited bonds in Judge
Frank Porter's Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Friday.
.Fined were Fred J. Arnett,
New Matamoras; Forrest R.
Barnett, Tvppers Plains;
Julius Nalipa, Poland ;
Raymond ' Gooch, Gallipolis;
Eula M. Rodgers, Erie, Pa.;
Aaron R. Turner, HWitington,
W. Va.; Schuyler F. Emmett,
St. Clairsville, and James C.
Townsend,
Belpre , all
speeding, all $10 and costs ;
Mildred L. mevlns, Route 3
. Pomeroy, no operator's
license, $15 and coeta; Bernice
L. SWan, IIAlllte 2 Pomeroy,
expired driver's license, $10
and costs; James W. Price,
Huntington, W. Va., paulng In
a curve (pleaded not guilty,
found guilty), costs only; Fred
L. Miller, Route 2 Racine,
driving while Intoxicated, $150
and coeta, three days confinement, and all months
license suspension; Charles F.
DAMAGE LIGHT
Kim, Tuppers Plallll. failure to
GALLIPOtiS - Damage yield \2 roadway, $10 and
was estimated at $251n a lire at costs; Richard Maynard,
4:40p.m. Friday at the mobile Wilkesville, defective muffler,
home rented by Dorothy
Clonch, 1626 Chatham Ave.
Fire Chief James A. Northup
uld the blaze was cauaed by an
electrical short In a fan which
RECEIPTS IN
cauaed !llll&lt;lke to enter the
POMEROY - Melg.s CoWity
' trailer owned by Malcolm Court rec:elpta lor the months
OrebeUIIh. Four men answered of July totaled $3,31~.25 acthe 98th alann of the year.
cordlnl to Betty llollltetter,
clerk. Receipts were dilbaraed
aa follows: finlll to alate,~
U,040.03; feea to aberill,
IJONS TO MEET
POMEROY - The Pmneroy ~.50; nnea and CGeta to
fund
• Middleport UON Club wiU covnty • general
t
hold a dlrecton' meellril at ~ $1,282.44; law library fund,
p.m. Mlllda7, AIIIUIUI. at IIIII tNI-N; auto license and 111
fund, ..1.74,
C.1nhla 0.. Co. aiiJot,
~

ATTEND FUNERAL
MIDDLEPORT - Relatives
attending th~ funeral of the late
Dale Swift which was held
Friday at Rawlings Coats
Funeral Home with burial in
Hebbardsville cemetery were :
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Clark and
Mrs . Larry Richards, all of
New Albany; Mr . and Mrs .
Dwight Gaskill of Cuyahoga
Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Byron
Gaskill of Munroe Falls ; Mr .
and Mrs. Charles McAfee, Sr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
McAfee, Jr. of Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Swill, Jerry, Vickie,
Michael and Randy of
Bellaire; Mr. and Mrs. Roland
Swift, David, Mary and
Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Swift, Joe, Danny, Bruce and
Rhonda of Shadyside; Mr. and
Mrs. William Swift, Brad and
Cynthia of Bridgeport ; Mr . and
Mrs . Harold Hinkle of
Chesapeake .

$5 and costs; Gerold Taylor,
Route Wellston, 1115eC111'e load,
$5, costs; Donald R. Bamhart, Route 1 Reedsville,
failure to transfer registration,
costs only, and Stephen D.
Brooks, Albany, no operator's
license, $10 and costs.
Forfeiting bonda were Roger
D. Luikhart, Kirby, Ohio,
failure to yield; Herbert p;
Moore, Canton, 'speeding ;
Garnet Milliron, Gallipolis ;
Debra K. Hill, Rt. 2, Racine,
speeding, and John W. Harmon, Huntington, W. Va.,
passing at an intersection, all
Marriage Uceose
$27.50, and James M. Hood,
POMEROY Stanley
Founl!'in Valley, Calif., no Everett Starcher, 36, Ro11te 1
safety equipment, $17.50.
Middleport, dozer operator,
and Dorts Ann Priddy, 24,
Rutland RD 1; .Gary Paul
Mitch, 21, Pomeroy, unemMINOR ACCIDENT
ployed, and Sandra Lynn
GAUJPOUS - City pollee Wolfe , 17, Racine ; Lester
Investigated a minor backing
William Wise, 38, Middleport,
accidental 4:45p.m. Friday on drill PTD, and Betley Ann
Second Ave. at the A&amp;P Romines, 31, Route 1 Mid·
l"'rking lot. omcers said cars dleport ; Donald Lee Dailey,19,
driven by Elmer E. Caldwell, Route 1 Middleport, mechanic,
70, 1068 First Ave., and Terri and Kathy Eloi11e Matson 17
Ann Hall, 17, Bell, W. Va.,
Route 1 Rutland, stud~nt :
collided as both drivers were Timothy David Michael, 22:
backing from parking spaces. Route 2 Pomeroy, laborer, and
There was minor damage. No Patricia Ann Capehart, 22,
one was Injured or cited.
Rovte 4 Pomeroy.
.

SUSPECT JAILED
POMEROY - William
Klein, Vale St., Pomeroy, has
been arreSted by Pomeroy
Police Clue! Jed Webster on
charges of breaking and enterlng of Simon's Plck·A·Pair
ShQe Store on Pomeroy's West
Main St. 1everal days ago, An
undetermined amount of
money waa taken. Klein Ia
ladled In Meig.s County Jail.

LAD INJURED
POMEROY - The lour year
old 1011 of Mr; and Mra. Carl
Roach, Wright St., Pomeroy,
was taken by private vehicle to
the Veterans Memorial
. Hospital lor Injuries suffered
when he leU into a 10 fool hole
onto cement at home. The child
111flered laceratiilna. The hole
was being dug for the addition
of rooms on!I! the Roaches •

ma xw ei1r

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17 OLIVE ST.

OAUIPOLIS, OHIO

hou~~e .

I)

�,- ' tl '

12- '!be 11me&amp;-Sentlnel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 19'/2

.

.

'

ers Named ·As
PPHS Vice Principal
.

Safety
.Training
Offered

.

•

PORTSMOUTH - A Patient
Evacuation and fire control
training institute will be
conducted Thursday, SePt. 7, at
the Scioto Memorial Hospital
het~, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., conducted b~ ·Harcy Pate, Fire
$alety Specialist of Trenton,
Mich. ·
· Pate, nationally recognized,
has devoted many years to
planning and teaching life and
fire safety. He is exceptionally
well qualified 'to explain
hospital, nursing home, and
residence fire defense.
Actual demonstrations as to
practical methods of handling
fire, coordinating the handling
of fire and patients, and
methods of removal of patients
In an emergency.
The institute is offered in
response to requests from
employees of nursing homes
and hospitals throughout the
State of Ohio for knowledge on
safety measures in case of a
fire emergency.
This public service program
is sponsored by the Department of Education of the
Licensed Practical Nurse
Association of Ohio, Inc., in
cooperation with Portsmouth
Fire Deparlment and Scioto
Memorial Hospital - informally conducted in an effort
to stimulate greater fire
defense In the community. It is
open to the general public.
Advance registration is
requested by contacting LPNAO, 1310 St. Paris Road.
Springfield, Ohio 45504 ,
telephone m-8920. Fee of $6
includes the luncheon.
President of the local
division of LPNAO is Ihla Fae
Kimes, P. 0. Box 490, Athens .
Ohio 45701.

participate in a sport durjng his junior
levy" and asked that ideas be pooled
or senior year and decides to drop from
and propOsals be.made to 'the board.
the sport for reasons other than
It was Eshenaur's contenilon that the'
medical or hardship cases must "sit
levy
should be used for salaries and a
out" one calendar year from the date ·he
bond
.for buildin2 purooses:·
quits befor~ . being permitted to
. Still in further actions the bo.ard;
participate in any sport:
-In teacher transfers, Faye Smith
10. Any boy dropped from an sport for
was moVed from Mt. Flower to Leon,
disciplinary reasons will not be allowed
Nancy Roll from Title .I travellilg ·
to participate in athletics for a period of
Resource Teacher to Central as Title I ·
a calendar year.
reading ResqW'Ce teacher and Jan
II. The merits of. each case will be
Haddox was transferred from Resource
discussed and decided by the Coaches
Teacher at Central Title I to Traveling
. and administration of Point Pleasant .
Resource Teacher( ESEA Tile I at Leon
. High School.
and Roosevelt.
"For .the health, safety, and ..welfare
-FranciS Casto was employed as
· OLD TIME STE~ WHEEL river bolts will be churning up the :-aten fl the Kariawha
of each individual, good morale, team
contract driver in the Elmwood area at
River in Charleston, W. Va., September 3 when .the Second Annual Stern Wheel Regatta gets
spirit, and personal pride, we have
the same salary as last year.
underway.·
A Iota! of 17 paddle wheel powered craft will be taking part in this year'f event adopteq the foregoing · COde for our
-,Employed Ira Potts and Robert
which is the only riverboat race of its kind in tha United States. Festivities preceding the races
athletic ieams."
Lanz as regular bus drivers.
that day will include a water ski show starting at 1p.m. and the stern wheel boat parade.
Mr. Robert Keesee, Principal; Dick
-Employed substitute.bus drivers as
Ware, Athletic Director; J. J. Wedge,
. follows: Edison Mayes, Willia Joe
Coach; Russ Wood, Coach.
Grinstead, James F. Greene, Charlottie
Howard Lee Miller, Coach; Donald
Long, Wilma Harris, Delma Smith Jack
VanMeter, Coach; Larry Rhodes,
Simpkins,
Floyd Dennis Weaver.
"I hereby move that all students who
Coach.
-Employed substitute cooks as
are of the proper age and with the
After the proposed code was studied
·follows: Emma Jean Black, Norma
proper academic qualifications in the
briefly, Harry Siders made a motion
Riggs, Dorothy F. Jones, Anna F.
Mason County School System be
that
the
board
study
it
and
table
action
Roush, Betty Lou .Harris, Lallie
eligible to participate in any athletic
until'later.
This:
motion
passed
in
a
4-1
CHARLESTON, W. Va. - Annual Stern Wheel Regatta year an estimated 50,000 people
Stewart, Viola McDade, Beatrice
activity and to go out for any sport
vote
with
Bill
Withers
dissenting.
Board
The
drama and excitement of gets underway on the Kanawha watched the race.
Weaver,
.
~elen
Pearson,
Beryle
except that if a student once goes out
president,
Ted
Stevens,
Charles
the
oldtime
river steamboat River.
Redman,
Crystal
Thomas,
Katherine
The event will start at I p.m.
for a particular sport and quits he will
Eshenaur
and
Fields
favored
Siders'
races
will
be
recreated
here
Hudson, Kathryn Dabney, Virginia
A total of 17 paddle wheel that day with a water ski show
not be allowed to go out for the same
motion.
If
the
board
accepts
this
September
3
when
the
Second
Thomas,
Elfrieda
Lucas,
Evelyn
powered
river boats from four on the river near the race finish
sport in the same school year, having
proposal
it
is
to
be
signed
by
parents
Jewell,
Jewell
Potts,
Esther
Andrews,
states will be converging here line. At 1:30 p.m. all of the
quit once, without the Coach's consent.
and players and returned to the school.
Eulah Redman, Barbara Oliver, Seal
for the event which will also stern wheel boats will parIt Is the intention and purpose of this
Teacher
Employment
on
Cochran, Esther Bland, Mae McCarty.
feature a water skiing show, ticipate in the grand parade up
motion to set a policy that prohibits
recommendation of Supt. Withen was
-Employed Richie Neal as
the grand boat parade, band the river to the race starting
barrinR of any student from
made as follows: Elaine Swisher,
maintenance as needed at $2.15 per
participation in any. sport merely
concerts and a fireworks point. At 2:30 p.m. the races
hour.
teacher at Wahama High School;
display.
because he may have quit one sport
will commence. At 7:30 p.m.
Albert
Wilcox,
teacher
.at
Wahama,
to
-Employed
cooks
as
follows
:
during a school year or because he may
"This is the only river boat there wilt be two band concerts
Mary :Jrd, Mason, $1.71 per hoW';
replace David Arrilt ·.10 mos.; Wanda
not have gone out for a particular
race of its kind in the entire on the levee at the race finish
Peggy Reitmire at Hartford, $1.71 per
Ray as teacher at Ordnance
sport."
United Stales," said West line and at 9 p.m. there will be
hOW'.
Elementary
•
10
mos.;
Sheila
Ringhiser
Virginia Department of a fireworks display. The event
It appeared clear that Supt. Charles
as
teacher
at
Point
Pleasant
Junior
Employed
Pauline
Bowers,
as
Title
Commerce
Commissioner is sponsored by the City of
Withers and assistant Supt. Charles
I
Teacher
aide
iit
Arbuckle,
Johnetta
High
School
10
mos.;
Betty
Crouae
as
Lysander
L.
Dudley,
Sr.
Charleson.
Chambers were against Field's motion
Oldaker
as
Title
I.
teacher
aide
at
teacher
at
MI.
Flower
•
10
mos.
The old stern wheel boats
There will be two racing
and neither would recommend it, but
Letart;
Judy
Mayes,
Kindergarten
Delores.
Barnett
as
teacher
at
Point
heats
that
Sunday
before
the
that
will be taking part in the
instead also submitted a prepared code
PORTSMOUTH, England
Pleasant
Junior
High
.
10
mos.;
Aide
at
Hannan;
Carolyn
Cook,
Point
to cover sports at Point Pleasant High
(UPI)-Sir
Francis final top boats are selected to races represent a rapidly
Pleasant
Junior
High.
Patricia
Graham
as
teacher
at
MI.
School.
Chichester. the old man who run in the last prize winning disappearing bit of Americana
Accepted
resignations
as
follows:
Olive
•
10
mos.;
Claude
&amp;drlquez
as
Comments·were made right and left
battled the seas and sailed race. The race cow-se covers a since by modern standsrds this
David
L.
Arritt,
teacher
at
Wahama
;
teacher
at
Central
•
Iii
mos.;
Barbara
by the group as Fields attempled to get
alone around the world, died two mile section of the type of river propulsion is
Maria
Arritt,
teacher
at
Wahama;
for
Girls
Handicapped
Butcher
a second for his motion, which finally
Saturday at the Royal Naval Kanawha River between the almost obsolete. Most paddle
Sharon
Hatfield,
guidance
at
Hannan
Program
in
Homemakipg
at
Vocational.
South Side and Kanawha City ·wheel craft have given way to
died for lack of lt. Field's opening
Hospital. He was 70.
High;
Lola
Hay&lt;s,
Title
I
teacher
aide
Cente.;
·
'
\Flossie
Allensworth
as
.
CARR NEW CHIEF
comment was "I think all students
· Chichester had suffered from Bridges in Charleston . Last the more powerful propellor
at
Arbuckle;
Marilyn
Kinnaird, County
substitute
teacher
at
Broad
Run
driven
boats.
MINNEAPOLIS
(UP! )
should be eligible... " Supt. Withers
a blood disease which ended his
Kindergarten.
Aide
at
Hannan;
Nancy
Sultivan,
Title
I
·number
of
the
boats
A
Patrick
E.
Carr,
an
attorney
reiterated with "I think you're taking
last yacht race three months
Music
Coordinator,
Clyde
Sullivan,
Connie
Jordan
(previously
scheduled to race are still used from Metaire, La., was elected
all the authority away from the
ago and hospitalized him Aug.
Electoral College
employed)
aiNew
Haven
Elementary;
teacher
at
PPJr.H.,
Linda
Ansalene,
in
river traffic by the com- Friday commander.Jno(:hief of
coach ... " He said he was opposing the
Members of the Electoral
18. A hospital announcement
Judith
Gibson
as
Title
I
Music
teacher
at
Ordnance;
Sharon
Beaver,
motion "because I feel like you would
earlier Saturday said he had College meet on the Monday panies that own them however the Veterans of Foreign War~.
Title I Aide at PPJr .H.
Coordinator, 10 mos. Salary based on
following the second Wednes- the majority of them have beta In ht. " ..,ech/ he c:!'llkililcl
be teaching the ·boys to .learn to be
certification and experience plus
-Granted leaves of absence to the developed pneumonia.
day
in December in a presi· taken out of this type of "decaying • morality and
qultten."
.
"Sir Francis Chichester died dential
election year and revenue service and converted patriotism" and called for 'a
$1200.00
excess.
(replaces
Nancy
following:
Annabel
Matheny,
teacher
It was &lt;l!arnbers' opinion that the
peacefully
at
2:30
·
p.m.
this
vote
as
a
unit for their can- in to pleasure craft.
Sullivan); Nancy Hasenb&amp;Ig as 'Speclal
at Leon; Patricia Bennett. teacher at
strong military posture.
boys should discipline themselves
afternoon
in
the
presence
of
didate.
Education teacher at Mason 101; mos;
PPHS; Mary Sisk, cook at Mason;
.. .if a boy chooses to accept
Ricky Northup as teacher at Point
James Watterson, bus driver; Winnie Lady Chichester and his son,
responsibility, let's make him hold to
Pleasant Junior High School. 10 mos;
McKenzie, teacher at New Haven; Mr. Giles Chichester" the
it. ..if he chooses to go out he should be
Sibyl H. Harouff as Nurse Aide R.N.
Carol W. Higginbotham, custodian at hospital announcement said.
man enough to face it" Qlambers
Sir Francis became world
Instructor at the Mason County
Central, Margaret Johnson, teacher at
added.
famous
in 1967 when he sailed
Vocational Center (employment
Vocational Center.
Then the administrators distributed ,
around the world alone in his S7
subject to final approval by the State
to members of the board their
Department of Education.) 10 mos;
-Awarded contract to Standard for -foot ketch, the Gypsy Moth
recommendation of a proposal
Don R. Spriegel, teacher at Point
pest control and another to Arab for IV. Following that leal he was
prepared by the coaching staff at Point
knighted by Queen Elizabeth.
Pleasant High School.
termite control.
Pleasant High School regarding only
.
Substitute Teachers:
-Accepted the West Virginia He would have been 71 on Sept.
the one school which says:
Elementary
and
Secondary . Department of Education policy 17.
Early this year, Sir Francis
"The
coaching
staff
and
Substitutes: Mrs . Eunice Beller; Mrs.
concerning eligibility determination for
began
planning for the last
administration at Point Pleasant High
children free and reduced_price school
Eunice Hesson, Mrs. Carol . Martin;
grand
Ding,
the Singlehanded
School realize that athletics are a very
Mrs. Velma Mueller, Mr . Wilbur
meals.
Important part of the school's overall
Plants; Rev. C. L. FTum.
!,hat Transatlantic Solo Race, the
-Heard Supt. Withers report
.
first of which be had belped
program. You, as a member of an
Secondary Substitutes: Mrs. Sharon
bids for a library addition at Waharna organize 12 years before. He
athletic team. represent the whole
Bush, Mrs. Anna Harreld, Mr. Joseph
are not in yet.
·
school and community. Your conduct,
Hughes, Mr. Leon Putz, Mrs. Frances
- Accepted City Insurance bid for bus had wanted to carry out his
in the school and away from it, Is a
Thomas, Mr. Stan Craig, Mrs. Cheryl
insurance which is $4,255 for 10 months. own pledge: "! don't want to
reflection on the entire school and the
Blankenship, William Bahr.
'·
-Granted contracts for trash and live too long. I just want to
community.
garbage pick ups. This goes to A. 0 . enjoy the years that are left."
Elementary Subsititutes; Mrs. Lottie
But this time, his luck ran
"Because of our strong feeling on tl•e
·Powers for schools north of the
Barnette, Mrs. Grace S. Brown, Mrs.
out.
The blood disease had
above, the Athletic Department and
Gretchen Carty, Mr. Horton Eckard,
Kanawha River for $450 per month to
Administration of Point Pleasant High
Mrs. Evelyn Jolly, Mrs. Ethel Grimm,
RW'al Sanitation for schools south of the already begun wracking his
lean frame. Shaky and anemic,
School has adopted a policy of action
Kanawha, for $142.00 per month.
Mrs. Janet Maggied, Mrs. Elizalieth
and dress for all athletic teams and
- Approved transportation requests he lett Plymouth June 17
Pullin, Mr. Richard Roush, Mr. L. D.
athletes representing Point Pleasant
Rutt, Mr. Campbell Stevens, Mr.
for Wahama High Football team and against the w~mings of his
High School.
Norville White, Deborah Louille North,
for Point Pleasant High's varsity and doctors.
Everything went wrong, His
"1. You are expected to be a
for MI. Olive Kindergarten.
junior varsity football teams.
gentleman at all times.
-Agreed to purchase floor tile for radio failed. Awould.!Je rescue
Three members of the Mason County
''Your hair must be well groomed and
covering in the Point Pleasant High ship snapped off most of his
Education Association were recognized
ketch's mizzenmast. He tried
neat, not to exceed a reasonable length
School cafeteria.
as a delegation and came forward to
for the purpose of the athlete's health
-Granted the superintendent to cure his intense pain with
ask for increased salary supplements
and welfare. Thls to be adjudged by the
permission to adve1 lise a public self -administered injections out of the next levy for teachers and
Coaching
Staff
and School
auction to sell surplus of busses no and became even more ill from
principals.
Administration.
longer required by the Transportation the effects .
Sarah Buffington was spokesman for
Chichester finally had to giye
3. Sideburns should be no longer than
Department and a surplus of
the group which was also comprised of
the bottom of the ear and no wider than
maintenance vehicles no longer up."! have been ill," he said in
Elaine Rouse and Suzanne Piercy.
a flashed message to a Rceyal
I inch.
needed.
In making the request for a $700
4. You should be personally well
Supt. Withers reported that seven Air Force rescue craft.
across the board increase for all
The way he did many things
groomed and your clothing should be
new buses have arrived and will be
ieachers, plus a S20 increment lor
best
was alone. "I know now I
clean.
ready for the opening of school.
experience, Mrs. Buffington said
don
'I
do things nearly so well
S. Shirts should be buttoned and shirt
-Gave permission for a telephone
"we've been loosing ground
with other people," he wrote
tails tuclted in.
extension at Hannan Elementary.
gradually."
late
in his life. "II makes me
6. You must wtar socks and shoes.
- -Approved participation in the
She cited salaries in surrounding
ESEA Title I Part C in the· amount of think I was cut out for solo jobs,
counties and said at one time Mason
7. Misconduct in school or at schooland any atte'mpt to diverge
.
$6,571.
County ranked eighth in the state on its
sponsored activities, which leads to
- At the suggestion of Fields . from this lot only makes me
pay scale,butls now·in 21st place.Cost
suspension from school, shall lead to
discussed wrestlirig for w&amp;biuna High half a person."
sheets for the proposed salary
suspension from an athletic team.
Chichester had a long history
and in the conversation Supt. Withers
supplements were distributed to the
8. Smoking or drinking shall result In
of
lone ventures. As a youth he
pointed ou that Mr. Wilcox. has had
board. Stevens told the delegation the
suspension from athletics.
experience in this field and will teach was a pilot and once tried to ·
board would take the request under
9. A boy may have his sophomore
wrestling at Wahama.
· break the London-to-8ydney ·
consideration.
year to decide ·whether he wants to
-Held a lengthy discussion on a solo flying record.
Supt. Withers said he has suggested
participate in athlet;cs. He may quit
Although well past the cutoff
proposed school for Henderson, but no
that all be given raises, this would
any sport and be ~ermitted to play
age
for combatants he volunaction was taken.
another.
include professional employes as well
teered
for flying duty in World
-Set the next meeting for Thursday.
as non-professional. He pointed out
"During his junior or ·senior year he
War II but was rejected as a
.• Sto;age Drawer
September 7 at 7:.30 p.m.
• Continuous aean Oven
methods to obtain "a good working
may choose any sports in which to
pilot because of poor eyesight.
He spent the war as a
• Plug Oul Surface Unils
• Apl)liance Receptacle
navigation officer.
STANDING FmM
A DIFFERENT TACK
Describing the solo trip that
•Clock &amp; Timer
•P~k Switch
' FI!i.MORE, Calif. (UP!) - perimeter but there haven't
VATICAN CITY (UPI)
CHARLESTON, W. Va . made his name famous, Sir
Flrefighten held the line on been any major runs."
The Vatican has again ordered (UPI) - Politicians normally Francis said: "I was very
California's worst brush fire of
Erratic north winds gusting priests, monks and nuns not to
devote news conferences to frightened." Wearing his longthe year Sa!W'day but feared to 30 miles caused a number of abandon or modify, their
public affairs. West Virginia's billed yachtman's cap, he told
Wind Could push flames further flare-ups in the 16,500-acre religious garments, Vatican Secretary
APPAlACHIAN POWER CO. JOINS YOU IN BRiNGING THIS .MESSAGE
of State John D, interviewers, "Salling up here
Into the mountain retreat of the brush fire in the LDs Padres sources said today. A letter Rockefeller IV took a slightly in the Atlantic you have no
rare California condors.
National Forest late Friday from the Department for
conception of what goes in
"We're playing It on a hour· with most of the activity near Religious Orders was sent to different tack Friday. He spent those southern waters. You
to-hour bull," said a U. S. the western boundary of the papal diplomats around the most of his news conference only' curvive down there with
Forest Service spokesman.· Sespe Condor Sanctuary. At world asking them to ensure talking a bout the fact that his good luck."
PHONE 675-1160
"We only have fire lines . least 350 acres of the refuge that the dress rules are kept, wife Sharon is expecting ·the
Saturday the old sailor's luck
312
6TH
ST.
couple •s third ~hlld in
around If miles of the 26-mlle was blackened.
the sources said.
ran out.
February.
BY JEAN WARNER
PT. PLEASANT - Point Pleasant
High School now has a vice-principal,
an athletic code for the same school is
being COJISidered, employment and
transfer of several teachers were made
all in a lengthy Board of Education
regular meeting Friday evening.
The administrative postal PPHS will
be held by Larry Sawyers who was
transferred from a teaching position at
Point Pleasant Junior High on a 101;
months basis. Sawyers also formerly
taught at Wahama.
Quite a lengthy discll&amp;'!ion ensued
when board member Ray Fields, just
before the meeting adjourned,
commented concerning the eligibility of ·
students to participate in sports.
~'ields apparently is not pleased with
the present procedure and asked that a
motion be adopted concerning
athletics. Immediately, he read a
prepared motion which said:

17 Paddle Wheelers to Race
In Kanawha Regatta Sept. 3.

Old Man
Of the
Sea Dies

1.1 - 'Die 'J'!meo Sel,lnei, Sunday, Aug, 21, 1~

•

Hospital

·enmg
New Unit Soon
•

Very Modern 5-Bed Area .
Grand Opening Set For '
PT. PLEASANT - Pleasant Valley
Hospital will unveil a new five-bed
electronically equipped Intensive Care·
Coronary Care unit with a grand
opening of the ultra-modern -depart·
menton Sunday, September 24.
This announcement was made
·Saturday ~y Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrator James L. Farley and
Board President G. A. Biggs. The date
lor holding a grand opening of the new
facility was set at a meeting of the
hospital board of trustees earlier
this week.
Residents of the area are cordially
invited to visit the new Intensive CareCoronary Care Unit on the grand
opening date, according
to
Administrator Farley. Guided tours
will be conducted from l-ll:30 p.m.
The unit will then officially be put into
operation on the following day,
Monday, September 25.
Hospital Administrator Farley
explained that "An Intensive Care·
Coronary .care uni_t is a separate
nursing unit within the hospital that is

specifically stalled, designed and
electronically equipped to treat cardiac
and other critically ill patients, with
highly skilled nursing
care
continuously provided and emergency
resuscitative treatment immediately
available.
Dr. Mark Cheng,Intermint is to and
chief of Medicine of the Hospital's
Medical Staff, pointed out that "the
purpose and objective of this type of
patient care is to provide thorough and
continuous observation of cardiac and
other critically ill patients in order to
promptly detect any complications or
abnormalities so that resusitative
treatm•nt can immediately be
installed."
Experience to date with similar unil5
in other parts of the nation has provided
excellent results.
"The community will be justly proud
of one of the most modem Intensive
Care-Coronary care units available
anywhere," said Mr. Farley.
Farley also related that · with the
opening of this unit, Pleasant Valley

' .(
lJ•

·~··

•

I

. ·ONLY

'2499.5.

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

r

'

CHECKS EQUIPMENT-Or. Mark Cheng, internist and chief of Pleasant Valley
Hospital medicine, inspects the electronic equipment that monitors the activity of a
patients in the new Intensive-Care-Coronary Care unit of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The new unit will be opened on September 25.

Hospital will be adding another "first"
since no hospital within West Virginia
can watch the modern physical design
and layout of such a department with
consideration being given to the needs .

of the patients for a quiet, tranquil
environment in private rootris
combined with visual nursing
surveilUance and electronic monitoring
equipment.

"

.
,.

'

'

NEW UNIT ROOM-Susan Pullin, R.N., who will head the nursing staff in the
new Intensive Care-Coronary Care Unit at Pleasant Valley Hospital when it opens in
September, poses inone of the now nearly complete rooms. Each of the private rooms
is electronically equipped with monitors to relay the electrical actibity of the patient's
heart to the central nurses• station on a small screen called on Oscilloscope. Each
private room is also equipped with piped-in-&lt;~xygen and suction, wall
sphygmanometer, stethoscope, nurse call system and modern over-the-bed lighting
designed for minor surgical cases, if needed.

Cottrill Family Loves Farm Life
fly JOHN COOPER
WSC District
(This is another in a series of

articles in which young people
who have chosen farming as
their career and who are
cooperators of the Western Suil
Conser\'alion Di strict

arc

honored. Full-time farmers up
to age 36, who own or share in
the fa rm business were ~hosen

lor these reports. The young
farm family featured in this
story is the Clair Lee Cottrill,
Jr. family of West Columbia.
Clair Lee Is now 3&amp; years old
but he did not become 3&amp; until
July of this year. Farmers who
\\-'ere not 36 on January 1 of this
year hnc been considered for

these stories. 1

WEST COLUMBIA - " I
wouldn't live in town again for
any lhing." sai d Beve rly
Crol lrill, wife of Clair Lee
Co!trill , Jr., during our in.
terview with this youn g farm

family . She continued, " I like it
especially because a farm is a
DISCUSSING PLANS-Clair Lee Cottrill, left, talking over plans with Judson Brake,
right, County Supervisor of Farmen Home Administration, for the construction of a manure
storage pit. The Cottrill family was chosen as the top Farmen Home Administration family in
West Virginia in 1960. (USDA.SCS photo.)

Curtis Family Reunion is Held
POMEROY - The sixty-fifth
annual Curtis reunion of the
descendants of Hoyt and Mary
Foster Curtis, was held at
Hoback Park at Heath, Ohio,
Sunday, August 20, with 83 in
attendance. Hosts were Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Curtis of
Granville and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Curtis of Heath.
Others attending were Mrs.
Mollie Pullins, Elmer Swank,
Billy and Sally, Mr. and Mrs.
E. P. Crispin, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bowman, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Wright, Brian and
Barry. Mr. and Mrs. Harold
DeWolf, Newark; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Griffith and Dav1d, and Donald
and Janet Curtis, Granville;
Mr. and Mrs. Kerm1t An·
derson, Caroline, David and
Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
Johnson and Earl and Roma
Thompson, Alexandria, Ohio;

Ina Sanford and Richard Hook,
Johnstown, Ohio.
Also Edith Curtis, Akron ;
Anita Curtis Raines, Dan and
Lori, Clinton; Mr. and Mrs.
John Newell, Scott an&lt;!_ Jeff,
and Keith Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Smith, Dennis and
Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. John K.
Hutchinson, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. David Seals, Myra J.
Grenier. Christopher Curtis,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Rathburn, Rusty and Diana,
Medway Ohio; Ricky Rathburn , Fairborn; Mr. · and
Mrs.
AI
Pooler
and
Julie, West Carrollton;
Mary Pierce, Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell and Sheila, Chester;
June Ashley, Keith and Heidi,
Racine; Virginia Reynolds and
Steve, Parkersburg; Caroline
Bissell, Brian, Mike, Royce
and Brent, Tuppers Plains, and

NEW SHIPMENT

KF332 FEATURES .

Firefighters Holding Line

'

' ,,

..'

Westinghouse

.

I

*CD rse

OXFORDS
..

e ALL COLORS .

e AU. SIZES

e MENS and BOYS

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
"Serving ·You Since 1936"

324 Second Ave.

.

Ollllpolls, 0.

Hazel Curtis, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Curtis and Sandra, Mr.
and Mrs. John Brewer, Reeds·
ville.

Family joins
Celebration
SALEM CENTER - It was a
gala day Aug. 15 for David
Carroll Jacks, Jr., son of Mr.
and Nrs. David C. Jacks, Sr.,
when great-grandparents,
grandparents, aunts and un·
cles helped him celebrate his
first birthday anniversary. The
party was hosted by his
parents at their home in Salem
Center.
Guest list included: Mrs.
Flora Barr of Rock Castle, W.
Va., Roscoe Hollon, of Chester;
Mr. and Mrs . Paul L. Mc·
Daniel, Sr ., and son, Paul Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Barr
and daug ter, Barbara Lee, of
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Clair
E. Jacks, Barbara and Linda
Jacks and Joe Jacks, of Salem
Center.
Adecors ted birthday cake in
red, white and blue
was topped with red
roses and the napkins had
the theme of TV's "Flintstone" family, ice cream,
potato chips, coffee, tea, and
milk were served ..
To lop off the entertainment,
pictures were taken, and David
had hili first visit to the Meigs
.County Fair and a rlde .on the ·
merry-go-round. Mr. and Mrs,
·Jacks wilt celebrate their
second wedding anniversary
Sept. 25.
.

EVEilYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD WAY
h

w1mderful place to

raise

children. When the kids are in
town for a while, it isn't long
un ti l they are ready tp come
home." She was speaking of
Timmy, age 14, and Roxan ne,
age 13.

Mrs. Kessinger
At Convention
POMEROY
Mrs.
Geraldine Kessinger of
Pomeroy has arrived in
Chicago to at~ nd the 52nd
Annual Convention of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
the world's largest Women's
Patriotic Organization.
' Mrs. Kessinger is one of the
more than 2,1100 delegates,
V!Ps and guests, who will
represent almost one million
members organized in 13,1100
local \Ulits in every state, the
District of Columbia and
overseas territories.

Perhaps the cause of the
children's interest in the farm
and their love for it is that they
are part of the farm operation.
Each of them owns a producing
cow and gels the profit from
her milk production. Timmy's
cow produced 14,483 pounds of
milk in 305 days with 628
pounds
butterfat
and
Roxann e's produced 12,029
pounds of milk and 423 pounds
butterfat in 274 ilays.
This family has won many
honors as a result of its .
outstanding progress m ',
farming. In 1966 when C!ali
was only 30 years old, their
farm was chosen as the top

taught me to enjoy work by
working along with me. He
never had to force me because
he knew how to make me want
to work."
He concluded by saying,
" Even though we haven 't
accomplished nearl y
as
many things as we would li ~e
to, I feel I'm where my Lord
wants me. Anyway, the Bible
says you don't judge a man by
the abundance oi his
possessions.''

COLUMBIA

conservation farm in· the

Western Soil Conservation
District and went ahead to
receive third place in the whole
GARDENING-Beverly Cottrill, left, and her daughter,
state in this conservation Roxanne, working with their trellis tomatoes in the home
farmer competition sponsored garden. (USDA..SCS photo) .
by Soil Conservation Oistricts
and West Virginia University.
In 1970 they were chosen as· acres and the installation of United Methodist Sunday
the top Farmers Home two watering troughs for their School. In high school he was
selected as the Star Farmer in
Administration farm family in cattle.
West Virginia for that year· Clair Lee was one of the first FFA. Beverly is a member of
They earned a crowning award dairy farmers in Mason County Heights UM Church where she
last year when they showed the to keep the milking herd in a teaches a Sunday School Class ,'
Reserve All American 2 year dry lot with loafing stalls. This is chairman of the culinary
old purebred Holstein heifer at method of cattle management arts department at the Mason
the All American show and sale involves not letting the cQws 'County Fair. She always helps
at Harrisburg, Pa.
out at all. They are kept on a with activities that require
AI the sale she sold for top concreted area and are led and adult presence or guidance
money. selling for more than milked on an area perhaps one- involving her children. Both
the heifer that was placed first. half acre in size. Feed is all children are members of
This same heifer placed first at brought to them. Green feed is Heights UM Church and Happy
several other showings, in the form of ensilage or green Hustlers 4-H Club. Timmy
including the West Virginia chop . Green chop consists of plays Pony League baseball,
State Fair at Lewisburg . such crops as corn, sudan was president of Pt. Pleasant
Fitting and showing diary grass, or perhaps other grasses Junior High School Student
Council last year and played
cattle is one -of 'their chief or legumes.
football
and basketball.
They regularly employ one
recreation activities. The
folowing in the
Roxanne,
whole family enjoys it. This man full-time . His chief duty is
yea r Roxanne showed the to do the miling and to keep the footsteps of her mother, is a
Grand Champion dairy cow barn and milking parlor clean. &lt;heerleader at P.P. Jr. High
while Timmy showed the Charles Weidlich has been with School and also on the
.r·
Reserve Champion heifer in them three years in th~ yearbook staff.
Clair
Lee
exhibits
the
the Junior Division at the capacity. Jn the past they have
dedication
and
humbleness
of
Mason County Fair.
used•another man about full·
The Cottrill farm consists of lime in the summer to help this family by saying, " I never
158 acres, all of which is .with the crops, however this reallY. pecided to farm, l just
bottomland. Conservation
.The activities of this family dec'1, d not to do anything else.
always enjoyed farming
practices which they have are many and varied . The farm l
even
as a very small kid. Dad
carried out include 18,575 feet is a l)lember of Dairy Herd
of tile drainage, crop residue Improvement Association
use on 81 acres, pasture and Artifi c ial Breeder~
hayiand planting on 37 acres, Cooperative, and Clair Lee Is a
minimum tillage on 53 acres. state director of ABC. He is ·
crop rotation system on 117 sup~rintendent of Heights

Wedding Bands

S tyle # 5978 Fo r Her . .. $42 50
Style # 5979 Fo r Him ... $39.5C

Style #5994 For Her ... $55.00
Style #5995 For Him., .$39".50

Style #5976 For Her , .$37.50
Styt e #5977 for Him .. $35.00

So

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TAWNEY
JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

Galllll')lis, Ohio

"!"

.
:es=eez&amp;!!EUQ

--

Boy Scout Program ·Will he

Explained in Two Meetings
HUNTINGTON
In formation and training
meetings to describe the lmproved Scouting program of
the Boy Scouts of America are
scheduled for September and
October, according to Tommy
Thomason, Training Chairman
of the Tri..State Area Council.
"Scouts who joined a troop
after September I will follow
the Improved advancement
program," Thomas said, "but
boys who were Scouts before
that date may continue with
the previous advancement plan
on· an optional basis until
December Jl, 1973."
Thomason explained,
however; that the Improved
Scouting program calls for new
directions in lbe role of a
Scoutmaster. the use of the

personal growth agreement for
Scouts, and the organization
and operation of the patrol,
troop, and the troop leaders'
coun cil.
The information meetings
for Scoutmasters, assistants,
and troop committee memlx.'l's
will he held in conjunction with
the f~ur district roundtables to
be held in September.
The orientat!on of key
council and district volunteers
will take place on Saturday,
September 30. Follow up
orientations will be held in
October In each of the lour
districts for other key district
Scouters.
"One of lhe exclling im·
provements for boys will be the
skill awards, Thomason said,

"which are designed to provide
earlier recognition , to provide
essential skills for everyday
living, for participating in
Scouting activities, and to give
Scouts options."
Thomason also explained
that it will be easier for a boy to
become a Scout, but that for all
progress awards from T•·n·
derfoot through Eagle the
Scout will be required to earn
merit badges.
"The merit badges are
designed to help a boy discover
his abilities and future hobbies
and vocations and to become
more proficien I in areas of
service and personal fitness .
They demand profiCiency and
may lead to luture adult in-

terests."

t~D

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

�,- ' tl '

12- '!be 11me&amp;-Sentlnel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 19'/2

.

.

'

ers Named ·As
PPHS Vice Principal
.

Safety
.Training
Offered

.

•

PORTSMOUTH - A Patient
Evacuation and fire control
training institute will be
conducted Thursday, SePt. 7, at
the Scioto Memorial Hospital
het~, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., conducted b~ ·Harcy Pate, Fire
$alety Specialist of Trenton,
Mich. ·
· Pate, nationally recognized,
has devoted many years to
planning and teaching life and
fire safety. He is exceptionally
well qualified 'to explain
hospital, nursing home, and
residence fire defense.
Actual demonstrations as to
practical methods of handling
fire, coordinating the handling
of fire and patients, and
methods of removal of patients
In an emergency.
The institute is offered in
response to requests from
employees of nursing homes
and hospitals throughout the
State of Ohio for knowledge on
safety measures in case of a
fire emergency.
This public service program
is sponsored by the Department of Education of the
Licensed Practical Nurse
Association of Ohio, Inc., in
cooperation with Portsmouth
Fire Deparlment and Scioto
Memorial Hospital - informally conducted in an effort
to stimulate greater fire
defense In the community. It is
open to the general public.
Advance registration is
requested by contacting LPNAO, 1310 St. Paris Road.
Springfield, Ohio 45504 ,
telephone m-8920. Fee of $6
includes the luncheon.
President of the local
division of LPNAO is Ihla Fae
Kimes, P. 0. Box 490, Athens .
Ohio 45701.

participate in a sport durjng his junior
levy" and asked that ideas be pooled
or senior year and decides to drop from
and propOsals be.made to 'the board.
the sport for reasons other than
It was Eshenaur's contenilon that the'
medical or hardship cases must "sit
levy
should be used for salaries and a
out" one calendar year from the date ·he
bond
.for buildin2 purooses:·
quits befor~ . being permitted to
. Still in further actions the bo.ard;
participate in any sport:
-In teacher transfers, Faye Smith
10. Any boy dropped from an sport for
was moVed from Mt. Flower to Leon,
disciplinary reasons will not be allowed
Nancy Roll from Title .I travellilg ·
to participate in athletics for a period of
Resource Teacher to Central as Title I ·
a calendar year.
reading ResqW'Ce teacher and Jan
II. The merits of. each case will be
Haddox was transferred from Resource
discussed and decided by the Coaches
Teacher at Central Title I to Traveling
. and administration of Point Pleasant .
Resource Teacher( ESEA Tile I at Leon
. High School.
and Roosevelt.
"For .the health, safety, and ..welfare
-FranciS Casto was employed as
· OLD TIME STE~ WHEEL river bolts will be churning up the :-aten fl the Kariawha
of each individual, good morale, team
contract driver in the Elmwood area at
River in Charleston, W. Va., September 3 when .the Second Annual Stern Wheel Regatta gets
spirit, and personal pride, we have
the same salary as last year.
underway.·
A Iota! of 17 paddle wheel powered craft will be taking part in this year'f event adopteq the foregoing · COde for our
-,Employed Ira Potts and Robert
which is the only riverboat race of its kind in tha United States. Festivities preceding the races
athletic ieams."
Lanz as regular bus drivers.
that day will include a water ski show starting at 1p.m. and the stern wheel boat parade.
Mr. Robert Keesee, Principal; Dick
-Employed substitute.bus drivers as
Ware, Athletic Director; J. J. Wedge,
. follows: Edison Mayes, Willia Joe
Coach; Russ Wood, Coach.
Grinstead, James F. Greene, Charlottie
Howard Lee Miller, Coach; Donald
Long, Wilma Harris, Delma Smith Jack
VanMeter, Coach; Larry Rhodes,
Simpkins,
Floyd Dennis Weaver.
"I hereby move that all students who
Coach.
-Employed substitute cooks as
are of the proper age and with the
After the proposed code was studied
·follows: Emma Jean Black, Norma
proper academic qualifications in the
briefly, Harry Siders made a motion
Riggs, Dorothy F. Jones, Anna F.
Mason County School System be
that
the
board
study
it
and
table
action
Roush, Betty Lou .Harris, Lallie
eligible to participate in any athletic
until'later.
This:
motion
passed
in
a
4-1
CHARLESTON, W. Va. - Annual Stern Wheel Regatta year an estimated 50,000 people
Stewart, Viola McDade, Beatrice
activity and to go out for any sport
vote
with
Bill
Withers
dissenting.
Board
The
drama and excitement of gets underway on the Kanawha watched the race.
Weaver,
.
~elen
Pearson,
Beryle
except that if a student once goes out
president,
Ted
Stevens,
Charles
the
oldtime
river steamboat River.
Redman,
Crystal
Thomas,
Katherine
The event will start at I p.m.
for a particular sport and quits he will
Eshenaur
and
Fields
favored
Siders'
races
will
be
recreated
here
Hudson, Kathryn Dabney, Virginia
A total of 17 paddle wheel that day with a water ski show
not be allowed to go out for the same
motion.
If
the
board
accepts
this
September
3
when
the
Second
Thomas,
Elfrieda
Lucas,
Evelyn
powered
river boats from four on the river near the race finish
sport in the same school year, having
proposal
it
is
to
be
signed
by
parents
Jewell,
Jewell
Potts,
Esther
Andrews,
states will be converging here line. At 1:30 p.m. all of the
quit once, without the Coach's consent.
and players and returned to the school.
Eulah Redman, Barbara Oliver, Seal
for the event which will also stern wheel boats will parIt Is the intention and purpose of this
Teacher
Employment
on
Cochran, Esther Bland, Mae McCarty.
feature a water skiing show, ticipate in the grand parade up
motion to set a policy that prohibits
recommendation of Supt. Withen was
-Employed Richie Neal as
the grand boat parade, band the river to the race starting
barrinR of any student from
made as follows: Elaine Swisher,
maintenance as needed at $2.15 per
participation in any. sport merely
concerts and a fireworks point. At 2:30 p.m. the races
hour.
teacher at Wahama High School;
display.
because he may have quit one sport
will commence. At 7:30 p.m.
Albert
Wilcox,
teacher
.at
Wahama,
to
-Employed
cooks
as
follows
:
during a school year or because he may
"This is the only river boat there wilt be two band concerts
Mary :Jrd, Mason, $1.71 per hoW';
replace David Arrilt ·.10 mos.; Wanda
not have gone out for a particular
race of its kind in the entire on the levee at the race finish
Peggy Reitmire at Hartford, $1.71 per
Ray as teacher at Ordnance
sport."
United Stales," said West line and at 9 p.m. there will be
hOW'.
Elementary
•
10
mos.;
Sheila
Ringhiser
Virginia Department of a fireworks display. The event
It appeared clear that Supt. Charles
as
teacher
at
Point
Pleasant
Junior
Employed
Pauline
Bowers,
as
Title
Commerce
Commissioner is sponsored by the City of
Withers and assistant Supt. Charles
I
Teacher
aide
iit
Arbuckle,
Johnetta
High
School
10
mos.;
Betty
Crouae
as
Lysander
L.
Dudley,
Sr.
Charleson.
Chambers were against Field's motion
Oldaker
as
Title
I.
teacher
aide
at
teacher
at
MI.
Flower
•
10
mos.
The old stern wheel boats
There will be two racing
and neither would recommend it, but
Letart;
Judy
Mayes,
Kindergarten
Delores.
Barnett
as
teacher
at
Point
heats
that
Sunday
before
the
that
will be taking part in the
instead also submitted a prepared code
PORTSMOUTH, England
Pleasant
Junior
High
.
10
mos.;
Aide
at
Hannan;
Carolyn
Cook,
Point
to cover sports at Point Pleasant High
(UPI)-Sir
Francis final top boats are selected to races represent a rapidly
Pleasant
Junior
High.
Patricia
Graham
as
teacher
at
MI.
School.
Chichester. the old man who run in the last prize winning disappearing bit of Americana
Accepted
resignations
as
follows:
Olive
•
10
mos.;
Claude
&amp;drlquez
as
Comments·were made right and left
battled the seas and sailed race. The race cow-se covers a since by modern standsrds this
David
L.
Arritt,
teacher
at
Wahama
;
teacher
at
Central
•
Iii
mos.;
Barbara
by the group as Fields attempled to get
alone around the world, died two mile section of the type of river propulsion is
Maria
Arritt,
teacher
at
Wahama;
for
Girls
Handicapped
Butcher
a second for his motion, which finally
Saturday at the Royal Naval Kanawha River between the almost obsolete. Most paddle
Sharon
Hatfield,
guidance
at
Hannan
Program
in
Homemakipg
at
Vocational.
South Side and Kanawha City ·wheel craft have given way to
died for lack of lt. Field's opening
Hospital. He was 70.
High;
Lola
Hay&lt;s,
Title
I
teacher
aide
Cente.;
·
'
\Flossie
Allensworth
as
.
CARR NEW CHIEF
comment was "I think all students
· Chichester had suffered from Bridges in Charleston . Last the more powerful propellor
at
Arbuckle;
Marilyn
Kinnaird, County
substitute
teacher
at
Broad
Run
driven
boats.
MINNEAPOLIS
(UP! )
should be eligible... " Supt. Withers
a blood disease which ended his
Kindergarten.
Aide
at
Hannan;
Nancy
Sultivan,
Title
I
·number
of
the
boats
A
Patrick
E.
Carr,
an
attorney
reiterated with "I think you're taking
last yacht race three months
Music
Coordinator,
Clyde
Sullivan,
Connie
Jordan
(previously
scheduled to race are still used from Metaire, La., was elected
all the authority away from the
ago and hospitalized him Aug.
Electoral College
employed)
aiNew
Haven
Elementary;
teacher
at
PPJr.H.,
Linda
Ansalene,
in
river traffic by the com- Friday commander.Jno(:hief of
coach ... " He said he was opposing the
Members of the Electoral
18. A hospital announcement
Judith
Gibson
as
Title
I
Music
teacher
at
Ordnance;
Sharon
Beaver,
motion "because I feel like you would
earlier Saturday said he had College meet on the Monday panies that own them however the Veterans of Foreign War~.
Title I Aide at PPJr .H.
Coordinator, 10 mos. Salary based on
following the second Wednes- the majority of them have beta In ht. " ..,ech/ he c:!'llkililcl
be teaching the ·boys to .learn to be
certification and experience plus
-Granted leaves of absence to the developed pneumonia.
day
in December in a presi· taken out of this type of "decaying • morality and
qultten."
.
"Sir Francis Chichester died dential
election year and revenue service and converted patriotism" and called for 'a
$1200.00
excess.
(replaces
Nancy
following:
Annabel
Matheny,
teacher
It was &lt;l!arnbers' opinion that the
peacefully
at
2:30
·
p.m.
this
vote
as
a
unit for their can- in to pleasure craft.
Sullivan); Nancy Hasenb&amp;Ig as 'Speclal
at Leon; Patricia Bennett. teacher at
strong military posture.
boys should discipline themselves
afternoon
in
the
presence
of
didate.
Education teacher at Mason 101; mos;
PPHS; Mary Sisk, cook at Mason;
.. .if a boy chooses to accept
Ricky Northup as teacher at Point
James Watterson, bus driver; Winnie Lady Chichester and his son,
responsibility, let's make him hold to
Pleasant Junior High School. 10 mos;
McKenzie, teacher at New Haven; Mr. Giles Chichester" the
it. ..if he chooses to go out he should be
Sibyl H. Harouff as Nurse Aide R.N.
Carol W. Higginbotham, custodian at hospital announcement said.
man enough to face it" Qlambers
Sir Francis became world
Instructor at the Mason County
Central, Margaret Johnson, teacher at
added.
famous
in 1967 when he sailed
Vocational Center (employment
Vocational Center.
Then the administrators distributed ,
around the world alone in his S7
subject to final approval by the State
to members of the board their
Department of Education.) 10 mos;
-Awarded contract to Standard for -foot ketch, the Gypsy Moth
recommendation of a proposal
Don R. Spriegel, teacher at Point
pest control and another to Arab for IV. Following that leal he was
prepared by the coaching staff at Point
knighted by Queen Elizabeth.
Pleasant High School.
termite control.
Pleasant High School regarding only
.
Substitute Teachers:
-Accepted the West Virginia He would have been 71 on Sept.
the one school which says:
Elementary
and
Secondary . Department of Education policy 17.
Early this year, Sir Francis
"The
coaching
staff
and
Substitutes: Mrs . Eunice Beller; Mrs.
concerning eligibility determination for
began
planning for the last
administration at Point Pleasant High
children free and reduced_price school
Eunice Hesson, Mrs. Carol . Martin;
grand
Ding,
the Singlehanded
School realize that athletics are a very
Mrs. Velma Mueller, Mr . Wilbur
meals.
Important part of the school's overall
Plants; Rev. C. L. FTum.
!,hat Transatlantic Solo Race, the
-Heard Supt. Withers report
.
first of which be had belped
program. You, as a member of an
Secondary Substitutes: Mrs. Sharon
bids for a library addition at Waharna organize 12 years before. He
athletic team. represent the whole
Bush, Mrs. Anna Harreld, Mr. Joseph
are not in yet.
·
school and community. Your conduct,
Hughes, Mr. Leon Putz, Mrs. Frances
- Accepted City Insurance bid for bus had wanted to carry out his
in the school and away from it, Is a
Thomas, Mr. Stan Craig, Mrs. Cheryl
insurance which is $4,255 for 10 months. own pledge: "! don't want to
reflection on the entire school and the
Blankenship, William Bahr.
'·
-Granted contracts for trash and live too long. I just want to
community.
garbage pick ups. This goes to A. 0 . enjoy the years that are left."
Elementary Subsititutes; Mrs. Lottie
But this time, his luck ran
"Because of our strong feeling on tl•e
·Powers for schools north of the
Barnette, Mrs. Grace S. Brown, Mrs.
out.
The blood disease had
above, the Athletic Department and
Gretchen Carty, Mr. Horton Eckard,
Kanawha River for $450 per month to
Administration of Point Pleasant High
Mrs. Evelyn Jolly, Mrs. Ethel Grimm,
RW'al Sanitation for schools south of the already begun wracking his
lean frame. Shaky and anemic,
School has adopted a policy of action
Kanawha, for $142.00 per month.
Mrs. Janet Maggied, Mrs. Elizalieth
and dress for all athletic teams and
- Approved transportation requests he lett Plymouth June 17
Pullin, Mr. Richard Roush, Mr. L. D.
athletes representing Point Pleasant
Rutt, Mr. Campbell Stevens, Mr.
for Wahama High Football team and against the w~mings of his
High School.
Norville White, Deborah Louille North,
for Point Pleasant High's varsity and doctors.
Everything went wrong, His
"1. You are expected to be a
for MI. Olive Kindergarten.
junior varsity football teams.
gentleman at all times.
-Agreed to purchase floor tile for radio failed. Awould.!Je rescue
Three members of the Mason County
''Your hair must be well groomed and
covering in the Point Pleasant High ship snapped off most of his
Education Association were recognized
ketch's mizzenmast. He tried
neat, not to exceed a reasonable length
School cafeteria.
as a delegation and came forward to
for the purpose of the athlete's health
-Granted the superintendent to cure his intense pain with
ask for increased salary supplements
and welfare. Thls to be adjudged by the
permission to adve1 lise a public self -administered injections out of the next levy for teachers and
Coaching
Staff
and School
auction to sell surplus of busses no and became even more ill from
principals.
Administration.
longer required by the Transportation the effects .
Sarah Buffington was spokesman for
Chichester finally had to giye
3. Sideburns should be no longer than
Department and a surplus of
the group which was also comprised of
the bottom of the ear and no wider than
maintenance vehicles no longer up."! have been ill," he said in
Elaine Rouse and Suzanne Piercy.
a flashed message to a Rceyal
I inch.
needed.
In making the request for a $700
4. You should be personally well
Supt. Withers reported that seven Air Force rescue craft.
across the board increase for all
The way he did many things
groomed and your clothing should be
new buses have arrived and will be
ieachers, plus a S20 increment lor
best
was alone. "I know now I
clean.
ready for the opening of school.
experience, Mrs. Buffington said
don
'I
do things nearly so well
S. Shirts should be buttoned and shirt
-Gave permission for a telephone
"we've been loosing ground
with other people," he wrote
tails tuclted in.
extension at Hannan Elementary.
gradually."
late
in his life. "II makes me
6. You must wtar socks and shoes.
- -Approved participation in the
She cited salaries in surrounding
ESEA Title I Part C in the· amount of think I was cut out for solo jobs,
counties and said at one time Mason
7. Misconduct in school or at schooland any atte'mpt to diverge
.
$6,571.
County ranked eighth in the state on its
sponsored activities, which leads to
- At the suggestion of Fields . from this lot only makes me
pay scale,butls now·in 21st place.Cost
suspension from school, shall lead to
discussed wrestlirig for w&amp;biuna High half a person."
sheets for the proposed salary
suspension from an athletic team.
Chichester had a long history
and in the conversation Supt. Withers
supplements were distributed to the
8. Smoking or drinking shall result In
of
lone ventures. As a youth he
pointed ou that Mr. Wilcox. has had
board. Stevens told the delegation the
suspension from athletics.
experience in this field and will teach was a pilot and once tried to ·
board would take the request under
9. A boy may have his sophomore
wrestling at Wahama.
· break the London-to-8ydney ·
consideration.
year to decide ·whether he wants to
-Held a lengthy discussion on a solo flying record.
Supt. Withers said he has suggested
participate in athlet;cs. He may quit
Although well past the cutoff
proposed school for Henderson, but no
that all be given raises, this would
any sport and be ~ermitted to play
age
for combatants he volunaction was taken.
another.
include professional employes as well
teered
for flying duty in World
-Set the next meeting for Thursday.
as non-professional. He pointed out
"During his junior or ·senior year he
War II but was rejected as a
.• Sto;age Drawer
September 7 at 7:.30 p.m.
• Continuous aean Oven
methods to obtain "a good working
may choose any sports in which to
pilot because of poor eyesight.
He spent the war as a
• Plug Oul Surface Unils
• Apl)liance Receptacle
navigation officer.
STANDING FmM
A DIFFERENT TACK
Describing the solo trip that
•Clock &amp; Timer
•P~k Switch
' FI!i.MORE, Calif. (UP!) - perimeter but there haven't
VATICAN CITY (UPI)
CHARLESTON, W. Va . made his name famous, Sir
Flrefighten held the line on been any major runs."
The Vatican has again ordered (UPI) - Politicians normally Francis said: "I was very
California's worst brush fire of
Erratic north winds gusting priests, monks and nuns not to
devote news conferences to frightened." Wearing his longthe year Sa!W'day but feared to 30 miles caused a number of abandon or modify, their
public affairs. West Virginia's billed yachtman's cap, he told
Wind Could push flames further flare-ups in the 16,500-acre religious garments, Vatican Secretary
APPAlACHIAN POWER CO. JOINS YOU IN BRiNGING THIS .MESSAGE
of State John D, interviewers, "Salling up here
Into the mountain retreat of the brush fire in the LDs Padres sources said today. A letter Rockefeller IV took a slightly in the Atlantic you have no
rare California condors.
National Forest late Friday from the Department for
conception of what goes in
"We're playing It on a hour· with most of the activity near Religious Orders was sent to different tack Friday. He spent those southern waters. You
to-hour bull," said a U. S. the western boundary of the papal diplomats around the most of his news conference only' curvive down there with
Forest Service spokesman.· Sespe Condor Sanctuary. At world asking them to ensure talking a bout the fact that his good luck."
PHONE 675-1160
"We only have fire lines . least 350 acres of the refuge that the dress rules are kept, wife Sharon is expecting ·the
Saturday the old sailor's luck
312
6TH
ST.
couple •s third ~hlld in
around If miles of the 26-mlle was blackened.
the sources said.
ran out.
February.
BY JEAN WARNER
PT. PLEASANT - Point Pleasant
High School now has a vice-principal,
an athletic code for the same school is
being COJISidered, employment and
transfer of several teachers were made
all in a lengthy Board of Education
regular meeting Friday evening.
The administrative postal PPHS will
be held by Larry Sawyers who was
transferred from a teaching position at
Point Pleasant Junior High on a 101;
months basis. Sawyers also formerly
taught at Wahama.
Quite a lengthy discll&amp;'!ion ensued
when board member Ray Fields, just
before the meeting adjourned,
commented concerning the eligibility of ·
students to participate in sports.
~'ields apparently is not pleased with
the present procedure and asked that a
motion be adopted concerning
athletics. Immediately, he read a
prepared motion which said:

17 Paddle Wheelers to Race
In Kanawha Regatta Sept. 3.

Old Man
Of the
Sea Dies

1.1 - 'Die 'J'!meo Sel,lnei, Sunday, Aug, 21, 1~

•

Hospital

·enmg
New Unit Soon
•

Very Modern 5-Bed Area .
Grand Opening Set For '
PT. PLEASANT - Pleasant Valley
Hospital will unveil a new five-bed
electronically equipped Intensive Care·
Coronary Care unit with a grand
opening of the ultra-modern -depart·
menton Sunday, September 24.
This announcement was made
·Saturday ~y Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrator James L. Farley and
Board President G. A. Biggs. The date
lor holding a grand opening of the new
facility was set at a meeting of the
hospital board of trustees earlier
this week.
Residents of the area are cordially
invited to visit the new Intensive CareCoronary Care Unit on the grand
opening date, according
to
Administrator Farley. Guided tours
will be conducted from l-ll:30 p.m.
The unit will then officially be put into
operation on the following day,
Monday, September 25.
Hospital Administrator Farley
explained that "An Intensive Care·
Coronary .care uni_t is a separate
nursing unit within the hospital that is

specifically stalled, designed and
electronically equipped to treat cardiac
and other critically ill patients, with
highly skilled nursing
care
continuously provided and emergency
resuscitative treatment immediately
available.
Dr. Mark Cheng,Intermint is to and
chief of Medicine of the Hospital's
Medical Staff, pointed out that "the
purpose and objective of this type of
patient care is to provide thorough and
continuous observation of cardiac and
other critically ill patients in order to
promptly detect any complications or
abnormalities so that resusitative
treatm•nt can immediately be
installed."
Experience to date with similar unil5
in other parts of the nation has provided
excellent results.
"The community will be justly proud
of one of the most modem Intensive
Care-Coronary care units available
anywhere," said Mr. Farley.
Farley also related that · with the
opening of this unit, Pleasant Valley

' .(
lJ•

·~··

•

I

. ·ONLY

'2499.5.

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

r

'

CHECKS EQUIPMENT-Or. Mark Cheng, internist and chief of Pleasant Valley
Hospital medicine, inspects the electronic equipment that monitors the activity of a
patients in the new Intensive-Care-Coronary Care unit of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The new unit will be opened on September 25.

Hospital will be adding another "first"
since no hospital within West Virginia
can watch the modern physical design
and layout of such a department with
consideration being given to the needs .

of the patients for a quiet, tranquil
environment in private rootris
combined with visual nursing
surveilUance and electronic monitoring
equipment.

"

.
,.

'

'

NEW UNIT ROOM-Susan Pullin, R.N., who will head the nursing staff in the
new Intensive Care-Coronary Care Unit at Pleasant Valley Hospital when it opens in
September, poses inone of the now nearly complete rooms. Each of the private rooms
is electronically equipped with monitors to relay the electrical actibity of the patient's
heart to the central nurses• station on a small screen called on Oscilloscope. Each
private room is also equipped with piped-in-&lt;~xygen and suction, wall
sphygmanometer, stethoscope, nurse call system and modern over-the-bed lighting
designed for minor surgical cases, if needed.

Cottrill Family Loves Farm Life
fly JOHN COOPER
WSC District
(This is another in a series of

articles in which young people
who have chosen farming as
their career and who are
cooperators of the Western Suil
Conser\'alion Di strict

arc

honored. Full-time farmers up
to age 36, who own or share in
the fa rm business were ~hosen

lor these reports. The young
farm family featured in this
story is the Clair Lee Cottrill,
Jr. family of West Columbia.
Clair Lee Is now 3&amp; years old
but he did not become 3&amp; until
July of this year. Farmers who
\\-'ere not 36 on January 1 of this
year hnc been considered for

these stories. 1

WEST COLUMBIA - " I
wouldn't live in town again for
any lhing." sai d Beve rly
Crol lrill, wife of Clair Lee
Co!trill , Jr., during our in.
terview with this youn g farm

family . She continued, " I like it
especially because a farm is a
DISCUSSING PLANS-Clair Lee Cottrill, left, talking over plans with Judson Brake,
right, County Supervisor of Farmen Home Administration, for the construction of a manure
storage pit. The Cottrill family was chosen as the top Farmen Home Administration family in
West Virginia in 1960. (USDA.SCS photo.)

Curtis Family Reunion is Held
POMEROY - The sixty-fifth
annual Curtis reunion of the
descendants of Hoyt and Mary
Foster Curtis, was held at
Hoback Park at Heath, Ohio,
Sunday, August 20, with 83 in
attendance. Hosts were Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Curtis of
Granville and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Curtis of Heath.
Others attending were Mrs.
Mollie Pullins, Elmer Swank,
Billy and Sally, Mr. and Mrs.
E. P. Crispin, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bowman, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Wright, Brian and
Barry. Mr. and Mrs. Harold
DeWolf, Newark; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Griffith and Dav1d, and Donald
and Janet Curtis, Granville;
Mr. and Mrs. Kerm1t An·
derson, Caroline, David and
Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
Johnson and Earl and Roma
Thompson, Alexandria, Ohio;

Ina Sanford and Richard Hook,
Johnstown, Ohio.
Also Edith Curtis, Akron ;
Anita Curtis Raines, Dan and
Lori, Clinton; Mr. and Mrs.
John Newell, Scott an&lt;!_ Jeff,
and Keith Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Smith, Dennis and
Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. John K.
Hutchinson, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. David Seals, Myra J.
Grenier. Christopher Curtis,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Rathburn, Rusty and Diana,
Medway Ohio; Ricky Rathburn , Fairborn; Mr. · and
Mrs.
AI
Pooler
and
Julie, West Carrollton;
Mary Pierce, Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell and Sheila, Chester;
June Ashley, Keith and Heidi,
Racine; Virginia Reynolds and
Steve, Parkersburg; Caroline
Bissell, Brian, Mike, Royce
and Brent, Tuppers Plains, and

NEW SHIPMENT

KF332 FEATURES .

Firefighters Holding Line

'

' ,,

..'

Westinghouse

.

I

*CD rse

OXFORDS
..

e ALL COLORS .

e AU. SIZES

e MENS and BOYS

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
"Serving ·You Since 1936"

324 Second Ave.

.

Ollllpolls, 0.

Hazel Curtis, Mr. and Mrs.
Perry Curtis and Sandra, Mr.
and Mrs. John Brewer, Reeds·
ville.

Family joins
Celebration
SALEM CENTER - It was a
gala day Aug. 15 for David
Carroll Jacks, Jr., son of Mr.
and Nrs. David C. Jacks, Sr.,
when great-grandparents,
grandparents, aunts and un·
cles helped him celebrate his
first birthday anniversary. The
party was hosted by his
parents at their home in Salem
Center.
Guest list included: Mrs.
Flora Barr of Rock Castle, W.
Va., Roscoe Hollon, of Chester;
Mr. and Mrs . Paul L. Mc·
Daniel, Sr ., and son, Paul Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Barr
and daug ter, Barbara Lee, of
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Clair
E. Jacks, Barbara and Linda
Jacks and Joe Jacks, of Salem
Center.
Adecors ted birthday cake in
red, white and blue
was topped with red
roses and the napkins had
the theme of TV's "Flintstone" family, ice cream,
potato chips, coffee, tea, and
milk were served ..
To lop off the entertainment,
pictures were taken, and David
had hili first visit to the Meigs
.County Fair and a rlde .on the ·
merry-go-round. Mr. and Mrs,
·Jacks wilt celebrate their
second wedding anniversary
Sept. 25.
.

EVEilYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD WAY
h

w1mderful place to

raise

children. When the kids are in
town for a while, it isn't long
un ti l they are ready tp come
home." She was speaking of
Timmy, age 14, and Roxan ne,
age 13.

Mrs. Kessinger
At Convention
POMEROY
Mrs.
Geraldine Kessinger of
Pomeroy has arrived in
Chicago to at~ nd the 52nd
Annual Convention of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
the world's largest Women's
Patriotic Organization.
' Mrs. Kessinger is one of the
more than 2,1100 delegates,
V!Ps and guests, who will
represent almost one million
members organized in 13,1100
local \Ulits in every state, the
District of Columbia and
overseas territories.

Perhaps the cause of the
children's interest in the farm
and their love for it is that they
are part of the farm operation.
Each of them owns a producing
cow and gels the profit from
her milk production. Timmy's
cow produced 14,483 pounds of
milk in 305 days with 628
pounds
butterfat
and
Roxann e's produced 12,029
pounds of milk and 423 pounds
butterfat in 274 ilays.
This family has won many
honors as a result of its .
outstanding progress m ',
farming. In 1966 when C!ali
was only 30 years old, their
farm was chosen as the top

taught me to enjoy work by
working along with me. He
never had to force me because
he knew how to make me want
to work."
He concluded by saying,
" Even though we haven 't
accomplished nearl y
as
many things as we would li ~e
to, I feel I'm where my Lord
wants me. Anyway, the Bible
says you don't judge a man by
the abundance oi his
possessions.''

COLUMBIA

conservation farm in· the

Western Soil Conservation
District and went ahead to
receive third place in the whole
GARDENING-Beverly Cottrill, left, and her daughter,
state in this conservation Roxanne, working with their trellis tomatoes in the home
farmer competition sponsored garden. (USDA..SCS photo) .
by Soil Conservation Oistricts
and West Virginia University.
In 1970 they were chosen as· acres and the installation of United Methodist Sunday
the top Farmers Home two watering troughs for their School. In high school he was
selected as the Star Farmer in
Administration farm family in cattle.
West Virginia for that year· Clair Lee was one of the first FFA. Beverly is a member of
They earned a crowning award dairy farmers in Mason County Heights UM Church where she
last year when they showed the to keep the milking herd in a teaches a Sunday School Class ,'
Reserve All American 2 year dry lot with loafing stalls. This is chairman of the culinary
old purebred Holstein heifer at method of cattle management arts department at the Mason
the All American show and sale involves not letting the cQws 'County Fair. She always helps
at Harrisburg, Pa.
out at all. They are kept on a with activities that require
AI the sale she sold for top concreted area and are led and adult presence or guidance
money. selling for more than milked on an area perhaps one- involving her children. Both
the heifer that was placed first. half acre in size. Feed is all children are members of
This same heifer placed first at brought to them. Green feed is Heights UM Church and Happy
several other showings, in the form of ensilage or green Hustlers 4-H Club. Timmy
including the West Virginia chop . Green chop consists of plays Pony League baseball,
State Fair at Lewisburg . such crops as corn, sudan was president of Pt. Pleasant
Fitting and showing diary grass, or perhaps other grasses Junior High School Student
Council last year and played
cattle is one -of 'their chief or legumes.
football
and basketball.
They regularly employ one
recreation activities. The
folowing in the
Roxanne,
whole family enjoys it. This man full-time . His chief duty is
yea r Roxanne showed the to do the miling and to keep the footsteps of her mother, is a
Grand Champion dairy cow barn and milking parlor clean. &lt;heerleader at P.P. Jr. High
while Timmy showed the Charles Weidlich has been with School and also on the
.r·
Reserve Champion heifer in them three years in th~ yearbook staff.
Clair
Lee
exhibits
the
the Junior Division at the capacity. Jn the past they have
dedication
and
humbleness
of
Mason County Fair.
used•another man about full·
The Cottrill farm consists of lime in the summer to help this family by saying, " I never
158 acres, all of which is .with the crops, however this reallY. pecided to farm, l just
bottomland. Conservation
.The activities of this family dec'1, d not to do anything else.
always enjoyed farming
practices which they have are many and varied . The farm l
even
as a very small kid. Dad
carried out include 18,575 feet is a l)lember of Dairy Herd
of tile drainage, crop residue Improvement Association
use on 81 acres, pasture and Artifi c ial Breeder~
hayiand planting on 37 acres, Cooperative, and Clair Lee Is a
minimum tillage on 53 acres. state director of ABC. He is ·
crop rotation system on 117 sup~rintendent of Heights

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--

Boy Scout Program ·Will he

Explained in Two Meetings
HUNTINGTON
In formation and training
meetings to describe the lmproved Scouting program of
the Boy Scouts of America are
scheduled for September and
October, according to Tommy
Thomason, Training Chairman
of the Tri..State Area Council.
"Scouts who joined a troop
after September I will follow
the Improved advancement
program," Thomas said, "but
boys who were Scouts before
that date may continue with
the previous advancement plan
on· an optional basis until
December Jl, 1973."
Thomason explained,
however; that the Improved
Scouting program calls for new
directions in lbe role of a
Scoutmaster. the use of the

personal growth agreement for
Scouts, and the organization
and operation of the patrol,
troop, and the troop leaders'
coun cil.
The information meetings
for Scoutmasters, assistants,
and troop committee memlx.'l's
will he held in conjunction with
the f~ur district roundtables to
be held in September.
The orientat!on of key
council and district volunteers
will take place on Saturday,
September 30. Follow up
orientations will be held in
October In each of the lour
districts for other key district
Scouters.
"One of lhe exclling im·
provements for boys will be the
skill awards, Thomason said,

"which are designed to provide
earlier recognition , to provide
essential skills for everyday
living, for participating in
Scouting activities, and to give
Scouts options."
Thomason also explained
that it will be easier for a boy to
become a Scout, but that for all
progress awards from T•·n·
derfoot through Eagle the
Scout will be required to earn
merit badges.
"The merit badges are
designed to help a boy discover
his abilities and future hobbies
and vocations and to become
more proficien I in areas of
service and personal fitness .
They demand profiCiency and
may lead to luture adult in-

terests."

t~D

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVINGS!

�.. - 'llle Times-Sentinel,

Au~ .

27, 1972

--------------------------~
.
'I
Ltllm of opinion arr IH'Iromed. Tht•y &lt;hould bt&gt; tess
thu 300words Jon~ tor br suhjrt•lt&lt;t r•dudimt by tht• rdJton
and must br slgn&lt;d "'lth tho sign"" ·s address . Namrs may be
wlt~held upon publit'ation. hou·•·•·rr, on r&lt;'ttut•st. l.t·Ucrs

I
I
I
I

should be in good L1Sh' , add rfss in g

:

i!'~ues. not pt·rsonalitics.

GOP Campaign ~mmittee Cited in Nine Possible

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Violations of Using $350,000 Election Money
Women's Rights junb~ ~imts- itntint1 Dem HQ Bug Put

forgiveness asked for error
Rio Grande, Ohio
August 22, 1972
Open Letter to the Citizens of Gallipolis:
To err is human - to forgive divine!
I must say that I have undoubtedly demonstrated the fact
that I am human. I unwittingly uttered a word which was con·
strued as being nasty. Please allow me to clarify what I was
trying to say. First of all, I was WJaware that the word "knocked
up" is such crude terminology. The reason I wrote the poem is
because I heard some women discussing how sometimes their
attitudes fluctuate during pregnancy. Some claimed to be overly
errotic to downright grouchy..So I deeideil to write a satire about ·
· the grouchy pregnant wile. Being the ham that I am, I sought to '
make people laugh, not to embarrass anyone.
Moreover, it was brought to iny attention that someone
Utought that I was under the influence of drugs. Needless to say ,I
do not indulge in the corrupt pharinaceiltical practices because
Christ is enough to boost my spirit.&lt;; when I feel down and out.
Moreover, I do not use profanity because I respect myself and
others.
Also it was mentioned that I did it to retaliate against the
townspeople for the "Ballad For Americans" mishap. That was
not on my mind at the time·. I only sought to make the riverfront
concert a happy occasion, not an X-rated occasion .
In conclusion I would like to say that Mr. Ross had nothing to
do with the poetry so do not blame him. For those whom I have
offended, please contact me at this address: Alvis Moore, Box
485, Rio Grande College, Rio Grande, Ohio 45614.
I promise to apologize to you personally.
A dearly beloved one sat on a wall
Then the beloved had a great fall
The fall created a scandalous sore
And now the beloved one
Isn't loved anymore - Think about it.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, AUGUST 27th
BOSTON
.

48 CAJunt

Heck's Reg.
Housewares

Heck's Reg. '4.99

LIQUID PLUMR
Quarts

Housewares

Twila·

.~r~h~b.~e so~rc?s .

,

.

Clatwor thy, . Mr.- and Mrs·. . . .fh~t·sa llthey v,? been do1~g
·Hem'r CJatworthy, and 1\fr. and· ~~ ta!kt~g about .It, K_mg said . .
Mrs.· jaimis Buchanan; all of . 1 c~n t· flrui.. an~th_mg tha.~
. Middleport: .
·
wouldsub~l;tnhat~ thetr storr . .

f

'...:;~ 1

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 11.29
Hardware

----~-. . .-1111!-_ __

PET

FLEA COLLAR
HECK 'S
REG.

$1.48

HOUSE JACK
door s and windows . Heavy
duty '&gt; teel co nstru ction eosi ·
ly adtus ted.

s

99&lt;·.

ALL FISHING
TACKLE Redu~~d

Stop fl oor sag and sti cking

OFF

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·66

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$1588

HECK 'S REG .
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REG.
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Official ~ize . Red ,
whi t e and b lue in
co lor .

SPOIJTS

DEPT.

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$1688
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PERFECTION KEROSENE
Here' s t he fa mous Perfection Portable Heater
tha t 's been delivering sa fe, quick, clean
heat . anywhere and any ti me ... since JB£8.
Tru l y portab le and se lf-contained, no pi pes or
wires. M ore than lJ mill ion sold for workshops,
cottages, hard-to-heat rooms, etc. A proven
lifesave r during power failures and other
emergencies . Economical, the Perfec t ion
Portabl e hea ts a 1500 cu . fl . roo m
on tess than a gallon of kerose ne .

HUTCH

BASKETBALL

HECK'S

SURE-DRY

581J.C

WASHINGTON (UP!) Democratic presidential nominee George S. McGovern
spent a secluded Saturday
putting the final touches on his
revised tax and welfare reform
plan that may include a tough
work requirement feature.
The proposal, to be unveiled
Tuesday in a speech at New
York City, will substitute for
the South Dakota senator 's

earlier-and hi ghly controversial-plan to provide
every American with a $1,000
payment annually.
There were strong indications the new one would
emphasize jobs instead of
grant.&lt;; as well as the work
requirement.
McGovern 's office said the
senator was spending the
weekend working on the speech

Chicago Flooded

at his Japanese-style home in
Washington. He had no announced appointments ·either
Saturday or Sunday.
McGovern aides offered few
hint.&lt;; about the specifics of the
welfare-tax proposal on
grounds premature disclosure
might affect the stock market.
But McGovern himself revealed the broad outlines of the
measure in a speech Friday.
"I will propose a plan next
Tuesday that we think will put
people back to work, place the
No. 1 emphasis on providing a
job for everyone who is able to
work," he said.

suburban residents were
CHICAGO
( UPI )
Torrenllal rains slashed caught by surprise and scores
Chicago and it.s suburbs late were rescued by boat from
Friday night and Saturday, tbelr homes and automobiles.
turning street.s into virtual
Thousands of home owners
rivers, flooding thousands of plowed through 12 inches of
• homes and collapsing the roof mud and debris lo bail out their
of a macaroni factory . One flooded homes.
person was killed and 10 others
The body of 11-year old
Douglas Biaisdell, Naperville,
injured.
When the storms hit, despite was foWJd behind a garage in
warnin gs of heavy rain s that southwest suburb. Police
broadcast by area stations, said he apparently drowned in
thousands of northwest a retention basin .

KIT
,.

,I

• -4 OL ofttr shovt 1
• -4 oz. deodorant
• -4 oz. shave lotker

.$

CAMP
STOOLS

Heck's Reg. $2.99

$166

.

Hec/c' s lteg~
. $4.68 ·

COSMET'I.C DEPT

captured shortly after allegedly ·:~&gt;.-:
firing the death bullet from a
window of the Texas book ~it
depository, was not alone in the .,.,

j@

crime.
He said the trajectory of the
bullet that struck Kennedy's
head indicated a "crossfire "
effect.
"Not one person could have
been a shooter," Wecht said.
"There had to be two shooters."
Oswald was shot to death by
Dallas businessman Jack Ruby
before the case opened in court.
Ruby later died of natural
causes in Dallas COWJty jail.
~ech\ said the projectile on
display in Washington "was
virtually WJscathed, with only a
small indentation on it.&lt;; base,
as if Superman pressed it
between his fingers." He also
scored the Warren Commission
for "negligence" in drawing the
single bullet theory as a "sine
qua non " upon Oswald's arrest.
"The Warren report, frankly,
was a very sloppy job," Wecht
said.
The coroner vowed to utilize
his position as director of the
departrnentofforensicsciences
at Duquesne Universtty here to
request an independent review
of tbe Warren report from Dr.
Burke Marshall, dean of the
Yale University law school and
former deputy attorney general
to the late Sen. Robert
Kennedy.

His usage of the phrase "able
to work " was considered

significant. Earlier, many of
McGovern' s liberal backers
had used the phrase "a job for
everyone who wants one,"
conveying a different meaning.
Early in his successful
campaign for the Democratic
nominati on, McG overn
suggested the outlines of a
welfare and tax plan intended
to redistribute income from the
very rich to the very poor.
The most striking feature of

········

Commitment to Israel in Jeopardy?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democratic presidential nominee George s. McGovern
said Saturday the bomeportlng of U.S. &amp;tit Fleet ships in Greece "Is jeopardizing our
commitment to Israel," challenging the administration's view that tbe new porting
arrangemenla will enhance U.S. abllity to support the Jewish state.
In a statement issaed at biB campaign headquarters here, McGovern said ofllclal
Greek statemenls refute "adminlslratlonassurancestbat Greece Is friendly to our cause
In Israel and will cooperate in the defense of that nation."
He said the Greek deputy foreign minlster·tbree weeks ago said "Greece's friendly
relations with the Arab world rule out any dired or indirect pertlclpatlon In any acls
aimed at our Arab friends." McGovern said "lhe Greek junta still refuses to recognize
officially the Slate of Israel. And during tbe 1970 Jordanlan crisis, the dictatorship didn't
even bother to respond to our request that reconnaissance flights be permitted from
bases on Greek soU."

l,:.:,.
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strength in the Mediterranean is dependent on the ports of a nation which Is In league
with the Arab counbies?" he uked.
Heuid the administration "failed to explore adequately a number of alternatives to
Greek ports, including potlslble bases In Italy or simple continuation of present
arrangements coupled wltb ne w crew rkotation pdractiees."
The Stale Department said 1ast wee that 6 estroyers would arrive in Greece in
Septem her where the crewmen and their' families will make their homes. The theory Is
that with the saUors seeing more of their famllles, tbe men will be more Ukely to stick
with the Navy as a career, Family separation Is the reason saUors give most for leaving

·tbr~

I

~·

tbat proposal-and the one that
grabbed most of the attentionwas a plan to provide every
person in the nation with a
yearly taxable payment from
the government of $1,000. For
persons in the upper -income
brackets, the grant would be
completely taxed away but the
poor would have been able to
keep most of the money.
Republicans denounced the
proposal on grounds it was
radical, WJworkable and unpopular with the majority of
the voters. Senate GOP leader
Hugh Scott said the McGovern
proposal would boost the taxes
of the average working family
by $2,500 a year. President
Nixon directed barbs at the
idea in his speech to the
Republican National Convention accepting his party's
renomination for a second
term.
McGovern withdrew the
$1,000 grant proposal weeks
ago when it became a center of
controversy.

Youngster Killed
By His Brother

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (U P!)
- Stephen Frost, 7, was ac·
il:i,ll cidentally shot to death by his
eight-year-old brother Rock
·:·:·:·: Friday night.
The two youngsters were
;~;~;~ playing in a field here behind
their grandfather's home when
Stephen was shot in the head
with a .22 single shot pistol.
Officials, who ruled the
shooting accidental, said the
boys had taken the pistol from
their grandfather 's bedroom
dresser.

f:!:

......,

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FISCHER SERVED
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- An attorney for motion
picture producer Chester Fox
se rved an aide to Bobby
Fischer Saturday with formal
notice of a $1.75 million breach
of contract lawsuit Saturday
because of Fischer's refusal to
permit television filming of his
world championship chess
match with Boris Spassky.

·X~

.

M '

~m:;~;~;ll~~lllllillllf:lill1l1l11~1lllllllllllll1llll;li~;lilit?~;lis~mm;;;;;mmm?:r~m;1;~r:;~;;;~m;;~~;~1f:il~ii~!~;~~J.~~~i~m~l;m~m@mmmm~;~;~ll~ll~l~;l~lll~

Hard er L00k
:

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jolm J. Gilligan and acting
state Welfare Director Robert
Wecht "scientifically" deB. Canary announced Saturday
clared that Lee Harvey Oswald,
a program of increased invesUgatlon of work done by county
welfare employes.
The &amp;Mouncement came in
the wake of 1,880 errors made
last fiacal year by county weifare case workers, Canary
COLUMBUS (UPI)
An contest.
Indiana couple captured top
Her !tu~nd, Dick, won the · said.
-·'d the state Wei·
G'"'-n
UU6A Dell
honors in two claues Salurilay, 1,200-pounci ·~n one-cylinder
the final day of the two-day claas !rlth 1' 175-foot pull.
. fare Depo!'\ment has added 541
National Garden Tractor Pull_-. ..Tom Miller, Bellevue, won people to lis quality control
Contelt at the Ohio Stale FaiT. tbe 1,iiOO-poUI!ll, one or multi- staff aince last December in
Carolyn Frame, Richmond, cylinder clau with a pull Of 196- order to increase the munber of
Ind., who palled a speclally feet-3-6. .
Investigations made of county
·built m'ecbanlcal weight
First-pia~ winners received welfare emplnya.
machine 17'1 feel, won the 100- an .., caab prize, plus trophy
The govemor said new state
pound, one-eyllnder tractor' and medlll\
would require county em.

Hoosiers Win Ohio Pull

,L&gt;

~.

McGovern Honing Up New L00k
Tax and Welfare Reform Plans

Theory No Good I
PI'ITSBURGH (UPI)-County Coroner Dr. Cyril Wecht, a
veteran of private probes into
the ~ssassination of Presideqt
John F. Kennedy, said Saturday his research into records at
the National Archives showed
the Warren Commission report
was "clearly invalid."
Wecht said the ·'single
bullet" tbrory, which said one
bullet struck both President
Kennedy and former Texas
Gov . John B. Connally, was
physically Impossible.
Wecht said the bullet he
observed during a two-day
research session at the National
Archives in Washington last
week "was not the bullet that
traversed the bodies of two
men ...It is physically impossible ."
Kennedy and former Texas
Gov. John Connally were felled
in a brief burst of gWJfire as
they waved from an open
motorcade in Dallas during a
campaign stop Nov. 22, 1963.
The pathologist categorically
dlsmissed tbe conclusion of the
Warren Commission that
K~nnedy and Connally were
.struck by .the same bullet.
Describing the fore-and-aft positions of both men in the
presidential car, he said thr
bullet that entered the President's back could not have

•• f

A LOT OF MOUTHS to lecd demand more than 50 pounds of dog food a week. The lti Irish St•ttcr pups are all
part ol the same Iiller and belong to Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wright of \1cKinlc~ville. Calif .

.lli~;~;;m~1;~;~m;li1il~l~l;;;~~~~~m1;~~~l~lij;~;*m~~*-t:1~;~;~~~;;;;;;~m;mmmm~m~m~l~;m;;~;;~~~~~~;~;~;~;~;;~mi~i~m;i;j;l~l~i~l~l!J;;~mmmll;m;~;m;;;;;mmm;;mmm;:

Reunion
Held In
Middleport

Miss

99

$

!AIIra &lt;:live s hades for ·
y window in your
Sizes : 37 1'4)(6
· Ft. White Only.

Linda Hackett Will be Wed

an d · Tim~ny,

·claimed Saturday Women's . stitutlon!l which receive Ieder·
. RightS Day and r~onde!l to · !'I money' ·. ·
.·
Denioctatic chafges th8t .he
"ill recent years there have
' has .tPeated ,' the . feminist . ilfeQ gr~at *id~ in exte11ding
.niovemenl ·,as• ."a joke" · .bY theproteCtton of the law to the
cialmiilg , that more, wixnen 'rights of . -women and ' in
· occtipy' promin~ht goverruri~nt · ptori&gt;Oting equa.l opportuiijties
positions tlian eyer before.
for . women;' . the President
. He .said .that .although great . !iaid. · "'l:oday · more
·strides have been rriade, ''We worden than ever before serve
. ·still must do more to ensure in pullcy.rnaking positions in
women · every 0ppottunity to the execlltlve branch of our
make thefallest cOntribution to government. Throughout the
our progress as a nation."
nation, in' state and local
Nixon issued the statement government and in the private
on the occasion of the 52nd sphere, women are playing a
anniversary of women winning more active role."
the right to vote and a day after
McGovern had claimed that
his opponent, Sen. George S.
tbere
are more than 12,000 top
McGovern, charged hlm with
pollcy
positions in the governan uunjust" and "stupid"
policy of dlscrimlmiting ment and less !ban 1 per cent
against women who comprise are filled by women . .
Nixon issued the statement
more than hall the electorate.
The White House issued · a from the Western White House
fact sheet claiming thai 118 where he spent the . day
women- triple the original relaxing with his family and
goal -had been placed in top- preparing for his trip Wedneslevel, policy-making positions day to Hawail for a two-day
paying $28,000 and up, and meeting with Japanese Prime
more than 1,000 women occupy Minister Kakuei Tanaka.
First Lady Pat Nixon will
middle level jobs paying from
acccompany
and make some
$18,737 to $25,583 aMua11y.
II claimed that for tbe first campaign appearances. The
time in history two women- Nixons, here for some rest and
Catherine May Bedell of the to work out the details of their
Tariff Conunisslon and Helen campeign schedule, will host a
D. Bentley of the Maritime group of Hollywood celebrities
Commission - are heading at the Western White House
regulatory agencies and said &amp;mday .
The White House refused
Nixon had for the first time
conunent
on tbe decision by the
promoted women to generals~ofthem-1mdtoamntral - General Accounting Office to
refer to the Justice Depart"'•61ie or them.
•· ~ Ticking olf olher "flrsta" for ment pouible violations by
his administration, N~on Nixon's campaign committee
claimed that all !Inns doing in tbe handllng of campaign
business with the government contributions. Deputy press
were required to have action sea-etary Gerald L. Warren
plans for hiring and promoting refused to say whether the
women and tbe administration President was aware of the
bad brought charges of sex decision or concerned about it.

Door
Mirror

I

Heck's Reg. 88(

~-,--~·~·SU_ND_AY_,A_U_GU~ST=27=='·-=19=72=----------'~'-AGE_!5-

O_L._VII_N_0-=.)"-"0__=_

·sAN CLEMENTE, Calif. discrimination against more

Heck's Reg.
1
1.20

7'!

v_·

(UPI)~esldent l!lixon pro- than 350 higher education in·

Bright ne.w colon with contra sti~9 block metcil stand. Preci sion ground 15 edqe cutter of 111lid steeL Mounting scr•w' included . Hiqh impact plodic receptad&amp;.
·

cutting the strings

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and at 2:30 'o'clock at the Sacred
. Mrs . Geo rge Ha ckett, Jr., Hear t church, Pomrroy.
annou nce the approac hin g Falher Berna rd Krajcov ic will
marriage of their daughter, officiate.
Maid ol honor will be
Linda, to Mr. John Goodwin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. David Melanic Hackett, sister ol the
Goodwin , Pomeroy. It will be bride, and matron of honor will
an event of Saturday, Sept. 2, be Rose Marie Fry, aso a sister
of the bride.
Best man is John Roberts, of
Columbus and ushers will be
Charles Clarkson of Appleton ,
Wis., and Robert Gachnauer of
Columbus. Hegistering guests
will be Joan Franz ol Perrys·
burg. Serving at the reception
will be Marlene Johnson, sistl!r
of the groom , Karen Humphrey
CHESHIHE - The fourth of Reedsville and Mrs . Charl es
annual
reunion of th e Jordan of Worthington.
descendants of Adaline
Reynolds Yeauger and Samuel
Yeauger of Cheshire was held
VISIT ENDED
Sunday, Aug . 20, at the Legion
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
park in Middleport.
Mrs. Wayne Burton, Dee, Chris
Ne&lt;t year's reunion will be
held the second Sunday in and Kim, have returned to
their home in Norfolk, Va .
August a l the same loct1tion.
after a tO day visit with Mrs.
Altending were Bruce
Ruth Dodson and Mr. and Mrs.
Yeauger, Cheshire; Mr. and
Gene Dodso n and family .
Mrs. Ray Hedman and Hay of
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Juanita
Bal la rd, Mrs. Marjori e
RETURN HOME
Bradbury , Miss Jeanette Scott,
MIDDLEPOHT - Mr. and
and Miss Sandy Bradbury, all
Mrs. Robert Arnold, Emily and
of Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs . Kathy of Basking Ridge, N.y.
Robert Gardner, Mr. and Mrs . hav e retu rned home a!ter
Raymond Potts, and Mrs .
visiting Mrs. Grace Hawley,
Margaret Bruce, all of Croo.ks- Miss Mildred !lawley, Mrs.
ville; Mr. and Mrs. James
Nan Moore and Mr. and Mrs.
Neutzling and Patti, Mr. and Jack Hawley.
Mrs. James Clatworthy of
Pomeroy; Mrs. Bertha Ward,
and Mr . and Mrs. John Mulford
of Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
'
Hubert Johnson, Jr. , and son, AN UNBELIEVER
LANDEH, Wyo. iUP])-A
12Buc ki e, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs.
.
Mildred Powell, Mr. and Mrs . foot high creature known as
Larry Guinther, Molly and "Big Fool" may be roaming
Richard, ,Springfield .
the Wind River Indian RescrvaAlso, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard lion, but Police Chief Bill King
is .not a believer.
Ba ird, Mrs. Mina Roub, Mr.. . R.eporis of a strange, ha iry
and Mrs . Leo Altier, Cindy,
Gregg, Chris, Pat, Tony and crea ture~w~o comes out at
Brent, and Miss Cheryl Phle.•of nighi apparently,to get drin.idtig.
Corning ; Mr. and Mrs. ·Lewis wa\er'-have drcuiat~d in ' the
·
J· an · Long, . M
. rs.
· · area
. ..
Long,
.,. . for .a .m?nth.
.
Margaret Cla tworthy·, Mrs.. ·lite reservation . poli~e chief
Bertha . Eber.sbach , Mr .. and said . the ·persoris who have
Mrs. James· Clatworthy, Mr. · claimed to see the creature
and. .Mrs: ·. William Ne~tzling · ~ere, . ,.'0~ t~e '?,ost · part,

'

PENCIL SHARPENERS

Crayola Crayons ·

Sincerely yours,
AlvL• J . Moore

Dear five year old, as I watch you today, I couldn 't help but
hold tears back and say, "Go strong, my sweet, go tall.
I'm here little one, If you should happen to fall."
But the ache is so hard to take.
How was I to know my heart would break ?
Your endless and boundless energy, hardly concerned how it
tired your Mominy and DHddy To be free of your chatter; (how I'll miss it; when did it
really matter?)
Will anyone notice our precious gem as you are to us?, or will
they notice you only when you make a fuss.
How can I help you? Or should I say, "I've done all I can,
you're on your own today ."
Stand tall, Mother, here 's your little one cqming home. (Hair
looking like it never saw a comb.)
Why was I worried? A smile from ear to ea r. Apparently no
worse for tbe wear.
Suddenly a slight frown do I see. She is watching elsewhere
yet looking at me.
Why it's the School Buses she watches. Could it be '
Tomorrow she'll ride one and not go with me.
1
Laura Amsbary's mother.

- 1 PM TO 7 PM ONLY

'Day Proclaimed
·By Mr. Nixon

"1•.'

:::::~:::::::::::~:::::::::~:~::::~::::~.::~::::::~;:?.!:;8::~

6 IN IRELAND DIE
BELFAST (UP!)
Gunfire, bombs and a booby·
trapped car kllled at least six
men Saturday, Including two
ployes to correct mistakes in parlltrne soldiers In Nor·
ellgibillty, overpayment and · thern Ireland, hours before
underpayment and make the planned start of the first
Protulant "Black Satur·
better reports.
marches In four years.
day"
"Together, these measures
Bodies
dloeovered after a
should put the welfare system
in a position of being more ac. predawn bomb blast at
countable to both the taxpayers Downpatrick County Down
and the rectpl~ts," Gilligan racetrack were so badly
ripped apart the Army was
said.
Cal)Bry said not all tbe. 1,880 unsure whether there were
two or three victims.
errors uncovered last fiscal
r
&lt;,...&lt;·~·-·,;·r·;:;·r·r·r ·r·r·:· ;· :s~···· ·r·r·:··.,;.,.,.,.,•.•••••••.
year concerned cases of ··· · .......... ··················· ..v........:.••••••••.·.·:·.·.·:·,
inl:llgiblllty or overpayments. system," Canary said. "But
. About half were ml.stakes of with this Increase In the
'ool givln!! reclplenta enough munber of state inveatigators,
money, he said.
1am sure we will be better able
"County welfare depart· to gu&amp;rantee to tbe people of
menta still remain tbe flrit line Ohio . that tbelr tax dollars
of defense against thQee who asalst . ooly thOR who are
would cheat the welfare honestly in need."

,

WHETHER YOU'RE big
enough lo make II on your
own or need a boo11, no
water tastes quite u good
as the stuff that comes out
of those lolly fountalno in
lhe part.

GAO into Probe

By ED DOOLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The General Accounting Office
turned over to the Justice Department Saturday a report, in·
spired by the Watergate bugging episode, listing nine possible
violations of the new election law by President Nixon's campaign
committee in the handling of $350,000 in contributions.
The GAO report said they consisted of both "apparent and
possible" violations of the 197,1campaign spending reform law by
the Finance Committee for the Re-election of the President. They
included failure to keep complete and accurate accoWJt of a
$25,000contribution linked to a suspect in the June 17 break~n at
the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate apartment
complex.
A spokesinan for tbe Nixon committee said the report was
0 inaccurate " and "it is also incomplete ." The spokesman said
information supporting those contentions would be given the Jus·
ice Department. .
At San Clemente, Calif ., the scheduled to be issued.
Western White House had a
The GAO said the committee
terse "no comment" on the set up to finance President
report, issued by the GAO's Nixon 's re-election appeared to
Office of Federal Elections.
have violated the 1971act in the
The GAO aUeged that failur e following ways:
to disclose details of the $25,000
- The committee failed to
contribution and other receipt.&lt;; keep detailed and exac t acand expenditures may con- counting ot the $25,000 constitute violation of the new law tribution received by Kenneth
which
requires
public H. Dahlberg, midwestern
disclosure of all major money finance chairman for the redealings after April 7.
election committee on April 9.
The report was issued after The report said this constituted
weeks of probing bank records an apparent violation, as did
in an effort to trace $114,000 th e committee's failure to
that was allegedly chaMeled disclose the details of the
through the Nixon campaign $25,000 contribution in ils June
fund to the Florida bank ac- 10 report.
count of Bernard L. Barker,
- The Committee's failure to
one of five men charged with keep a "detailed and exact
breaking into DemOcratic Na- accoun t" of hew the $25,000
tional Committee headquar- Dahlberg check and four
ters on June 17.
Mexican bank checks totalling
The men, Including James $8P,OOO were spent, along with
W. McCord Jr., then chief of th e committee's failur e to
security for the Nixon re· disclose the details of the exelection committee, carried penditures in it.s June 10 report.
electronic
eavesdropping The four checks were drawn on
equipment and cameras.
the Banco Internacional of
Under the federal election Mexico City to the order of
reform law, disclosure must be Manuel OgarriQ and deposited
made of major contributions in the same account on the
and expenditures after April 7, same day as Ute Dalberg
the day the law took effect.
check .
The. GAO is empowered to
- The GAO cited the
refer it.&lt;; finding to the Justice "committee's failure to keep
Department for prosecution. and maintain adequate books
The criminal penalty for each and records on a current basis
violation is a fine of up to $1,000 with respect to the $25,000
or one year in jail for any check and it.s proceeds, the
campaign committee officially proceeds of the four checks
involved.
totallin g $89,000 and the
Spokesmen for the Com· balance of the $350,000 in
mittee to Re-Elect the currency which constituted an
President have said the apparent violation" of the
$114,000 in question was part of comptroller general's rules
$10.2 million collected before and regulations under the law.
April 7 and listed as "cash on
hand" even though it reached
the committee after the law's
C
effective date.
Murder harged
Dwayne Andreas, a Min- To Columbus Man
neapolis businessman and one
of the biggest financial backers
COLUMBUS ( UP 1)
of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey's . Michael John Lager , 23,
unsuccessful bid for the Demo- Columbus, was charged with
eratic presidential nomination, first degree murder in conwas identified as the source of nection with a shooting Friday
the $25,000 check that \j'Ound up nigh t at the Interns tiona!
in Barker's account.
Harvester warehouse here .
Dahlberg has said Andreas
Fatally shot at the plant was
made tbe contribution on April Charles Greene, 28 of nearby
5-two days before tbe law . London . Police said they were
went into effect. He said he WJable to determine a motive
picked it up from a Florida for the 7 p.m. shooting at the
hotel depository April 9, con- warehouse where Greene
verted it into a cashier's check worked.
and gave it to Maurice H.
Stans, Nixon's chief political
fund..-aiser, on April H 1 in · I" FOREIGNERS OUT
Washington.
KAMPALA, Uganda (UP!)
The GAO acted shortly after - Presidentldi Amin declared
Stans issued a statement Saturday that African interest.s
denying that lie had sought to would take over for eign
block the report, although he businesses
in
Uganda-.
acknowledged that he had met European as well as. Asianwith GAO officials in Miami owned concerns- in phase two
Beach last Tuesday, the day of his nation 's econom ic
the report was originally revolution .

�.. - 'llle Times-Sentinel,

Au~ .

27, 1972

--------------------------~
.
'I
Ltllm of opinion arr IH'Iromed. Tht•y &lt;hould bt&gt; tess
thu 300words Jon~ tor br suhjrt•lt&lt;t r•dudimt by tht• rdJton
and must br slgn&lt;d "'lth tho sign"" ·s address . Namrs may be
wlt~held upon publit'ation. hou·•·•·rr, on r&lt;'ttut•st. l.t·Ucrs

I
I
I
I

should be in good L1Sh' , add rfss in g

:

i!'~ues. not pt·rsonalitics.

GOP Campaign ~mmittee Cited in Nine Possible

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Violations of Using $350,000 Election Money
Women's Rights junb~ ~imts- itntint1 Dem HQ Bug Put

forgiveness asked for error
Rio Grande, Ohio
August 22, 1972
Open Letter to the Citizens of Gallipolis:
To err is human - to forgive divine!
I must say that I have undoubtedly demonstrated the fact
that I am human. I unwittingly uttered a word which was con·
strued as being nasty. Please allow me to clarify what I was
trying to say. First of all, I was WJaware that the word "knocked
up" is such crude terminology. The reason I wrote the poem is
because I heard some women discussing how sometimes their
attitudes fluctuate during pregnancy. Some claimed to be overly
errotic to downright grouchy..So I deeideil to write a satire about ·
· the grouchy pregnant wile. Being the ham that I am, I sought to '
make people laugh, not to embarrass anyone.
Moreover, it was brought to iny attention that someone
Utought that I was under the influence of drugs. Needless to say ,I
do not indulge in the corrupt pharinaceiltical practices because
Christ is enough to boost my spirit.&lt;; when I feel down and out.
Moreover, I do not use profanity because I respect myself and
others.
Also it was mentioned that I did it to retaliate against the
townspeople for the "Ballad For Americans" mishap. That was
not on my mind at the time·. I only sought to make the riverfront
concert a happy occasion, not an X-rated occasion .
In conclusion I would like to say that Mr. Ross had nothing to
do with the poetry so do not blame him. For those whom I have
offended, please contact me at this address: Alvis Moore, Box
485, Rio Grande College, Rio Grande, Ohio 45614.
I promise to apologize to you personally.
A dearly beloved one sat on a wall
Then the beloved had a great fall
The fall created a scandalous sore
And now the beloved one
Isn't loved anymore - Think about it.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, AUGUST 27th
BOSTON
.

48 CAJunt

Heck's Reg.
Housewares

Heck's Reg. '4.99

LIQUID PLUMR
Quarts

Housewares

Twila·

.~r~h~b.~e so~rc?s .

,

.

Clatwor thy, . Mr.- and Mrs·. . . .fh~t·sa llthey v,? been do1~g
·Hem'r CJatworthy, and 1\fr. and· ~~ ta!kt~g about .It, K_mg said . .
Mrs.· jaimis Buchanan; all of . 1 c~n t· flrui.. an~th_mg tha.~
. Middleport: .
·
wouldsub~l;tnhat~ thetr storr . .

f

'...:;~ 1

Hardware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 11.29
Hardware

----~-. . .-1111!-_ __

PET

FLEA COLLAR
HECK 'S
REG.

$1.48

HOUSE JACK
door s and windows . Heavy
duty '&gt; teel co nstru ction eosi ·
ly adtus ted.

s

99&lt;·.

ALL FISHING
TACKLE Redu~~d

Stop fl oor sag and sti cking

OFF

Single Bullet

·66

•

$1588

HECK 'S REG .
$5 .99

Heck's
Reg. 16.99

REG.
$19.99

Official ~ize . Red ,
whi t e and b lue in
co lor .

SPOIJTS

DEPT.

WA TERPROOFJNG
;---.....1 r :.~
HECK 'S REG . $2.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

iT!

18x25

ft r':/

ent ~A~:

IRA VEL

UTILITY HEATER

$1688
Heck's Reg. 119.99
SPORTS OEPT.
St(.lti.A~ .

'

.

.

. TOJLLUSTRATIO~
....

.

.
•

Reg. 7'!

\;.)

PERFECTION KEROSENE
Here' s t he fa mous Perfection Portable Heater
tha t 's been delivering sa fe, quick, clean
heat . anywhere and any ti me ... since JB£8.
Tru l y portab le and se lf-contained, no pi pes or
wires. M ore than lJ mill ion sold for workshops,
cottages, hard-to-heat rooms, etc. A proven
lifesave r during power failures and other
emergencies . Economical, the Perfec t ion
Portabl e hea ts a 1500 cu . fl . roo m
on tess than a gallon of kerose ne .

HUTCH

BASKETBALL

HECK'S

SURE-DRY

581J.C

WASHINGTON (UP!) Democratic presidential nominee George S. McGovern
spent a secluded Saturday
putting the final touches on his
revised tax and welfare reform
plan that may include a tough
work requirement feature.
The proposal, to be unveiled
Tuesday in a speech at New
York City, will substitute for
the South Dakota senator 's

earlier-and hi ghly controversial-plan to provide
every American with a $1,000
payment annually.
There were strong indications the new one would
emphasize jobs instead of
grant.&lt;; as well as the work
requirement.
McGovern 's office said the
senator was spending the
weekend working on the speech

Chicago Flooded

at his Japanese-style home in
Washington. He had no announced appointments ·either
Saturday or Sunday.
McGovern aides offered few
hint.&lt;; about the specifics of the
welfare-tax proposal on
grounds premature disclosure
might affect the stock market.
But McGovern himself revealed the broad outlines of the
measure in a speech Friday.
"I will propose a plan next
Tuesday that we think will put
people back to work, place the
No. 1 emphasis on providing a
job for everyone who is able to
work," he said.

suburban residents were
CHICAGO
( UPI )
Torrenllal rains slashed caught by surprise and scores
Chicago and it.s suburbs late were rescued by boat from
Friday night and Saturday, tbelr homes and automobiles.
turning street.s into virtual
Thousands of home owners
rivers, flooding thousands of plowed through 12 inches of
• homes and collapsing the roof mud and debris lo bail out their
of a macaroni factory . One flooded homes.
person was killed and 10 others
The body of 11-year old
Douglas Biaisdell, Naperville,
injured.
When the storms hit, despite was foWJd behind a garage in
warnin gs of heavy rain s that southwest suburb. Police
broadcast by area stations, said he apparently drowned in
thousands of northwest a retention basin .

KIT
,.

,I

• -4 OL ofttr shovt 1
• -4 oz. deodorant
• -4 oz. shave lotker

.$

CAMP
STOOLS

Heck's Reg. $2.99

$166

.

Hec/c' s lteg~
. $4.68 ·

COSMET'I.C DEPT

captured shortly after allegedly ·:~&gt;.-:
firing the death bullet from a
window of the Texas book ~it
depository, was not alone in the .,.,

j@

crime.
He said the trajectory of the
bullet that struck Kennedy's
head indicated a "crossfire "
effect.
"Not one person could have
been a shooter," Wecht said.
"There had to be two shooters."
Oswald was shot to death by
Dallas businessman Jack Ruby
before the case opened in court.
Ruby later died of natural
causes in Dallas COWJty jail.
~ech\ said the projectile on
display in Washington "was
virtually WJscathed, with only a
small indentation on it.&lt;; base,
as if Superman pressed it
between his fingers." He also
scored the Warren Commission
for "negligence" in drawing the
single bullet theory as a "sine
qua non " upon Oswald's arrest.
"The Warren report, frankly,
was a very sloppy job," Wecht
said.
The coroner vowed to utilize
his position as director of the
departrnentofforensicsciences
at Duquesne Universtty here to
request an independent review
of tbe Warren report from Dr.
Burke Marshall, dean of the
Yale University law school and
former deputy attorney general
to the late Sen. Robert
Kennedy.

His usage of the phrase "able
to work " was considered

significant. Earlier, many of
McGovern' s liberal backers
had used the phrase "a job for
everyone who wants one,"
conveying a different meaning.
Early in his successful
campaign for the Democratic
nominati on, McG overn
suggested the outlines of a
welfare and tax plan intended
to redistribute income from the
very rich to the very poor.
The most striking feature of

········

Commitment to Israel in Jeopardy?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democratic presidential nominee George s. McGovern
said Saturday the bomeportlng of U.S. &amp;tit Fleet ships in Greece "Is jeopardizing our
commitment to Israel," challenging the administration's view that tbe new porting
arrangemenla will enhance U.S. abllity to support the Jewish state.
In a statement issaed at biB campaign headquarters here, McGovern said ofllclal
Greek statemenls refute "adminlslratlonassurancestbat Greece Is friendly to our cause
In Israel and will cooperate in the defense of that nation."
He said the Greek deputy foreign minlster·tbree weeks ago said "Greece's friendly
relations with the Arab world rule out any dired or indirect pertlclpatlon In any acls
aimed at our Arab friends." McGovern said "lhe Greek junta still refuses to recognize
officially the Slate of Israel. And during tbe 1970 Jordanlan crisis, the dictatorship didn't
even bother to respond to our request that reconnaissance flights be permitted from
bases on Greek soU."

l,:.:,.
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· :.:,

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strength in the Mediterranean is dependent on the ports of a nation which Is In league
with the Arab counbies?" he uked.
Heuid the administration "failed to explore adequately a number of alternatives to
Greek ports, including potlslble bases In Italy or simple continuation of present
arrangements coupled wltb ne w crew rkotation pdractiees."
The Stale Department said 1ast wee that 6 estroyers would arrive in Greece in
Septem her where the crewmen and their' families will make their homes. The theory Is
that with the saUors seeing more of their famllles, tbe men will be more Ukely to stick
with the Navy as a career, Family separation Is the reason saUors give most for leaving

·tbr~

I

~·

tbat proposal-and the one that
grabbed most of the attentionwas a plan to provide every
person in the nation with a
yearly taxable payment from
the government of $1,000. For
persons in the upper -income
brackets, the grant would be
completely taxed away but the
poor would have been able to
keep most of the money.
Republicans denounced the
proposal on grounds it was
radical, WJworkable and unpopular with the majority of
the voters. Senate GOP leader
Hugh Scott said the McGovern
proposal would boost the taxes
of the average working family
by $2,500 a year. President
Nixon directed barbs at the
idea in his speech to the
Republican National Convention accepting his party's
renomination for a second
term.
McGovern withdrew the
$1,000 grant proposal weeks
ago when it became a center of
controversy.

Youngster Killed
By His Brother

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (U P!)
- Stephen Frost, 7, was ac·
il:i,ll cidentally shot to death by his
eight-year-old brother Rock
·:·:·:·: Friday night.
The two youngsters were
;~;~;~ playing in a field here behind
their grandfather's home when
Stephen was shot in the head
with a .22 single shot pistol.
Officials, who ruled the
shooting accidental, said the
boys had taken the pistol from
their grandfather 's bedroom
dresser.

f:!:

......,

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FISCHER SERVED
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
- An attorney for motion
picture producer Chester Fox
se rved an aide to Bobby
Fischer Saturday with formal
notice of a $1.75 million breach
of contract lawsuit Saturday
because of Fischer's refusal to
permit television filming of his
world championship chess
match with Boris Spassky.

·X~

.

M '

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Hard er L00k
:

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Jolm J. Gilligan and acting
state Welfare Director Robert
Wecht "scientifically" deB. Canary announced Saturday
clared that Lee Harvey Oswald,
a program of increased invesUgatlon of work done by county
welfare employes.
The &amp;Mouncement came in
the wake of 1,880 errors made
last fiacal year by county weifare case workers, Canary
COLUMBUS (UPI)
An contest.
Indiana couple captured top
Her !tu~nd, Dick, won the · said.
-·'d the state Wei·
G'"'-n
UU6A Dell
honors in two claues Salurilay, 1,200-pounci ·~n one-cylinder
the final day of the two-day claas !rlth 1' 175-foot pull.
. fare Depo!'\ment has added 541
National Garden Tractor Pull_-. ..Tom Miller, Bellevue, won people to lis quality control
Contelt at the Ohio Stale FaiT. tbe 1,iiOO-poUI!ll, one or multi- staff aince last December in
Carolyn Frame, Richmond, cylinder clau with a pull Of 196- order to increase the munber of
Ind., who palled a speclally feet-3-6. .
Investigations made of county
·built m'ecbanlcal weight
First-pia~ winners received welfare emplnya.
machine 17'1 feel, won the 100- an .., caab prize, plus trophy
The govemor said new state
pound, one-eyllnder tractor' and medlll\
would require county em.

Hoosiers Win Ohio Pull

,L&gt;

~.

McGovern Honing Up New L00k
Tax and Welfare Reform Plans

Theory No Good I
PI'ITSBURGH (UPI)-County Coroner Dr. Cyril Wecht, a
veteran of private probes into
the ~ssassination of Presideqt
John F. Kennedy, said Saturday his research into records at
the National Archives showed
the Warren Commission report
was "clearly invalid."
Wecht said the ·'single
bullet" tbrory, which said one
bullet struck both President
Kennedy and former Texas
Gov . John B. Connally, was
physically Impossible.
Wecht said the bullet he
observed during a two-day
research session at the National
Archives in Washington last
week "was not the bullet that
traversed the bodies of two
men ...It is physically impossible ."
Kennedy and former Texas
Gov. John Connally were felled
in a brief burst of gWJfire as
they waved from an open
motorcade in Dallas during a
campaign stop Nov. 22, 1963.
The pathologist categorically
dlsmissed tbe conclusion of the
Warren Commission that
K~nnedy and Connally were
.struck by .the same bullet.
Describing the fore-and-aft positions of both men in the
presidential car, he said thr
bullet that entered the President's back could not have

•• f

A LOT OF MOUTHS to lecd demand more than 50 pounds of dog food a week. The lti Irish St•ttcr pups are all
part ol the same Iiller and belong to Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wright of \1cKinlc~ville. Calif .

.lli~;~;;m~1;~;~m;li1il~l~l;;;~~~~~m1;~~~l~lij;~;*m~~*-t:1~;~;~~~;;;;;;~m;mmmm~m~m~l~;m;;~;;~~~~~~;~;~;~;~;;~mi~i~m;i;j;l~l~i~l~l!J;;~mmmll;m;~;m;;;;;mmm;;mmm;:

Reunion
Held In
Middleport

Miss

99

$

!AIIra &lt;:live s hades for ·
y window in your
Sizes : 37 1'4)(6
· Ft. White Only.

Linda Hackett Will be Wed

an d · Tim~ny,

·claimed Saturday Women's . stitutlon!l which receive Ieder·
. RightS Day and r~onde!l to · !'I money' ·. ·
.·
Denioctatic chafges th8t .he
"ill recent years there have
' has .tPeated ,' the . feminist . ilfeQ gr~at *id~ in exte11ding
.niovemenl ·,as• ."a joke" · .bY theproteCtton of the law to the
cialmiilg , that more, wixnen 'rights of . -women and ' in
· occtipy' promin~ht goverruri~nt · ptori&gt;Oting equa.l opportuiijties
positions tlian eyer before.
for . women;' . the President
. He .said .that .although great . !iaid. · "'l:oday · more
·strides have been rriade, ''We worden than ever before serve
. ·still must do more to ensure in pullcy.rnaking positions in
women · every 0ppottunity to the execlltlve branch of our
make thefallest cOntribution to government. Throughout the
our progress as a nation."
nation, in' state and local
Nixon issued the statement government and in the private
on the occasion of the 52nd sphere, women are playing a
anniversary of women winning more active role."
the right to vote and a day after
McGovern had claimed that
his opponent, Sen. George S.
tbere
are more than 12,000 top
McGovern, charged hlm with
pollcy
positions in the governan uunjust" and "stupid"
policy of dlscrimlmiting ment and less !ban 1 per cent
against women who comprise are filled by women . .
Nixon issued the statement
more than hall the electorate.
The White House issued · a from the Western White House
fact sheet claiming thai 118 where he spent the . day
women- triple the original relaxing with his family and
goal -had been placed in top- preparing for his trip Wedneslevel, policy-making positions day to Hawail for a two-day
paying $28,000 and up, and meeting with Japanese Prime
more than 1,000 women occupy Minister Kakuei Tanaka.
First Lady Pat Nixon will
middle level jobs paying from
acccompany
and make some
$18,737 to $25,583 aMua11y.
II claimed that for tbe first campaign appearances. The
time in history two women- Nixons, here for some rest and
Catherine May Bedell of the to work out the details of their
Tariff Conunisslon and Helen campeign schedule, will host a
D. Bentley of the Maritime group of Hollywood celebrities
Commission - are heading at the Western White House
regulatory agencies and said &amp;mday .
The White House refused
Nixon had for the first time
conunent
on tbe decision by the
promoted women to generals~ofthem-1mdtoamntral - General Accounting Office to
refer to the Justice Depart"'•61ie or them.
•· ~ Ticking olf olher "flrsta" for ment pouible violations by
his administration, N~on Nixon's campaign committee
claimed that all !Inns doing in tbe handllng of campaign
business with the government contributions. Deputy press
were required to have action sea-etary Gerald L. Warren
plans for hiring and promoting refused to say whether the
women and tbe administration President was aware of the
bad brought charges of sex decision or concerned about it.

Door
Mirror

I

Heck's Reg. 88(

~-,--~·~·SU_ND_AY_,A_U_GU~ST=27=='·-=19=72=----------'~'-AGE_!5-

O_L._VII_N_0-=.)"-"0__=_

·sAN CLEMENTE, Calif. discrimination against more

Heck's Reg.
1
1.20

7'!

v_·

(UPI)~esldent l!lixon pro- than 350 higher education in·

Bright ne.w colon with contra sti~9 block metcil stand. Preci sion ground 15 edqe cutter of 111lid steeL Mounting scr•w' included . Hiqh impact plodic receptad&amp;.
·

cutting the strings

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and at 2:30 'o'clock at the Sacred
. Mrs . Geo rge Ha ckett, Jr., Hear t church, Pomrroy.
annou nce the approac hin g Falher Berna rd Krajcov ic will
marriage of their daughter, officiate.
Maid ol honor will be
Linda, to Mr. John Goodwin,
son of Mr. and Mrs. David Melanic Hackett, sister ol the
Goodwin , Pomeroy. It will be bride, and matron of honor will
an event of Saturday, Sept. 2, be Rose Marie Fry, aso a sister
of the bride.
Best man is John Roberts, of
Columbus and ushers will be
Charles Clarkson of Appleton ,
Wis., and Robert Gachnauer of
Columbus. Hegistering guests
will be Joan Franz ol Perrys·
burg. Serving at the reception
will be Marlene Johnson, sistl!r
of the groom , Karen Humphrey
CHESHIHE - The fourth of Reedsville and Mrs . Charl es
annual
reunion of th e Jordan of Worthington.
descendants of Adaline
Reynolds Yeauger and Samuel
Yeauger of Cheshire was held
VISIT ENDED
Sunday, Aug . 20, at the Legion
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
park in Middleport.
Mrs. Wayne Burton, Dee, Chris
Ne&lt;t year's reunion will be
held the second Sunday in and Kim, have returned to
their home in Norfolk, Va .
August a l the same loct1tion.
after a tO day visit with Mrs.
Altending were Bruce
Ruth Dodson and Mr. and Mrs.
Yeauger, Cheshire; Mr. and
Gene Dodso n and family .
Mrs. Ray Hedman and Hay of
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Juanita
Bal la rd, Mrs. Marjori e
RETURN HOME
Bradbury , Miss Jeanette Scott,
MIDDLEPOHT - Mr. and
and Miss Sandy Bradbury, all
Mrs. Robert Arnold, Emily and
of Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs . Kathy of Basking Ridge, N.y.
Robert Gardner, Mr. and Mrs . hav e retu rned home a!ter
Raymond Potts, and Mrs .
visiting Mrs. Grace Hawley,
Margaret Bruce, all of Croo.ks- Miss Mildred !lawley, Mrs.
ville; Mr. and Mrs. James
Nan Moore and Mr. and Mrs.
Neutzling and Patti, Mr. and Jack Hawley.
Mrs. James Clatworthy of
Pomeroy; Mrs. Bertha Ward,
and Mr . and Mrs. John Mulford
of Columbus ; Mr . and Mrs.
'
Hubert Johnson, Jr. , and son, AN UNBELIEVER
LANDEH, Wyo. iUP])-A
12Buc ki e, Mason, W. Va.; Mrs.
.
Mildred Powell, Mr. and Mrs . foot high creature known as
Larry Guinther, Molly and "Big Fool" may be roaming
Richard, ,Springfield .
the Wind River Indian RescrvaAlso, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard lion, but Police Chief Bill King
is .not a believer.
Ba ird, Mrs. Mina Roub, Mr.. . R.eporis of a strange, ha iry
and Mrs . Leo Altier, Cindy,
Gregg, Chris, Pat, Tony and crea ture~w~o comes out at
Brent, and Miss Cheryl Phle.•of nighi apparently,to get drin.idtig.
Corning ; Mr. and Mrs. ·Lewis wa\er'-have drcuiat~d in ' the
·
J· an · Long, . M
. rs.
· · area
. ..
Long,
.,. . for .a .m?nth.
.
Margaret Cla tworthy·, Mrs.. ·lite reservation . poli~e chief
Bertha . Eber.sbach , Mr .. and said . the ·persoris who have
Mrs. James· Clatworthy, Mr. · claimed to see the creature
and. .Mrs: ·. William Ne~tzling · ~ere, . ,.'0~ t~e '?,ost · part,

'

PENCIL SHARPENERS

Crayola Crayons ·

Sincerely yours,
AlvL• J . Moore

Dear five year old, as I watch you today, I couldn 't help but
hold tears back and say, "Go strong, my sweet, go tall.
I'm here little one, If you should happen to fall."
But the ache is so hard to take.
How was I to know my heart would break ?
Your endless and boundless energy, hardly concerned how it
tired your Mominy and DHddy To be free of your chatter; (how I'll miss it; when did it
really matter?)
Will anyone notice our precious gem as you are to us?, or will
they notice you only when you make a fuss.
How can I help you? Or should I say, "I've done all I can,
you're on your own today ."
Stand tall, Mother, here 's your little one cqming home. (Hair
looking like it never saw a comb.)
Why was I worried? A smile from ear to ea r. Apparently no
worse for tbe wear.
Suddenly a slight frown do I see. She is watching elsewhere
yet looking at me.
Why it's the School Buses she watches. Could it be '
Tomorrow she'll ride one and not go with me.
1
Laura Amsbary's mother.

- 1 PM TO 7 PM ONLY

'Day Proclaimed
·By Mr. Nixon

"1•.'

:::::~:::::::::::~:::::::::~:~::::~::::~.::~::::::~;:?.!:;8::~

6 IN IRELAND DIE
BELFAST (UP!)
Gunfire, bombs and a booby·
trapped car kllled at least six
men Saturday, Including two
ployes to correct mistakes in parlltrne soldiers In Nor·
ellgibillty, overpayment and · thern Ireland, hours before
underpayment and make the planned start of the first
Protulant "Black Satur·
better reports.
marches In four years.
day"
"Together, these measures
Bodies
dloeovered after a
should put the welfare system
in a position of being more ac. predawn bomb blast at
countable to both the taxpayers Downpatrick County Down
and the rectpl~ts," Gilligan racetrack were so badly
ripped apart the Army was
said.
Cal)Bry said not all tbe. 1,880 unsure whether there were
two or three victims.
errors uncovered last fiscal
r
&lt;,...&lt;·~·-·,;·r·;:;·r·r·r ·r·r·:· ;· :s~···· ·r·r·:··.,;.,.,.,.,•.•••••••.
year concerned cases of ··· · .......... ··················· ..v........:.••••••••.·.·:·.·.·:·,
inl:llgiblllty or overpayments. system," Canary said. "But
. About half were ml.stakes of with this Increase In the
'ool givln!! reclplenta enough munber of state inveatigators,
money, he said.
1am sure we will be better able
"County welfare depart· to gu&amp;rantee to tbe people of
menta still remain tbe flrit line Ohio . that tbelr tax dollars
of defense against thQee who asalst . ooly thOR who are
would cheat the welfare honestly in need."

,

WHETHER YOU'RE big
enough lo make II on your
own or need a boo11, no
water tastes quite u good
as the stuff that comes out
of those lolly fountalno in
lhe part.

GAO into Probe

By ED DOOLEY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The General Accounting Office
turned over to the Justice Department Saturday a report, in·
spired by the Watergate bugging episode, listing nine possible
violations of the new election law by President Nixon's campaign
committee in the handling of $350,000 in contributions.
The GAO report said they consisted of both "apparent and
possible" violations of the 197,1campaign spending reform law by
the Finance Committee for the Re-election of the President. They
included failure to keep complete and accurate accoWJt of a
$25,000contribution linked to a suspect in the June 17 break~n at
the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate apartment
complex.
A spokesinan for tbe Nixon committee said the report was
0 inaccurate " and "it is also incomplete ." The spokesman said
information supporting those contentions would be given the Jus·
ice Department. .
At San Clemente, Calif ., the scheduled to be issued.
Western White House had a
The GAO said the committee
terse "no comment" on the set up to finance President
report, issued by the GAO's Nixon 's re-election appeared to
Office of Federal Elections.
have violated the 1971act in the
The GAO aUeged that failur e following ways:
to disclose details of the $25,000
- The committee failed to
contribution and other receipt.&lt;; keep detailed and exac t acand expenditures may con- counting ot the $25,000 constitute violation of the new law tribution received by Kenneth
which
requires
public H. Dahlberg, midwestern
disclosure of all major money finance chairman for the redealings after April 7.
election committee on April 9.
The report was issued after The report said this constituted
weeks of probing bank records an apparent violation, as did
in an effort to trace $114,000 th e committee's failure to
that was allegedly chaMeled disclose the details of the
through the Nixon campaign $25,000 contribution in ils June
fund to the Florida bank ac- 10 report.
count of Bernard L. Barker,
- The Committee's failure to
one of five men charged with keep a "detailed and exact
breaking into DemOcratic Na- accoun t" of hew the $25,000
tional Committee headquar- Dahlberg check and four
ters on June 17.
Mexican bank checks totalling
The men, Including James $8P,OOO were spent, along with
W. McCord Jr., then chief of th e committee's failur e to
security for the Nixon re· disclose the details of the exelection committee, carried penditures in it.s June 10 report.
electronic
eavesdropping The four checks were drawn on
equipment and cameras.
the Banco Internacional of
Under the federal election Mexico City to the order of
reform law, disclosure must be Manuel OgarriQ and deposited
made of major contributions in the same account on the
and expenditures after April 7, same day as Ute Dalberg
the day the law took effect.
check .
The. GAO is empowered to
- The GAO cited the
refer it.&lt;; finding to the Justice "committee's failure to keep
Department for prosecution. and maintain adequate books
The criminal penalty for each and records on a current basis
violation is a fine of up to $1,000 with respect to the $25,000
or one year in jail for any check and it.s proceeds, the
campaign committee officially proceeds of the four checks
involved.
totallin g $89,000 and the
Spokesmen for the Com· balance of the $350,000 in
mittee to Re-Elect the currency which constituted an
President have said the apparent violation" of the
$114,000 in question was part of comptroller general's rules
$10.2 million collected before and regulations under the law.
April 7 and listed as "cash on
hand" even though it reached
the committee after the law's
C
effective date.
Murder harged
Dwayne Andreas, a Min- To Columbus Man
neapolis businessman and one
of the biggest financial backers
COLUMBUS ( UP 1)
of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey's . Michael John Lager , 23,
unsuccessful bid for the Demo- Columbus, was charged with
eratic presidential nomination, first degree murder in conwas identified as the source of nection with a shooting Friday
the $25,000 check that \j'Ound up nigh t at the Interns tiona!
in Barker's account.
Harvester warehouse here .
Dahlberg has said Andreas
Fatally shot at the plant was
made tbe contribution on April Charles Greene, 28 of nearby
5-two days before tbe law . London . Police said they were
went into effect. He said he WJable to determine a motive
picked it up from a Florida for the 7 p.m. shooting at the
hotel depository April 9, con- warehouse where Greene
verted it into a cashier's check worked.
and gave it to Maurice H.
Stans, Nixon's chief political
fund..-aiser, on April H 1 in · I" FOREIGNERS OUT
Washington.
KAMPALA, Uganda (UP!)
The GAO acted shortly after - Presidentldi Amin declared
Stans issued a statement Saturday that African interest.s
denying that lie had sought to would take over for eign
block the report, although he businesses
in
Uganda-.
acknowledged that he had met European as well as. Asianwith GAO officials in Miami owned concerns- in phase two
Beach last Tuesday, the day of his nation 's econom ic
the report was originally revolution .

�.

.. .

I

.'.

"

., . .

...

~

. . . ...

•

•

17 - 'lbe 'lbDe.&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, Aug. 27,.11172
16 - The Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 1972

~~~*'

FDA Would Reduce Bad Blood
WASHiNGTON (UP!)- The
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), In an attempt to screen .
out contaminated human ·
blood, has taken steps to bring
lllder federal control for the
first lime the nation's 5,000
blood collection centers.
Dr. Charles C. Edwards,
FDA commissioner, said
Friday the action "is essential,
not only- for the protection of
patients against blood from
unhealthy donors, but also for
the protection of donors
against exploitation."
Several diseases, including
syphillis, malaria and hepatitis
can be transmitted through

contaminated blood.
The action is aimed mainly
at small, local blood banks that
accoon I for 15 ·pet. of the 8
million pints of human blood
collected annually for medical
use.
Under the proposed rules,
federa l registration and· in·
spection would he required for
all blood collection facilities
not now operating und er
federal license and facilities
that collect blood for
separation into components.

across state lines. These
collection centers account for
85 pet. of the blond collected
across the country.
Many of the remaining 15
pet. - which operate within a .
single state - subscribe to
standards of such groups as the
American Red Cross and the
American Association of Blond
Banks (AABB) but are
governed by widely varying
local laws.
Edwards emphasized that
the action was not meant to be
tTitical of intrastate blood

Currently, there are about
530 federally licensed blond
banks that transport blood

centers.

"This is not to say that all
intrastate blood is Wlsafe or

poorly regulated," he said. "It
is not .. . But these voluntary
programs lack adequate enforcement authority to stop
intrastate collection and
distribution of substandard
blood."

Dr . Robert D. Langdell ,
president-elect of the AABB,
said his organization had not
been co nsulted about the
regulatory proposals. " We
have been in inspection aud
accreditation for 20 years and
have a certain amount of expertise,'' he said. ''I don 't think

that we ought to be regulated
out of existence."

w

m~:e:: · :'n:

:OC&gt;t=:f:m ... :Pm:1~:::: ··

)) Full Rights Promised
WASHINGTON (UP!) Democratic vice presidential
uominee R. Sargent Shriver
picked the 52nd anniversary of
the day American women got
the right to vote Saturday to
promise that he and pre$idential nominee GeorgeS. McGovern Will campaign hard for the
constitutional
amendment
granting women full legal
rights.
He also lambasted the Nixon
administration for its altitude
toward women and, following
McGovern's lead Friday,
named six women to top jobs
on his campaign staff.
In a statement, Shriver

lt In the 30 otllen.
Ratiflcation by three-fourths !If
the states, 38 In all, is required
to make an amendment part of
the Constitution.
Shriver charged that the
.Nixon administration has "ignored the needs and concerns
of working women" by !allure
to enforce sex discrimination
laws, the President's veiQ of a
comprehensive child care bill
and failure to move women into
top-level-government jobs.
"Senator McGovern has said
there is no reason why the
secretary of state, the secrelary of defense or the secretary
of the interior must be male,"
he said. "There should be
women on the National Security
Council so that the question of
war or peace will never again
be an all-male decision. There

sha'Jid be Wlllliln Gil the
· Supreme Court. Nl:&amp;onllu bad
four opportunities to appoint
women to the court, !llld has
struck out every time."

!&amp;L.L( .jf.'."r. for

I

described the Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA ) that won
congressional approval earlier
lhis year as the second great
legislative goal" for American
women, following adoption of
the 19th amendment to the
Constitution Aug. 26, 1920, that
give women the right to vote.
"When this (new) amendment is fully ratified and
becomes law, the last vestiges
of 'legal discrimination on the
basis of sex will come to an
end," he said.
Twenty state legislatures
have ratified the ERA so far
and Shriver promised that he
and McGovern would campaign

Veleraas Memortal Hospital
ADM ISSIONS - Susan
Emrick, Lancaster; Nettle
Swisher, Bidwell; Randy
Grinstead, Mason; Vernon
Roush, Mason; Donald Machir,
· Letart, W. Va .; • Kenneth
Collins, Pomeroy ; Darin
Roach, Pomeroy; Fran kiln
Lemley, Portland; Clarence'
Wickline, Racine ; Harry
Smith, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Leroy
Terrell, Lela Forrest, Susan
Emrick.

McGee Has Tournament Lead Devine Has His
DOUGLAS MONROE
lied at four-under-par 140
";lNEHURsT, N.C. (UP!)- Friday after two rounds of the
! ~e never been quite in thia L&amp;M, found themselves vying
posttlon before," Jerry McGee
for the seventh and eighth slots
Said.
for the match play. Bies birA bogey in a playoff with died the second hole of the
Paul Moran sent McGee playoff, while Moran and
packin~ as far as today's u.s. McGee earned pars.
professtonal match play chamThe top eight finishers In the
pionship was concerned--but it L&amp;M departed from the stroke
won him the third roWJd lead In play tournament to face the
the L&amp;M Open,
likes of Jack Nicklaus, Lee
McGee,Moran and Don Bies Trevino, Arnold Palmer ·and
'
By

NATIONAL LEAGUE

San Diego.at Si. Louis (N )
New York at Atlanta (N)

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WE INSTALL

San

Francisco at

49ers Stronger

In '72 Campa zgn, ge;~·
Collett at tackle.
II there is a question mark on
the team this year it is at
defensive end where Cedrick
Hardman, one of the best at
sacking the quarterback, is
coming back from an offseason knee injury. H he can't
play as well or as often as

WINS HANDICAP
CLEVELANp (UP! ) .
Central Paris beat Royal
Harrriony by a neck to win the
$36,950 Clevelander Handicap
at Thistledown Saturday with
Merry Native third in the mile
and 70 yard event.
Centraj Paris, with Tommy
Meyers in the irons, covered
the distance in I :46 4-5 to pay
$10.60, $4 and $3.20.
First Column and Kent Maid
(2-11) returned $20.40 on the
daily double.
Attendance was 7,028 with a
handle of $582,109 on the 10race card.

FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
(UP! ) - Ken Rosewall, the
leading pro on the World
Championship tennis circuit
last year, defeated Wimbledon
Champion Stan Smith, 11-3, in a
one-set match Saturday in the
highlight of the Robert F.
Kennedy Celebrity Tennis
Tournament.
The one-day tournament,
which attracted some 70
celebrities from the worlds of
sport, politics and show
business, drew about 13,000
spec tators and was held for the
benefit of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation. All
proceeds from the tournament
go to the foundation, which was
set up to help minority
children.
Thirty-two
teams
of
celebrities competed in the
tournament, including fiv e
members of the Kenn edy
family - Joan and Ted Kennedy , Eunice and Sargent
Shriver and Steve Smith.
Actor Dustin Hoffman and
Eric Van Dillen defeated
Eunice Shriver and Pancho
Gonzales, 6-1, in the pro-am
portion of the program and
Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass.,
and Sen. John Tunneyk DCalif., beat Sargent Shriver
and Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N. Y.,
in a tie-breaker in a battle of
politicians.

Vented to the Chimney.

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CLEVELAND (UP!) - A 211year veteran of the city police
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Sgt. Joseph Johnson, off duty
at the time of the killing, was
sitting in a car with a woman

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SHERIFF RELEASED
BARTOW, Fla. (UP!) - A
sheriff's deputy in need of
insulin for diabetes was
released by an escaped
prisoner who held him hostage
Saturday, but a manhunt
conlinued for a Miami Beach
family taken from their motel
room.

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areas-lack of experience, Nitschke out of a job last year.
particularly at quarterback, Carter has shown tremendous
and lack of speed on the flanks . impr"" oment and his year of
Probably the most telling expenence should help .
blow to Devine's hopes came
In the defensive line veterans
when Bart Starr was forced to Bob Brown and Alden Roch,
retire because of recurring are the outstanding start~
pains in his throwing ann.
Clarence Williams is anotha
The rebuilt defense looked veteran. But the problems
good in the fll'sl two pre--season .were complicated even more
games, holding Cincinnati and when Mike McCoy broke a
Miami in check before falling bone in his foot in the third
to Houston, ~.
exhibition game and was
l)elenslve Backfield Open shelved indefinitely . Jim
The retirements of Willie Delisle replaced him and
Wood and Doug Hart opened up Devine immediately started
the defensive backfield and it looking for more help.
appears Devine will go with
rookie Willie Buchanon, a first·
round draft choice, third-year
men Al Matthews and Ken
Ellis, and veteran Jim Hill,
obtained from San Diego.
The linebacking appears
solid with Dave Robinson
apparently ready to return to
his All-Pro form after an
Achilles tendon injury, and
Fred Carr rapidly becoming
one of the best outside
linebackers in the business.
In the middle, where Ray
Nitschke held forth for many
years, is Jim Carter, who beat

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OAKLAND (UP! I - A ninth
inning throwing error by Tim
Cullen, Oakland's third second
baseman of the game, enabled
Brooks Robinson to score the
ga-ahead rWl and opened the
door to·a four-run inning as the
Baltimore Orioles beat the A's,
5-!, Saturday in a nationally
televised game.
Robinson led off the ninth
aga inst loser Rollie Fingers (66) with his second double of the
game. With one out, Johnny
Oates was intentionally
walked . Tommy Davis batted
for winning pitcher Pat Dobson
(15-12) and grounded to shortstop .
Bert Campaneris fli pped to
Cullen for a force out at second ,
but Cullen's throw to 1st on the
double piBy attempt was wild,
and Robinson scored. After a
stolen base and walk, two more
Oriole runs crossed when
centerfielder Reggie Jackson
lost Paul Blair 's fly ball in the
sun . Terry Crowley singled in
Blair for the final rWJ of the
inning.
Baltimore had taken a 1-0
lead off A's starter John Odom
in the fifth inning when Bobby
Grieb si ngled, stole scond and
scored on a Robinson double.

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watchdogs are back.
Weller said Saturday he might
look for toothless hounds that
can 't chew candy.

needed, the veteran Bill Belk
will take over.
The Other Members
The other members of the
front four are Charlie Krueger
(starting his 14th season), Earl
Edwards and Tommy Hart.
Behind them at linebacker
are All Pro Dave Wilcox, the
rising Frank Nunley and Skip
Vanderbundt as the regulars.
Backup men include. Jim
Sniadecki , Ed Beard and
, Marty Huff with rookie Mike
· Green of Georgia an outsider
"ffgllting ron berth.,.
All-Pro J)mmy Johnson
heads the defensive secondary
and will work in a unit with
Bruce Taylor and Mel Phillips.
Rosey Taylor is gone from last
year's team and his spot is up
for grabs with Mike Simpson
and Johnny Fuller the candidates.
The 49ers sought depth for
·- the unit by drafting four
SPARTAN SPACE mls- defensi ve ba cks-Ralph
slons will be a thing of the McGill of Tulsa , Windlan Hall
past wh en the Skvlab Is
f
·
s t J k'
launched in 1973. · Astro- 0 Arazona ta e, ac te
Walker of Tennessee and Jerry
nnuts, who hlll'e had to go Brown of Northwestern.
to the moon and back without so much as a shave or Naturally, all fo ur won't
ehun ge of spacesuit, will survive but those who do
be able to enjoy the luxury should give the unit a good
of a show er in the orbital blend of experience and youth.
space station. Us ing a compact assembly in the crew
quarters, space men wIll
The life of man is a jour·
step Inside a ring mounted
ney
: a journey that must be
on the cabin floor, above,
traveled
, however bad the
and raise a 42-l neh diamroads
or the accommoda·
eter hoop with attached
tions.-Oliver
Go Id s mit h.
curtain to the ceiling, below . Flexible h o s c with English novelist.
push -button shower nozzle
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Water ration per shower
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Defeats
Smith

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Chicago

COURSE

,(

•·ith 70s.
Hale Irwin and Larry Ziegler
were tied at 142, two under par
anJ two strokes off the lead.
· Richie Karl, the 27-year-&lt;Jld
tour sophomore who stunned
the field in 'the first round
Thursday by firing a sevenonder 65, struggled In with an
embarrassing 81 Friday to
wind up in a 16 way tie at 146--- .
two over par.
The cut was after 147,
leaving 79 players in competition for the L&amp;M's fi rstprize purse of $20,000.

Win On
On Salvage Lot Big Error

p.m. l
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
Philadelph ia
San Diego al 51. Louis (2: 15 (UP!) - Henry Weller's night
WEST
p.m.)
W L Pet GB
New York at Aflan la 12 : IS p. security plan has gone from the
Cincinnati
75 44 .630
m.l
how-wows to the honk-honks
Houston
67 54 .554 9
Phi ladelphia at Cinc innati and back to the bow-wows.
Los Ange les
64 55 .538 11
(2 : IS p.m.)
Atlan ta
56 66 .459 2o y,
Henry posted watch dogs at
Montreal at Houston (Jp. m . )
San Francisco 54 68 .443 22•12
Monday' s Games
his
auto salvage lot in suburSan Diego
46 73 .387 29
San Diego at Pittsburgh INI
ban Wyoming . They liked
·
Saturday's Res ults
San Fran . at St. Louis INI
Los Angeles 7 Pittsburgh 3
candy.
Thieves gave the dogs
New York at Cincinnati (N)
Chicago 10 San Fran 9
(Only games sc heduled)
ca ndy, helped themselves to
( 10 inninQs)
spare parts and left.
Weller moved the dogs to
another lot and put m geese,
hoping that they would honk
and hiss at intruders, thereby
alerting the night watchmen.
Roving dogs ruined that idea.
e
They got in and killed the six

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)The San Francisco 49ers came
within 12 points of winning a
Super Bowl berth last year
with a solid team.
ThiS year's club could be
stronger, so it comes as no
surprise to hear the 49ers
talking, even during the exhibition season, of "going all the
way."
11
0 ur
first
concern,
however," says conservative
head Coach Dick Nolan, "is
winning our division . After thai
we'll think about going the rest
of the way.
·
Nolan, of course, is right in
~~ sticking his n~ ~~~ ~
!ley Injury could nllnit aU. for
the 49ers, who are talented and
deep but once again will be
starting out with an old
quarterback and an ine.P.,.lenced backup man.
The "old quarterback" is
John Brodie, who recently
celebrated his 37th birthday.
He is throwing the ball hard
and with accuracy, but
followers of the club shudder
whenever injury is mentioned.
Spurrier Is Back
Sieve Spurrier, the former
Helsman Trophy winner, is
starting his sixth year with the
49ers but if you put all hia
playing time ·together it
wouldn't amount to a half
season .
Suffice it to say, though, that
going into the season the 49ers
start out with one of the best
quarterbacks in the pro ranks
and several good receivers
second to none.
Gene Washington, the All
Pro wide receiver, is in a cla&amp;S
all by himself. At tight end, the
49ers feel they have one of the
rising stars in Ted Kwalick.
Veteran Dick Wlchter has the
other wide receiving job but
with Bob Windsor traded off he
may have to see double duty,
backing up Kwallck on occasion.
·
·
That leaves room for No. 1
, .draft choice Terry Beasley of ·
. Auburn to work his way into.aspot starting a&amp;Signment. Allen
Dunbar, the t~J;d-round choice
from Southern I.Jnlversity, also
should be around for spot dutY,The club is strong In the
offensive line. The unit is back
intact with Forrest Blue at
center, Woody Peoples and
Randy Beisler at guard and
Cas Banaszek and Elmer

blond 29-year-dd veteran of
five years on Uie tour. "But,
I'm leading."
Six golfers, Jumped together
at 141, three-under for two
rounds, suddenly found themselves only one stroke off the
pace instead of five shots back.
Jim Wiechers fired a 6~
Friday to join John Schroeder,
Dan Sikes, Ken Still, Dave
Eichelberger and Dick Lotz at
141.
· Schroeder, Sikes and Lotz
had second-round 72s, while
Still and Eichelberger came in

Nuthin' Worked

EAST
Montreal at Houston ( NJ
W L Pel GB
Sunday's Games
74 45 .622
(All Times EDTl

-

Model VR· 85·MAB

Phila . at Cin cinnati (Nl

others in the match play. ,
Bles and Moran-along with
Bob Barbarossa with eightunder 138, Deane Beman with
137, Lanny Wadldns with 138
and Babe Hiskey, Dave Stockton and Len Thompsonbeaded for the richer pastures
of the $150,000 match play.
McGee, whose bogey six on
the 484-yard 18th hole, the
fourth hole of the playoff,
skyrocketed illto the lead of the
. $100,000 L&amp;M, which will be
played simultaneously with the
match play today and Sunday
on the 6,973-yard Country Club
of North Carolina course.
"It's a kind of funny way to
be leading one," said McGee, a

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)This is the year Dan Devine
gets a chance to write a second
chapter to his hoped-for best
seller: "How to Rebuild a
Dynasty ."
But chances are the final
pages won 't come off the press
for a couple of seasons more.
"! think everybody on our
team wants to win so much
right now they can taste it,"
Devine said of his 1972
Packers, a team with few
remnants of the glory years of
Vince Lombardi.
Devine admits the problems
are many as he tried to wipe
out four years of frustrations
for the fans in pro football 's
smallest city.
First off, there's the schedule
-a grind that Involves seven of
the eight teams in last season's
playoffs. The Packers open
with Cleveland, Oakland and
Dallas and it's doubtful any
team could have it tougher.
Rebuilds Defense
Then there's the task of
rebuilding a defense that last
yea r proved particularly
volnera~!" &amp;gainst the pass.
As !ar as the offense is
con(erned, Devine is confident,
but not overly so.
The reasons for the confidence are in a fine trio of
running backs - John
Brockington, MacArthur Lane
and Dave Hampton-and in an
outstanding offensive line
anchored by center Ken
Bowman and guard Gale
Gillingham.
But the confidence is tempered when Devine licks off
what could be some problem

Chance

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17 - 'lbe 'lbDe.&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, Aug. 27,.11172
16 - The Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 27, 1972

~~~*'

FDA Would Reduce Bad Blood
WASHiNGTON (UP!)- The
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), In an attempt to screen .
out contaminated human ·
blood, has taken steps to bring
lllder federal control for the
first lime the nation's 5,000
blood collection centers.
Dr. Charles C. Edwards,
FDA commissioner, said
Friday the action "is essential,
not only- for the protection of
patients against blood from
unhealthy donors, but also for
the protection of donors
against exploitation."
Several diseases, including
syphillis, malaria and hepatitis
can be transmitted through

contaminated blood.
The action is aimed mainly
at small, local blood banks that
accoon I for 15 ·pet. of the 8
million pints of human blood
collected annually for medical
use.
Under the proposed rules,
federa l registration and· in·
spection would he required for
all blood collection facilities
not now operating und er
federal license and facilities
that collect blood for
separation into components.

across state lines. These
collection centers account for
85 pet. of the blond collected
across the country.
Many of the remaining 15
pet. - which operate within a .
single state - subscribe to
standards of such groups as the
American Red Cross and the
American Association of Blond
Banks (AABB) but are
governed by widely varying
local laws.
Edwards emphasized that
the action was not meant to be
tTitical of intrastate blood

Currently, there are about
530 federally licensed blond
banks that transport blood

centers.

"This is not to say that all
intrastate blood is Wlsafe or

poorly regulated," he said. "It
is not .. . But these voluntary
programs lack adequate enforcement authority to stop
intrastate collection and
distribution of substandard
blood."

Dr . Robert D. Langdell ,
president-elect of the AABB,
said his organization had not
been co nsulted about the
regulatory proposals. " We
have been in inspection aud
accreditation for 20 years and
have a certain amount of expertise,'' he said. ''I don 't think

that we ought to be regulated
out of existence."

w

m~:e:: · :'n:

:OC&gt;t=:f:m ... :Pm:1~:::: ··

)) Full Rights Promised
WASHINGTON (UP!) Democratic vice presidential
uominee R. Sargent Shriver
picked the 52nd anniversary of
the day American women got
the right to vote Saturday to
promise that he and pre$idential nominee GeorgeS. McGovern Will campaign hard for the
constitutional
amendment
granting women full legal
rights.
He also lambasted the Nixon
administration for its altitude
toward women and, following
McGovern's lead Friday,
named six women to top jobs
on his campaign staff.
In a statement, Shriver

lt In the 30 otllen.
Ratiflcation by three-fourths !If
the states, 38 In all, is required
to make an amendment part of
the Constitution.
Shriver charged that the
.Nixon administration has "ignored the needs and concerns
of working women" by !allure
to enforce sex discrimination
laws, the President's veiQ of a
comprehensive child care bill
and failure to move women into
top-level-government jobs.
"Senator McGovern has said
there is no reason why the
secretary of state, the secrelary of defense or the secretary
of the interior must be male,"
he said. "There should be
women on the National Security
Council so that the question of
war or peace will never again
be an all-male decision. There

sha'Jid be Wlllliln Gil the
· Supreme Court. Nl:&amp;onllu bad
four opportunities to appoint
women to the court, !llld has
struck out every time."

!&amp;L.L( .jf.'."r. for

I

described the Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA ) that won
congressional approval earlier
lhis year as the second great
legislative goal" for American
women, following adoption of
the 19th amendment to the
Constitution Aug. 26, 1920, that
give women the right to vote.
"When this (new) amendment is fully ratified and
becomes law, the last vestiges
of 'legal discrimination on the
basis of sex will come to an
end," he said.
Twenty state legislatures
have ratified the ERA so far
and Shriver promised that he
and McGovern would campaign

Veleraas Memortal Hospital
ADM ISSIONS - Susan
Emrick, Lancaster; Nettle
Swisher, Bidwell; Randy
Grinstead, Mason; Vernon
Roush, Mason; Donald Machir,
· Letart, W. Va .; • Kenneth
Collins, Pomeroy ; Darin
Roach, Pomeroy; Fran kiln
Lemley, Portland; Clarence'
Wickline, Racine ; Harry
Smith, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Leroy
Terrell, Lela Forrest, Susan
Emrick.

McGee Has Tournament Lead Devine Has His
DOUGLAS MONROE
lied at four-under-par 140
";lNEHURsT, N.C. (UP!)- Friday after two rounds of the
! ~e never been quite in thia L&amp;M, found themselves vying
posttlon before," Jerry McGee
for the seventh and eighth slots
Said.
for the match play. Bies birA bogey in a playoff with died the second hole of the
Paul Moran sent McGee playoff, while Moran and
packin~ as far as today's u.s. McGee earned pars.
professtonal match play chamThe top eight finishers In the
pionship was concerned--but it L&amp;M departed from the stroke
won him the third roWJd lead In play tournament to face the
the L&amp;M Open,
likes of Jack Nicklaus, Lee
McGee,Moran and Don Bies Trevino, Arnold Palmer ·and
'
By

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San Diego.at Si. Louis (N )
New York at Atlanta (N)

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San

Francisco at

49ers Stronger

In '72 Campa zgn, ge;~·
Collett at tackle.
II there is a question mark on
the team this year it is at
defensive end where Cedrick
Hardman, one of the best at
sacking the quarterback, is
coming back from an offseason knee injury. H he can't
play as well or as often as

WINS HANDICAP
CLEVELANp (UP! ) .
Central Paris beat Royal
Harrriony by a neck to win the
$36,950 Clevelander Handicap
at Thistledown Saturday with
Merry Native third in the mile
and 70 yard event.
Centraj Paris, with Tommy
Meyers in the irons, covered
the distance in I :46 4-5 to pay
$10.60, $4 and $3.20.
First Column and Kent Maid
(2-11) returned $20.40 on the
daily double.
Attendance was 7,028 with a
handle of $582,109 on the 10race card.

FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
(UP! ) - Ken Rosewall, the
leading pro on the World
Championship tennis circuit
last year, defeated Wimbledon
Champion Stan Smith, 11-3, in a
one-set match Saturday in the
highlight of the Robert F.
Kennedy Celebrity Tennis
Tournament.
The one-day tournament,
which attracted some 70
celebrities from the worlds of
sport, politics and show
business, drew about 13,000
spec tators and was held for the
benefit of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation. All
proceeds from the tournament
go to the foundation, which was
set up to help minority
children.
Thirty-two
teams
of
celebrities competed in the
tournament, including fiv e
members of the Kenn edy
family - Joan and Ted Kennedy , Eunice and Sargent
Shriver and Steve Smith.
Actor Dustin Hoffman and
Eric Van Dillen defeated
Eunice Shriver and Pancho
Gonzales, 6-1, in the pro-am
portion of the program and
Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass.,
and Sen. John Tunneyk DCalif., beat Sargent Shriver
and Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N. Y.,
in a tie-breaker in a battle of
politicians.

Vented to the Chimney.

.. . ..

Cllrflfll tllf

•uNcntoh ..

lin. thearJ, and

pracdced In lllock of.
ftcM frlm tOIIC to coH.
ol ba* or .chanced COWH.

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• - o f \to,.-.~.. d-.

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OHICI Olll: 0 UllO HVHI C ADVAIOID CDUIII:

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ADOAESS
,HON

CITY

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ITAT

.ARNOLD GRATE

SALE

Veteran Cop Shot

$AVE

Dead by Gutzman

20% to 50%

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A 211year veteran of the city police
force was shot to ·death
Saturday by a gunman who
attempted to rob him .
Sgt. Joseph Johnson, off duty
at the time of the killing, was
sitting in a car with a woman

Also Showing Some Of
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companion on the city's east

BAHR CLOTHIERS

side when two men came
running up and jerked open the
doors, said Lt. Ralph Joyce,
head of the police homicide
unit.

MIDDLEPORT 0.
I

STUDENTS!
Be the fust to have your
Picture here

SHERIFF RELEASED
BARTOW, Fla. (UP!) - A
sheriff's deputy in need of
insulin for diabetes was
released by an escaped
prisoner who held him hostage
Saturday, but a manhunt
conlinued for a Miami Beach
family taken from their motel
room.

JENNY PROFFITT
BOX 94
RACINE, OHIO 45771
AY

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SUMMER
U.EARANCE

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areas-lack of experience, Nitschke out of a job last year.
particularly at quarterback, Carter has shown tremendous
and lack of speed on the flanks . impr"" oment and his year of
Probably the most telling expenence should help .
blow to Devine's hopes came
In the defensive line veterans
when Bart Starr was forced to Bob Brown and Alden Roch,
retire because of recurring are the outstanding start~
pains in his throwing ann.
Clarence Williams is anotha
The rebuilt defense looked veteran. But the problems
good in the fll'sl two pre--season .were complicated even more
games, holding Cincinnati and when Mike McCoy broke a
Miami in check before falling bone in his foot in the third
to Houston, ~.
exhibition game and was
l)elenslve Backfield Open shelved indefinitely . Jim
The retirements of Willie Delisle replaced him and
Wood and Doug Hart opened up Devine immediately started
the defensive backfield and it looking for more help.
appears Devine will go with
rookie Willie Buchanon, a first·
round draft choice, third-year
men Al Matthews and Ken
Ellis, and veteran Jim Hill,
obtained from San Diego.
The linebacking appears
solid with Dave Robinson
apparently ready to return to
his All-Pro form after an
Achilles tendon injury, and
Fred Carr rapidly becoming
one of the best outside
linebackers in the business.
In the middle, where Ray
Nitschke held forth for many
years, is Jim Carter, who beat

don't, come in and open one with the "Wide-Awake Bank"

COMPLETE INFORMATION

now and ready to serve you.

OAKLAND (UP! I - A ninth
inning throwing error by Tim
Cullen, Oakland's third second
baseman of the game, enabled
Brooks Robinson to score the
ga-ahead rWl and opened the
door to·a four-run inning as the
Baltimore Orioles beat the A's,
5-!, Saturday in a nationally
televised game.
Robinson led off the ninth
aga inst loser Rollie Fingers (66) with his second double of the
game. With one out, Johnny
Oates was intentionally
walked . Tommy Davis batted
for winning pitcher Pat Dobson
(15-12) and grounded to shortstop .
Bert Campaneris fli pped to
Cullen for a force out at second ,
but Cullen's throw to 1st on the
double piBy attempt was wild,
and Robinson scored. After a
stolen base and walk, two more
Oriole runs crossed when
centerfielder Reggie Jackson
lost Paul Blair 's fly ball in the
sun . Terry Crowley singled in
Blair for the final rWJ of the
inning.
Baltimore had taken a 1-0
lead off A's starter John Odom
in the fifth inning when Bobby
Grieb si ngled, stole scond and
scored on a Robinson double.

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watchdogs are back.
Weller said Saturday he might
look for toothless hounds that
can 't chew candy.

needed, the veteran Bill Belk
will take over.
The Other Members
The other members of the
front four are Charlie Krueger
(starting his 14th season), Earl
Edwards and Tommy Hart.
Behind them at linebacker
are All Pro Dave Wilcox, the
rising Frank Nunley and Skip
Vanderbundt as the regulars.
Backup men include. Jim
Sniadecki , Ed Beard and
, Marty Huff with rookie Mike
· Green of Georgia an outsider
"ffgllting ron berth.,.
All-Pro J)mmy Johnson
heads the defensive secondary
and will work in a unit with
Bruce Taylor and Mel Phillips.
Rosey Taylor is gone from last
year's team and his spot is up
for grabs with Mike Simpson
and Johnny Fuller the candidates.
The 49ers sought depth for
·- the unit by drafting four
SPARTAN SPACE mls- defensi ve ba cks-Ralph
slons will be a thing of the McGill of Tulsa , Windlan Hall
past wh en the Skvlab Is
f
·
s t J k'
launched in 1973. · Astro- 0 Arazona ta e, ac te
Walker of Tennessee and Jerry
nnuts, who hlll'e had to go Brown of Northwestern.
to the moon and back without so much as a shave or Naturally, all fo ur won't
ehun ge of spacesuit, will survive but those who do
be able to enjoy the luxury should give the unit a good
of a show er in the orbital blend of experience and youth.
space station. Us ing a compact assembly in the crew
quarters, space men wIll
The life of man is a jour·
step Inside a ring mounted
ney
: a journey that must be
on the cabin floor, above,
traveled
, however bad the
and raise a 42-l neh diamroads
or the accommoda·
eter hoop with attached
tions.-Oliver
Go Id s mit h.
curtain to the ceiling, below . Flexible h o s c with English novelist.
push -button shower nozzle
u nco II s from the hoop.
Water ration per shower
will be three quarts.

• lltdudlt

Adual pholo of our tanb in stock

Rosewall
Defeats
Smith

Orioles

Chicago

COURSE

,(

•·ith 70s.
Hale Irwin and Larry Ziegler
were tied at 142, two under par
anJ two strokes off the lead.
· Richie Karl, the 27-year-&lt;Jld
tour sophomore who stunned
the field in 'the first round
Thursday by firing a sevenonder 65, struggled In with an
embarrassing 81 Friday to
wind up in a 16 way tie at 146--- .
two over par.
The cut was after 147,
leaving 79 players in competition for the L&amp;M's fi rstprize purse of $20,000.

Win On
On Salvage Lot Big Error

p.m. l
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
Philadelph ia
San Diego al 51. Louis (2: 15 (UP!) - Henry Weller's night
WEST
p.m.)
W L Pet GB
New York at Aflan la 12 : IS p. security plan has gone from the
Cincinnati
75 44 .630
m.l
how-wows to the honk-honks
Houston
67 54 .554 9
Phi ladelphia at Cinc innati and back to the bow-wows.
Los Ange les
64 55 .538 11
(2 : IS p.m.)
Atlan ta
56 66 .459 2o y,
Henry posted watch dogs at
Montreal at Houston (Jp. m . )
San Francisco 54 68 .443 22•12
Monday' s Games
his
auto salvage lot in suburSan Diego
46 73 .387 29
San Diego at Pittsburgh INI
ban Wyoming . They liked
·
Saturday's Res ults
San Fran . at St. Louis INI
Los Angeles 7 Pittsburgh 3
candy.
Thieves gave the dogs
New York at Cincinnati (N)
Chicago 10 San Fran 9
(Only games sc heduled)
ca ndy, helped themselves to
( 10 inninQs)
spare parts and left.
Weller moved the dogs to
another lot and put m geese,
hoping that they would honk
and hiss at intruders, thereby
alerting the night watchmen.
Roving dogs ruined that idea.
e
They got in and killed the six

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)The San Francisco 49ers came
within 12 points of winning a
Super Bowl berth last year
with a solid team.
ThiS year's club could be
stronger, so it comes as no
surprise to hear the 49ers
talking, even during the exhibition season, of "going all the
way."
11
0 ur
first
concern,
however," says conservative
head Coach Dick Nolan, "is
winning our division . After thai
we'll think about going the rest
of the way.
·
Nolan, of course, is right in
~~ sticking his n~ ~~~ ~
!ley Injury could nllnit aU. for
the 49ers, who are talented and
deep but once again will be
starting out with an old
quarterback and an ine.P.,.lenced backup man.
The "old quarterback" is
John Brodie, who recently
celebrated his 37th birthday.
He is throwing the ball hard
and with accuracy, but
followers of the club shudder
whenever injury is mentioned.
Spurrier Is Back
Sieve Spurrier, the former
Helsman Trophy winner, is
starting his sixth year with the
49ers but if you put all hia
playing time ·together it
wouldn't amount to a half
season .
Suffice it to say, though, that
going into the season the 49ers
start out with one of the best
quarterbacks in the pro ranks
and several good receivers
second to none.
Gene Washington, the All
Pro wide receiver, is in a cla&amp;S
all by himself. At tight end, the
49ers feel they have one of the
rising stars in Ted Kwalick.
Veteran Dick Wlchter has the
other wide receiving job but
with Bob Windsor traded off he
may have to see double duty,
backing up Kwallck on occasion.
·
·
That leaves room for No. 1
, .draft choice Terry Beasley of ·
. Auburn to work his way into.aspot starting a&amp;Signment. Allen
Dunbar, the t~J;d-round choice
from Southern I.Jnlversity, also
should be around for spot dutY,The club is strong In the
offensive line. The unit is back
intact with Forrest Blue at
center, Woody Peoples and
Randy Beisler at guard and
Cas Banaszek and Elmer

blond 29-year-dd veteran of
five years on Uie tour. "But,
I'm leading."
Six golfers, Jumped together
at 141, three-under for two
rounds, suddenly found themselves only one stroke off the
pace instead of five shots back.
Jim Wiechers fired a 6~
Friday to join John Schroeder,
Dan Sikes, Ken Still, Dave
Eichelberger and Dick Lotz at
141.
· Schroeder, Sikes and Lotz
had second-round 72s, while
Still and Eichelberger came in

Nuthin' Worked

EAST
Montreal at Houston ( NJ
W L Pel GB
Sunday's Games
74 45 .622
(All Times EDTl

-

Model VR· 85·MAB

Phila . at Cin cinnati (Nl

others in the match play. ,
Bles and Moran-along with
Bob Barbarossa with eightunder 138, Deane Beman with
137, Lanny Wadldns with 138
and Babe Hiskey, Dave Stockton and Len Thompsonbeaded for the richer pastures
of the $150,000 match play.
McGee, whose bogey six on
the 484-yard 18th hole, the
fourth hole of the playoff,
skyrocketed illto the lead of the
. $100,000 L&amp;M, which will be
played simultaneously with the
match play today and Sunday
on the 6,973-yard Country Club
of North Carolina course.
"It's a kind of funny way to
be leading one," said McGee, a

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)This is the year Dan Devine
gets a chance to write a second
chapter to his hoped-for best
seller: "How to Rebuild a
Dynasty ."
But chances are the final
pages won 't come off the press
for a couple of seasons more.
"! think everybody on our
team wants to win so much
right now they can taste it,"
Devine said of his 1972
Packers, a team with few
remnants of the glory years of
Vince Lombardi.
Devine admits the problems
are many as he tried to wipe
out four years of frustrations
for the fans in pro football 's
smallest city.
First off, there's the schedule
-a grind that Involves seven of
the eight teams in last season's
playoffs. The Packers open
with Cleveland, Oakland and
Dallas and it's doubtful any
team could have it tougher.
Rebuilds Defense
Then there's the task of
rebuilding a defense that last
yea r proved particularly
volnera~!" &amp;gainst the pass.
As !ar as the offense is
con(erned, Devine is confident,
but not overly so.
The reasons for the confidence are in a fine trio of
running backs - John
Brockington, MacArthur Lane
and Dave Hampton-and in an
outstanding offensive line
anchored by center Ken
Bowman and guard Gale
Gillingham.
But the confidence is tempered when Devine licks off
what could be some problem

Chance

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Your E-l-H ·
R

'' CODf_

Be sure to bring your Favorite Photo and see one
of the Friendly Tellers . . .

"DfVIIIOn~(/'i)•wm•l'flfODUCT•C~ffY

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evans InTeRnaTionaL

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Member Federal Rnerve System
On Fridays Ovr Oriye-ln Window Is
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120,000 /Mximum Insurance

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18 - The Thr:: S !llnel, Sunday,

A~~g .

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'J:/, 19'12

' SW Highlanders Have 20 Returning Lettermen
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By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
PATRIOT - Football fortunes at Southwestern High
School in 1972 could rnake a
turn for the best according to
head coach Mel Carter.
Carter, entering his third
year as head mentor for the
highlands, has 20 returning
lettermen with two years
experience which cowu be a
major contribution to the
overall team.
Southwestern 's offensive
unit is intact except for the end
positions . The Highlander
defense will have only three
new players. Lost via
graduation were Chuck
Olambers; Mark Smith and
Bill Flowers : Cham hers and
Flowers were especially rough
on defense .
Coach Carter said the overall
attitude was the best he has
seen in his three years at
Southwestern. "0111' team will
not be as big as last year, but
we will be quick and ex·
perience means a lot," he said.

The Highlanders will run
from a straight T and slot
formation. Terry Carte" 5-10
sophomore,
and
Larry
Frasher, 168 pound junior ill
share the quarterba ·n .
The offensive attac will be
provided by John
I Hutchinson, a speedy sophomore;
Dale Whitt, 180 pound lineman
last year who has been switched to fullback ; Kevin Gill,
165 pounder also has plenty of
running experience.
It was learned Saturday that
Mike Dillon, 168 pound senior
fullback will be lost to the team
th e entire season. Dillon suf·
fered a severe hand injury
while working with the couniy
highway department .
Other returning lettermen
are Darrell Dot.son-;--200 pound
sophomore tackle; Larry
Fallon, 185 pound sophomore ·
tackle ; Terrence Fortner, 125
pound halfback ; John Hall, 100
pound junior tackle; Jim
Hubbard, 210 pound junior
tackle; David Jenkins, 140

pound end ; Phil Lewis, 200 Bill Peck, 145 poWld senior
pound guard-tackle; Bob guard ; Gil Trowbridge, 160
Norris. 140 pound senior pound halfbac.k; Ed Shriver,
guard; Carroll Ruff, 130 pound 180 pound senior tackle, and
.sophomore guard ; Henry Keith Williams, a 155
Sloan. 132 pound sophomore; sophomore. Other prospects
'

....

include juniors, Daniel Blaker, poWJder ; and Ll•yd Wood, 150
a 150 pounder , and Mike poWJd end.
Crouse, a 130 pounder.
Freshmen hopefuls are Mike
Sophomores competing for Fortner, 135 pound guard; Bob
positions are Dennis Blaker, Ruff, l'J:/ pound halfback, and
120pounder; Kevin Walker,l31 JackWalker,100poundcenter . .

·~·

The Highlander 8quad Is
compo~ of seven seniors, ·
S!!ven juniors, 10 sophomores ·
and three freShmen.
Carter feels North Gallia and
Kyger Creek will be the
strongest teams in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference.
Southwesll!rn firiished 'the
1~71 campaign with a 1-4 ,
league record and 1-8 m~k
overall. Richard Hamilton, a
Marshall University graduate,
Is entering his third year as
assistant grid coach.
The Highlanders open their
1972 schedule against Zane
Trace.
Here Is tll~hedule :
Sept. 8-Zane Trace
Sept. 15--llaDDAD, W. Va.

Sept. 22-Nortb Gallla
Sept. 29--At Kyger Creek
Oct. 6-At Symmes Valley
Oct. 13-AI Ha11111n Trace
Oct. ZO-Greeo
Oct. Z'l-At Eastem
Nov. 3-Southem

SYMPATHY
FLOWERS

'
interPLAYING IN 00 degree weather, the GlunpoU. Blue Devils held an
squad game on Memorial Fleld. Coach Buddy Moore's White team

"E xpress your Thoughts
when Words are Hard to
Find."

Dudley's Florist

Quarterbacks Shine In Tilt

Serving: Go lllpatis,
Middleport, Pomeroy,O.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS - Coach
Buddy Moore 's White team
posted a 211-12 victory over
Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker's
Blue squad Saturday afternoon
in an intersquad football
scrill)lllage on Memorial Field.
Playing in hot and humid 90
degree weather , the Blue
Devils managed to battle
without recording an injury.
Coach Moore's team was led

STEER THIS WAY
By

;c

BILL NELSON

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SOUTHWESTERN LE'ITERMEN -Southwestern High
School will have one of the largest group of lettermen this
season in the Southern Valley Athletic Conference. r.oach
Mel Carter has 20returning lettermen. Soine of the returning

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ffiGHLANDER COACHES - Mel Carter, left, and
Richard Hamilton, right, are entering their third year as
coaches at Southwestern High School.

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Inside Harness Racing

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'A Race Is Rarely
Completely
Fixed'
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t he wint er of 1967, I had the
chance to buy
a harness horse
and jumped at

!Ed i t or's N o te: Mike
Blake now lives under an
assumed name. His gam ·
bling pro blem forced l1i111
t1) move away from the
Midwest city in which he
had lived most of his adult
li.fe. That is true. So are
the facts and incidents as
relat ed in the fo llowing

I

two-part series. However.
all the names have bee11
fic tional ized to pro I e c 1
Mr. Blake, who fears re·
prisals.)
(Fir1t of Two Ports .)

By MIKE BLAKE
As Told to IRA BERKO\\'
NEW YORK-INEA l- lo

it. I was a pro·

fess ional gambler. I bought the horse to increase my contacts so that I
could make safer bets And .
hopefull y. to bet on sure
thin gs.
For yea rs I was like the
"verage fa n. I heard rumors
about shenanigans in har·
ness races. Now I was to find
ou t for mysel f. In th e tracks
that I soon began to fre·
quent. I found that in most
of the eight to 10 races a
n 1 g h t. deals were being

made among the drivers.
Those d r i v e r s are still
drivin g. They drive all over
the country. in most or all
of the 15 states and Canada
that permit harness racing.
One night. my l rain e r·
driver, St ev e F iII mor e.
dru g g e d my horse. High
Step, a very mediocre pacer.
He told me of his plan s be·
for e h a nd and I made a
bundle. But I fo und that
horse dopings are unu sual
because th ey are. first of all ,
too risky and . secondl y. un necessa ry.
The mos t common an d fr e.
quent way to arran ge a race
is for two. three or four dr iv·
ers to ge t t og e t h e r be·
fore th e race and' set it up. I
wa s in on ma ny uf t hose .
A har ness rare is rarelv
complete ly fix ed. m which
all eight or nin e dri ve rs are
involved. There are man y
drivers who have no price
1or if they do have a price.
it has never been met to th e
best of my knowledge 1. But
thei r cooperation isn't nee·
essary. Usually just a couple
dri vers w o r k i n g together
can eliminate an h o n es t
driver.
Harness racin g is the fa st·
est-growin g spectator sport
in th e United Stat es. accord·
in g to th e 1971 Gambler's
Digest . Th irty million paying
fa ns attend ed harness races
last year. The fi gure will
p r o b a b I y be higher this
ye ar. Very few of those 30
mill ion reall y know what is
goi ng on right before their
very eyes. But they suspect.
For good reason.
When it becomes obvious
that so m et hin g has been
h a p p e n i n g. they make a
noise. Th ey did just that at
Yonkers Ra c ew ay in New
York. when a ridiculously
!ow· payi ng ex acta t picking
the firs! two horses in one
race 1 caused a minor riot by
bettors. It happened again at
Pocono Downs. Another absurdly low exacta. another
riot by bettors. And at Louisvi lle Downs. two drivers were
suspended for one year for
"tryin g to get together on a
perfecta," according to Wil·
liam Hillia rd. chairman of

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That's saving more than
half of what it
normally costs.

Greg Landry made the
"Over the Hill Gang" look a bit
over the hill Friday night
before a national TV audience.
landry piloted. Detroit to a
20-point second quarter and the
Lions downed .\he Washington

The first successful electric self·
starter was introduced in 1912 .
It takes half a second, on the average,
for a driver to react to an emergency
situation. (But that was established •in
tests, with the subjects on the alert.)
"Dieseling" - when the engine keeps
running after you turn off the Ignition
- can be caused by nothing more
serious than a too-low idle speed.

Walker Is Fired,
Leo New .Manager

We'll check THAT, and any other
problems, when you see us for service
at Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

HOUSTON ( UPli - The
Richardson said he has been
Houston Astros fired manager disappointed in the perHarry Walker Saturday and formance of the Astros this
replaced him with baseball year. They had been expected
.. ·veteran Leo Durocher.
to make a strong run at the
~ ..-'l•frfs' ~'iltit ~aHMiillagd" ' Westel'lll&lt; Dlv:!sl~n··· cflam­
spec Richardson made the plonsh!p of the National
announcement in a hastily League, but are currently nine
called news conference at the games out of first place behind
Astrodome.
Cincinnati with 67 wins and 54
Richardson said he made his losses .
decision to fire Walker late
"Harry Walker is one of the
Friday night. He then called most dedicated baseball men
Durocher in Chicago and asked that I know," Richardson said .
him to manage his ll!am and "I told Harry to go home and
Durocher accepted.
think about what he wanted to
Durocher was fired as do and If he wanted to stay with
manager of the Chicago Cubs the Houston organization we
in July .
could have a job for him ."

Open Evenings Ti117 p.m. &amp; Sat. till· s p.m .'
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon.

NELSOrt··;MOTORS~INt.
TOURISTS IN NORWAY may be going out olthelr way
to get lost these days, sllK!e Oslo and five other Nor·
weglan cities have begun using "tourist pHots" to
guide foreigners who hav• misplaced themselves.

I\!

Buick

•

Redskins, 23-10, for their third
victory in four games.
Landry, playing only the first
half, completed seven of 11
passes for 107 yarda and he
took advantage of some golden
opportunities set up by Redskin
fumbles an~ Lion in-

Ponlloc .

PH. 992-2174
,MAIN--ST. ·'POMEROY,
UHIU .
....
~

FOR SALE
BABY FARMS AT BEAUTIFUl CHAROLAIS HilLS LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160 JUST 1 MIL£ NORTH
OF THE NEW HOllER MEDICAL CENTER.

•

0

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c')

MILWAUKEE (UPI )- Dick
Allen's single with one out in
the 13th inning Saturday
touched off a two-run rally to
give the surging Chicago White
Sox a 3-1 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers in the first
game of a doubleheader.
It was the White Sox' ninth
victory in 10 games this year
against the Brewers .
Chicago apparently had the
game won In regulation time
with Tom Bradley sailing along
on a three-hitll!r until the ninth.
Then Joe Lahoud's triple
scored Brock Davis, who had
walked, to force the game into
extra Innings.
·
Terry Forster, who replaced
Bradley in the ninth, got the

0

( j

11""'-.0£111:1

PHASE 1
Rll

CARTER • E'IAII lilt.

Carter &amp; Evans Inc. of Gallipolis, Ohio
recently purchased 170 acres of the locally
renown EEE Ranch and are now offering for
sale this choice 48 acre tract in 2112 to s acre Baby
Farms.
Each farm is easily accessible from the wide
stone road. Each farm borders the Galli a County

service-P~rts-Offoco

:OOP.M.
Mon., Tu.s·• W.d '' Fri ·- BA.M.tol
Thur. I:OOA.M. to9:30 P.M.- Cl osed 5at .

•

HEAD COACH
CLEVELAND (UP! )
..Klaas _;. Pellqer · .. ~~~~~~r
·Michigan St~~te soccer stand·
out, Friday was named head
soccer and tennis coach at
Cleveland State University .
' De Boer, currently playing
with the Boston Astros, succeeds Bill Clarke who reSigned
in June to become athletic
director and head basketball
coach at Walsh College.

has a twisted knee.
Outstanding defensive ef·
forts were turned in by Mike
Wolfe, Leon Briggs, Leon
Smith and Matt Epling.
The Blue Devils are
scheduled to scrimmage South
Poin t, Saturday, Sept. 2.

FULLY·.COOKED HA

Shank

We reservt ltle ritht to
limit qutntifiu on til
Items in tllis ad . Ptitts

tlfedin Mon., August
21 lhru Man., StJIII. 4,
1912. Non• uld

Half

Haters.

Major- LEiague Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batters

National League
g. ab r . h. pet.
Cdeno , Hou 107 432 88 W .3&lt;1()
Dvlito, Pit
91 278 44 93 .335
Wilm s, Chi 118 457 73 152 .333
Garr,AII
109 445 69145 .326
Baker, All
95 325 43 105 .323
Mota. LA
90 293 45 94 .321
Bckner. LA 85 305 34 97 .318
Sng uiln, P it 108 416 48 130 .Jt3
Alou, St. L 107 400 45 125 .313
Hbner, Pit
90 JOB 50 96 .312
American League
g. ab r. h. pet .
Ca rew, Min 106410 50131.320
Rudi. Oak
115 m 77 148 .314
Allen. Chi
ttl 398 76 125 .314
Shblm ,KC 102 339 46106.313

was nationally televised.
Fumble recoveries by
middle linebacker Mike Lucci
and defensive end Jim Mitchell
set up the first and last field
goals a.nd a Lem Barney inll!rception set up the last one.
Washmgton managed only
a 16-yard field goal by Curt ~~~;~th~c ::~ !6~
:l~
Knight in the first period and a Otis, KC
109 408 57 123 .301
one-yard touchdown pass from Braun , Min 84 286 31 86 .301
quarterback Sonny Jurgen- Berry. Cal
89 310 33 93 .300
sen, who spelled Kilmer, to Fisk. Bos Hom9:~t~ 557100 .298
Charlie Taylor.
National League: Colbert, SO
In the o.nly oth~r exhibition 35; Bench, Cin 29; Stargetl. Pitt
game Fr1day mght, Muum 28; May. Hou 26 ; Aaron. All
and Wi llia m s, Chi 25.
downed Atlanta 24-10. . .
American League : Allen. Chi
TbevJctoryleftMl&amp;mlWltha 32; Cash , Del, Murcer, NY and
2-2 mark in exhibition play ~~ckson. Oak 22 ; Epstein, Oak
while Atlanta is ().3, The vicRuns Batted In
tory margin was held down by
National League : Stargell.
the fact that Charlie Leigh had Pott 95 ; Colb~rt , SO 93 ; Bench .
touchdown runs of 57 and !!9 Cm 9t' Wolilams. Chi 87 ;
. r S1mmons. St.L 79 .
yardscalledbackbypenaltJes. American League : Allen, Chi
:Atlantadldn'tgainafirstdown 91 ; Murcer, NY 71; Scott, Mil
until midway through the third and Ma yberry, KC 65; Darwin,
.
Monn 63.
per!00 .
Pitching
Bob Griese played more than
Nation a I League: Carlton,
he was expected to at quar- Ph il 20-7: Je nk ins, Chi 18-1 0 ;
Seaver, NY 15-9; MarshalL
ll!rback because Earl Morrall Mont
14·3; Blass, Pitt 14·6;
wasn't too impressive in his Gibson, SI.L J4.); Osteen. LA
stint. Griese hit Paul Warfield 14·9.
League : Wood, Chi
with a 16-yard scoring pass and 22-American
11 ; Lot ic h, Det t9.10; Perry ,
Jim Kiick scored on runs of two Ciev 19·12; Palmer, Ball 17·6;
Hunter, Oa k J6.); Bahnsen. Ch i
and 12 yards.
16·13.

nm

IRISH or SWin'S PREMIUM

U.S. Govt. Inspected

U. S. Govt. Inspected

FAMILY PAK

Rural Water System.
. The entire tract is restricted just enough to
insure . that the beautiful scenery and the
pleasant country atmosphere will be maintained
and not , e~ough to interfere with enjoy•ble
country hv1ng •

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
CALL44M905

'

DAYTON,Ohio (UPI) - The
Dayton Dodgers and the
Kankakee, Ill., Salkeld Chiefs
remained the only undefeated
ll!ams Saturday In the 1972
northern senior division
National Amateur Baseball
. Federation Tournament.
• In a rain-delayed game,
' ' oayton defeated the Buffalo
(N.y.) Bruins 9-6 whlle
Kankakee bad a thtrd-round
bye and was to meet Dayton
SaturdaY night.
Still surviving In losers
brackets
are
Buffalo;
Youngstown, Ohio; Chicago,
IIIII Xenia Ohio. Younptown
,; SaturdaY
ellminlted' AkrOn (Ohio)
whlle tlw
~

••

c

FULLY COOKED

CANNED

PARTS

Includes 3 Breast Otrs., 3 leg Otrs..
3 Wings, 2 Pkgs. Giblets. 2 Necks.

5-lb. SIZE

c
U.S. No. 1. Grade

:::POTATOES
Excellent for Potato Salad

c

10-lb.
bag
STATE FARE
WIENER OR SANDWICH

BUNS
Pkg. of 8

Tops Brewers

cottar! IA'ItiUIIII

Phone (614) 446-9&amp;~

terceptions.
Landry threw an eight-yard
. a
SCoring pass to AI Barnes ln
drive aided by three interference calls. Steve Owens came
outofthebackfieldandcaught '
a SG-yard scoring pass from
Landry after linebacker
Wayne Walker picked off a Bill
Kilmer pass.
Mann Kicks
Errol Mann kicked field
goals of 40and 20 yards in the
period to complete the 26-point
outburst. The rest of the game,
the Lions Were limi'ted to a 1•~
yard field goal by Mann in the
third period in the game that

-u.s. Govt. Inspected

ARMOUR •

Allen's Single

FAYGO
REGULAR

victory, his fifth against three
losses . The loss went to
reliever Ken Sanders, who
came on in the 13th to relieve
Brewer starter Skip Lockwood.
Chicago scored its first run ln
the fourth when Allen singled,
took second on a groundout,
and came home on Ed Splezlo's
single.
Sanders got the first White
Sox batll!r to fly out in the 13th
but then Allen singled and went
all the way to third when a
throw from Sanders to shortstop Rick Auerback went wild
and bounced to the outfield. A
sacrifice fly by Mike Andrews
brought home Allen and Carlos
May then scored from second
on another Splezio single.

·BEVERAGES
12-oz. cans

STATE FARE

POTATO
CHIPS
l-U1. Pkg.

0 I CFREICI FliED OIIOIS

'!THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"
We thou~ht
you'd never

ask.

Chicago Hornets eliminated
Glens Falls, N. Y. 16-7. Xenia .
ellmlnated Detroit Rlo Gran 87.
Buffalo was to meet
Youngstown and Chicago was
to face Xenia in losers bracket
play later Saturday.

_.:.----------.-1
1
Classified Ads 1
.1
1
1
I
br I
1
· na: you
1

l

l

1
extra cash
·t
for
I
1
I
w 1__lhoppln&amp;
sprus
1
... __________ 1

~!;01 •

35'

SMUCKER FEATURES

,.

Remain Unbeaten

' Special a11 cond lf!Onmg orrer by your Volkswagen dts·
lnbutor exptres August 31 1972 Avatlat&gt;l e at p;HttCtpattng
Vo lkswagen dealers Bus ancl Campmoblle models nor

nullified on a penalty. The
Blues' last score came on a
long run by sophomore Tom
Valentine.
Three Blue Devils missed the
scrimmage .due to injuries.
Rick Grymes is still recovering
from an operation for the
removal of a cyst on his
tailbone . Scott Epling mjured
his knee earlier this week in
practice and Winston Saunders

\

ClD

II an own er ma rnta rns and servrces l1rs
\letlrc le tn accordance wr !l) 111e
Volkswagen marnt enance schedule. any lac tory pari founO10 be
defect•ve in matenal or wor kmans h•p
w•thrn 24 month s or 24 000 mrles whrc h
ever comes frrst (except normal wear and
tear and servrce rtems). wrll be re parred or
replaced by any U S or Carladran Volkswage n
dealer And thrs wrll be done free of charge

Berridge scored on a five yard
sweep around his right side.
Mike Evans, sophomore
tackle, kicked each point after
touchdown, hitting four for
four.
Sophomores dominated play
for Coach Ecker's Blue squad.
Quarterback Jimmy Niday
fired a 60 yard TD to his
sophomore end John Groth .
Another 60 yarder to Groth was

Lions Claw Redskins, 23-10

'•

And every new Volkswagen
carries this warranty:

Ohio

•

Engine flooding can be caused by
many factors- a dirty, worn or faulty
needle valve, for instance.

by the quarterbacking of Mike
Berridge. He passed for two
touchdowns and ran for
another.
Il&lt;lrridge's first TD came on
a 20 yard pass to speedy end
Leon Briggs. Dean Rees, junior
tailback, scored the second
White TD on a 10 yard run.
Berridge's other scoring tosses
were an electrifying 70 yard
pass to senior John Walter.

2 Teams Still

195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7), Gallipolis,

.''

MASS TO PATRIOTS
FOXBORO, Mass. (UP!) Offensive tackle Wayne Mass
was acquired Friday by the
New England Patri.ot.s from the
Miami Dolphins in exchange
for an undisclosed 1973
National Football League draft
choice.

'

Now you can get
air conditioning in a brand·new
Volkswagen* for only s1so •

DON WAITS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

I,

the Kentucky Stale Trotting
Co mmission.
l owned High Step for six
months. Though the horse
was in my name only, I had
a silent partner, Sal Torre .
At the time, Sal could not
obtain a license to buy a
horse. He was not permitted
on the grounds of any track
in the state. He had been
e,iected a few weeks before
when he was caught talking
through a paddock window
at a fo cal track. He was a
general patron then and gen·
era! oatrons are not allowed
to talk to paddoc k people.
J was happy to be a part·
ner of Sal's. I knew he was
always going down to the
p a d do c k before races for
ti ps. What I came to learn
was that he also received
signals whi le sitting up in
th e stands.

Solid state, a familiar term in TV and
audio equipment, is now coming into
use for new car electrical systems.

•

tnc iUded.

•

lettermen are front row,lefl to right, Jim Hubbard, Henry
Sloan, Bill Peck, Terry Carter, Carroll Ruff and Kevin Gill.
Back row,left to right, Larry Fallon, Terrence Fortner, Phil
Lewis, Dale Whitt, David Jenkins, and John Eart' Hutchinson.

defeated Coach Johnny Ecker's Blue squad, 28-12. The winners were paced
by the passing of jWiior quarterback Mike Berridge. Sophomores dominated
play for the Eckermen.

GRAPE JAM . ............. •·••· ,.... '"
SWEO ORANGE MARMALADE '· '~.;';..
PEACH PRESERVES .' , . , • , .... . ••~:;"
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM . • 11 ~:;-•·
ILACKIERRY JELLY ..... •.•.. '·'";:,..•·
GRAPE JILLY ...•......... ,.,•. ,.... ,.,

49c

46c
59c
69c
69c

49c

Blue Bor-..-llt llqarine Features

JERZEE
EVAPORATED

PAMILYSIZE-SOR •••••.• ,.,•. ...., 47c
SOfT WHIPPED ~=~ ~~f'· . , ·•·•• ..,. 43c
WHIPPED mCK ~=~ ,;:~.
33c
IIGULAR PLIISCHMANN'S •• •·1•. otn. 45c

...•·•·..,.

"109 Years Of Service"
CHEF'S DELIGHT

Ask About Our Many Other Banking
Servicesep
·
ersonal Loans •Travelers C.,hecks .
eNo Service Charge Checking Accounts
e Savings Accot.mts
Mobile .Home
Loans

e

Cheese
Plain or ·Pimento
2·1b.
Pkg.

69~'

STALEY

Waffle Srru

CHASE ll SANBORN

COFFEE
~~·

93e

�'

..

"

18 - The Thr:: S !llnel, Sunday,

A~~g .

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'J:/, 19'12

' SW Highlanders Have 20 Returning Lettermen
:t !

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By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
PATRIOT - Football fortunes at Southwestern High
School in 1972 could rnake a
turn for the best according to
head coach Mel Carter.
Carter, entering his third
year as head mentor for the
highlands, has 20 returning
lettermen with two years
experience which cowu be a
major contribution to the
overall team.
Southwestern 's offensive
unit is intact except for the end
positions . The Highlander
defense will have only three
new players. Lost via
graduation were Chuck
Olambers; Mark Smith and
Bill Flowers : Cham hers and
Flowers were especially rough
on defense .
Coach Carter said the overall
attitude was the best he has
seen in his three years at
Southwestern. "0111' team will
not be as big as last year, but
we will be quick and ex·
perience means a lot," he said.

The Highlanders will run
from a straight T and slot
formation. Terry Carte" 5-10
sophomore,
and
Larry
Frasher, 168 pound junior ill
share the quarterba ·n .
The offensive attac will be
provided by John
I Hutchinson, a speedy sophomore;
Dale Whitt, 180 pound lineman
last year who has been switched to fullback ; Kevin Gill,
165 pounder also has plenty of
running experience.
It was learned Saturday that
Mike Dillon, 168 pound senior
fullback will be lost to the team
th e entire season. Dillon suf·
fered a severe hand injury
while working with the couniy
highway department .
Other returning lettermen
are Darrell Dot.son-;--200 pound
sophomore tackle; Larry
Fallon, 185 pound sophomore ·
tackle ; Terrence Fortner, 125
pound halfback ; John Hall, 100
pound junior tackle; Jim
Hubbard, 210 pound junior
tackle; David Jenkins, 140

pound end ; Phil Lewis, 200 Bill Peck, 145 poWld senior
pound guard-tackle; Bob guard ; Gil Trowbridge, 160
Norris. 140 pound senior pound halfbac.k; Ed Shriver,
guard; Carroll Ruff, 130 pound 180 pound senior tackle, and
.sophomore guard ; Henry Keith Williams, a 155
Sloan. 132 pound sophomore; sophomore. Other prospects
'

....

include juniors, Daniel Blaker, poWJder ; and Ll•yd Wood, 150
a 150 pounder , and Mike poWJd end.
Crouse, a 130 pounder.
Freshmen hopefuls are Mike
Sophomores competing for Fortner, 135 pound guard; Bob
positions are Dennis Blaker, Ruff, l'J:/ pound halfback, and
120pounder; Kevin Walker,l31 JackWalker,100poundcenter . .

·~·

The Highlander 8quad Is
compo~ of seven seniors, ·
S!!ven juniors, 10 sophomores ·
and three freShmen.
Carter feels North Gallia and
Kyger Creek will be the
strongest teams in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference.
Southwesll!rn firiished 'the
1~71 campaign with a 1-4 ,
league record and 1-8 m~k
overall. Richard Hamilton, a
Marshall University graduate,
Is entering his third year as
assistant grid coach.
The Highlanders open their
1972 schedule against Zane
Trace.
Here Is tll~hedule :
Sept. 8-Zane Trace
Sept. 15--llaDDAD, W. Va.

Sept. 22-Nortb Gallla
Sept. 29--At Kyger Creek
Oct. 6-At Symmes Valley
Oct. 13-AI Ha11111n Trace
Oct. ZO-Greeo
Oct. Z'l-At Eastem
Nov. 3-Southem

SYMPATHY
FLOWERS

'
interPLAYING IN 00 degree weather, the GlunpoU. Blue Devils held an
squad game on Memorial Fleld. Coach Buddy Moore's White team

"E xpress your Thoughts
when Words are Hard to
Find."

Dudley's Florist

Quarterbacks Shine In Tilt

Serving: Go lllpatis,
Middleport, Pomeroy,O.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS - Coach
Buddy Moore 's White team
posted a 211-12 victory over
Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker's
Blue squad Saturday afternoon
in an intersquad football
scrill)lllage on Memorial Field.
Playing in hot and humid 90
degree weather , the Blue
Devils managed to battle
without recording an injury.
Coach Moore's team was led

STEER THIS WAY
By

;c

BILL NELSON

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SOUTHWESTERN LE'ITERMEN -Southwestern High
School will have one of the largest group of lettermen this
season in the Southern Valley Athletic Conference. r.oach
Mel Carter has 20returning lettermen. Soine of the returning

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ffiGHLANDER COACHES - Mel Carter, left, and
Richard Hamilton, right, are entering their third year as
coaches at Southwestern High School.

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Inside Harness Racing

:)&lt;
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'A Race Is Rarely
Completely
Fixed'
.
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t he wint er of 1967, I had the
chance to buy
a harness horse
and jumped at

!Ed i t or's N o te: Mike
Blake now lives under an
assumed name. His gam ·
bling pro blem forced l1i111
t1) move away from the
Midwest city in which he
had lived most of his adult
li.fe. That is true. So are
the facts and incidents as
relat ed in the fo llowing

I

two-part series. However.
all the names have bee11
fic tional ized to pro I e c 1
Mr. Blake, who fears re·
prisals.)
(Fir1t of Two Ports .)

By MIKE BLAKE
As Told to IRA BERKO\\'
NEW YORK-INEA l- lo

it. I was a pro·

fess ional gambler. I bought the horse to increase my contacts so that I
could make safer bets And .
hopefull y. to bet on sure
thin gs.
For yea rs I was like the
"verage fa n. I heard rumors
about shenanigans in har·
ness races. Now I was to find
ou t for mysel f. In th e tracks
that I soon began to fre·
quent. I found that in most
of the eight to 10 races a
n 1 g h t. deals were being

made among the drivers.
Those d r i v e r s are still
drivin g. They drive all over
the country. in most or all
of the 15 states and Canada
that permit harness racing.
One night. my l rain e r·
driver, St ev e F iII mor e.
dru g g e d my horse. High
Step, a very mediocre pacer.
He told me of his plan s be·
for e h a nd and I made a
bundle. But I fo und that
horse dopings are unu sual
because th ey are. first of all ,
too risky and . secondl y. un necessa ry.
The mos t common an d fr e.
quent way to arran ge a race
is for two. three or four dr iv·
ers to ge t t og e t h e r be·
fore th e race and' set it up. I
wa s in on ma ny uf t hose .
A har ness rare is rarelv
complete ly fix ed. m which
all eight or nin e dri ve rs are
involved. There are man y
drivers who have no price
1or if they do have a price.
it has never been met to th e
best of my knowledge 1. But
thei r cooperation isn't nee·
essary. Usually just a couple
dri vers w o r k i n g together
can eliminate an h o n es t
driver.
Harness racin g is the fa st·
est-growin g spectator sport
in th e United Stat es. accord·
in g to th e 1971 Gambler's
Digest . Th irty million paying
fa ns attend ed harness races
last year. The fi gure will
p r o b a b I y be higher this
ye ar. Very few of those 30
mill ion reall y know what is
goi ng on right before their
very eyes. But they suspect.
For good reason.
When it becomes obvious
that so m et hin g has been
h a p p e n i n g. they make a
noise. Th ey did just that at
Yonkers Ra c ew ay in New
York. when a ridiculously
!ow· payi ng ex acta t picking
the firs! two horses in one
race 1 caused a minor riot by
bettors. It happened again at
Pocono Downs. Another absurdly low exacta. another
riot by bettors. And at Louisvi lle Downs. two drivers were
suspended for one year for
"tryin g to get together on a
perfecta," according to Wil·
liam Hillia rd. chairman of

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That's saving more than
half of what it
normally costs.

Greg Landry made the
"Over the Hill Gang" look a bit
over the hill Friday night
before a national TV audience.
landry piloted. Detroit to a
20-point second quarter and the
Lions downed .\he Washington

The first successful electric self·
starter was introduced in 1912 .
It takes half a second, on the average,
for a driver to react to an emergency
situation. (But that was established •in
tests, with the subjects on the alert.)
"Dieseling" - when the engine keeps
running after you turn off the Ignition
- can be caused by nothing more
serious than a too-low idle speed.

Walker Is Fired,
Leo New .Manager

We'll check THAT, and any other
problems, when you see us for service
at Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

HOUSTON ( UPli - The
Richardson said he has been
Houston Astros fired manager disappointed in the perHarry Walker Saturday and formance of the Astros this
replaced him with baseball year. They had been expected
.. ·veteran Leo Durocher.
to make a strong run at the
~ ..-'l•frfs' ~'iltit ~aHMiillagd" ' Westel'lll&lt; Dlv:!sl~n··· cflam­
spec Richardson made the plonsh!p of the National
announcement in a hastily League, but are currently nine
called news conference at the games out of first place behind
Astrodome.
Cincinnati with 67 wins and 54
Richardson said he made his losses .
decision to fire Walker late
"Harry Walker is one of the
Friday night. He then called most dedicated baseball men
Durocher in Chicago and asked that I know," Richardson said .
him to manage his ll!am and "I told Harry to go home and
Durocher accepted.
think about what he wanted to
Durocher was fired as do and If he wanted to stay with
manager of the Chicago Cubs the Houston organization we
in July .
could have a job for him ."

Open Evenings Ti117 p.m. &amp; Sat. till· s p.m .'
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon.

NELSOrt··;MOTORS~INt.
TOURISTS IN NORWAY may be going out olthelr way
to get lost these days, sllK!e Oslo and five other Nor·
weglan cities have begun using "tourist pHots" to
guide foreigners who hav• misplaced themselves.

I\!

Buick

•

Redskins, 23-10, for their third
victory in four games.
Landry, playing only the first
half, completed seven of 11
passes for 107 yarda and he
took advantage of some golden
opportunities set up by Redskin
fumbles an~ Lion in-

Ponlloc .

PH. 992-2174
,MAIN--ST. ·'POMEROY,
UHIU .
....
~

FOR SALE
BABY FARMS AT BEAUTIFUl CHAROLAIS HilLS LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160 JUST 1 MIL£ NORTH
OF THE NEW HOllER MEDICAL CENTER.

•

0

0

c')

MILWAUKEE (UPI )- Dick
Allen's single with one out in
the 13th inning Saturday
touched off a two-run rally to
give the surging Chicago White
Sox a 3-1 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers in the first
game of a doubleheader.
It was the White Sox' ninth
victory in 10 games this year
against the Brewers .
Chicago apparently had the
game won In regulation time
with Tom Bradley sailing along
on a three-hitll!r until the ninth.
Then Joe Lahoud's triple
scored Brock Davis, who had
walked, to force the game into
extra Innings.
·
Terry Forster, who replaced
Bradley in the ninth, got the

0

( j

11""'-.0£111:1

PHASE 1
Rll

CARTER • E'IAII lilt.

Carter &amp; Evans Inc. of Gallipolis, Ohio
recently purchased 170 acres of the locally
renown EEE Ranch and are now offering for
sale this choice 48 acre tract in 2112 to s acre Baby
Farms.
Each farm is easily accessible from the wide
stone road. Each farm borders the Galli a County

service-P~rts-Offoco

:OOP.M.
Mon., Tu.s·• W.d '' Fri ·- BA.M.tol
Thur. I:OOA.M. to9:30 P.M.- Cl osed 5at .

•

HEAD COACH
CLEVELAND (UP! )
..Klaas _;. Pellqer · .. ~~~~~~r
·Michigan St~~te soccer stand·
out, Friday was named head
soccer and tennis coach at
Cleveland State University .
' De Boer, currently playing
with the Boston Astros, succeeds Bill Clarke who reSigned
in June to become athletic
director and head basketball
coach at Walsh College.

has a twisted knee.
Outstanding defensive ef·
forts were turned in by Mike
Wolfe, Leon Briggs, Leon
Smith and Matt Epling.
The Blue Devils are
scheduled to scrimmage South
Poin t, Saturday, Sept. 2.

FULLY·.COOKED HA

Shank

We reservt ltle ritht to
limit qutntifiu on til
Items in tllis ad . Ptitts

tlfedin Mon., August
21 lhru Man., StJIII. 4,
1912. Non• uld

Half

Haters.

Major- LEiague Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batters

National League
g. ab r . h. pet.
Cdeno , Hou 107 432 88 W .3&lt;1()
Dvlito, Pit
91 278 44 93 .335
Wilm s, Chi 118 457 73 152 .333
Garr,AII
109 445 69145 .326
Baker, All
95 325 43 105 .323
Mota. LA
90 293 45 94 .321
Bckner. LA 85 305 34 97 .318
Sng uiln, P it 108 416 48 130 .Jt3
Alou, St. L 107 400 45 125 .313
Hbner, Pit
90 JOB 50 96 .312
American League
g. ab r. h. pet .
Ca rew, Min 106410 50131.320
Rudi. Oak
115 m 77 148 .314
Allen. Chi
ttl 398 76 125 .314
Shblm ,KC 102 339 46106.313

was nationally televised.
Fumble recoveries by
middle linebacker Mike Lucci
and defensive end Jim Mitchell
set up the first and last field
goals a.nd a Lem Barney inll!rception set up the last one.
Washmgton managed only
a 16-yard field goal by Curt ~~~;~th~c ::~ !6~
:l~
Knight in the first period and a Otis, KC
109 408 57 123 .301
one-yard touchdown pass from Braun , Min 84 286 31 86 .301
quarterback Sonny Jurgen- Berry. Cal
89 310 33 93 .300
sen, who spelled Kilmer, to Fisk. Bos Hom9:~t~ 557100 .298
Charlie Taylor.
National League: Colbert, SO
In the o.nly oth~r exhibition 35; Bench, Cin 29; Stargetl. Pitt
game Fr1day mght, Muum 28; May. Hou 26 ; Aaron. All
and Wi llia m s, Chi 25.
downed Atlanta 24-10. . .
American League : Allen. Chi
TbevJctoryleftMl&amp;mlWltha 32; Cash , Del, Murcer, NY and
2-2 mark in exhibition play ~~ckson. Oak 22 ; Epstein, Oak
while Atlanta is ().3, The vicRuns Batted In
tory margin was held down by
National League : Stargell.
the fact that Charlie Leigh had Pott 95 ; Colb~rt , SO 93 ; Bench .
touchdown runs of 57 and !!9 Cm 9t' Wolilams. Chi 87 ;
. r S1mmons. St.L 79 .
yardscalledbackbypenaltJes. American League : Allen, Chi
:Atlantadldn'tgainafirstdown 91 ; Murcer, NY 71; Scott, Mil
until midway through the third and Ma yberry, KC 65; Darwin,
.
Monn 63.
per!00 .
Pitching
Bob Griese played more than
Nation a I League: Carlton,
he was expected to at quar- Ph il 20-7: Je nk ins, Chi 18-1 0 ;
Seaver, NY 15-9; MarshalL
ll!rback because Earl Morrall Mont
14·3; Blass, Pitt 14·6;
wasn't too impressive in his Gibson, SI.L J4.); Osteen. LA
stint. Griese hit Paul Warfield 14·9.
League : Wood, Chi
with a 16-yard scoring pass and 22-American
11 ; Lot ic h, Det t9.10; Perry ,
Jim Kiick scored on runs of two Ciev 19·12; Palmer, Ball 17·6;
Hunter, Oa k J6.); Bahnsen. Ch i
and 12 yards.
16·13.

nm

IRISH or SWin'S PREMIUM

U.S. Govt. Inspected

U. S. Govt. Inspected

FAMILY PAK

Rural Water System.
. The entire tract is restricted just enough to
insure . that the beautiful scenery and the
pleasant country atmosphere will be maintained
and not , e~ough to interfere with enjoy•ble
country hv1ng •

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
CALL44M905

'

DAYTON,Ohio (UPI) - The
Dayton Dodgers and the
Kankakee, Ill., Salkeld Chiefs
remained the only undefeated
ll!ams Saturday In the 1972
northern senior division
National Amateur Baseball
. Federation Tournament.
• In a rain-delayed game,
' ' oayton defeated the Buffalo
(N.y.) Bruins 9-6 whlle
Kankakee bad a thtrd-round
bye and was to meet Dayton
SaturdaY night.
Still surviving In losers
brackets
are
Buffalo;
Youngstown, Ohio; Chicago,
IIIII Xenia Ohio. Younptown
,; SaturdaY
ellminlted' AkrOn (Ohio)
whlle tlw
~

••

c

FULLY COOKED

CANNED

PARTS

Includes 3 Breast Otrs., 3 leg Otrs..
3 Wings, 2 Pkgs. Giblets. 2 Necks.

5-lb. SIZE

c
U.S. No. 1. Grade

:::POTATOES
Excellent for Potato Salad

c

10-lb.
bag
STATE FARE
WIENER OR SANDWICH

BUNS
Pkg. of 8

Tops Brewers

cottar! IA'ItiUIIII

Phone (614) 446-9&amp;~

terceptions.
Landry threw an eight-yard
. a
SCoring pass to AI Barnes ln
drive aided by three interference calls. Steve Owens came
outofthebackfieldandcaught '
a SG-yard scoring pass from
Landry after linebacker
Wayne Walker picked off a Bill
Kilmer pass.
Mann Kicks
Errol Mann kicked field
goals of 40and 20 yards in the
period to complete the 26-point
outburst. The rest of the game,
the Lions Were limi'ted to a 1•~
yard field goal by Mann in the
third period in the game that

-u.s. Govt. Inspected

ARMOUR •

Allen's Single

FAYGO
REGULAR

victory, his fifth against three
losses . The loss went to
reliever Ken Sanders, who
came on in the 13th to relieve
Brewer starter Skip Lockwood.
Chicago scored its first run ln
the fourth when Allen singled,
took second on a groundout,
and came home on Ed Splezlo's
single.
Sanders got the first White
Sox batll!r to fly out in the 13th
but then Allen singled and went
all the way to third when a
throw from Sanders to shortstop Rick Auerback went wild
and bounced to the outfield. A
sacrifice fly by Mike Andrews
brought home Allen and Carlos
May then scored from second
on another Splezio single.

·BEVERAGES
12-oz. cans

STATE FARE

POTATO
CHIPS
l-U1. Pkg.

0 I CFREICI FliED OIIOIS

'!THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"
We thou~ht
you'd never

ask.

Chicago Hornets eliminated
Glens Falls, N. Y. 16-7. Xenia .
ellmlnated Detroit Rlo Gran 87.
Buffalo was to meet
Youngstown and Chicago was
to face Xenia in losers bracket
play later Saturday.

_.:.----------.-1
1
Classified Ads 1
.1
1
1
I
br I
1
· na: you
1

l

l

1
extra cash
·t
for
I
1
I
w 1__lhoppln&amp;
sprus
1
... __________ 1

~!;01 •

35'

SMUCKER FEATURES

,.

Remain Unbeaten

' Special a11 cond lf!Onmg orrer by your Volkswagen dts·
lnbutor exptres August 31 1972 Avatlat&gt;l e at p;HttCtpattng
Vo lkswagen dealers Bus ancl Campmoblle models nor

nullified on a penalty. The
Blues' last score came on a
long run by sophomore Tom
Valentine.
Three Blue Devils missed the
scrimmage .due to injuries.
Rick Grymes is still recovering
from an operation for the
removal of a cyst on his
tailbone . Scott Epling mjured
his knee earlier this week in
practice and Winston Saunders

\

ClD

II an own er ma rnta rns and servrces l1rs
\letlrc le tn accordance wr !l) 111e
Volkswagen marnt enance schedule. any lac tory pari founO10 be
defect•ve in matenal or wor kmans h•p
w•thrn 24 month s or 24 000 mrles whrc h
ever comes frrst (except normal wear and
tear and servrce rtems). wrll be re parred or
replaced by any U S or Carladran Volkswage n
dealer And thrs wrll be done free of charge

Berridge scored on a five yard
sweep around his right side.
Mike Evans, sophomore
tackle, kicked each point after
touchdown, hitting four for
four.
Sophomores dominated play
for Coach Ecker's Blue squad.
Quarterback Jimmy Niday
fired a 60 yard TD to his
sophomore end John Groth .
Another 60 yarder to Groth was

Lions Claw Redskins, 23-10

'•

And every new Volkswagen
carries this warranty:

Ohio

•

Engine flooding can be caused by
many factors- a dirty, worn or faulty
needle valve, for instance.

by the quarterbacking of Mike
Berridge. He passed for two
touchdowns and ran for
another.
Il&lt;lrridge's first TD came on
a 20 yard pass to speedy end
Leon Briggs. Dean Rees, junior
tailback, scored the second
White TD on a 10 yard run.
Berridge's other scoring tosses
were an electrifying 70 yard
pass to senior John Walter.

2 Teams Still

195 Upper River Rd. (Ohio Rt. 7), Gallipolis,

.''

MASS TO PATRIOTS
FOXBORO, Mass. (UP!) Offensive tackle Wayne Mass
was acquired Friday by the
New England Patri.ot.s from the
Miami Dolphins in exchange
for an undisclosed 1973
National Football League draft
choice.

'

Now you can get
air conditioning in a brand·new
Volkswagen* for only s1so •

DON WAITS VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

I,

the Kentucky Stale Trotting
Co mmission.
l owned High Step for six
months. Though the horse
was in my name only, I had
a silent partner, Sal Torre .
At the time, Sal could not
obtain a license to buy a
horse. He was not permitted
on the grounds of any track
in the state. He had been
e,iected a few weeks before
when he was caught talking
through a paddock window
at a fo cal track. He was a
general patron then and gen·
era! oatrons are not allowed
to talk to paddoc k people.
J was happy to be a part·
ner of Sal's. I knew he was
always going down to the
p a d do c k before races for
ti ps. What I came to learn
was that he also received
signals whi le sitting up in
th e stands.

Solid state, a familiar term in TV and
audio equipment, is now coming into
use for new car electrical systems.

•

tnc iUded.

•

lettermen are front row,lefl to right, Jim Hubbard, Henry
Sloan, Bill Peck, Terry Carter, Carroll Ruff and Kevin Gill.
Back row,left to right, Larry Fallon, Terrence Fortner, Phil
Lewis, Dale Whitt, David Jenkins, and John Eart' Hutchinson.

defeated Coach Johnny Ecker's Blue squad, 28-12. The winners were paced
by the passing of jWiior quarterback Mike Berridge. Sophomores dominated
play for the Eckermen.

GRAPE JAM . ............. •·••· ,.... '"
SWEO ORANGE MARMALADE '· '~.;';..
PEACH PRESERVES .' , . , • , .... . ••~:;"
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM . • 11 ~:;-•·
ILACKIERRY JELLY ..... •.•.. '·'";:,..•·
GRAPE JILLY ...•......... ,.,•. ,.... ,.,

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PAMILYSIZE-SOR •••••.• ,.,•. ...., 47c
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WHIPPED mCK ~=~ ,;:~.
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IIGULAR PLIISCHMANN'S •• •·1•. otn. 45c

...•·•·..,.

"109 Years Of Service"
CHEF'S DELIGHT

Ask About Our Many Other Banking
Servicesep
·
ersonal Loans •Travelers C.,hecks .
eNo Service Charge Checking Accounts
e Savings Accot.mts
Mobile .Home
Loans

e

Cheese
Plain or ·Pimento
2·1b.
Pkg.

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STALEY

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CHASE ll SANBORN

COFFEE
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.

21 - The Thnes&amp;ntinel, Sunday A
' ug. 27, 1972

F,irst and Only State

Grace Red Team Champs
GALU!OLIS - The Grace two doubles in six trips to the triple, Bob McCully 1-1, Jim ,.
United Methodist ·Red team plate. Other Red hitters were : Bennett 1-4, and Norm Stewart
men added Jho tournament' Roger Hyden 3-5, including a 1-5.
Bill Pegg and Dave Burnett
championship to its regular home run .and a double, Dave
season championship by Tawney 2-3, Norm Snyder 2-1, had 3-5 for the Baptists. Brent
defeating First Baptist, 19-12, Ron Janey 2-li with a triple, Sanders had a triple and Phil
on Quaker State Field. Norm Mike Allen 2~; Dave Durham Cremeans a home run.
Stewart was the winning hurler2-5
u:::;,~JI~m!.::Ch~e;_:s:::,tn:,::u~t,:2-6::.,;wi:!!::th~a-:--:-~:-:-:::::-::=::-~

an~~~.::::r':ct~~~: ~:~ -

MEMBERS OF THE Grace United Methodist Church's men's Red team
won the chiii'Ch loorn811)ent championship by defeating First Baplist 1!1-12.
Team members are, left to right, first row, Norm Stewart, Ron Janey, Jim

Chestnut, Dave Durham, Dave Tawney, and Bob McCully. Second row, left
to right, R&amp;ger Hyden, Neil McMahon, Jim Bennett, Mike Allen and Oke
Tawney. Absent Carl Baker, Norm Snyder, Marlin Nibert and Tom Weaver.

AGREE TO DISAGREE
COOS BAY, Ore. (UPI)
Dick Brecke, President of
Oregon Coast Baseball, Inc.
announced Friday that
directors of the organization
holding the franchise for the
Rookie League baseball club.
here voted friday to terminate
the working agreement with
the Oakland Athletics because
of a series of snubs by A's
owner Charles 0. Finley and a
"lack of communication and
refusal to supply the club with
good players."

Middleport Ball Club

r!RO CHA.RTS:
•

By KEITH WISECUP
MIDDLEPORT - The only
Metgs County high school team
to win a state championship in
any organized sport was the
undefeated Middleport Yellow
Jacket baseball team of 1957.
The Yellow Ja ckets, coached
by Nolan Swackhamer, were
16-1lthat year, the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League champs
and Class "A" state champs.
That Middleport nine ,
recalled fondly by my
generation 's dads, won seven
straight tournament games,
scoring 46 run s, giving up only
12.
The Jackets were led by the
incomparable Jim Bowles, who
won bolh ga mes in the
regionals and· both games in
the state tournament. His
back-up on the mound was
anoth er great righthander ,
Dave Hindy. Hindy hurled
three scoreless innings in relief
of Bowles to protect a Middleport 4-3 lead over Doylestown
in the final game.
The Jackets were hardly
tested in three games in di s·
lrict play, and won the first
regional game handily. But
they were hard-pressed in the
regional fin~Js against
Pleasantville, Winning H in
nine innings, with Bowles goi ng
the route, allowing but four
hits.
Middleport might not have
made it to the state tournament
if it had nul been for rain ,
probably U1e most cheristed of
all rains by Meigs County
baseball fans.
Pleasantville had a 5-3 lead
after five innings. But rain
began and persisted so as lo
force calling th e game off. It
was started over on lhe next

~A
~ hv MURRAV OLmMA~ ~
American Conference: Central Division
24-CINCINNATI BENGALS
PROSPECTUS- Everything bad that could happen seemed to happen to
this young club last year.
Still, they're considered
one of brightest around
for future. Even with 4-10
record they scored more
points than they yielded .
Lost six games by total of
21 points, Youth movement continues with injection of rookies. Could
be the suprise of '72.
Paul Brown
OFFENSE

Tornado Grid
Squad Lacking

QU~RTERBACK -You con practically write off carter ot lame -armed
Greg Cook . It'll be either astute, gutsy Virgi l Carttlr or st rong-armed
Ken Anderson at helm . Rating- B.

.-

RUNNING BACKS--Could rotate almost a hall dozen backs.

...

•

By KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - The Southern
Local High School Tornado
grid squad has been working
hard preparing for its .season
opener on Sept. 8 here against
Green High.
And again, as in the Tornadoes' last two seasons, they
are taking and giving their
licks under the critical eyes of
a first year head coach.
Bill Jewell, an assistant at
Southern the past two years,
undet ilo~ ~shl~y_.in 1970 1 th n
.. ~ iri"' 1911"., "hasrr
Bruce"''"'''
wa!ace
taken over the helm with 12
lettermen from last year's 3-Q
squad.
Southern, which has won but
eight games in its last four
seasons, still has a lack of
depth on its squad of 35 boys.
There is expeMence, however,
among the first-line players.
The Tornadoes begin the
season with five seniors, all of
whom started last year, three
of whOIIJ..were·in the backfield.
Halfb8s Mike . Nease and
Nick !hie and fullback Jay Hill,
all seniors, are back. Vern Ord,
a junior, will be the signalcaller. Ord started some
games at quarterback last
year and knows tbe position.
Senior tackles Ron Hill and
Larry Wilcoxen will supply
muscle at their positions, both
offensively and defensively.
They are both returning
starters.
Junior Dennis Hawk has
been playing at cen ler in preseason drills. Hawk saw a little
playing time last year, enough
to know what it is all about. The

WIDE RECEIVERS-TaU corps to b ~de•il secondaries with Bob Trumpy
(6-6) shih~d from 1i9ht end to join Chip Myers (6-5), and Speedy
Thomas spelling them . Trumpy one of finest in NFL. Roting-8+.

108 Golfers
Play In

Tournament

I

JACKSON - Another highly
successful golf tournament
was held August 22 when 108
golfers over age 50 participated in the sixth annual
Southern Ohio Seniors Tourney
at the Fairgreens Country
Club.
(,'bet Fitch, Portsmouth, won
the Joe Thomas trophy, the
award being made in person by
Mr. Thomas who in 1924 was
Fairgrcens
first
golf
professional. Mr. Fitch shot an
83 and was low net for his age
group.
Golf Chairman Ken Gallant
made trophy awards to the
follo~~;ing Gallia-Meigs
players:
Low Net, Harold Brown,
Gallipolis (86-14--166).
Seniors 60-64, low net, John
fblllday, Gallipolis ( 84-Ul88).
Seniors 65-69, Low Gross, R.
D. White, Gallipolis (78).
A special award or prize
went to Walter Grueser,
Pomeroy; Harry Mills ,
GaiUpoliJ, and Pit Heyer, Pi.
Pleallllt.

gua rds will probably be either
juniors Bob Eynon, Mike
Codner, who staFted at center
last year, Greg Middleswart,
or sophomore Dave Huddleston .
Junior Jim Williams is a
returnin g starter at end from
last year, whi le Mitch Nease, a
sophomore, will probably get
into the starti ng line-up
somewhere, whether at end or
in the backfield. He saw plenty
of acti on as a freshman last
y.ear.
Others trying to crack the
TORNADO SENIORS - Five seniors will be knocking
startin g line up are junior
Randy Fm·bes, who played
heads this year for the Southern Tornadoes . Tbey are, left to
quite a bi t last year,
sophomores Monty Hart, Glenn
Simpson, Donald Sha!fer,
Buddy Ervi n, Jim Maver, John
Sa lser , Dave Clark, John
Barnhart. Jim Hill, Skipper
McMillion, Jim Ferrell and
Jeff Circle, and the freshmen
are Danny Brown, Ronnie
Johnson, Greg Dunning 1 Jim
Cundi ff, Brady Hoffman,
Frank Shane, Jeff Knighting,
Rick Deeter and Randy
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Don in the seventh game of the
DuddinJ!.,
The Tornado schedule is as Gullett is feeling a lot better World Series.
these days than he did a couple
"I was glad to see Gullett
follows:
of
weeks ago.
throw those 152 pitches," said
Sept. 8---{;reen, home
In fact, one might say the 21- pitching coach Larry Shepard.
Sept. 15-Hannan Trace, away
year-()ld
lelthander is feeling "It makes his arm that much
Sept. 22-Eastern away
''three victories better.''
stronger. That's why pitchers
Sept. 29- Wahama, away
Gullett,
bouncing
back
from
go to spMng training early.
Oct. 6- North Gallia iHC )
an
early
season
attack
of
They've got to throw, throw
Oct. 13-Kyger Creek, away
stopped
the and throw to build up the
Oct. 20-Symmes
Valley, hepa litis,
Philadelphia Phils on only strength in their arm if they're
home
three
hits, walked four and to be effective."
Oct. 27---{;louster, away
Nov. 3-Southwcstcrn, home struck out 10 as tbe Redlegs
pounded out a S-1 victory
Nov.IU- i\lcxander, away
Friday night in the opener of a
three game series.
It was back on Aug. IS in
Philadelphia that Gullett
blanked the Phillies with four
hits in eight innings after
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
replacing an injured Wayne
Simpson to pick up the first of (UPI)- AureHo Rodriguez's
two-run lith inning home run
his three straight victories.
broke
a 3-3 tie to give the
He then reeled . off seven
scoreless innings in beating the Detroit Tigers a 5-3 vi~tory
New York .Mets last Sunday. over the Minnesota Twins in
PROCTORVILLE - Coach And Friday night, again facing the first game of a
doubleheader Saturday.
Jim Mayo's ~'airland Dragons the Phits, he pulled within one
victory
of
the
.500
mark,
pitEd Brinkman opened the
scored a touchdown in each
half here Saturday in downing ching his first complete game Tiger lith with a walk but was
forced out on an attempted
the North Galli a Pirates, 12-1l in in nine starts this season.
Gullett
also
delivered
the
key
the first fall scrimmage for
blow , a two-run bases loaded
both teams.
single,
to climax a live-run
Cocah ·John Blake's Pirates
fourth
inning
that sent Phil
drove to th e Dragon 10 yard
lefly Ken Reynolds to the
line in their first series of
showers with his 12th straight
downs but failed to score. The
drive featured heavy running loss against no victories. This
ties a major league record,
by senior fullback Phil
shared by two other
Hollanbaugh, junior Kim Hall
Philadelphia pitchers, Russ
and sophomore speedster
Miller of the Phils in 1928 and
Sterling Logan. Hollanbaugh
GALLIPOLIS _ Led by
was injw·cd during the later Steve Gerke of the Athletics in
Lonnie Bush 's five RBI'S,
part of the first quarter. He did 1945.
Gullett
made
152
pitches,
an
Quaker
State de!eated Matnot play the second half.
indication
he
has
regained
full
thews
and
Edleblute, 12-ti, in
North Gallia will scrimmage
strength
after
his
bout
with
the
opening
round of the
Alexander next Saturday at
hepatitis.
Gallipolis Slow Pitch Softball
Albru1y.
Reds manager Sparky An- Tournament. Gary :Lane and
derson is looking for Gullett to Paige Humphreys each had
be a winner the remainder of two hits and three RBI's,
GRIM SIGNS CONTRACT
the season.
Eric Saunders, Dave Burnett
NEW YORK (UP!) - Wide
"Those 16 victories he won and Howell paced the losers.
receiver Bob' Grim, who was last year," said Sparky,
Friday n;aht, Citizens Naa.a
acquired in a big off-season "weren't flukes."
tiona! Bank slammed 22 hits In
trade that sent quarterback
Gullett, with a 6-7 record, blasting Quaker State, !8-1.
Fran Tarkenton to the Min- doesn't figure to come close to Jim Carpenter paced the
nesola Vikings, Friday signed matching his win total of last winners with four hits in four
a one-year contract with the year but he admitted it would trips to the plate. Gary Lane
New York Giants of the be mce, as som.eon~ suggested, homered for the Oilers' only
if he were to win his 15th game ,
.
National Football League.
run.

TIGHT END- Oe,clopment of Bruce Coslet freed Trump~ for wide rol e.
Not spectacular but steady. Somet imes used double tight en d set-up
with Trumpy for better blocking. Rating- B.
LINE- It's roung and de.,eloping. 8ig news th is year should be improvement of Rwtus Mo yes at tackle. He and Vern Holland make pair
who could be around for years. Bob John son at ce nter is o standou t.
New man up front is Ohio State's Tom Deleone , who con be relief man
or ~uard or center. Rating--8.

DEFENSE
LINE-·Starring spot already re~ernd for Sherman Wh1te, the lop
droftee, at end . Will jack up pau ru1h tre mendously. There's already
one superlative gur up front in tac kle Mike Reid with the piano-playing
hands. SteYe Chomysrok Md Ron Carpenter duelling tor other tackle
spot. Rating-B.

Gullett Wins Again
Earlier Friday Anderson
learned he was suffering !rom
an ulcer.
Be!ore heading for the
dugout tbe Reds manager put a
botUe baH-filled with liquid in
his hip pocket.
11
1t's for anti~acid," ezplained Sparky. "With Gullett
pitching I figure haH a botUe
will be enough."

Tigers Defeat
Twins In Opener

Defeats
NG Pirates

Loss Drops

Oilers Into

Losers Slot

LINEIACICERS-There's a goad one in the middle you don't hear
8~ttku class-Bill Bergey. Ken Avery o" one
tide has bttll' p:leosCHitly-steody &lt;fetr 'toupl e of yeers. ~kit ~totnd Ji~W iti
LeClair could e•entuolly squeeze oul Bill Peterson or AI Beauchamp "'
for third starting job. Rotinv--8 .

right, Jay Hill, Ronnie Hill, Nick Thle, Mike Nease and Larry
Wilcoxen.

sacMfice by Tiger pitcher BiU
Slayback, one out later,
Rodriguez followed with a
homer to leftrield o!f Twins'
reliever Jim Strickland.
Detroit had tied the game at
3-3 In the eighth inning when
Willie Horton and Duke Sims
singled home Jim Northrup
and Norm Cash re'spectively.
Bobby Darwin had given the
Twins a 3-1 lead in the sixth
inning when he slammed a 395foot home run just inside the
leltfield foul pole, scoring
Cesar Tovar ahead of him.
Cash doubled off Twins'
starter Bert Bly leven to score
Northrup and give the Tigers a
1-0 lead in the third inning .
Minnesota tied the game 1-1
in the !ifth inning when Glenn
Borgmann homered off Detroit
starter Mickey Lolich, who
once again failed to reach the
20-victory mark. Lolich left for
a pinch-hitter alter six innings.

By United Press International

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore &lt;Mc Nall y 12-121 at
Oakla nd (Blue 5-7) .
Cleveland l Perrv t9-Ill at
Ca lifornia

light.

Delroit {Timmerman IJ-10) at
Min nesota (Corbin 7-6).

San Franci sco {Marichal 5-

Lou is {Wi se 11 -14) .

·

New York (Seaver 15-9) at
Atlanta (Reed 11 -12) .
· Philadelphia (Brandon 5-5) at
Cinc innati (Grimsley 11 -6) .
Montrea l (Morton 5-11 or

Moore-5-6) at Houston (Roberts
10-6).

The Gallia County Budget Commission
wi II hold public hearing on School,
Township, Village and other Political
Subdivisions Budgets in the Commissioners Room of the Gallia County
Courthouse, Gallipolis, Ohio, on
Friday, September 1, 1972, commencing at 9 a.m.

SIGNED: GALLIA COUNTY BUDGET COMMISSION
,,
•

.·Mid-State Electric Co.
Electrical ContractOrs

..

Residential, Commercial, Industrial
No Job Too Large or Too Small

''

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: ·:

,,,

30 Y ear8 Experience

•

All Work Insured Up To $100,000

•

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Ucensed .and Bonded

RESIDEITIAL ·.
..
COMMERCIAL OONTRACTORS .
Glenwood, W. Va.

Phone 576·2131

.

def~;5;i~~~~i~8 AVERAGES

great
NAME

G

·'
I:.

'

I

.

::~

~i~~~~~l~::l~~ IB-P

:1666

Rob Hennessy, :IB
Ed Crooks, SS
Jr. Kennedy, LF

J!
@.
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~~~

...::::.
!!~

·:·:
1_11_1

;1~.7 :! ::~~

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53 .321
51 .294 ',:_._: .'·
57 .281

t6 1s
16 16

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)

SEAITLE (UP!) - Veteran
Natio nal Bask et ball
Association player Lenny
Wilkens, traded from the
Seattle Supersonics to th e
Cleveland Cavalier, says he
will not report to Cleveland.
"At this point I ca n't see
myself goi ng to Cleveland and I
don't intend to," Wilkens said
after lea rning of the trade in
which the Cavs shipped guard
Butch Beard to the Sonics.
Seattle also dealt forward
Barry Clemens to Cleveland.
A Sonics spokesman said if
Wilkens, a 34-year-()ld guard,
refuses to report to Cleveland,
Seattle will have to send
another player or cash or a
dra!t choice, or a combination
of those, to the Cavs.
Wilkens said he was
"shocked, very disappointed
and disillusioned" by the trade.
He said he has mad.e his permanent home in the suburb of
Bellevue and had planned on
playing out his basketball
career with the Sonics.
The general manag(rloHhe
Sonics, Bob Houbregs, on
Friday issued a public apology
to Wilkens for his handling of
the trade.
News of the transaction was
released before Wilkens was
informed.
A team of!icial called
Wilkens' home and when he
. found that Lenny was playing
golf, his wife was told of the
trade and was asked to relay
the information.
"I !eel I owe Lenny, his
family and our fans my sincere
apology," Houbregs said. "I
felt I was handling this in the
proper manner. I'm sorry it
has been accepted as an error.
Lenny Is due all the respect and
considera lion of the communlly and the Seattle
Supersonics.
A team spokesman said the
Sonics of!ice had received a

Kennedy (all state outrielder), Dave Hindy, Ed McComas, Jim Bowles (all
state pitcher-!irst baseman), Bobby Hermessy, Steve Bailey, Roger
Lightfoot, Harlan Whitlatch and Coach Nolan Swackhamer. Not pictured
here is the late Charley Swackhamer, "honorary" bat boy during the
championship playoffs in Columbus.

CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM OF 1957 - The 14 players on the undefeated
baseball squad of Middleport High School · that won the Class A state
championship, kneeling, 1 to r, Jan' Houck, mgr., Sonny Knapp, Bobby
Nelson, Eddie Crooks, Tommy Davis, and Yogi Wayland ; standing, Jr.

:! i! ~ fiTI,l,.,'._: Cubs
Blast Colorado Youth Bobcat-Panther
5 Homers,

Harlan Whitlatch. RF

Is 45

!J

.2oo

il , , ,,:~::~~~::~:,::::
. , ,:~, ;,;, , , ~ , , , , , , :,: : ,,:,:,:~:, :,:,~ :,: : :; ~: :J~! Edge Giants Soap Box Champ
.

day, the Jackets winning 1·0.
Middleport . opened post
schedule tournament play with
a 9-:t win over Coalton at
Coalton . The Yellow Jackets
were 6-1l at the time. Later in
the week, they whipped a good
Waverly team 6-2 at Waverly .
Middleport easily knocked off
South Webster, 9-1, in the
district fin~ls at Middleport.
It was on to Jet Stadium in
Columbus where the Jackets
took a heavily-favored Warsaw
nine, 7-3, with Bowles getting
the win . On the next day , the
Jackets had their run-in with

.

Pleasa ntville.
After a week's delay (d ue to
Middleport's se nior trip), the
Jackets began practicing for
the state finals in Columbus .
They tore apart Salem Local
(near Urbana) 10-0 in the semifinals with Bowles hurling a
three-hit shutout. Salem was
riding high until this game,
having knocked off big name
teams game after game.
In the final s against
Doylestown , Middleport scored
four runs in the first two
framesandheldon to a 4-3 1ead
the final three innings .

W L Pet GB
78 54 .591
76 58 .567 3
71 63 .530 8
70 63 530 9

69

Svracuse

ioined by Bernard Jackson, rookie in secondary . Ratinr8 .

All Work Meets or Exceeds Standard of the
National Electric Code

::::
:..,:_',:.:

The Jackets had a fantastic team batting
aJ· ~erage of .:106 with pitcher-first baseman
1mmy Bowles leading the pack with a
fabulous .460 clip (29 hits in 63 trips) .
Two Yell ow Jackets were named to the
Ohio Class . ."A" all-state team. Of course '
Bowles was one, and the other was left fielder
Leo Kennedy, Jr., who baited .281 and was a

Tidewater
Rochester
Toledo

NOTICE

14) at Chicago (Hooton 7-11).
San Diego (Arlin 8-16) at St

jji
j _j!
.

Louisville

PREDICTION
Ch ica go (Wood 13- 11) at
Milwaukee (Parsons 9.12,_
Second' ·in Division. Because Paul Brown, ot 64,
Kansas City l Dal Canton 6-5 is eoger for that one more title shot.
and
Hedlund
5-5)
NewIemyre
York · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
(Peterson
lJ.lJ
andatStott
12-15). 2.
Texas (Paul 6~ 5) at Boston
(McGlothen 5-4)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles (Downing 7-6) at
Pittsburgh (Briles tl-6) .

!~!~

::;:

Charles ton

KICKING-For two years in row, Don lewi1 has been lead punter
in NFL (••.8 aYeroge in '71), and get long ·distonce field goals (JOme·
timn erratic on short ones) lrom Horst Muhlmann, only O'ltr-10 man
on squad. Rating- A-

~

;;:: Hot H•tt•
. .
1 mg Ouh

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

SPECIAL TEAMS--U sed to be strongest around, hut got burned
13-12). tw i. couple of games lost year on CoYeragt. Parrish is fine rtturn man , now

(Ryan

»

N

,8y United Press International

SECONDARY- It's swift. eager and young. Couple of agile corner
bach, Lemar Parrish and Ken Riley, or e now complemen ted by Neil
Craig , roo~ie last yea r, and Tommy Casono,o, brilliant newco mer this
year, al the sahries. Coso noYo's a headline maker. Rotin9-B + .

Sunday ' s Probable Pitchers

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

M

Wilkens Greg Cook Standings
i Refuses,. Thro.wing . .
~= Trade
Better Now

·'t

mYch of, bwt he's c:lose to

Reds Fatten Lead As

Fairland

~torlers

by midseason should be Fred Willis, fine rookie lou 1eor, and burly
Doug Dressier, with Enex Johnson delivering half-game breoka.way thrills.
Jtu Phillips and Paul Robinson , regular$ ot start of '71 . are pol~nt , too.
loting-8 + .

Depth in 1972

'

Title Won in 1957 by

'

in the first in~ing on seven hits.
The game was never close
after that. Eleven players hit
safely for the Reds as they
blasted .out 23 hits.
Neil McMahon was the
game's best hitter as he
banged out three singles and

i

65 .555 10

61 73 .455 18
50 75 .440 10

CHI CAGO (UP!) - The
AKRON, Ohio (U Pl) Chicago Cubs blasted five
The new champion, who had
home run s Saturday but Robert Lange, Jr. of Boulder, to win eight races in comneeded a hit batsman with the Colo.. defeated Bruce Cross of petition with 250 other
bases loaded in the lOth inning Detroit, Mich., in the final heat champions from the U. S. and
to force in Jose Cardenal with Saturday afternoon to become foreign countries, was clocked
the winning run and beat the the 1972 All-American Soap in 27.33 seconds as he piloted
Box Derby champion.
San Francisco Giants, 10-9.
his maroon and gold racer
Lange, 14, a motorcycle and down the 953.75 foot track on
The two tea ms combined for
nine home 1·uns. Most in the skiing enthusiast, had to take a his final trip .
close photo decision ove r
National League this season Cross, 12, who shared the
with Chicago's Billy Williams James Howard J r. of fastest time of the day ( 27.31)
and Ron Santo and San Columbus, Ga., to ga in the with Pricilla Ann Freeman of
Francisco's Ken Henderson final heat.
Chape l Hill , N. C., in
hitting two each.
preliminary heats, defeated Ed
Cardenal and Williams led row of the bleachers in leflfield
Morris, 15, Charlotte, N. C., to
off the lOth inning with singles,
ga
in the championship heat.
in the third inning.
putting runners on first and
Third
place went to Howard,
Henderson, who has 43 hits
third. After Randy Moffitt and 26 RBl's in August, hit his ll , as Edward Morris, 15,
struck out Ric1((11onday, Santo
ninth homer of the month with Charlotte, N. C., finish ed
was intentionally walked to fill the bases empty in the fourth fourth with Miss Freeman
the bases. Moffitt's first pitch "and then followed with a two- fifth .
to Joe Pepitone grazed his run homer in the seventh .
. 'Eric Raber, 14, New
right knee, ending the game.
The other San Francisco Philadelphia, Ohio, was sixth,
The Giants had tied it in the home runs came on successive with Karen Ann Johnson, 14,
ninU1, kn ocking out Ferguson pitches by McCovey and Dave Farmington, Mich., seve nth.
Jenkins and scoring two runs
Rader in the sixth inning. Paul Michael Paul, 12, San Diego,
on a single by Bobby Bonds, a
Popovich hit the other home Calif., was eighth and Tom
triple by Chris Speier and a run for Chicago, his first of the Harvey, 11, Decatur, Ga .,
sacrifice fly by Willie Meninth.
see~ son.
Covey.

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!) Ric hmond
Williams had fiv e hits, Santo
50 82 .379 28
- Cincinnati quarterback Pen; nsula
Friday s Results
and
Cardenal four each and
Greg Cook says he is throwing
Charleston 2 Pen insula I, 1st Williams and Santo each drove
better in the first week of the game, 7 innings
Charleston 3 Penins ula 2, 2nd, in four runs, leading Chicago's
new traini ng campaign than he 7 innings
18-hit attack.
was "in the fifth, six th and
Tidewa te r 8 Rlchmond 5
One of Santo's hits was his
seve nth weeks last year" and Louisville 6 Rochester 5
2,000th
in the major leagues, a
feels he can make a comeback Toledo 9 Syracuse 3
three-run homer into the last
this season.
Cook, a se nsation his rookie
yea r in I!Hi9, missed most of the
1970 and all of the 1971 seasons
because of a shoulder injury.
He has been undergoing
treatment with strength
building machines and feels
they have really helped.
"In another month, if I
conti nu e to progress the same
way," he sa id·, " I'll be
UL APPROVED
throwing 75 to 80 per cent of
what I once was. I'll really be
Underwriters Laboratory
close.
" Really though I'm not
ready to play a game," he said.
"About the eighth game of the
"World's Largest Manufacturer Of
season seems rea listie now."
Assistant Coach Bill Walsh
played catch with Cook this
Mobile Homes."
week and was impressed.
" He 's much stronger
THE ONLY HOMES APPROVED BY UL
physically," said Walsh. "He's
in tremendous physical condition at 215 pounds.
"He· seems to be operating
"THE 1t7rr
with very little pain, he's enfREEDoM"
thusiastic and rarin' to go,"
said Walsh. "However, much
will" depend on the progress of
me throwing arm.
"I'm much stronger and I
UL insures you of Trouble Free Service. These
really believe I can come back.
this time/ ' said Cook. u1 can
homes must pass rigid inspections. ·
throw farther than I have been
but I'm not pushilig it yet."

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
and Chesapeake battled to a 0-0
tie here Saturday in a controlled scrimmage on the Bobcat field .
Coach Jim Sprague's Bobcats moved the ball well at
times, but fumbled away any
possible scoring chances.
Chesapeake muffed two
scoring chances .
The Panthers drove to the
Bobcat four yard line late in
the first half on long pass play
but could not push it across.
Chesapeake moved to the sixYard line in the opening ·
minutes of the second half but
were again stopped by the
Bobcat defense.
Coach Sprague, the Bobcats'
third football coach in as many
years, said " we have several
things to sharpen up on , but
overall, the players are
learning our new system.
Fumbles cost us on offense,
defensively, we did not do bad
except for lhe occasional long
pass completion." "We must
tighten up our aerial defense

before we meet Wabama on
Sept. 8, " he said. The Bobcats
are playing a Pro I offense and
Pro 44 defense .
Seniors John Baird and Bill
Rife alternated at the quarterback slot.
The Bobcat reserve team
composed of freshmen and
sophomores also battled the
Chesapeake reserves to an 0-0
tie. Both teams ran a two series
of 10 plays each.
Kyger Creek · will travel to
Vinton County for Its final
scrimmage Saturday, Sept. 2.

MARTIN DISABLES
CHICAGO (UP!) -Veteran
catcher J. C. Martin Friday
was placed on the disabled list
by the Chicago Cuba In order
that he maY Wlderga surgery
!or removal o! a bone chip in
his right elbow. The Cubs
•recalled outfielder Jim Tyrone
to replace Martin on the roster.

'·

HI

1

1973 ·
MODEL

WHERE YOU SAVE

DOES
MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

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5%

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Interest from date of

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90 day Certificates of

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Interest
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Interest paid as long as

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an

open account
maintained .

Deposit.
51 ; 000 . 00
Minimum . Interest

year

certificates · of

oe p osl t.
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Interest

Payable Qurterly. to

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6 Pet . per year on 2 year

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l10,000.DO
Interest

Minimum .
payable
Quarterly. 90 day in·

terest penalty If t:Uhtd
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is
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number of telephone calls
protesting the club's actlon ..He
said most of the callers said
they were angry over the way
the matter was handled.
Some fans started · circulating petitions to retain
Wilkens.

MASON BOWLING CENTER
MAS!)N, W_. VA.

BOWLI_NG
LEAGUES·
Now Being Formed
PHONE

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Whether you put $5 a week into a ·regular
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The Athens CountY Savings &amp;Loan Co•.
Ead F. Ingels, Jr., ft1anagef

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.

21 - The Thnes&amp;ntinel, Sunday A
' ug. 27, 1972

F,irst and Only State

Grace Red Team Champs
GALU!OLIS - The Grace two doubles in six trips to the triple, Bob McCully 1-1, Jim ,.
United Methodist ·Red team plate. Other Red hitters were : Bennett 1-4, and Norm Stewart
men added Jho tournament' Roger Hyden 3-5, including a 1-5.
Bill Pegg and Dave Burnett
championship to its regular home run .and a double, Dave
season championship by Tawney 2-3, Norm Snyder 2-1, had 3-5 for the Baptists. Brent
defeating First Baptist, 19-12, Ron Janey 2-li with a triple, Sanders had a triple and Phil
on Quaker State Field. Norm Mike Allen 2~; Dave Durham Cremeans a home run.
Stewart was the winning hurler2-5
u:::;,~JI~m!.::Ch~e;_:s:::,tn:,::u~t,:2-6::.,;wi:!!::th~a-:--:-~:-:-:::::-::=::-~

an~~~.::::r':ct~~~: ~:~ -

MEMBERS OF THE Grace United Methodist Church's men's Red team
won the chiii'Ch loorn811)ent championship by defeating First Baplist 1!1-12.
Team members are, left to right, first row, Norm Stewart, Ron Janey, Jim

Chestnut, Dave Durham, Dave Tawney, and Bob McCully. Second row, left
to right, R&amp;ger Hyden, Neil McMahon, Jim Bennett, Mike Allen and Oke
Tawney. Absent Carl Baker, Norm Snyder, Marlin Nibert and Tom Weaver.

AGREE TO DISAGREE
COOS BAY, Ore. (UPI)
Dick Brecke, President of
Oregon Coast Baseball, Inc.
announced Friday that
directors of the organization
holding the franchise for the
Rookie League baseball club.
here voted friday to terminate
the working agreement with
the Oakland Athletics because
of a series of snubs by A's
owner Charles 0. Finley and a
"lack of communication and
refusal to supply the club with
good players."

Middleport Ball Club

r!RO CHA.RTS:
•

By KEITH WISECUP
MIDDLEPORT - The only
Metgs County high school team
to win a state championship in
any organized sport was the
undefeated Middleport Yellow
Jacket baseball team of 1957.
The Yellow Ja ckets, coached
by Nolan Swackhamer, were
16-1lthat year, the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League champs
and Class "A" state champs.
That Middleport nine ,
recalled fondly by my
generation 's dads, won seven
straight tournament games,
scoring 46 run s, giving up only
12.
The Jackets were led by the
incomparable Jim Bowles, who
won bolh ga mes in the
regionals and· both games in
the state tournament. His
back-up on the mound was
anoth er great righthander ,
Dave Hindy. Hindy hurled
three scoreless innings in relief
of Bowles to protect a Middleport 4-3 lead over Doylestown
in the final game.
The Jackets were hardly
tested in three games in di s·
lrict play, and won the first
regional game handily. But
they were hard-pressed in the
regional fin~Js against
Pleasantville, Winning H in
nine innings, with Bowles goi ng
the route, allowing but four
hits.
Middleport might not have
made it to the state tournament
if it had nul been for rain ,
probably U1e most cheristed of
all rains by Meigs County
baseball fans.
Pleasantville had a 5-3 lead
after five innings. But rain
began and persisted so as lo
force calling th e game off. It
was started over on lhe next

~A
~ hv MURRAV OLmMA~ ~
American Conference: Central Division
24-CINCINNATI BENGALS
PROSPECTUS- Everything bad that could happen seemed to happen to
this young club last year.
Still, they're considered
one of brightest around
for future. Even with 4-10
record they scored more
points than they yielded .
Lost six games by total of
21 points, Youth movement continues with injection of rookies. Could
be the suprise of '72.
Paul Brown
OFFENSE

Tornado Grid
Squad Lacking

QU~RTERBACK -You con practically write off carter ot lame -armed
Greg Cook . It'll be either astute, gutsy Virgi l Carttlr or st rong-armed
Ken Anderson at helm . Rating- B.

.-

RUNNING BACKS--Could rotate almost a hall dozen backs.

...

•

By KEITH WISECUP
RACINE - The Southern
Local High School Tornado
grid squad has been working
hard preparing for its .season
opener on Sept. 8 here against
Green High.
And again, as in the Tornadoes' last two seasons, they
are taking and giving their
licks under the critical eyes of
a first year head coach.
Bill Jewell, an assistant at
Southern the past two years,
undet ilo~ ~shl~y_.in 1970 1 th n
.. ~ iri"' 1911"., "hasrr
Bruce"''"'''
wa!ace
taken over the helm with 12
lettermen from last year's 3-Q
squad.
Southern, which has won but
eight games in its last four
seasons, still has a lack of
depth on its squad of 35 boys.
There is expeMence, however,
among the first-line players.
The Tornadoes begin the
season with five seniors, all of
whom started last year, three
of whOIIJ..were·in the backfield.
Halfb8s Mike . Nease and
Nick !hie and fullback Jay Hill,
all seniors, are back. Vern Ord,
a junior, will be the signalcaller. Ord started some
games at quarterback last
year and knows tbe position.
Senior tackles Ron Hill and
Larry Wilcoxen will supply
muscle at their positions, both
offensively and defensively.
They are both returning
starters.
Junior Dennis Hawk has
been playing at cen ler in preseason drills. Hawk saw a little
playing time last year, enough
to know what it is all about. The

WIDE RECEIVERS-TaU corps to b ~de•il secondaries with Bob Trumpy
(6-6) shih~d from 1i9ht end to join Chip Myers (6-5), and Speedy
Thomas spelling them . Trumpy one of finest in NFL. Roting-8+.

108 Golfers
Play In

Tournament

I

JACKSON - Another highly
successful golf tournament
was held August 22 when 108
golfers over age 50 participated in the sixth annual
Southern Ohio Seniors Tourney
at the Fairgreens Country
Club.
(,'bet Fitch, Portsmouth, won
the Joe Thomas trophy, the
award being made in person by
Mr. Thomas who in 1924 was
Fairgrcens
first
golf
professional. Mr. Fitch shot an
83 and was low net for his age
group.
Golf Chairman Ken Gallant
made trophy awards to the
follo~~;ing Gallia-Meigs
players:
Low Net, Harold Brown,
Gallipolis (86-14--166).
Seniors 60-64, low net, John
fblllday, Gallipolis ( 84-Ul88).
Seniors 65-69, Low Gross, R.
D. White, Gallipolis (78).
A special award or prize
went to Walter Grueser,
Pomeroy; Harry Mills ,
GaiUpoliJ, and Pit Heyer, Pi.
Pleallllt.

gua rds will probably be either
juniors Bob Eynon, Mike
Codner, who staFted at center
last year, Greg Middleswart,
or sophomore Dave Huddleston .
Junior Jim Williams is a
returnin g starter at end from
last year, whi le Mitch Nease, a
sophomore, will probably get
into the starti ng line-up
somewhere, whether at end or
in the backfield. He saw plenty
of acti on as a freshman last
y.ear.
Others trying to crack the
TORNADO SENIORS - Five seniors will be knocking
startin g line up are junior
Randy Fm·bes, who played
heads this year for the Southern Tornadoes . Tbey are, left to
quite a bi t last year,
sophomores Monty Hart, Glenn
Simpson, Donald Sha!fer,
Buddy Ervi n, Jim Maver, John
Sa lser , Dave Clark, John
Barnhart. Jim Hill, Skipper
McMillion, Jim Ferrell and
Jeff Circle, and the freshmen
are Danny Brown, Ronnie
Johnson, Greg Dunning 1 Jim
Cundi ff, Brady Hoffman,
Frank Shane, Jeff Knighting,
Rick Deeter and Randy
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Don in the seventh game of the
DuddinJ!.,
The Tornado schedule is as Gullett is feeling a lot better World Series.
these days than he did a couple
"I was glad to see Gullett
follows:
of
weeks ago.
throw those 152 pitches," said
Sept. 8---{;reen, home
In fact, one might say the 21- pitching coach Larry Shepard.
Sept. 15-Hannan Trace, away
year-()ld
lelthander is feeling "It makes his arm that much
Sept. 22-Eastern away
''three victories better.''
stronger. That's why pitchers
Sept. 29- Wahama, away
Gullett,
bouncing
back
from
go to spMng training early.
Oct. 6- North Gallia iHC )
an
early
season
attack
of
They've got to throw, throw
Oct. 13-Kyger Creek, away
stopped
the and throw to build up the
Oct. 20-Symmes
Valley, hepa litis,
Philadelphia Phils on only strength in their arm if they're
home
three
hits, walked four and to be effective."
Oct. 27---{;louster, away
Nov. 3-Southwcstcrn, home struck out 10 as tbe Redlegs
pounded out a S-1 victory
Nov.IU- i\lcxander, away
Friday night in the opener of a
three game series.
It was back on Aug. IS in
Philadelphia that Gullett
blanked the Phillies with four
hits in eight innings after
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
replacing an injured Wayne
Simpson to pick up the first of (UPI)- AureHo Rodriguez's
two-run lith inning home run
his three straight victories.
broke
a 3-3 tie to give the
He then reeled . off seven
scoreless innings in beating the Detroit Tigers a 5-3 vi~tory
New York .Mets last Sunday. over the Minnesota Twins in
PROCTORVILLE - Coach And Friday night, again facing the first game of a
doubleheader Saturday.
Jim Mayo's ~'airland Dragons the Phits, he pulled within one
victory
of
the
.500
mark,
pitEd Brinkman opened the
scored a touchdown in each
half here Saturday in downing ching his first complete game Tiger lith with a walk but was
forced out on an attempted
the North Galli a Pirates, 12-1l in in nine starts this season.
Gullett
also
delivered
the
key
the first fall scrimmage for
blow , a two-run bases loaded
both teams.
single,
to climax a live-run
Cocah ·John Blake's Pirates
fourth
inning
that sent Phil
drove to th e Dragon 10 yard
lefly Ken Reynolds to the
line in their first series of
showers with his 12th straight
downs but failed to score. The
drive featured heavy running loss against no victories. This
ties a major league record,
by senior fullback Phil
shared by two other
Hollanbaugh, junior Kim Hall
Philadelphia pitchers, Russ
and sophomore speedster
Miller of the Phils in 1928 and
Sterling Logan. Hollanbaugh
GALLIPOLIS _ Led by
was injw·cd during the later Steve Gerke of the Athletics in
Lonnie Bush 's five RBI'S,
part of the first quarter. He did 1945.
Gullett
made
152
pitches,
an
Quaker
State de!eated Matnot play the second half.
indication
he
has
regained
full
thews
and
Edleblute, 12-ti, in
North Gallia will scrimmage
strength
after
his
bout
with
the
opening
round of the
Alexander next Saturday at
hepatitis.
Gallipolis Slow Pitch Softball
Albru1y.
Reds manager Sparky An- Tournament. Gary :Lane and
derson is looking for Gullett to Paige Humphreys each had
be a winner the remainder of two hits and three RBI's,
GRIM SIGNS CONTRACT
the season.
Eric Saunders, Dave Burnett
NEW YORK (UP!) - Wide
"Those 16 victories he won and Howell paced the losers.
receiver Bob' Grim, who was last year," said Sparky,
Friday n;aht, Citizens Naa.a
acquired in a big off-season "weren't flukes."
tiona! Bank slammed 22 hits In
trade that sent quarterback
Gullett, with a 6-7 record, blasting Quaker State, !8-1.
Fran Tarkenton to the Min- doesn't figure to come close to Jim Carpenter paced the
nesola Vikings, Friday signed matching his win total of last winners with four hits in four
a one-year contract with the year but he admitted it would trips to the plate. Gary Lane
New York Giants of the be mce, as som.eon~ suggested, homered for the Oilers' only
if he were to win his 15th game ,
.
National Football League.
run.

TIGHT END- Oe,clopment of Bruce Coslet freed Trump~ for wide rol e.
Not spectacular but steady. Somet imes used double tight en d set-up
with Trumpy for better blocking. Rating- B.
LINE- It's roung and de.,eloping. 8ig news th is year should be improvement of Rwtus Mo yes at tackle. He and Vern Holland make pair
who could be around for years. Bob John son at ce nter is o standou t.
New man up front is Ohio State's Tom Deleone , who con be relief man
or ~uard or center. Rating--8.

DEFENSE
LINE-·Starring spot already re~ernd for Sherman Wh1te, the lop
droftee, at end . Will jack up pau ru1h tre mendously. There's already
one superlative gur up front in tac kle Mike Reid with the piano-playing
hands. SteYe Chomysrok Md Ron Carpenter duelling tor other tackle
spot. Rating-B.

Gullett Wins Again
Earlier Friday Anderson
learned he was suffering !rom
an ulcer.
Be!ore heading for the
dugout tbe Reds manager put a
botUe baH-filled with liquid in
his hip pocket.
11
1t's for anti~acid," ezplained Sparky. "With Gullett
pitching I figure haH a botUe
will be enough."

Tigers Defeat
Twins In Opener

Defeats
NG Pirates

Loss Drops

Oilers Into

Losers Slot

LINEIACICERS-There's a goad one in the middle you don't hear
8~ttku class-Bill Bergey. Ken Avery o" one
tide has bttll' p:leosCHitly-steody &lt;fetr 'toupl e of yeers. ~kit ~totnd Ji~W iti
LeClair could e•entuolly squeeze oul Bill Peterson or AI Beauchamp "'
for third starting job. Rotinv--8 .

right, Jay Hill, Ronnie Hill, Nick Thle, Mike Nease and Larry
Wilcoxen.

sacMfice by Tiger pitcher BiU
Slayback, one out later,
Rodriguez followed with a
homer to leftrield o!f Twins'
reliever Jim Strickland.
Detroit had tied the game at
3-3 In the eighth inning when
Willie Horton and Duke Sims
singled home Jim Northrup
and Norm Cash re'spectively.
Bobby Darwin had given the
Twins a 3-1 lead in the sixth
inning when he slammed a 395foot home run just inside the
leltfield foul pole, scoring
Cesar Tovar ahead of him.
Cash doubled off Twins'
starter Bert Bly leven to score
Northrup and give the Tigers a
1-0 lead in the third inning .
Minnesota tied the game 1-1
in the !ifth inning when Glenn
Borgmann homered off Detroit
starter Mickey Lolich, who
once again failed to reach the
20-victory mark. Lolich left for
a pinch-hitter alter six innings.

By United Press International

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore &lt;Mc Nall y 12-121 at
Oakla nd (Blue 5-7) .
Cleveland l Perrv t9-Ill at
Ca lifornia

light.

Delroit {Timmerman IJ-10) at
Min nesota (Corbin 7-6).

San Franci sco {Marichal 5-

Lou is {Wi se 11 -14) .

·

New York (Seaver 15-9) at
Atlanta (Reed 11 -12) .
· Philadelphia (Brandon 5-5) at
Cinc innati (Grimsley 11 -6) .
Montrea l (Morton 5-11 or

Moore-5-6) at Houston (Roberts
10-6).

The Gallia County Budget Commission
wi II hold public hearing on School,
Township, Village and other Political
Subdivisions Budgets in the Commissioners Room of the Gallia County
Courthouse, Gallipolis, Ohio, on
Friday, September 1, 1972, commencing at 9 a.m.

SIGNED: GALLIA COUNTY BUDGET COMMISSION
,,
•

.·Mid-State Electric Co.
Electrical ContractOrs

..

Residential, Commercial, Industrial
No Job Too Large or Too Small

''

'

': r •

: ·:

,,,

30 Y ear8 Experience

•

All Work Insured Up To $100,000

•

'

'· '

' '

Ucensed .and Bonded

RESIDEITIAL ·.
..
COMMERCIAL OONTRACTORS .
Glenwood, W. Va.

Phone 576·2131

.

def~;5;i~~~~i~8 AVERAGES

great
NAME

G

·'
I:.

'

I

.

::~

~i~~~~~l~::l~~ IB-P

:1666

Rob Hennessy, :IB
Ed Crooks, SS
Jr. Kennedy, LF

J!
@.
::~

;!;!

~~~

...::::.
!!~

·:·:
1_11_1

;1~.7 :! ::~~

_!l_;_!_l

53 .321
51 .294 ',:_._: .'·
57 .281

t6 1s
16 16

E?:g:~~·

;&lt;9

H AR AV.

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)

SEAITLE (UP!) - Veteran
Natio nal Bask et ball
Association player Lenny
Wilkens, traded from the
Seattle Supersonics to th e
Cleveland Cavalier, says he
will not report to Cleveland.
"At this point I ca n't see
myself goi ng to Cleveland and I
don't intend to," Wilkens said
after lea rning of the trade in
which the Cavs shipped guard
Butch Beard to the Sonics.
Seattle also dealt forward
Barry Clemens to Cleveland.
A Sonics spokesman said if
Wilkens, a 34-year-()ld guard,
refuses to report to Cleveland,
Seattle will have to send
another player or cash or a
dra!t choice, or a combination
of those, to the Cavs.
Wilkens said he was
"shocked, very disappointed
and disillusioned" by the trade.
He said he has mad.e his permanent home in the suburb of
Bellevue and had planned on
playing out his basketball
career with the Sonics.
The general manag(rloHhe
Sonics, Bob Houbregs, on
Friday issued a public apology
to Wilkens for his handling of
the trade.
News of the transaction was
released before Wilkens was
informed.
A team of!icial called
Wilkens' home and when he
. found that Lenny was playing
golf, his wife was told of the
trade and was asked to relay
the information.
"I !eel I owe Lenny, his
family and our fans my sincere
apology," Houbregs said. "I
felt I was handling this in the
proper manner. I'm sorry it
has been accepted as an error.
Lenny Is due all the respect and
considera lion of the communlly and the Seattle
Supersonics.
A team spokesman said the
Sonics of!ice had received a

Kennedy (all state outrielder), Dave Hindy, Ed McComas, Jim Bowles (all
state pitcher-!irst baseman), Bobby Hermessy, Steve Bailey, Roger
Lightfoot, Harlan Whitlatch and Coach Nolan Swackhamer. Not pictured
here is the late Charley Swackhamer, "honorary" bat boy during the
championship playoffs in Columbus.

CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM OF 1957 - The 14 players on the undefeated
baseball squad of Middleport High School · that won the Class A state
championship, kneeling, 1 to r, Jan' Houck, mgr., Sonny Knapp, Bobby
Nelson, Eddie Crooks, Tommy Davis, and Yogi Wayland ; standing, Jr.

:! i! ~ fiTI,l,.,'._: Cubs
Blast Colorado Youth Bobcat-Panther
5 Homers,

Harlan Whitlatch. RF

Is 45

!J

.2oo

il , , ,,:~::~~~::~:,::::
. , ,:~, ;,;, , , ~ , , , , , , :,: : ,,:,:,:~:, :,:,~ :,: : :; ~: :J~! Edge Giants Soap Box Champ
.

day, the Jackets winning 1·0.
Middleport . opened post
schedule tournament play with
a 9-:t win over Coalton at
Coalton . The Yellow Jackets
were 6-1l at the time. Later in
the week, they whipped a good
Waverly team 6-2 at Waverly .
Middleport easily knocked off
South Webster, 9-1, in the
district fin~ls at Middleport.
It was on to Jet Stadium in
Columbus where the Jackets
took a heavily-favored Warsaw
nine, 7-3, with Bowles getting
the win . On the next day , the
Jackets had their run-in with

.

Pleasa ntville.
After a week's delay (d ue to
Middleport's se nior trip), the
Jackets began practicing for
the state finals in Columbus .
They tore apart Salem Local
(near Urbana) 10-0 in the semifinals with Bowles hurling a
three-hit shutout. Salem was
riding high until this game,
having knocked off big name
teams game after game.
In the final s against
Doylestown , Middleport scored
four runs in the first two
framesandheldon to a 4-3 1ead
the final three innings .

W L Pet GB
78 54 .591
76 58 .567 3
71 63 .530 8
70 63 530 9

69

Svracuse

ioined by Bernard Jackson, rookie in secondary . Ratinr8 .

All Work Meets or Exceeds Standard of the
National Electric Code

::::
:..,:_',:.:

The Jackets had a fantastic team batting
aJ· ~erage of .:106 with pitcher-first baseman
1mmy Bowles leading the pack with a
fabulous .460 clip (29 hits in 63 trips) .
Two Yell ow Jackets were named to the
Ohio Class . ."A" all-state team. Of course '
Bowles was one, and the other was left fielder
Leo Kennedy, Jr., who baited .281 and was a

Tidewater
Rochester
Toledo

NOTICE

14) at Chicago (Hooton 7-11).
San Diego (Arlin 8-16) at St

jji
j _j!
.

Louisville

PREDICTION
Ch ica go (Wood 13- 11) at
Milwaukee (Parsons 9.12,_
Second' ·in Division. Because Paul Brown, ot 64,
Kansas City l Dal Canton 6-5 is eoger for that one more title shot.
and
Hedlund
5-5)
NewIemyre
York · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
(Peterson
lJ.lJ
andatStott
12-15). 2.
Texas (Paul 6~ 5) at Boston
(McGlothen 5-4)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles (Downing 7-6) at
Pittsburgh (Briles tl-6) .

!~!~

::;:

Charles ton

KICKING-For two years in row, Don lewi1 has been lead punter
in NFL (••.8 aYeroge in '71), and get long ·distonce field goals (JOme·
timn erratic on short ones) lrom Horst Muhlmann, only O'ltr-10 man
on squad. Rating- A-

~

;;:: Hot H•tt•
. .
1 mg Ouh

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

SPECIAL TEAMS--U sed to be strongest around, hut got burned
13-12). tw i. couple of games lost year on CoYeragt. Parrish is fine rtturn man , now

(Ryan

»

N

,8y United Press International

SECONDARY- It's swift. eager and young. Couple of agile corner
bach, Lemar Parrish and Ken Riley, or e now complemen ted by Neil
Craig , roo~ie last yea r, and Tommy Casono,o, brilliant newco mer this
year, al the sahries. Coso noYo's a headline maker. Rotin9-B + .

Sunday ' s Probable Pitchers

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

M

Wilkens Greg Cook Standings
i Refuses,. Thro.wing . .
~= Trade
Better Now

·'t

mYch of, bwt he's c:lose to

Reds Fatten Lead As

Fairland

~torlers

by midseason should be Fred Willis, fine rookie lou 1eor, and burly
Doug Dressier, with Enex Johnson delivering half-game breoka.way thrills.
Jtu Phillips and Paul Robinson , regular$ ot start of '71 . are pol~nt , too.
loting-8 + .

Depth in 1972

'

Title Won in 1957 by

'

in the first in~ing on seven hits.
The game was never close
after that. Eleven players hit
safely for the Reds as they
blasted .out 23 hits.
Neil McMahon was the
game's best hitter as he
banged out three singles and

i

65 .555 10

61 73 .455 18
50 75 .440 10

CHI CAGO (UP!) - The
AKRON, Ohio (U Pl) Chicago Cubs blasted five
The new champion, who had
home run s Saturday but Robert Lange, Jr. of Boulder, to win eight races in comneeded a hit batsman with the Colo.. defeated Bruce Cross of petition with 250 other
bases loaded in the lOth inning Detroit, Mich., in the final heat champions from the U. S. and
to force in Jose Cardenal with Saturday afternoon to become foreign countries, was clocked
the winning run and beat the the 1972 All-American Soap in 27.33 seconds as he piloted
Box Derby champion.
San Francisco Giants, 10-9.
his maroon and gold racer
Lange, 14, a motorcycle and down the 953.75 foot track on
The two tea ms combined for
nine home 1·uns. Most in the skiing enthusiast, had to take a his final trip .
close photo decision ove r
National League this season Cross, 12, who shared the
with Chicago's Billy Williams James Howard J r. of fastest time of the day ( 27.31)
and Ron Santo and San Columbus, Ga., to ga in the with Pricilla Ann Freeman of
Francisco's Ken Henderson final heat.
Chape l Hill , N. C., in
hitting two each.
preliminary heats, defeated Ed
Cardenal and Williams led row of the bleachers in leflfield
Morris, 15, Charlotte, N. C., to
off the lOth inning with singles,
ga
in the championship heat.
in the third inning.
putting runners on first and
Third
place went to Howard,
Henderson, who has 43 hits
third. After Randy Moffitt and 26 RBl's in August, hit his ll , as Edward Morris, 15,
struck out Ric1((11onday, Santo
ninth homer of the month with Charlotte, N. C., finish ed
was intentionally walked to fill the bases empty in the fourth fourth with Miss Freeman
the bases. Moffitt's first pitch "and then followed with a two- fifth .
to Joe Pepitone grazed his run homer in the seventh .
. 'Eric Raber, 14, New
right knee, ending the game.
The other San Francisco Philadelphia, Ohio, was sixth,
The Giants had tied it in the home runs came on successive with Karen Ann Johnson, 14,
ninU1, kn ocking out Ferguson pitches by McCovey and Dave Farmington, Mich., seve nth.
Jenkins and scoring two runs
Rader in the sixth inning. Paul Michael Paul, 12, San Diego,
on a single by Bobby Bonds, a
Popovich hit the other home Calif., was eighth and Tom
triple by Chris Speier and a run for Chicago, his first of the Harvey, 11, Decatur, Ga .,
sacrifice fly by Willie Meninth.
see~ son.
Covey.

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!) Ric hmond
Williams had fiv e hits, Santo
50 82 .379 28
- Cincinnati quarterback Pen; nsula
Friday s Results
and
Cardenal four each and
Greg Cook says he is throwing
Charleston 2 Pen insula I, 1st Williams and Santo each drove
better in the first week of the game, 7 innings
Charleston 3 Penins ula 2, 2nd, in four runs, leading Chicago's
new traini ng campaign than he 7 innings
18-hit attack.
was "in the fifth, six th and
Tidewa te r 8 Rlchmond 5
One of Santo's hits was his
seve nth weeks last year" and Louisville 6 Rochester 5
2,000th
in the major leagues, a
feels he can make a comeback Toledo 9 Syracuse 3
three-run homer into the last
this season.
Cook, a se nsation his rookie
yea r in I!Hi9, missed most of the
1970 and all of the 1971 seasons
because of a shoulder injury.
He has been undergoing
treatment with strength
building machines and feels
they have really helped.
"In another month, if I
conti nu e to progress the same
way," he sa id·, " I'll be
UL APPROVED
throwing 75 to 80 per cent of
what I once was. I'll really be
Underwriters Laboratory
close.
" Really though I'm not
ready to play a game," he said.
"About the eighth game of the
"World's Largest Manufacturer Of
season seems rea listie now."
Assistant Coach Bill Walsh
played catch with Cook this
Mobile Homes."
week and was impressed.
" He 's much stronger
THE ONLY HOMES APPROVED BY UL
physically," said Walsh. "He's
in tremendous physical condition at 215 pounds.
"He· seems to be operating
"THE 1t7rr
with very little pain, he's enfREEDoM"
thusiastic and rarin' to go,"
said Walsh. "However, much
will" depend on the progress of
me throwing arm.
"I'm much stronger and I
UL insures you of Trouble Free Service. These
really believe I can come back.
this time/ ' said Cook. u1 can
homes must pass rigid inspections. ·
throw farther than I have been
but I'm not pushilig it yet."

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
and Chesapeake battled to a 0-0
tie here Saturday in a controlled scrimmage on the Bobcat field .
Coach Jim Sprague's Bobcats moved the ball well at
times, but fumbled away any
possible scoring chances.
Chesapeake muffed two
scoring chances .
The Panthers drove to the
Bobcat four yard line late in
the first half on long pass play
but could not push it across.
Chesapeake moved to the sixYard line in the opening ·
minutes of the second half but
were again stopped by the
Bobcat defense.
Coach Sprague, the Bobcats'
third football coach in as many
years, said " we have several
things to sharpen up on , but
overall, the players are
learning our new system.
Fumbles cost us on offense,
defensively, we did not do bad
except for lhe occasional long
pass completion." "We must
tighten up our aerial defense

before we meet Wabama on
Sept. 8, " he said. The Bobcats
are playing a Pro I offense and
Pro 44 defense .
Seniors John Baird and Bill
Rife alternated at the quarterback slot.
The Bobcat reserve team
composed of freshmen and
sophomores also battled the
Chesapeake reserves to an 0-0
tie. Both teams ran a two series
of 10 plays each.
Kyger Creek · will travel to
Vinton County for Its final
scrimmage Saturday, Sept. 2.

MARTIN DISABLES
CHICAGO (UP!) -Veteran
catcher J. C. Martin Friday
was placed on the disabled list
by the Chicago Cuba In order
that he maY Wlderga surgery
!or removal o! a bone chip in
his right elbow. The Cubs
•recalled outfielder Jim Tyrone
to replace Martin on the roster.

'·

HI

1

1973 ·
MODEL

WHERE YOU SAVE

DOES
MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

Freedom by Skyline

5%

6%

.,

5 Pet . per year paid on
Regular
Passbook

$:\:. Pet. per year on one

Savings . No Minimum .
Interest from date of

Sl;J Pet. per- year paid on
90 day Certificates of

de posit to date of withdrawal .
Interest
com pau nded quarterly .
Interest paid as long as

Payable Quarterly.

an

open account
maintained .

Deposit.
51 ; 000 . 00
Minimum . Interest

year

certificates · of

oe p osl t.
Min i mum .

ss ,oo o. oo
Interest

Payable Qurterly. to

day interest pentlty If
cashed before maturity.

6 Pet . per year on 2 year

Certificates of Deposit .
l10,000.DO
Interest

Minimum .
payable
Quarterly. 90 day in·

terest penalty If t:Uhtd
before maturity .

is
1

$3995

number of telephone calls
protesting the club's actlon ..He
said most of the callers said
they were angry over the way
the matter was handled.
Some fans started · circulating petitions to retain
Wilkens.

MASON BOWLING CENTER
MAS!)N, W_. VA.

BOWLI_NG
LEAGUES·
Now Being Formed
PHONE

·-

.,

SOMESEUINCFE.4TIJRES:

Whether you put $5 a week into a ·regular
passbook acco·unt or $10,000 into savings
certificates •.• your best investment is
with us. Ask about ou-r Savings programs
.•• today!

•

eHOUSE lYPE DOOftS &amp; STORM DOORS, WINDOWS &amp;
'SCREENS. CARPI:TED UVINCi ROOM WITH PAD. 2 liED-

Mon ., Tues., Wed. - t to l
Thursd•y &amp; Soturdliy - 9 to Noon
Friday - 9 to •

ROOM. l'ftONT UVIN(&gt; ROOM MODEL·MORE UVING
MEA. COI'P!R WIRING THROUGHOUT.

MEIGS BRANCH

*T~US&amp; TERIYTWlSIS*

The Athens CountY Savings &amp;Loan Co•.
Ead F. Ingels, Jr., ft1anagef

296 W. Second Sl
•

Pomeroy, Ohio

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22 - The 'l1me&amp;Sentlnel, Sunday; Aug. 'll,

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Coffee House Plan Explain~

Outdoor Ceremony
At GSI is Held

MIDDLEPORT - Ro[l
Stengel, operations manager of
WMPO Radio, Middleport •
Pomeroy, explained objectives
of the "Coffee House Corn·
mlttee " which is seeking to
establish and operate a youth
renter in Pomeroy to serve the
county to members of the
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday evening at Heath
United Methodist Church.
A question-and-answer
.Period followed Stengel's
remarks. He was Introduced by
program chairman C. E.
Blakeslee.
Guests were Charles Gaskill
and ll&lt;b Buck. President Gene

stitute is the first instilition in
the state department to have
completed inservice training
for all its nursing service
personnel.
Miss Karen H. Evans, Chief
of Coun seling, Public Service
Ca reer Pr ogram in the
Department of Sta te Per·
sonnet, conveyed the greetings
of Director Paul A. Corey as
well as his advice to regard
graduation as a beginning

GALLIPOLIS
Staff
membe rs, residents, and
guests who ga thered on the
West Hall lawn at Gallipolis
State Institute Tuesday af·
ternoon ~xpressed enthusiastic
approval of "the new look" of
outdo or graduation cere·
monies.
While work crews removed
the last traces of the recent
violent storms from adja cent
3reas, genial Clyde A. Brad·
bury extended a ·warm
welcome to all and introduced
guests.
The Rev . Robert Kuhn ,
Protestant Chaplain at
Gallipolls Stale Institute ,
· opened and closed the
ceremonies with prayer.
Bernard F. Niehm, Ph.D.,
Superintendent of Gallipolis
State Institute, delivered the
principal address, "Life with
Dignity - Fact or Fantasy?",
in which he stressed that this
ideal should be a reality for
every hwnan being.
Whether or not it is a reality
fur those confined to any in·
stitution depends not so much
on the size of that institution as
on the attitudes and practices
of each staff member, he
warned.
He challenged the graduates,
who are the newest group of
Gallipolis State Institute
employees to complete state
requirements for classification
as Psychiatric Aide I, to use
their recently comple ted
training to achieve Ule new
goal of institutional care, each
resident's enjoyment of life
with dignity and contribution of
his share to society's progress.
Ed
Finley,
training
manager, Management Ser·
vices , Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retar·
dation,
extended
congratulations and pointed
out U1 at Gallipolis State I•·

rather than a conclusion .

Laura Cornwell, R.N., ·
Director of Nursing , made
congratulatory remarks and
together with Dr. Niehm and
Mr . Bradbury greeted the
graduates individually as they
were presented by Nursing
Education Instructors Gwen
Fisher, R.N., Pat Hogan, R.N.,
and M. Josephine Hargraves,
R.N .
Musical selections, " Our
IDirector " and " Onward
Christian Soldiers," were
presented by the Resident
Band of Gallipolis State In·
stitute under the direction of
Miss Dale Bechtel.
Refreshments were served
by a committee from the
secretarial staff including Mrs.
Anna Collins, Chairman, Kathy
Howard, Lola McCoy, Ann
Waugh, Vivian Hansen, and
Regina Robinson .
Mrs. Margaret Ehman,
R.N., Assistant Director of
Nursing, and Mrs. Sharon
Birch,
R.N.,
Nursing
Education Instructor, were
ush erettes.
The
floral
arrangements were provided
through the courtesy of Mr.
Clinton Smith, Horticultural
Director at Gallipolis State
Institute , and members of the
Nw·sing Education Staff.
The moving of equipment to
and from West Hall was
completed by resident employees under the direction of
Mr . Converse Keels.

GROUP! of the graduates, first row,! tor, Lelia Watson,
Gloria Cox, Evelyn Hutcblnson, Diana Fellure, Sylvia
Roach, Gladys Miller, Mavis McClain; second row, Bernard
Niehm, Phd., Superintendent; Laura Cornwell, R.N.,
Director of Nursing; Harley Taylor, Steven Hawley, Harold

Check Our Everyday
Low Prices

•

SALES REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - July 1972
sales of Series E &amp; H United
' States Savings Bonds in Ohio
were $29.8 million . The state
attained 65.3 pet . of its annual
sales quota July 31 , with sales
totaling $225.5 million for the
first seven months. Luther E.
Gunsett, Gallia County Area
Manager, reported July sales
of Savings ll&lt;nds in the COWlty
were $31,298. At the end of July,
the county achieved 77.1 pet. of
its annual sales goal.

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NO PRIMER NEEDED IF USED

AS DIRECTED
GROUPD of the graduatea,flrstrow, I tor, Gwen Flaher
RN-Jnslructor; Douglas Courtney, Bernie Queen, Ruth Ro1J.
erts, Nola Brabham, Nancy Altizer, Charles Lee, Floyd
Brumfield, Laura Cornwell, R.N., Director of Nursing;
second row, Ranfrrd Cox, Dmna BriQB. Jean AdtiDs,

• Goes on Iuter, euler
• No need to be a weather pro~het
• Soapy water cleans tools ·
• Excellent color retention and durability
• Beautiful colors kered to fashion

Mlldred HamUtcn, Opal Stover, Mary B;rerly, Rick Denny,
Donna Cooley, R.N., Director of Nursing Education; third
row, Farrell Betz, Fred, Paxton, Frank Queen, Keith
Williams, Richard Cook, Robert Byerly, Steven Phllllps,
Bernard Nlelm, PHD Superlnlendent.

Our Prices
First!

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otcUIIIV112COit
t

GROUP m of the graduates, lint row, I to r Virginia
Darst, Vickie Ward, Madeline McClung, Sally No~, Norma
Warren, Connie Hendricks, Juanita George, Garnett Lamm,
Martha Garnes; second row, Juanita J. Wagoner, Thelma L.
Cox, Patricia Sickels, Michael Warren, Richard L. Wiles,

N-G Raises,Lunch Costs
aides were accepted . ADC and
Title One personnel employed
were Virginia Stout, Diane
McCarley, Linda Dee!, Sharon
Saunders, Cherry Quickel and
Connie Evans.

Business Administration
Secretarial
18 months
12 months
Jr. Accounting
Executive Secretarial
12 months
1Bmonths

.f

Gallipolis, 0 .

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security In one of the best places on eartn to save money.

... HttttttHtHflttflll.l llllllllltltl

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11151

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ALL SAVINGS ~UARANTEED IN FULL
I

GA~LIPOLIS

I

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SAVINGS .

AND LOAN COMPANY
.Oppos ite Post Office

Pllotlt~-31;,: :

lillll;.l,.

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your wayne National Forest
IRONTON - Today's article is witten
by Ray Schoe ner, timber management
forester 2n Jh ~ Ironton Ranger District.
Among h1s du1ies, Ra y is responsible for
hmber sal es ad ministration and
preparation, timber stand improvement ,
work and planting.
Whether it's a small shop 1•000 square
fee t in size, or a ran ger district covering
60,000 acres, the goal is the same. Like any
business man , the Fores t Service likes to
showa profit , but unlike the man who runs
a business, we don't count our profit in
money. It's counted in the work and service that is accomplished durin g a given
year. Our goals are set before th e fiscal
year begins, and our finances are set to
allow us to accomplish those goals.
There are many things which may
· interfere with the continuity of the work
plans, such as very bad weather or a hot
fire season , but when the last day of the
fiscal year arrives, success or failure is
me asured by th e percent of accomplishment the District has made.

The results of these accomplishments
are often intangible and can't be counted
in acres or volumes, since only the passage
of time will show their actual value to the
public, but the initial work itself can be
measured .
In timber management, the various
goals were either met or exceeded on the
Ironton District during t:Jis past year :
150,000 trees were planterl ; 371 acres of site
preparation work was done on cutover
land to encourage the growth of desirable
reproduction; 44 acres of black walnut
seedlings were pruned to eliminate
damage done by frost and animals; 92
acres of black walnut plantation were
sprayed to kill the competing grasses and
other growth which wiU take most of the
food and water from the walnut trees if
allowed to exist; thinning was done on a 3().
acre tra ct. to eliminate brush and un·
desirable trees which were threatening to
overtop the fine stand of tulip poplar which
has come in since the area was clearcut ;
over 2 million board feet of timber was

Beats $100

POMEROY _ A new,
lightweight cnain saw, the first
by a ma jor manufacturer to
break the $100 price level, is
now av ailabl e at Meigs
Equipment Co., in Pomeroy, a
local McCulloch dealer.
A compan y spokesman
said the new Mini Mac 1 chain
saw manufactured by MeCulloch Corp. is a precision.
built wood cuttin g tool priced
at $99.95 .
The Mini Mac 1 represents
the third generation of Me·
Culloch's popular ultra-light·
weight series of sa ws and will
deliver the same high perform a nee as
its two
predecessors.
The Mini Mac 1 power unit
'weighs jus t over 6'h lbs. and is
packaged with a !~inc h bar. It
is powered by a rugged 30cc
two..cycle engine, the same as
~;;;;:; on some higher priced models.

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bydi~·tr~!~a~a:;!~er

marked to sell to local timber operators,
and approximately 2 million board fee t of
timber (sawlogs and pulpwood) was sold .
. Most of this work is spread over the
late fall, winter and early spring and is
. done by permanent Ironton Distric t
personnel, together with a few parttime
employees, at the time of year when the
Wayne National Forest seems, to most of
you, to be lying dormant under a possible
skiff of snow.
Like a shopkeeper who has a good
year, financially, and who closes out his
books withonlyasmallinventoryof out-&lt;Jf·
season mer chandise, th e district
personn el
also
feel
a
like
sense of satisfaction and ac·
complishment
when
they' ve
achieved their goals. There is an
urge to sit back lor a while and rest on
your laurels. But before you know it, the
new year is here and you're off with the
carrot dangling in front of your nose and
yo u are trying, agaic, to catch up to your
new goals and aspirations.

::::::::

Wolfpen

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News, Notes .

Run for Honors
BY JOHN COOPER
Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT- The State
Judging Committee for the
s~ lec ti on of the State Conservation Farmer was in
Mason Co. last week to go
over ca refully the W. Forrest
Nibert and Son farm at Ashton .
The Nibert farm is being
considered along with 13 other

Lay of the Land
farms reprsenting each of the
soil conservation districts in
the state as the "No. one"
Conservation Farm in West
Virginia. Ann-ouncement will
be made of the state winners at
the annual meeting of the West
Virginia Districts Associat ion

at Jacksons Mill m Novem ber.
Last year the W. W. Brown
and Son farm of West Colun1bia
w.as the state wi nner .
Th e jud gin g committ ee
visiting these fourteen fa rms
consisted of Charles Sperow of
the West Vi rginia Un iver,ity,
Frank Glover of Soil Conservatio n

Service ,

a nd

ra ising of 3,500 trees •.hat he
piRn ted to be used a. --:. rist·
mas trees .
He ~!a n ted these trees three
years ago . Since He has
operated this filling station, he
has been selling Christmas
trees each year at the station,
in addi tJOn to his regular
service station business. He.
plans to ma rket his own trees
through this retail outlet. He
said tha t his main purpose in
~rowing these trees was to
prov1de some income to pay for
his son 's college education.
ON i\ TRIP through Mason,
we slopped to see the ga rden of
Hoy Roush. About two years
ago we had helped Mr. Roush
with a problem in his garden.
Upon examination at that time,
we could not find the first weed
in his ga rd en and close
examination showed that he
had plowed too close to the
roots and too deep during
cultivation operations.
On this visi t to the Roush
garden we still did not see a
weed, but he had changed his
cul tivat ion methods to very
shallow cultiva tion . The
ga rden was producing abun ·
dantly. He insisted that we
accept a few of his prize non·
acid tonmtoes.

La w re n ce
Id l eman
Recent visitors of Mr. and representi ng the State Soil
Mrs. Harley Johnson were Jo Conservation Committee.
TH E WESTE RN SO IL
Smith, Mrs. Howard Thoma ,
Mr. Ray Russell of Lexington, Conservation District Board of
Supervism·s held its regular
Ky. , and Lincoln Russell .
Mrs. Paul Pierce and family mee ting at the District office in
of Mason were Monday visitors Pt. Pleasa nt. An item of
of Mrs. Geneva Shumate and busin ess disc ussed was
Mrs. Larry John son and pla nn ing for th e distri ct's
annual recognition dinner to be
family.
Mr . and Mrs. William Boyce held later this fall. Presen t at
of Colwnbus were weekend the meeting were Norris R.
visi tors of Mr. and Mrs. Caryl and James B. Newman
of the State Office of Soil
Howard Russell.
Rev. and Mrs. Ray Russell Conse rvation Service.
Caryl explained the interim
and Tena Rae of Lexington,
for the watershed plan on
plan
Ky., were weekend visitors of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Pocatalico River. The
Lincoln Russell. Rev. Russell Distri ct is one of the sponsoring
participated in the tOOth agencies for this project.
Homecoming of Zion Church on Ca rrying out the project will be
POMEROY - The Veterans
a joint effort between the
Aug. 20.
Mminislration is sponsoring a
~
w SunctaY,
and Mrs. Bill McElroy sponsors as well as Soil Con- National Poster Contest for all
~*~l~~lmm;;~~;;;~~l~~~~~~;ilW1~~tm~;;lill1i~;~mttl~mlilllll~~~1~l~~ ~;~lll~l;lj~;;l;~ll;~;;~;i~~~;lllllWt:~ili=~~~!;;~;~;~;i;r:::~~~~~~~~~;~~l;l;§;1~l1lmm;~;~;~~~~m~mm~m~m;l;~~~~m;j~m;m~;~j;;\;;~~;;m~mm1~l~1~1~l~l~lm~1~1~~ ;jj~l;~;1;mm1~lml;~;l~~;;~1;1;~;;m;~l~mmm;;fur andMr.Jeff
of Columbus were servation Service and U. S. high students around the theme
weekend visitors of Mr. and Corps of Engi neers.
"Hire the Veteran .' 1
Newman
made
a
report
on
Mrs . Paul McElroy and her
The contest is open to all high
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon the gra ssland program in West school students (grades 9·121in
Virginia. He put chief em·
Bing and daughter.
public, parochial, and private
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith phasis on hts report to the schools in Ohio. The contest
of Kanauga were Sunday af· management of pastureland in will be held during the early
deductions for growers who
If farmers elected to "set beld out. of prnduction, not on
By BERNARD BRENNER
l&lt;rnoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. the winter. This management part of the coming fall
idle "less-than -average- aside" low.quality fields, the the "good" land actually used
UPI Farm Editor
includes the use of round bales
Charley Smith.
semester. There will be three
quality" land in 1973 programs . program provided fixed for crops.
of _.qfl~' . ~\l~~.!t. ~r~. J!:f! on the levels of ·competition ; local,
Chri~tine
Shaw
of
CleveJar.ld
""
Misses,f&lt;harlotte
and
Sherry
•.
for wheat, feed grains andlcot· ·subsidy reducUona based on
J'Or example, officials said, a.
ground after baling and are
.
how far the Idled land fell IIJO.bushel-an-acre corn farmer and mother, Mrs. William Lambert were Sunday af· used by livestock where they slate, and national.
cli&gt;se a ton.
Prizes will be awarded to the
In 1971 and again this year, below par for the farm. The who Idled average land this Shaw, sisters, Amy and Beth ternoon visitors of Miss Jo have fallen from the baler .
!ann program loophole which
Ann,
of
Richmond,
Ohio
visited
Smith.
top
three winners at each level,
they aald had allowed "a few" the government's "set aside" object was klleave the farmer year would have gotten pay·
THE GREAT Kan awha
Dixie
Circle
at
the
home
of
her
Miss
Jo
Sl\lith
was
a
Sunday
producers to get better programs for the three major who retired low-quality landno ments equal to $80 lor each
Reso urce Conservation and as follows:
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
·Homer
evening
dinner
guest
of
Mr.
Local Level - lst prize $75
treatment than most others. crops were designed to provide better off, fmancially, than if "set aside" acre. If Ute same
Development Steering Com·
Circle.
and
Mrs.
Gene
Lambert
and
Savings
Bond (or equivalent) ;
farmer idled land only half as
The
Department's standardized subsidy rates for he had idled average land.
mittee held its mon thly
Barbara
Eli
za
beth
W
atson
of
daughters.
Miss
Sherry
2nd prize $50 Savings Bond (or
However, officials said, stud· productive as his average, his
Agricultural Stabilization and farmers who idled , or "set
meeling in Buffalo. This RC&amp;D
Kent
is
spending
a
few
days
Lambert
spent
Sunday
night
equi
va lent ); 3rd prize $25
Conservation Service (ASCS), aside," specified amounts of ies showed the deductions were payment was reduced to $60 an
area is comprised of
with
her
grandparents,
Mr.
with
Miss
Smith.
Sa
vings
Bond (or equivalent ).
wlllch runs farm production land on each farm - assuming not deep enough to keep some acre under the 1972 rules.
Mason, Putnam, Jackson,
and
Mrs.
Edson
Roush.
Stale Level - 1st price $100
Under the new 1973 rule,
control and subsidy programs, the idled acreage was equal in farmers from gaining a cash
Boone and Kanawha Coun·
Mrs
.
Ma
ry
Russell
of
Savings
Bond (or equivalent) ;
aald tbe new action involves a productivity to the fields left in advantage by idling low- however, the farmer who.idled
ties. The meetings alter Waverly,
W.
Va.
,
visited
with
2nd prize $75 Savings ll&lt;nd (or
quality rather than standard- land only half as productive as
sharp Increase in subsidy production.
nate among each of th e
equivalent
); 3rd prize $ii0
quality land. A spokesman said average would get a payment Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
five counties. Attending the
PART IN WORKSHOP
Verna
and
Wavie,
on
Monday.
Savings
Bond
(or equivalent) .
this happened mainly in cases of only $40 an acre.
MUNCIE, Ind. - Dr. Paul meeting from Mason County,
Betty
Van
M
eter
and
Eunie
National Level - 1st, 2nd,
wbere farmers set aside low·
For cotton farmers, deducUoyd, assistant professor of in addition to ourselves, were and 3rd prize winners wlll
yielding "dryland" acreage tions are calculated dif· Brinker called on Mr. and Mrs.
mathematics and supervisor of K. W. Robinson , representin g
while keeping crops on high. ferentiy, but will be twice as Ray Byers at Tanners Run, student teaching, Rio Grande the Mayor of Pt. Pleasant, receive a trip to Washington ,
D. C. plus other awards.
yielding jrrigated acreage.
big in 1973 as they were this recently.
College, has had a part in the Johnny Looney, Paul Mat·
Local winners will be an·
Under a new regulation year, a~ official said.
25th anniversary workshop of thews and Troy Southall of the
noun ced on October I ; state
adopted for 1973, penalties for
Spokesman said most far·
the North Central Association West Virginia Department of winners on October 10, and
setting aside low-yield land will mers have set aside average.
conducted at Bail State Natural Resources.
be increased by a simple quality land, and "relatively
CARL OSB(')RNE , who national winners on October 21.
University in Muncie . Dr .
Local area designations will be
device. In such eases, subsidy few' ' producers will be affected
Uoyd's individual project was operates a filling station in St.
announ
ced later .
payments on wheat and feed by the tightened regulations.
"Program evaluation toward a Albans, owns ·a farm on Mt.
For
more information
grain farms will be based on an ofllcial said the change
Mrs. Bernice Hawkeye and competency-based teacher Union Ridge. One of his chief
the average yield of the land had no relation at all to in- daughter. Donna, of Grantsprojects on this farm is the contact the Poster Contest
edUcation cw-riculwn.' '
Coordinator at your school.
vestigations of set aside ville, W. Va ., were overnight
violations in Kern County guests of her sister, Mr. and
Calif., where many producers Mrs.
Dinsmore
Boyles
-·
were accused of idling sub-par Saturday night.
land while claiming payments
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parker
based on average-quality and family of Coal Grove and
acreage.
Mrs. Lilly Shultz and family of
..
Colwnbus were Sunday guests
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Arbaugh.
Mrs. Ralph Higg ins and Mrs .
Margaret Sands of Vienna, W.
Kila Anne Young of Success Va., spent a recent weekend
Roy Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt Road visited her·grandparents, here with Mrs. Higgins' sister ,
to Freda Ferm••on,
•- 2ii Acres, Mr . an d. Mrs. J . D.· Hayman. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith .
·Lebanon.
Darrell Henderson spent a Mr. and Mrs. Steven MarFreda Ferguson, Roy few days with his grand· cinko of Middleport were
Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt to parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph overnight guests of her
Gary Dennis Evans, Linda Henderson of Portland. .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don
·cheryl ·Evans, 2 Acres,
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Franklin Sprague and family .
Lebanon.
Of Vienna, w. Va., visited with Orland Gilliland of Success is
George. H: Abbott, Jenny Mr. and Mrs, Marion Boston a patient at Camden-Clark
Abbott to Ernest Cale, Jr., and family.
Hospital in Parkersburg with
Nina Gale, 1 Acre, Chester.
Mr•· Pauline Atkerson of six broken ribs which he
Mrs . sustained in a fall from a load
Mary Wright io Carlyle Parkersburg and
. Fultz, Virgll i..awoon, 80 Acres, . Adelphia Harvey of Detroit, ·of hay near his home . He is
·
· .
Mich., Crystal Hall of Little recovering and hopes to be
'Bedford.
. ;·David Dodderer, Lois : Hocking and Pat Quinn of home soon .
· t;&gt;odderer io William Dodderer, Guysville were recent visitors
Rebecca Dod.derer, 5· Acres, of Mrs. Opal Randolph.
Olive. .
Mrs. Galdys Baughman and
' LIBBY CONVICTED
Huntington National Bank to · Jack Gale Of Gahamia spent a SANTA MONICA, Calif.
· , Edna R. · few days .wt' th Mrs. Rose (UP!) - Nobel Prize-winner.
Dona.ld P. Wilson
Wilson • Lot Correction Deed • Thoma s.
·
. Dr. Willard F. Libby was
Middleport. . .
Mr: .and Mrs. 'John Riebel convicted
Friday
of
Ml\dred Lucille Smith, Elma and children of Pomeroy R. D. misdemeanor drunken driving
Smith Reuter to James Gordon .and Mr. and · Mrs. Robert and fined $200. Libby, 63,
Q
Mays, Esther Mae · Mays, 3 Morton and daughters of director of the UCLA Institute
Acres, Chesler.
Porterfield vi.!ited with .Mr. of Geophysics and Planetary
William Mitcbell, Geraldtne · and Mrs. D. c. Riebel.
Physics, was arrested Jan. 22
· Mitchell ·tci· N~ E:, Hyaell, · Mrs: Opal Randolph and afier hls car was .involved in a
We extend many thanks to the people who made our tractor showing a
~atricia A. Hysell, 1.3 Acres, Mrs. ·Rose Thomas enjoyed a .collision which injured the
.success. To those who didn't see our model on display, we Invite you to
· sCipio.
'· ''. · ·
' . .day sh!IPPinK at columbus.
driver and a passenger of the
come now and see it.
Philllp Meinhart, .Genevieve
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise other car.
Meinhart to Richard E. oWens, have retufnecj home after
R. Juan,ita Owen1, · Lot, . vacationing in Florida,
Pomeroy.
· Mrs. Mabel Hetzer is visiting
In 1971, hook publisher and
Albert .A. . Tyler, Mary ·E.. ·with Mr. and Mrs. Marion
TV
personality Bennett Cerf
Tyler to Lawnnce Rapp, Roxie Hetzer at Toledo.
Kanauga, Ohio
Gellipolls, Ohio
Upper Rt. 7
Jrd ~ Sycamore Sts.
died
at
the
age
of
73.
Rapp, ?WeeI, Bedford.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

10-% DISCOUNT
ON FENCERS

• Nor&gt;ehallltlll lltllte
t [ICIIlent protection
tlld durabllltJ

Poster

Contest

Planned

Carmel News,

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Also Available, Fence Posts, Insulators,
Wire, etc.

YOUR
HOME'S BEST FRIEND

Meigs
Property

Transfers

You've been waiting for !his. KIT Homes al
sale prices. KIT features, KIT Interiors KIT
quality, sale priced now!
'

• High titanium pll(ment tor extreme durability
• Fade resistant colors that 1~11 and 1111
• Easy to apply
• Also In non-chalkinl and ulf·cleanlnl white

Outside Paint.. ........... !!!'~. $510 Interior Paint...... ..~. $41o&amp;iL

This House can be
financed for 30 years ·with
as little as 5 pet. down.
Is ·worth two In the ~sh and that' s why most Ameri cans'
depend upon a savings account for security. tt offers:
allractlve· earnings which are paid like clockwork ;
.savlnas are guaranteed In f.uiJ; ready . availability. No
fuzzy promises, no shaky guarantees, simply sound

,.,...

World Cattle
Approxhnateiy t w o·thirds Slightly less than one-third
of the world's cattle are in are found in the western
Europe, Asia and Africa. hemisphere .

KITHOMES

Sept.l4

Gallipolis Business College
36 Lo,ust StrHt
St. Reg. No. 71-02·00328

Rmald L. Angel, J. Rowley, Lacy Bray, Maroella Ferrell,
LauraCornwell,R.N.,Directorof Nursing; third row, Donna
Conley, R.N ., Director of Nursing Education; Jbn Black·
burn, Rick Bermett, Vernon Pratt, Jeff Olyer, Mike Myers,
Oakey Johnson, Jr., Gary L. Dray, LeeR. Wllliams, Kyle
Donnally and Bernard Niehm.

We have reduced our Kit Model for quick sale.
Yo,u can make Big Savings if you buy this
display model now.

General Office
9 months

HIIWJ•Iledttd, -fall
t1t1olu01 conteot

,...,,.

Cecil Hall was granted a
contract to haul school garba ge. The 1972-73 school
calendar was also adopted.
Discussion was held on
projected enrollment, tuition
students and the new proposed
elementary building.

ABIRD IN
.THE HAND

phone 446-4361

· theck ·

'.

CAREER TRAINING
FOR ARE~ARDED FUTURE

Make something ...,1 of your future this Foil. Giye
yourself the aklllo which bring in a worthwhile pay.
check. And 'glvt you a chance to advance! Attend
a Khool whore the oalo purpooe 11 oolld buslne01
training and career placement. Free Bulletin.

.

plication is coming up soon and is ihe one where we
Then,lirm the soil and apply a mulch of straw or
apply two poundl! aetna) nltrogeh per 1,000 square , peat moss. Keep t:,e wulcb thin so you can see the soil
feet.
through it. Do not let the seeded area become dry.
The other two applications receive one pound
Soil should be kept moist until th e new grass is
ea~h per 1,000 square feet. Two pounds actual
established.
nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of ~awn is 10 pounds of a
The best way to grass bare spots is to take plugs
20-1~10, 21).11h'i, etc.
of sod from inconspicuous places in your lawn and
To avoid fertilizer burn, do not ·apply more than
resod ·
t wopounds nitrogenper1, 000 square feetatonetime.
Many people are Puzzl ed bY th e ·growth of
Spread the fertilizer evenly and try not to overlap or · mushrooms; toadstools, and puffballs in circles.
the FARM Front
spill the material.
These are usually called fairy rings.
Bare spots are frequently your problem in lawns.
Fairy rings may be produced by the growth of
probably a victim of dry weather like many others Reseeding bare spots is difficult, if not useless.
any one of over 50 different species of mushrooms,
across the state.
Unless the bare spot is broken up, pulverized,
roadstools, and puffballs. Although there are ways to
This year hasn 't been the best for growing grass
properly seeded and kept damp, you're probably
chemically remove fairy rings from your lawn, the
vegetables or anything else around the home. oi wasting your time and seed.
methods involve killing the grass, too, and reseeding.
course, some lawns have turned out beautifully
.If you have bare spots in your lawn and plan to
Your county Extension agent has information on
because ramlall was adequate in some areas. It has seed them, prepare the spot as you would for large
these procedures.
"
been spotty, though, and unless you used the sprink· areas. Just tossing a few weeds on bard ground will
Since the disease fungi that cause fairy rings are
~' ler extra heavy during those dry weeks in July and not work.
located in the top 8 to 10 inches of soil, the area often
'• August, your lawn probably looks drab.
Once the soil is broken aod pulverized at least
becomes Impervious to water. If you break up this
•·
.. Most of us try to follow a three application fer· four or five inches deep, apply fertilizer and work it
area by punching boles throughout the band and
'
tiltzer program each year , that is, one in early June;
water thoroughly, the grassmay reco ver. A tree root
,, a second the latter part of July or early August and into tbe surface of the soU. Sow seed of the same grass
mixture already present in the lawn. Rake lightlyfeeder works well Ill supplymg water to the root zone
the third in early September. The Septembe~ ap· just covering seed.
of the turf.
,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.--.,.,.,.,.,...,....,.,...........,.,...,.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
·
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'
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" •'•'• ••
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,•,•,•,•,•,·.='f.:•.•.•.•.•.-.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.••••• ···········. ' • ••

By the Da'

VINTON - North Gallia's
Board of Education Friday
night increased the price of
student and adult lunches.
Lunches were raised to 30 cents
lor students and 50 cents for
adults.
The board also approved the
Federal Lunch Program and
agreed to participate in the
volunteer cancer insurance
program for teaching and non.
teachin g personnel. The
resignations of Janet and
Donna Browning , teachers '

Classes Begin

BY c. E. BLAKESLEE
Extenolon Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY- Meigs County lawns are beginnin
togreenupaftertheannual "fair " rains of last
~
Ohio state Agronomy specialists have ::;::ly.
1
suggestiOns about lawns :
The first thing to do is ask the question "How's
your lawn?" If it failed to
d
•
__
·
respon
to
fertilizers
or
, wue up to st d ds
an ar you expecte.d, you were

Special Farm Deals May be Oosed

wlll be determined.
These young ladies have had
a unique experience this year
as they have been members of
4-H Clubs in two counties. They
were members of the 4-H Club
in Fayette county until late last
spring. When their father
moved to Meigs County as a
herdsman with Royal Oak
Farms. they broug ht their
ste ers along and became
members of the Meigs County
Bet te r Livestock Beef 4-H
Club.
Both girls assisted in
showing the Royal Oak Fann
entries at the Meigs County
Fair last week.
BREi\KS RECORD
BERLIN (UP! ) - Harmut
Briesenick of East Germany
Friday broke the European
shotput record with a throw of
70 fee t 4'h inches at an in·
'tcrnational tra ck and field
meet in Potsdam, it was
reported by the East German
News Service ADN.

Agronomists Give Tips for Lawn Care

'-

BIG

•
Mini Mac I Nibert Farm m

' .·

DIVORCE GRANTED
MIDDLEPORT - Ancii
Cross , pllintill, has been
granted a divorce from Gloria
ero~. defendant, Columbus, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the Clerk of Courts office
reported Saturday.

BEFORE YOU BUY
SALE PAINT

Coughenour, Pat Hopn, R.N.,. Illltruc:tor; Donna Cmley,
R.N., Dlrecor of Nursing Ed.; thinf row, John McDaniel,
Harold Dillon, John Hartzlee, John Gooldin, Jacob Howard,
Harold Shortridge, Joe Herron, Glen Young.

.,

Riggs presided. GB$klll, in
brief remarkS, described the
succe~ful operaUO!I of a teen
cenier in Wellston in which the
Wellston Rotary Club par·
ticipates.

Steers at Fair
POMERO\: - Two Meigs
County girls are exhibiting
their Hereford Steers at the
Ohio State Junior Fair this
weekend. Robin and Jennifer
Gainer, daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Gainer, competed on
Satw·day with the steers from
all o"cr the state for top
honors.
From these placings, the sale
order for the Ohio State Steer
Sale to be held Monday night

II - The 'l'lmea-6ent'1111!I• Sunday, Aug. ~. 1972

Spray Paint

SAVE· NOW!

13oz.
Ufl

.q,.,t~~·

French City

MOBILE HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Jo• Giles
Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction

Slipp~

Phone 446-9340

Gallipolis, Ohio

B_uilders
750 1st Ale. Galpolls, 0.

...._ ..
"twwl &amp;

Reedsville

--

-

.. ~-~-

News, NOteS

Introducing The All New
1973 John Deere Generation II

TRACTORS

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

�•

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22 - The 'l1me&amp;Sentlnel, Sunday; Aug. 'll,

• •

•

j

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'

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~·

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1m

Coffee House Plan Explain~

Outdoor Ceremony
At GSI is Held

MIDDLEPORT - Ro[l
Stengel, operations manager of
WMPO Radio, Middleport •
Pomeroy, explained objectives
of the "Coffee House Corn·
mlttee " which is seeking to
establish and operate a youth
renter in Pomeroy to serve the
county to members of the
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Club Friday evening at Heath
United Methodist Church.
A question-and-answer
.Period followed Stengel's
remarks. He was Introduced by
program chairman C. E.
Blakeslee.
Guests were Charles Gaskill
and ll&lt;b Buck. President Gene

stitute is the first instilition in
the state department to have
completed inservice training
for all its nursing service
personnel.
Miss Karen H. Evans, Chief
of Coun seling, Public Service
Ca reer Pr ogram in the
Department of Sta te Per·
sonnet, conveyed the greetings
of Director Paul A. Corey as
well as his advice to regard
graduation as a beginning

GALLIPOLIS
Staff
membe rs, residents, and
guests who ga thered on the
West Hall lawn at Gallipolis
State Institute Tuesday af·
ternoon ~xpressed enthusiastic
approval of "the new look" of
outdo or graduation cere·
monies.
While work crews removed
the last traces of the recent
violent storms from adja cent
3reas, genial Clyde A. Brad·
bury extended a ·warm
welcome to all and introduced
guests.
The Rev . Robert Kuhn ,
Protestant Chaplain at
Gallipolls Stale Institute ,
· opened and closed the
ceremonies with prayer.
Bernard F. Niehm, Ph.D.,
Superintendent of Gallipolis
State Institute, delivered the
principal address, "Life with
Dignity - Fact or Fantasy?",
in which he stressed that this
ideal should be a reality for
every hwnan being.
Whether or not it is a reality
fur those confined to any in·
stitution depends not so much
on the size of that institution as
on the attitudes and practices
of each staff member, he
warned.
He challenged the graduates,
who are the newest group of
Gallipolis State Institute
employees to complete state
requirements for classification
as Psychiatric Aide I, to use
their recently comple ted
training to achieve Ule new
goal of institutional care, each
resident's enjoyment of life
with dignity and contribution of
his share to society's progress.
Ed
Finley,
training
manager, Management Ser·
vices , Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retar·
dation,
extended
congratulations and pointed
out U1 at Gallipolis State I•·

rather than a conclusion .

Laura Cornwell, R.N., ·
Director of Nursing , made
congratulatory remarks and
together with Dr. Niehm and
Mr . Bradbury greeted the
graduates individually as they
were presented by Nursing
Education Instructors Gwen
Fisher, R.N., Pat Hogan, R.N.,
and M. Josephine Hargraves,
R.N .
Musical selections, " Our
IDirector " and " Onward
Christian Soldiers," were
presented by the Resident
Band of Gallipolis State In·
stitute under the direction of
Miss Dale Bechtel.
Refreshments were served
by a committee from the
secretarial staff including Mrs.
Anna Collins, Chairman, Kathy
Howard, Lola McCoy, Ann
Waugh, Vivian Hansen, and
Regina Robinson .
Mrs. Margaret Ehman,
R.N., Assistant Director of
Nursing, and Mrs. Sharon
Birch,
R.N.,
Nursing
Education Instructor, were
ush erettes.
The
floral
arrangements were provided
through the courtesy of Mr.
Clinton Smith, Horticultural
Director at Gallipolis State
Institute , and members of the
Nw·sing Education Staff.
The moving of equipment to
and from West Hall was
completed by resident employees under the direction of
Mr . Converse Keels.

GROUP! of the graduates, first row,! tor, Lelia Watson,
Gloria Cox, Evelyn Hutcblnson, Diana Fellure, Sylvia
Roach, Gladys Miller, Mavis McClain; second row, Bernard
Niehm, Phd., Superintendent; Laura Cornwell, R.N.,
Director of Nursing; Harley Taylor, Steven Hawley, Harold

Check Our Everyday
Low Prices

•

SALES REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - July 1972
sales of Series E &amp; H United
' States Savings Bonds in Ohio
were $29.8 million . The state
attained 65.3 pet . of its annual
sales quota July 31 , with sales
totaling $225.5 million for the
first seven months. Luther E.
Gunsett, Gallia County Area
Manager, reported July sales
of Savings ll&lt;nds in the COWlty
were $31,298. At the end of July,
the county achieved 77.1 pet. of
its annual sales goal.

~w~
0
0

NO PRIMER NEEDED IF USED

AS DIRECTED
GROUPD of the graduatea,flrstrow, I tor, Gwen Flaher
RN-Jnslructor; Douglas Courtney, Bernie Queen, Ruth Ro1J.
erts, Nola Brabham, Nancy Altizer, Charles Lee, Floyd
Brumfield, Laura Cornwell, R.N., Director of Nursing;
second row, Ranfrrd Cox, Dmna BriQB. Jean AdtiDs,

• Goes on Iuter, euler
• No need to be a weather pro~het
• Soapy water cleans tools ·
• Excellent color retention and durability
• Beautiful colors kered to fashion

Mlldred HamUtcn, Opal Stover, Mary B;rerly, Rick Denny,
Donna Cooley, R.N., Director of Nursing Education; third
row, Farrell Betz, Fred, Paxton, Frank Queen, Keith
Williams, Richard Cook, Robert Byerly, Steven Phllllps,
Bernard Nlelm, PHD Superlnlendent.

Our Prices
First!

.,_...

otcUIIIV112COit
t

GROUP m of the graduates, lint row, I to r Virginia
Darst, Vickie Ward, Madeline McClung, Sally No~, Norma
Warren, Connie Hendricks, Juanita George, Garnett Lamm,
Martha Garnes; second row, Juanita J. Wagoner, Thelma L.
Cox, Patricia Sickels, Michael Warren, Richard L. Wiles,

N-G Raises,Lunch Costs
aides were accepted . ADC and
Title One personnel employed
were Virginia Stout, Diane
McCarley, Linda Dee!, Sharon
Saunders, Cherry Quickel and
Connie Evans.

Business Administration
Secretarial
18 months
12 months
Jr. Accounting
Executive Secretarial
12 months
1Bmonths

.f

Gallipolis, 0 .

.....
---. -,... - -

security In one of the best places on eartn to save money.

... HttttttHtHflttflll.l llllllllltltl

""

SI

11151

.

"""

ALL SAVINGS ~UARANTEED IN FULL
I

GA~LIPOLIS

I

...............................................

'

SAVINGS .

AND LOAN COMPANY
.Oppos ite Post Office

Pllotlt~-31;,: :

lillll;.l,.

lin-~

-

;:;:;~~

~: :~

0 . . . . . . . . 0 0 . 0 0 0 0 • • • ' • • • • • • • • ,•, •,•, • ,•, • , • ,•,· , · . - . · .

your wayne National Forest
IRONTON - Today's article is witten
by Ray Schoe ner, timber management
forester 2n Jh ~ Ironton Ranger District.
Among h1s du1ies, Ra y is responsible for
hmber sal es ad ministration and
preparation, timber stand improvement ,
work and planting.
Whether it's a small shop 1•000 square
fee t in size, or a ran ger district covering
60,000 acres, the goal is the same. Like any
business man , the Fores t Service likes to
showa profit , but unlike the man who runs
a business, we don't count our profit in
money. It's counted in the work and service that is accomplished durin g a given
year. Our goals are set before th e fiscal
year begins, and our finances are set to
allow us to accomplish those goals.
There are many things which may
· interfere with the continuity of the work
plans, such as very bad weather or a hot
fire season , but when the last day of the
fiscal year arrives, success or failure is
me asured by th e percent of accomplishment the District has made.

The results of these accomplishments
are often intangible and can't be counted
in acres or volumes, since only the passage
of time will show their actual value to the
public, but the initial work itself can be
measured .
In timber management, the various
goals were either met or exceeded on the
Ironton District during t:Jis past year :
150,000 trees were planterl ; 371 acres of site
preparation work was done on cutover
land to encourage the growth of desirable
reproduction; 44 acres of black walnut
seedlings were pruned to eliminate
damage done by frost and animals; 92
acres of black walnut plantation were
sprayed to kill the competing grasses and
other growth which wiU take most of the
food and water from the walnut trees if
allowed to exist; thinning was done on a 3().
acre tra ct. to eliminate brush and un·
desirable trees which were threatening to
overtop the fine stand of tulip poplar which
has come in since the area was clearcut ;
over 2 million board feet of timber was

Beats $100

POMEROY _ A new,
lightweight cnain saw, the first
by a ma jor manufacturer to
break the $100 price level, is
now av ailabl e at Meigs
Equipment Co., in Pomeroy, a
local McCulloch dealer.
A compan y spokesman
said the new Mini Mac 1 chain
saw manufactured by MeCulloch Corp. is a precision.
built wood cuttin g tool priced
at $99.95 .
The Mini Mac 1 represents
the third generation of Me·
Culloch's popular ultra-light·
weight series of sa ws and will
deliver the same high perform a nee as
its two
predecessors.
The Mini Mac 1 power unit
'weighs jus t over 6'h lbs. and is
packaged with a !~inc h bar. It
is powered by a rugged 30cc
two..cycle engine, the same as
~;;;;:; on some higher priced models.

0 • • •• •

bydi~·tr~!~a~a:;!~er

marked to sell to local timber operators,
and approximately 2 million board fee t of
timber (sawlogs and pulpwood) was sold .
. Most of this work is spread over the
late fall, winter and early spring and is
. done by permanent Ironton Distric t
personnel, together with a few parttime
employees, at the time of year when the
Wayne National Forest seems, to most of
you, to be lying dormant under a possible
skiff of snow.
Like a shopkeeper who has a good
year, financially, and who closes out his
books withonlyasmallinventoryof out-&lt;Jf·
season mer chandise, th e district
personn el
also
feel
a
like
sense of satisfaction and ac·
complishment
when
they' ve
achieved their goals. There is an
urge to sit back lor a while and rest on
your laurels. But before you know it, the
new year is here and you're off with the
carrot dangling in front of your nose and
yo u are trying, agaic, to catch up to your
new goals and aspirations.

::::::::

Wolfpen

::::::::

News, Notes .

Run for Honors
BY JOHN COOPER
Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT- The State
Judging Committee for the
s~ lec ti on of the State Conservation Farmer was in
Mason Co. last week to go
over ca refully the W. Forrest
Nibert and Son farm at Ashton .
The Nibert farm is being
considered along with 13 other

Lay of the Land
farms reprsenting each of the
soil conservation districts in
the state as the "No. one"
Conservation Farm in West
Virginia. Ann-ouncement will
be made of the state winners at
the annual meeting of the West
Virginia Districts Associat ion

at Jacksons Mill m Novem ber.
Last year the W. W. Brown
and Son farm of West Colun1bia
w.as the state wi nner .
Th e jud gin g committ ee
visiting these fourteen fa rms
consisted of Charles Sperow of
the West Vi rginia Un iver,ity,
Frank Glover of Soil Conservatio n

Service ,

a nd

ra ising of 3,500 trees •.hat he
piRn ted to be used a. --:. rist·
mas trees .
He ~!a n ted these trees three
years ago . Since He has
operated this filling station, he
has been selling Christmas
trees each year at the station,
in addi tJOn to his regular
service station business. He.
plans to ma rket his own trees
through this retail outlet. He
said tha t his main purpose in
~rowing these trees was to
prov1de some income to pay for
his son 's college education.
ON i\ TRIP through Mason,
we slopped to see the ga rden of
Hoy Roush. About two years
ago we had helped Mr. Roush
with a problem in his garden.
Upon examination at that time,
we could not find the first weed
in his ga rd en and close
examination showed that he
had plowed too close to the
roots and too deep during
cultivation operations.
On this visi t to the Roush
garden we still did not see a
weed, but he had changed his
cul tivat ion methods to very
shallow cultiva tion . The
ga rden was producing abun ·
dantly. He insisted that we
accept a few of his prize non·
acid tonmtoes.

La w re n ce
Id l eman
Recent visitors of Mr. and representi ng the State Soil
Mrs. Harley Johnson were Jo Conservation Committee.
TH E WESTE RN SO IL
Smith, Mrs. Howard Thoma ,
Mr. Ray Russell of Lexington, Conservation District Board of
Supervism·s held its regular
Ky. , and Lincoln Russell .
Mrs. Paul Pierce and family mee ting at the District office in
of Mason were Monday visitors Pt. Pleasa nt. An item of
of Mrs. Geneva Shumate and busin ess disc ussed was
Mrs. Larry John son and pla nn ing for th e distri ct's
annual recognition dinner to be
family.
Mr . and Mrs. William Boyce held later this fall. Presen t at
of Colwnbus were weekend the meeting were Norris R.
visi tors of Mr. and Mrs. Caryl and James B. Newman
of the State Office of Soil
Howard Russell.
Rev. and Mrs. Ray Russell Conse rvation Service.
Caryl explained the interim
and Tena Rae of Lexington,
for the watershed plan on
plan
Ky., were weekend visitors of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. the Pocatalico River. The
Lincoln Russell. Rev. Russell Distri ct is one of the sponsoring
participated in the tOOth agencies for this project.
Homecoming of Zion Church on Ca rrying out the project will be
POMEROY - The Veterans
a joint effort between the
Aug. 20.
Mminislration is sponsoring a
~
w SunctaY,
and Mrs. Bill McElroy sponsors as well as Soil Con- National Poster Contest for all
~*~l~~lmm;;~~;;;~~l~~~~~~;ilW1~~tm~;;lill1i~;~mttl~mlilllll~~~1~l~~ ~;~lll~l;lj~;;l;~ll;~;;~;i~~~;lllllWt:~ili=~~~!;;~;~;~;i;r:::~~~~~~~~~;~~l;l;§;1~l1lmm;~;~;~~~~m~mm~m~m;l;~~~~m;j~m;m~;~j;;\;;~~;;m~mm1~l~1~1~l~l~lm~1~1~~ ;jj~l;~;1;mm1~lml;~;l~~;;~1;1;~;;m;~l~mmm;;fur andMr.Jeff
of Columbus were servation Service and U. S. high students around the theme
weekend visitors of Mr. and Corps of Engi neers.
"Hire the Veteran .' 1
Newman
made
a
report
on
Mrs . Paul McElroy and her
The contest is open to all high
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon the gra ssland program in West school students (grades 9·121in
Virginia. He put chief em·
Bing and daughter.
public, parochial, and private
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith phasis on hts report to the schools in Ohio. The contest
of Kanauga were Sunday af· management of pastureland in will be held during the early
deductions for growers who
If farmers elected to "set beld out. of prnduction, not on
By BERNARD BRENNER
l&lt;rnoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. the winter. This management part of the coming fall
idle "less-than -average- aside" low.quality fields, the the "good" land actually used
UPI Farm Editor
includes the use of round bales
Charley Smith.
semester. There will be three
quality" land in 1973 programs . program provided fixed for crops.
of _.qfl~' . ~\l~~.!t. ~r~. J!:f! on the levels of ·competition ; local,
Chri~tine
Shaw
of
CleveJar.ld
""
Misses,f&lt;harlotte
and
Sherry
•.
for wheat, feed grains andlcot· ·subsidy reducUona based on
J'Or example, officials said, a.
ground after baling and are
.
how far the Idled land fell IIJO.bushel-an-acre corn farmer and mother, Mrs. William Lambert were Sunday af· used by livestock where they slate, and national.
cli&gt;se a ton.
Prizes will be awarded to the
In 1971 and again this year, below par for the farm. The who Idled average land this Shaw, sisters, Amy and Beth ternoon visitors of Miss Jo have fallen from the baler .
!ann program loophole which
Ann,
of
Richmond,
Ohio
visited
Smith.
top
three winners at each level,
they aald had allowed "a few" the government's "set aside" object was klleave the farmer year would have gotten pay·
THE GREAT Kan awha
Dixie
Circle
at
the
home
of
her
Miss
Jo
Sl\lith
was
a
Sunday
producers to get better programs for the three major who retired low-quality landno ments equal to $80 lor each
Reso urce Conservation and as follows:
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
·Homer
evening
dinner
guest
of
Mr.
Local Level - lst prize $75
treatment than most others. crops were designed to provide better off, fmancially, than if "set aside" acre. If Ute same
Development Steering Com·
Circle.
and
Mrs.
Gene
Lambert
and
Savings
Bond (or equivalent) ;
farmer idled land only half as
The
Department's standardized subsidy rates for he had idled average land.
mittee held its mon thly
Barbara
Eli
za
beth
W
atson
of
daughters.
Miss
Sherry
2nd prize $50 Savings Bond (or
However, officials said, stud· productive as his average, his
Agricultural Stabilization and farmers who idled , or "set
meeling in Buffalo. This RC&amp;D
Kent
is
spending
a
few
days
Lambert
spent
Sunday
night
equi
va lent ); 3rd prize $25
Conservation Service (ASCS), aside," specified amounts of ies showed the deductions were payment was reduced to $60 an
area is comprised of
with
her
grandparents,
Mr.
with
Miss
Smith.
Sa
vings
Bond (or equivalent ).
wlllch runs farm production land on each farm - assuming not deep enough to keep some acre under the 1972 rules.
Mason, Putnam, Jackson,
and
Mrs.
Edson
Roush.
Stale Level - 1st price $100
Under the new 1973 rule,
control and subsidy programs, the idled acreage was equal in farmers from gaining a cash
Boone and Kanawha Coun·
Mrs
.
Ma
ry
Russell
of
Savings
Bond (or equivalent) ;
aald tbe new action involves a productivity to the fields left in advantage by idling low- however, the farmer who.idled
ties. The meetings alter Waverly,
W.
Va.
,
visited
with
2nd prize $75 Savings ll&lt;nd (or
quality rather than standard- land only half as productive as
sharp Increase in subsidy production.
nate among each of th e
equivalent
); 3rd prize $ii0
quality land. A spokesman said average would get a payment Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle,
five counties. Attending the
PART IN WORKSHOP
Verna
and
Wavie,
on
Monday.
Savings
Bond
(or equivalent) .
this happened mainly in cases of only $40 an acre.
MUNCIE, Ind. - Dr. Paul meeting from Mason County,
Betty
Van
M
eter
and
Eunie
National Level - 1st, 2nd,
wbere farmers set aside low·
For cotton farmers, deducUoyd, assistant professor of in addition to ourselves, were and 3rd prize winners wlll
yielding "dryland" acreage tions are calculated dif· Brinker called on Mr. and Mrs.
mathematics and supervisor of K. W. Robinson , representin g
while keeping crops on high. ferentiy, but will be twice as Ray Byers at Tanners Run, student teaching, Rio Grande the Mayor of Pt. Pleasant, receive a trip to Washington ,
D. C. plus other awards.
yielding jrrigated acreage.
big in 1973 as they were this recently.
College, has had a part in the Johnny Looney, Paul Mat·
Local winners will be an·
Under a new regulation year, a~ official said.
25th anniversary workshop of thews and Troy Southall of the
noun ced on October I ; state
adopted for 1973, penalties for
Spokesman said most far·
the North Central Association West Virginia Department of winners on October 10, and
setting aside low-yield land will mers have set aside average.
conducted at Bail State Natural Resources.
be increased by a simple quality land, and "relatively
CARL OSB(')RNE , who national winners on October 21.
University in Muncie . Dr .
Local area designations will be
device. In such eases, subsidy few' ' producers will be affected
Uoyd's individual project was operates a filling station in St.
announ
ced later .
payments on wheat and feed by the tightened regulations.
"Program evaluation toward a Albans, owns ·a farm on Mt.
For
more information
grain farms will be based on an ofllcial said the change
Mrs. Bernice Hawkeye and competency-based teacher Union Ridge. One of his chief
the average yield of the land had no relation at all to in- daughter. Donna, of Grantsprojects on this farm is the contact the Poster Contest
edUcation cw-riculwn.' '
Coordinator at your school.
vestigations of set aside ville, W. Va ., were overnight
violations in Kern County guests of her sister, Mr. and
Calif., where many producers Mrs.
Dinsmore
Boyles
-·
were accused of idling sub-par Saturday night.
land while claiming payments
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parker
based on average-quality and family of Coal Grove and
acreage.
Mrs. Lilly Shultz and family of
..
Colwnbus were Sunday guests
of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Arbaugh.
Mrs. Ralph Higg ins and Mrs .
Margaret Sands of Vienna, W.
Kila Anne Young of Success Va., spent a recent weekend
Roy Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt Road visited her·grandparents, here with Mrs. Higgins' sister ,
to Freda Ferm••on,
•- 2ii Acres, Mr . an d. Mrs. J . D.· Hayman. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith .
·Lebanon.
Darrell Henderson spent a Mr. and Mrs. Steven MarFreda Ferguson, Roy few days with his grand· cinko of Middleport were
Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt to parents, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph overnight guests of her
Gary Dennis Evans, Linda Henderson of Portland. .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don
·cheryl ·Evans, 2 Acres,
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Franklin Sprague and family .
Lebanon.
Of Vienna, w. Va., visited with Orland Gilliland of Success is
George. H: Abbott, Jenny Mr. and Mrs, Marion Boston a patient at Camden-Clark
Abbott to Ernest Cale, Jr., and family.
Hospital in Parkersburg with
Nina Gale, 1 Acre, Chester.
Mr•· Pauline Atkerson of six broken ribs which he
Mrs . sustained in a fall from a load
Mary Wright io Carlyle Parkersburg and
. Fultz, Virgll i..awoon, 80 Acres, . Adelphia Harvey of Detroit, ·of hay near his home . He is
·
· .
Mich., Crystal Hall of Little recovering and hopes to be
'Bedford.
. ;·David Dodderer, Lois : Hocking and Pat Quinn of home soon .
· t;&gt;odderer io William Dodderer, Guysville were recent visitors
Rebecca Dod.derer, 5· Acres, of Mrs. Opal Randolph.
Olive. .
Mrs. Galdys Baughman and
' LIBBY CONVICTED
Huntington National Bank to · Jack Gale Of Gahamia spent a SANTA MONICA, Calif.
· , Edna R. · few days .wt' th Mrs. Rose (UP!) - Nobel Prize-winner.
Dona.ld P. Wilson
Wilson • Lot Correction Deed • Thoma s.
·
. Dr. Willard F. Libby was
Middleport. . .
Mr: .and Mrs. 'John Riebel convicted
Friday
of
Ml\dred Lucille Smith, Elma and children of Pomeroy R. D. misdemeanor drunken driving
Smith Reuter to James Gordon .and Mr. and · Mrs. Robert and fined $200. Libby, 63,
Q
Mays, Esther Mae · Mays, 3 Morton and daughters of director of the UCLA Institute
Acres, Chesler.
Porterfield vi.!ited with .Mr. of Geophysics and Planetary
William Mitcbell, Geraldtne · and Mrs. D. c. Riebel.
Physics, was arrested Jan. 22
· Mitchell ·tci· N~ E:, Hyaell, · Mrs: Opal Randolph and afier hls car was .involved in a
We extend many thanks to the people who made our tractor showing a
~atricia A. Hysell, 1.3 Acres, Mrs. ·Rose Thomas enjoyed a .collision which injured the
.success. To those who didn't see our model on display, we Invite you to
· sCipio.
'· ''. · ·
' . .day sh!IPPinK at columbus.
driver and a passenger of the
come now and see it.
Philllp Meinhart, .Genevieve
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise other car.
Meinhart to Richard E. oWens, have retufnecj home after
R. Juan,ita Owen1, · Lot, . vacationing in Florida,
Pomeroy.
· Mrs. Mabel Hetzer is visiting
In 1971, hook publisher and
Albert .A. . Tyler, Mary ·E.. ·with Mr. and Mrs. Marion
TV
personality Bennett Cerf
Tyler to Lawnnce Rapp, Roxie Hetzer at Toledo.
Kanauga, Ohio
Gellipolls, Ohio
Upper Rt. 7
Jrd ~ Sycamore Sts.
died
at
the
age
of
73.
Rapp, ?WeeI, Bedford.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

10-% DISCOUNT
ON FENCERS

• Nor&gt;ehallltlll lltllte
t [ICIIlent protection
tlld durabllltJ

Poster

Contest

Planned

Carmel News,

Tuppers Plains
Society News

Also Available, Fence Posts, Insulators,
Wire, etc.

YOUR
HOME'S BEST FRIEND

Meigs
Property

Transfers

You've been waiting for !his. KIT Homes al
sale prices. KIT features, KIT Interiors KIT
quality, sale priced now!
'

• High titanium pll(ment tor extreme durability
• Fade resistant colors that 1~11 and 1111
• Easy to apply
• Also In non-chalkinl and ulf·cleanlnl white

Outside Paint.. ........... !!!'~. $510 Interior Paint...... ..~. $41o&amp;iL

This House can be
financed for 30 years ·with
as little as 5 pet. down.
Is ·worth two In the ~sh and that' s why most Ameri cans'
depend upon a savings account for security. tt offers:
allractlve· earnings which are paid like clockwork ;
.savlnas are guaranteed In f.uiJ; ready . availability. No
fuzzy promises, no shaky guarantees, simply sound

,.,...

World Cattle
Approxhnateiy t w o·thirds Slightly less than one-third
of the world's cattle are in are found in the western
Europe, Asia and Africa. hemisphere .

KITHOMES

Sept.l4

Gallipolis Business College
36 Lo,ust StrHt
St. Reg. No. 71-02·00328

Rmald L. Angel, J. Rowley, Lacy Bray, Maroella Ferrell,
LauraCornwell,R.N.,Directorof Nursing; third row, Donna
Conley, R.N ., Director of Nursing Education; Jbn Black·
burn, Rick Bermett, Vernon Pratt, Jeff Olyer, Mike Myers,
Oakey Johnson, Jr., Gary L. Dray, LeeR. Wllliams, Kyle
Donnally and Bernard Niehm.

We have reduced our Kit Model for quick sale.
Yo,u can make Big Savings if you buy this
display model now.

General Office
9 months

HIIWJ•Iledttd, -fall
t1t1olu01 conteot

,...,,.

Cecil Hall was granted a
contract to haul school garba ge. The 1972-73 school
calendar was also adopted.
Discussion was held on
projected enrollment, tuition
students and the new proposed
elementary building.

ABIRD IN
.THE HAND

phone 446-4361

· theck ·

'.

CAREER TRAINING
FOR ARE~ARDED FUTURE

Make something ...,1 of your future this Foil. Giye
yourself the aklllo which bring in a worthwhile pay.
check. And 'glvt you a chance to advance! Attend
a Khool whore the oalo purpooe 11 oolld buslne01
training and career placement. Free Bulletin.

.

plication is coming up soon and is ihe one where we
Then,lirm the soil and apply a mulch of straw or
apply two poundl! aetna) nltrogeh per 1,000 square , peat moss. Keep t:,e wulcb thin so you can see the soil
feet.
through it. Do not let the seeded area become dry.
The other two applications receive one pound
Soil should be kept moist until th e new grass is
ea~h per 1,000 square feet. Two pounds actual
established.
nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of ~awn is 10 pounds of a
The best way to grass bare spots is to take plugs
20-1~10, 21).11h'i, etc.
of sod from inconspicuous places in your lawn and
To avoid fertilizer burn, do not ·apply more than
resod ·
t wopounds nitrogenper1, 000 square feetatonetime.
Many people are Puzzl ed bY th e ·growth of
Spread the fertilizer evenly and try not to overlap or · mushrooms; toadstools, and puffballs in circles.
the FARM Front
spill the material.
These are usually called fairy rings.
Bare spots are frequently your problem in lawns.
Fairy rings may be produced by the growth of
probably a victim of dry weather like many others Reseeding bare spots is difficult, if not useless.
any one of over 50 different species of mushrooms,
across the state.
Unless the bare spot is broken up, pulverized,
roadstools, and puffballs. Although there are ways to
This year hasn 't been the best for growing grass
properly seeded and kept damp, you're probably
chemically remove fairy rings from your lawn, the
vegetables or anything else around the home. oi wasting your time and seed.
methods involve killing the grass, too, and reseeding.
course, some lawns have turned out beautifully
.If you have bare spots in your lawn and plan to
Your county Extension agent has information on
because ramlall was adequate in some areas. It has seed them, prepare the spot as you would for large
these procedures.
"
been spotty, though, and unless you used the sprink· areas. Just tossing a few weeds on bard ground will
Since the disease fungi that cause fairy rings are
~' ler extra heavy during those dry weeks in July and not work.
located in the top 8 to 10 inches of soil, the area often
'• August, your lawn probably looks drab.
Once the soil is broken aod pulverized at least
becomes Impervious to water. If you break up this
•·
.. Most of us try to follow a three application fer· four or five inches deep, apply fertilizer and work it
area by punching boles throughout the band and
'
tiltzer program each year , that is, one in early June;
water thoroughly, the grassmay reco ver. A tree root
,, a second the latter part of July or early August and into tbe surface of the soU. Sow seed of the same grass
mixture already present in the lawn. Rake lightlyfeeder works well Ill supplymg water to the root zone
the third in early September. The Septembe~ ap· just covering seed.
of the turf.
,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.--.,.,.,.,.,...,....,.,...........,.,...,.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
·
.
'
.I·' ;';:!j~:;:;:;:;:;:~;::~::'(:~:::::;:::::~::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;@~~:j:j;j;l~;:;:;:;:;:;:~:~:l:~:~~:l:l:j:l,=~:;:;::;:;:;:;~:;:;:::r:~;;;~:;:;:~:::::::::::~~~=~:::::::::;:::~:::::~:§~~~:::~~!j!j~!j!j:~~~=~~!!!j~:~f:l!;:;:~:~:~:i!~!~!~!l!~~~~~::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::=:~:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:::r:~:::~::::::::::l:~:~:~;:::::::;:;j;;:~:~;:;:~:;;j;j;j;~
" •'•'• ••
•••••• .••••-... .. . . ••••••••••.·.····················•.;o,•,•,•.•,o;&lt;o;•.............v;•.•.•.•.•.•.•.;s.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•,•••.••
,•,•,•,•,•,·.='f.:•.•.•.•.•.-.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.••••• ···········. ' • ••

By the Da'

VINTON - North Gallia's
Board of Education Friday
night increased the price of
student and adult lunches.
Lunches were raised to 30 cents
lor students and 50 cents for
adults.
The board also approved the
Federal Lunch Program and
agreed to participate in the
volunteer cancer insurance
program for teaching and non.
teachin g personnel. The
resignations of Janet and
Donna Browning , teachers '

Classes Begin

BY c. E. BLAKESLEE
Extenolon Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY- Meigs County lawns are beginnin
togreenupaftertheannual "fair " rains of last
~
Ohio state Agronomy specialists have ::;::ly.
1
suggestiOns about lawns :
The first thing to do is ask the question "How's
your lawn?" If it failed to
d
•
__
·
respon
to
fertilizers
or
, wue up to st d ds
an ar you expecte.d, you were

Special Farm Deals May be Oosed

wlll be determined.
These young ladies have had
a unique experience this year
as they have been members of
4-H Clubs in two counties. They
were members of the 4-H Club
in Fayette county until late last
spring. When their father
moved to Meigs County as a
herdsman with Royal Oak
Farms. they broug ht their
ste ers along and became
members of the Meigs County
Bet te r Livestock Beef 4-H
Club.
Both girls assisted in
showing the Royal Oak Fann
entries at the Meigs County
Fair last week.
BREi\KS RECORD
BERLIN (UP! ) - Harmut
Briesenick of East Germany
Friday broke the European
shotput record with a throw of
70 fee t 4'h inches at an in·
'tcrnational tra ck and field
meet in Potsdam, it was
reported by the East German
News Service ADN.

Agronomists Give Tips for Lawn Care

'-

BIG

•
Mini Mac I Nibert Farm m

' .·

DIVORCE GRANTED
MIDDLEPORT - Ancii
Cross , pllintill, has been
granted a divorce from Gloria
ero~. defendant, Columbus, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the Clerk of Courts office
reported Saturday.

BEFORE YOU BUY
SALE PAINT

Coughenour, Pat Hopn, R.N.,. Illltruc:tor; Donna Cmley,
R.N., Dlrecor of Nursing Ed.; thinf row, John McDaniel,
Harold Dillon, John Hartzlee, John Gooldin, Jacob Howard,
Harold Shortridge, Joe Herron, Glen Young.

.,

Riggs presided. GB$klll, in
brief remarkS, described the
succe~ful operaUO!I of a teen
cenier in Wellston in which the
Wellston Rotary Club par·
ticipates.

Steers at Fair
POMERO\: - Two Meigs
County girls are exhibiting
their Hereford Steers at the
Ohio State Junior Fair this
weekend. Robin and Jennifer
Gainer, daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Gainer, competed on
Satw·day with the steers from
all o"cr the state for top
honors.
From these placings, the sale
order for the Ohio State Steer
Sale to be held Monday night

II - The 'l'lmea-6ent'1111!I• Sunday, Aug. ~. 1972

Spray Paint

SAVE· NOW!

13oz.
Ufl

.q,.,t~~·

French City

MOBILE HOME SALES
See Jim Staats or Jo• Giles
Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction

Slipp~

Phone 446-9340

Gallipolis, Ohio

B_uilders
750 1st Ale. Galpolls, 0.

...._ ..
"twwl &amp;

Reedsville

--

-

.. ~-~-

News, NOteS

Introducing The All New
1973 John Deere Generation II

TRACTORS

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

�•·

..

~-

•

t

•

~·

...,

. ..

..

,.• •·

J

... -·

•

•

•

•'II" "'

J

..

•

..

•

•

·'

'

,...,.~

.. · #

' '

24 - The Tlmes&amp;nlinel, Swlday, A~JR. 2'1, 1972

...

J•

\\.' ,1 \•.·

::.

••

~

·

·

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel.Clas~ifieds

,..

For Sale

WANT. ADS

INFORMATION
, DEAD\.INES
AUCTION. Saturday, Sep·
lj P.M. Dav .Before Pubtica tiorf
lember 2nd. I p. m. I have
• Monday Deadline 9 11 .m.
sold my home and will sell the
• Cancellation- Corrections
'Ifill bf.·accepted untll9 a .m . for.
personal property located just
Day of Publicat ion
off State Route 143 near the
REGULATIONS
chur
ch in Harrisonville, OhiO .
Tht Publisher reserves the

Watch for sate signs.
Warm Morning gas heater,
65 ,000 BTU. 2 refrigerators.
publisher will not be responsible,
for mol"'-.: than one , incorrect
Sun
Ray
gas
range,
insertion
Fr igida ire electric range ;
, RATES
Maytag washer {wringer
tFor Wan' Ad Serv ic e
type) , 5 pc. dinette, 2 utility
5 cents per Word one insertion
cab i ne t s,
G. E . electric
Minimum Charge 75c
heater,
treadle
sew in g
12 cents per word three
machine, 3 pc . bedroom suite,
consecutive lnse-r ti'oris.
sofa bed, rocker and other
18 cents per 'word sfx con
secu t ive Insertions .
chairs. halt tree, ironing
25 Per (('n l Discount on paid
board. stands. lamps, bed·

right ro edit or reject any ad ~
deemed
ob jectional .
The

aJs and ads paid w i thin 10 days .

CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 fo r 50 word min imum

Each addjtionat word 2c.
BLIND 4DS
Addi tional 25c Char'ge · per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOU'II~, &lt; .
.r 8:30a .m•. tQ S:OO.p.m, Da•IY.
D: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noor
saturday .

Card of ThanKs
WE WISH to express our sin ·

cere lhanks lo all who helped
in any way during the illness
.and death of our beloved

husband and fa ther; a specia l

thanks to those who sent
fl owers and cards, Ewing
Funeral Hom e, pallbearers
and Rev . Dear I Porter for his
consoling words.

ding.

hand

laals,

whee lbarrow, lawn mower,
ladders and other articles not
l isted . Wil lard 0 . Faudree.
owner . Terms: Cash . Not
responsible for acciden ts. The

Bradford Auclian Co .. C. C.
Brad ford. auctioneer.

8·27-llc
H&amp;N Day old or started leghorn
pul lets. Both floor or cage
grown ava ila ble. Poultry
housing and automa tion .
Modern P..oultry , 399 W. Main,
Pomeroy , 992 ·2164.

YAMAHA 250 Enduro, a months BLAKE

HOT POl NT se ll .defrosl ing FOR YOUR hoallh's sake eal 1972 SUZUK I GT380. excellent
refrigerator , very good
condition ; phone 992 -3061.
'

8·27-61c

organi cally grown tomatoes;
B. Quisenberry has large

ones. IOc pound at the old Posl

Office build ing , Syracuse,
Ohio.

condition, Bates windshield,

old, Norge elect •. .: range. like

padded backresl and IU9gage

new. Phone 99U109 .

rack, SB25 or best otter; pllone
667-3364, must sell.

daughters

8-2/. lfp
I WI SH to thank everyone who
was so kind and thoughtful
dur ing my recent stay at the
Holzer Med ica l Center. I

especially wish to thank
everyone who sent the many
nice fl owers and cards and
anyone else who helped in any
· way .

Mary M. Beard
8·2/. lfc

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our son,
P,F.C. Thomas R. Lind, U. S.
Mari nes, who was killed in
action in Vietnam on Aug. 26,
1968. Tom would ha ve

ce lebrated his 26th bi rthday
on Aug . 27th , th is yea r.

modeL

Tao sudden to forget;
And WI!' who loved you dear ly,
Are the ones who can 't forg et.

S27 cash or

l

KOSCOT

KOS METICS •nd

wigs, more new products
com in~ soon. For free

7124.

8-23-4tc

CARRIERS
WANTED
IN

Clifton and
Hartford, W. Va.
PHONE 992-2 156

Dai~

The

Sentinel

PLAYHOUSE TOY train lo

success . We 're selling toy ~
and booking parties , having
fun and getting paid . As a
demo I have no delivering, no
coll ec tion , and I do not need
any experience . I get free
training. Final deadline for
hiring is Sept. 25, cal l me now,
don't wait. Margaret Fortune,

F IRST FLOOR, 2 room aparl·
menl in Pomeroy. Phone 992·
3028 .
8.27 -ltc

8- 10.ttc

4· 12·tf!

LEGAL NOTICE

I

992·2448
Pomeroy,

o.

Lost
LADIES' black clutch billfold in
Middleport Friday morning .
Bank deposit slip with nome .
Reword. Ann Bose, Portland,
0111o. Phone &amp;.4J.2oCJ9.
1·27·3tp

Sea led bids will be rece i\led
by the Me igs Loca l School

District Board of Education at
their off ice in the Meigs Juni or
High Schoo l Bui ld ing, Mid
dleport. Ohio , tor two (2)
Passeng er school buses until
12 :00 o'clock on September 11 ,
1972,
according
to
the
specUlcatlons of said Board ol
Education. Separate ·and ln .
dependent bids wilt be received
wit h respect to the chassis and
body type, and will sta te that
the buses, when assemb le d and
pr ior to delivery , compl y with
all
school
distric t
specifications, and all safe ly
regulations, and curren t Oh io
minimum standards tor sc hool
bus co nstruction of the
Depa rtme nt of Educa ti on
adopted by and with the con!e nt
of the Director of HiQhway
Sa fety pursuant to Section
4511 . 76 of th e Revised Code an·d
a ll other pertinent provisions of

law .

Specifications
and
in structions to bictders may be
ob ta ine d
from
Aulstan l
Super intend ent Morrison·,

Middleporl, Oh io.

Board of Educalion
reurves the right to re ject any
The

and ell bids.

By order of the Board of
Education .
L . W. McComas
Clerk -Treasurer

(8) 13. 20. 27

I.

K

t
JI j
1
J

~CONDES

(9)

3, 41

now

available

~

MO~

1

the

Pomeroy-Mason

Br idge ; phone IIJ-5308.
8-IS·IIC

(]

I.QY·.

E.O.M. SALE
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
1970 Dodge Polara, ......• ~~~ sm '1995

amro••rrx xxrx J
{ANwen IWond•y)

5

Factory air conditioning_, V-8 engine, automatic tra~s­
mlsslon , power steering, power brakes, good white side

walls, many mare extras. White finish , black vinyl roof.

1970 Ford Galaxie 500

I

Anlt~~er :

.

WAS S2J9l

Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T. Factory air. Low
mileage. Take your Labor Day vacation in this
beauty.

tires. like new.

WAS $19'15 $

··

11

7,fJa1~~~hh-.~kt

6--Sietvelass

cloaks
11 -0id pro noun

7~ -Wors kii,

76-Perfool'l"n"td

~

77- Level

78-E..,ergreen
tre11

16- Da ma&amp;:es

79-Completeneu

21- Biblical weeds
22-0pen to view

82-Punctuation

23-Evalui'ltes
24-Wipe out
25-Simia n
26-Transa ctlo ns

28-Periods of
time
3!)-Conjunction
32- Cooled la v&lt;t
33-French article
34- Measure of

weight
35-(ntell eet
36--Whip
37-limb

42--Q penwork
f abric

mark
64-Strons winds

LTD Coupe, 390 v.a engine, 3·speed, automatic, pawer
steering, POWer brakes, fa ctory air, grey finish. Goad
white wall tires, radio.
WAS S2295 NOW

1965 Buick ......................s595

14 5--Rent

8£-Walk

147-Range of hills
149-Japantse sash

88-lease
89-Story
90-Thw&amp;rts
92-Cublc meters
94-Settled
98- Goddess of

discord

99- E:qual
100-Male sheep
102-Compensate
103-Sailor !colloq .)
104- Varnlsh
lna:red lent
105-Ciothe d
106-Fathers
108-Land measure

43-Sow

109-Proceed

47- Set
49-Froth

110-Neaatlvt
prefix
111 - Phoenlclan
sun &amp;Od
112- Tells

50-Cushion
51-Talked idly

114-Piace
I 16--Corded cloth

54- Take one's

117-Encomlum

55- Happy
56-Hate
59-Pronoun
60-Chart

62-Hawkar
64 -Boundary

65-Preposltlon
66--Pald notlee
67- Relltlnt
69-Eagle's nest
70- Si!IUC)'
71-0ifspring

name

J 19-Farm anima it
120-Powdered

soapstone

IS~retk

marketplace
152-Fear
!54-Priest's
vestment
!56-Common
purple
seaweed
I 59-Rllnts

159-Carments
160-1$ borne
161--Seml-preclous
stone

DOWN

1- Vapld
2-Candle
1-Natlve metal
4- Note of scale

4 0-S t~lk

41 - Journey
42-Wanled

107-C halr

43-Fioat In air
44 - Partner
46--Nu r
48-Mental Image

perso n
112- 0ecays

49- E• cape
50-Shut up
51- 0ne 11iew of e

11 6--Soaks

11 3-KIIIe d
115-Gratultles

Fl

70-Consplrator
71-5!1 11

Ill

5-Wc.rm

73-Style ;;~f

em 1na
139- Word of sorrow

6--Paints

prlntlna
74 - Mac•ws

140-Accompllthment
144-Before

75-Chemlcal

145-Hawllitn

co mpound
77-Mora dellc•te
78- Santkrlt

·
wruth
J46-0rt•l1 of
heuin 1

7-Thoroughfares
8-Footllke part
9- Teutonlc de ity
ID-Pia:pen

1 1--Ctlara cterlstlc
12- Malo deer
13- Possess lve

14--Compau polr'lt

amount
131 -0ines

18- Sun sod

89-Birttrtd

19- Former

90--Mis repretant
91 - Babylonlan

pronoun

15-Reaard

16-Warfnth
17- Vase

Runran
rulers

dlaltet
80-l rrltates

-

87- 0anKers

· underworld

149-Eais
151-Kine of Bashe11
153-$ymbol for
ruthenium
155-Note of seal• '
157-Symbol for
Slt\ltr

I
I

radio,

tires, luggage rack . A nice one.

~~~ mu

'899
"

Power Steering &amp; Brakes, Automatic Trans .. white finish ,
blue viny l Interior, goad tires, rad io.

...-·-····---------------------

USED CARS...

VB. Real nice

-·

l
1

48,921 miles on it. This Week

I

only '139~
1
~-------------------J
We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our~Bond
P.M.

.8..

MITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

~

liMiMil
TIHICKS

992· 2174
Buick

Pontiac

MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO

..~

ONLY 12 NEW QiEVROLET CARS

GOING AT YEAR END PRICES.

We talk to you

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

'WMP0/1390

"Your Cllevy Dialer"

Gft YOUR DIAL

Open Eves. Till I

461 S. 3rd

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM HOUSE, bath, 2 car
garage, enc losed porch, 94-100
acre land , Rt. 1. Raci ne, Ohio.

like a pe150r..

992·2U6

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

Buy Of ALifetime!
Come In Now!

I

1969 lnllfz Ton Pickup

Open E.venings Till7 p. m. &amp; Sat. Till 5
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

Phone'

~49 -4785 .

a.2Htc

'Mobile Homes Filr Sale

gas and ele ctric,

WANTED - Your mobile horne
business. Veteran financing

Rt . I,

Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
8·21·81p

Middleport

Phone 992·2196

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phi&gt;ne'
985·3529.
6·1l ·tfc

CONVENIENT but seclu ded ~==-==,-----­
building
Rack Springs,
IR E,I, 5 I'/•
roomsAcre,
&amp; balh.
close
to lots
Highat School
&amp; Fair CHESH
ba semen
10
Ground ; ca ll or see Bil l Wille,
minutes from Gavin ; storm
992·2789 alter 5 p.m. week · windows, newly remodeled ;
d
ca rpeted dining area, large
ays .
8·6·30tc living room ; call after 5:30
a ROOM house, bath , large lot,

KEITH GOBLE FORD

Real Estate For Sale

weekdays,

U7- Free of
U&amp;-Guldg's hi h
1
8 1- Wela:ht of India
note

83-Communltt
84--:Piuc~y

I

''•·'

118-Lantem
t 19-Metropolls

tubitct
121--C hlnk
52-Part of
123-Brother of Odin
forti fic ation
125--Dinner course
53-Anaer (col loq .) r
(pl.}
55- Enlil lnelau planel26--Help5
56--Solt
127-Siddt
57- Roek
129- Hindu au lt•r
58-Pil chea
JJo-Greek leHer
61-Mexlcan . labor~~r l31-Min't name
63- Fall In d;ops
132-Condttclt
64-Conduct
134- F•II btl'llnd
fiB-Took by force
136--Country of A1i1

122-8undry
J24-Exl5t
125-Poses for
portrait
126-Cha nges
128-Fondle
129-lndeflnlte

13 2-Fa lsehood
133-Sprina:s

lll - Unlnterestlna

I

Local 1 owner new ca. trado .ln, beige finish, vi ny l In·

1966 Buick Wildcat Cpe.

WE NEED

I·-------------------~
This Week Special
I

1967 Clev. Impala St Wagon .... $1295

106--S tlt ches

15-'72 TRUCKS IN STOCK

Wildcat. All white. Runs real good. Make
some one a real nice car for the price.

NOW

6 cyl. Std. trans .

Excellent Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Falcons, Torino,
Gran Torino, Galaxie 500, LTD 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr ... Shop Early For Big
Bargains. Also FIOO &amp; F250 Pickup Trucks- V-B's, Automatic
Transmissions.

1969 Ford ...................... s1595

350 v .a engine, automatic trans., pawer steering &amp; brakes,
vinyl interior, beige exterior fi nish . good w-w tires , radio .
A local car &amp; very nice.

&amp; brakes,

35 CARS .1N STOCK

Elec . 225 4 Dr . H.T. Full power and air. Real
nice. 67 model .

F-L 500 Wagon . Auto. Small
wagon . Local owner.

v.a, automatic, power steering

EXCELLENT SELECTION

1967 Buick only ............ s1595

1968 Buick LaSabre H.T. Cpe. •••.'1295

W· W

Sell down

LeSabre 4 Dr. Sedan . Factory air. One owner .
Real sharp. 69 model . Priced to sell .

NOW

WAS Sl395

AUG. &amp; SEPT.

1969 Buick .....................S2195

Chev. Kingswood St Wagon $2095

goad

135--Mtlslc: as
2o-Junctu ru
92-Fu r-b.arlnt
written
27- Unlt of
mammal . • •., ~
13a...:..O.mtll'l- •• ••••• • • ~ ~,..,... ,_'-1..,)(,. ·"-i3.....,.,. .. "-""afnt.i ......
ll9-PartMr
c urrenc y
95-Eplc po•m
140--Galle food to
29-Female 1heep
96-Ardtnt
141-By Will)' Of
(pl.)
97- lets fall
142- Supposin&amp; that 31-Poutned
99-Frolic
143-Symbol for
36-Trin~et
101-Couralt
tellurium
37-Auluant
105-En ciOiur'tl for
144- Lamb's pen
39- BeUow
animals

85-Sandarac tree

44-Unmarried
woman
45-Gra ln

part

1895

NOW

FORD

Sedan. Factory air. Low

350 cu. ln. V;8 engine, turbohydramatic, pawer steering &amp;
brakes, rad1a , red vinyl Interior, black finish. White wall

terlor ,

SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1972

Dr.

1970 Pontiac ..................s2895

I • • • • • • •• • • • • ,• • • I • •

Out They GO!

'72

owner. We want to sell this car .

NOW

miss ion , radio. A clean unit and very economica l.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
' ' '-

Coronet Cust . 4

1970 Chevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. '2195
1969 rrord

End of Model
GIGANTIC SELLDOWNIII

197l Oodge ........... only s2695

Station Wagon, beige finish, goad tires , 4-speed trans·

Jf'hat liar. J.UinlutritH ('011UIUH11tl
I&lt;Ot-LIPT-WITHOUT A ,INNY

72- CapUI::t1 1n
monkey

'1795

Hardtop coupe, V-8 eng ine. automatic transmission,
POwer. steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black vinyl top,
vinyl 1nterior, white wall tires, lik e new, radio.

NOIJ.:t'IOS

ACROSS

~~ sm5

A~

It's NOW Tlmell

Priced to move!

1968 Opel :................... ~~ m5 '845

JumbltOI FILMY UNCA, ILIVIN TAM,..

Yetlerdey' •

So Come In Now and Save Many s $ On
A New Buick, Pontiac or Opel. We
Have 4 Demos. That You Really Can
Save Some Money.

Interior, li ke new whlle·w!ll tires, radio.

Now lll'nll(le the eln:led lettel'll
to form the ourprl10 ONwer, •
IUflelted bJ the above cartoon.

BIG

AND OPELS IN STOCK.

v.s with automatic trans ., power steering &amp; brakes,
IU9gage rack, factory air, calor while wllh green vi nyl

HE l-EFT THI::O.

NOW!!

FINAL WEEK OF CLOSE OUT
CLEARANCE, ON ALL
NEW BUICKS, PONTIACS

Finest Cars - .&amp;st Service

WAS $1495

I. Vb, .d'i

~

_

pompous ly

LEGAL NOTICE

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

......

SEVERA L varielles of top
quality, tree ripened, canning

38- Be mistaken
40-Walk

" hone 992 -54~ .

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

'p oODLt pufJ~· c:., :,uver foy,

SUMMER clear.nce of pattern
books and imparted yarns .
Needlecraft Shop, Rl . 124
East , Syracuse . 10 a.m. to 7
p.m. dally except Sunday.
8-10·tfc

8·2J.61c

8·23·12tc

Air Conditioners

l

'\) ~".1'.!::.~~ -

tLOMBIE

my home; phone 992-3645
after 8: 30 p.m. or before 11
a.m .

graduate
of
Cincinnati "'j""A"'N"'D:-:4 -::Rc:ou
"'
. 7M,...,.,
fu-rn'"'r"'
s h-e.,.-da eft!
Conservatory of Music with 2:l
unfurPiished,
apartments
year s teach ing experience ;

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Window

8·25·2tc

above

Help Wanted

Pomeroy .

'

Rowe , Yellow Bush Rd .,
Rac ine . Phone 949-3746.

through early September ;
Bob's Markel , Mason , W. Va. ,

8·24·3tc

PIANO &amp; organ lessons by

"HEll"

budgel plan

peaches ;

truck , go ca rt tra iler, two
ut ility lrailers . Phone 992·

de monstrallon , phone 992 - - - - - - - - - - - 5113.
3 ROOM apartment, un ·
lurnished, 408 Spring Ave ..
8·11-tfc

phone 992-3825.

1'U/Ef'

i 9~6~4~F~O~R~D~E~c~o~n~o~li~n~e~v an
c

949·5414 or Barbara Lambert,
446·311.
REWARD, lor shopping at
IV
8·22·11C
Showalter's Wei Pel Shop, - ----'-'----Ches ler , Ohio: 10 per cent at
your total purchase ma'( be For Rent
applied lo the purchase a any TRA I LER , Brown 's Trailer
cera mic Items.
Park . Phone 992·3324.
a.2.JOtp
8·2Hic

- - - -- -

picked, man goes, Raymond

Un1&lt;ramble these four Jumble&amp;,
one letter to eaeh square, to
Corm four ordinary word1.

ba lance due of $88.21 or pay
56. 10 a month ; call 992·5331.
8·23-6tc

out of Pomeroy on September
8 and 9. Watch far itemized ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th.
list in Sunday, September 3rd .
Last chance to hop aboard the
Br adford Auction Co .

8-2/.31p

Llmeslone, Excels'"'
Salt Work s, E. Main St.,
Pomer oy, Phone 992-3891:
4·12-IIC

Keith Goble Ford In Middleport

,..... S.lldial lock lollell Prktsl

b-15-ffl

Walnut Console; will sell for

merchandise of the lat e Grace
Vauqhn wi ll be sold at

Ridge -Ba shan Rd . Some
antiques. odds. and ends.

COAL.

lomatoes, Sl.25

Park view Kennels, Phone 9'12·
5443.

DELUXE 8 track Stereo In

ENTIRE stock of antique

m. Watch lor sign, Eagle

all

8·25·6tc

KUHL' s BARGAIN CE N·
TER, "at caution light," Rt.
7, Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
Closed Mondavs.
8-21·6tc

Signed : Alma E. Miller.
8.2s.31p

and Wednesday . Starts at 9 a.

with

available. Phone 992-5641.

LARGE selection ol beautiful

1 WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted by any
one other than myself.

VARDSALE,Monday , Tuesday

Complete

8·21·21P

mahogany dining su ites;
bedroom outf its; also, usual
stock of other clean used
furniture, appliances at

B· _ t.p·
.23 6

peaches arriving Frid!~ A.M .

742·3656.

Notice

8·27 ·1tc

985·3816.

5 GUNS and 1.72 acre lei; Phone

Hoeflich and Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Lind.
8·2/. ltc

In the Grange
Hall al Rack Springs Fa ir
Ground an State Route 33 N,

excell ent condition; phone

Thursday A.M. Shippers Re
and White Georgia Bell e

damage in shi pping . Will take

8·2/· IIC

Yout memory is our keepsake, SALESMA N wanled, full or
pa rt time evenings, car
With which we'll never part ;
necessary. Drop a carQ with
God ha s you in hi s keeping ,
name, addrllS , ll&amp;and1pilone
We have you In ol!r heart.
rlumber to Mr. FOss. ' P. "0 .
Sadly missed by hi s parents,
Box 4133, Cincinna ti. Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Relno Lind and
45204.
grandparents, Mr. Edward

A~cllon

E.lbert~ 1970 HONDA CLIO Scrambler,

can-n ing ~each~s arrivln~

cleaning lools. Small paint CANN 1NG

BABYSITTER far 3 children in

To the one we loved so welL
It was a sudden ending ,

Red

- - - - --

"J ust a prayer from us who
REFINED woman In need of
loved you,
home to live in and care for
Precious kind and true ,·
ir'IValid woman . Nursi ng
Just to say how much we m iss
exper
ience no t ne cessa ry .
you,
Salary negot iable. Wri te E.
Because we thought the world of
Donaldson , 5440 Pheasant
you.
Drive, Orient, Ohio 43136.
You couldn 't say goodbye to us,
8-25-2tc
Perhaps 'twas 1ust as wed;
We never could l"lave said

goodbye ,

ond

.--------;,--

1971 KAWASAK I 100, like new,
$300. Phone 949·3915.
8·21·5tp
st ep -

and

. For Sale

Br ing
your . conta1ners .
8·25-31c 1971 YAMAHA 650, goad can·
Midway
Market, Pomeroy. 1973 CAMPERS and law profile
dition,
extras
inCluded,
1
8' 23-l 2tp ~K:-:E:-:N:-:N:-:::
Travel Trailers In stock,
E -::B-::E:-:C:-~
Pat:-a:-:to_e_s_ far
Phone 992·2582.
owner, $850 firm ; phone 992 Alhens, Ohio 45701 , 592·2158.
lowest
price In Tri -State area;
8·24·3tc
8·27-3tp ZIG-ZAG sewing machine, thi s win ter , nO~ ,. ready . Tom
6279.
1972 trailers, huge discount;
8·25-3tc
Sayre,
ph
one·
843-2436
.
ma chine is dressmaker
Camp Conley Staroraft Sales,
CANNIN G tomatoes and
8·2S.Jtp
model, lh fs machine makes
Rl . 62 , N. of Pf. Pleasant
mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
MAPLE
Stereo
radio
cam
·
buttonho les, da r ns, em behind
Red Carpet Inn.
Racine.
Ohio
.
binalion, AM·FM radio. 4
G IRLS' 20" high ·r ise bike ; br oiderie s;
tak e
ove r APPLES Fitzpatrick Orchards,
o.25-7tc
8·16·tf&lt;
adult girl ·scout leader
payments ol $5.10 or pay M a
Sta.te Route 689. Phone speaker sound sys tem, 4
uniform, complet e ; phon e
spee d automatic cha nger,
Wilkesville 669-3785.
manlh ; ca ll 992 -533 1.
1910 ALLIS-CHA LM ERS HD.21 STER EQ.radl oCansole, 4 speed
992 3573.
8·23-6tc
8·17-10tc separa te controls . Balan ce
B, SN 10S1756 Hyd. full U
i nterm 1xed cha nger , ~ua I
8-27·31c
$78.29. Use aur ·budget terms .
blade
SN
6381,
21.000
Mar
k
II
vo lume control, 4 speaker
Ca ll 992·1085 .
sound sys tem, beautiful hand
8·25·6tc engine, encl osed Allen canopy
cab. Good condi tion , ready to
rubbed
Walnut finish .
work; 104 Galion Grader SN
Balance 566 .34. Use our
1972
ZIG·ZAG
sewing
machine
--GMP 20796, good condition,
budget terms . Call 992·1085.
lell in layaway . Bea utiful
N!E
'!W KJDOINb! ,
8·25-6tc
ready to work. Inquire by
HEY, SWI! WHY
pastel
color,
full
size
modeL
[ U'J.J'r EI.EN Fbt..I:A.
dialing
J
.
W.
Ashton,
CONT 'IOU ro 1\
All bui lt-in to buttonhole, do
Columbus (614) 486·9546 days MOBILE Home ail furnace,
t&lt;I&lt;IIJ twiCE f'
stretch sewing and fancy
or
(61 4) 457-0659 evenings and
lank, etc.; phone 992-5247.
stitching . Pay iust $48.75 cash
weekends
.
8·22·61p
or terms ava ilable. Trade-Ins
8·22-6tc
1
56
P
2
accepted. hone 99 · 4 .
---------AKC registered miniature
.
8·2Htc
Schnauzers. Ph . 446·2497.
'63 HONDA 300, phone 949·4012.
a.22-t2tc
VACUU M Cleaner new 1972
8·2S·Jtc
BLACK Diamond linamenf ;
cal l or write F. M. Guthr ie,

Mrs. E·thel Clark and son,
daughters.

8·21 -61c

~~A

'

For Sale

ForS~Ie

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

'

··,

,

••'

•

Sat urday

Sunday, 367-7114.

&amp;

a.1a. 10tc

.Business Services

..

r"·::··===..::.========;-:;==========Ji';::======~==-==
I'
- --

·R
· o· OFING
eHEATING
ePLUMBING
eCARPENTR Y
eSPOU1lNG
ePAINTJ]\1'}
For Free Estimate

EARTH MOVING

Dow &amp; End loader wor",

. ponds ,

basement, land,
scaping. We have 2 sin
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.,
Free' Estimates. We also
' haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump .
trucks and low.boy lor hire.
S.e Bob or Roger Jtlten.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525 ·
'' after 1 p.m. or phone · 992-'

.

EXPERT
.•
Wheet-AJignment
'5.5"'oJ

On Mnst Americim ~~
- GUI\RANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·

with no dawn payment ;
Valley
Estates Mobile 6 ROOM house. bath, aluminum
siding, garage, carpeting and
Homes, Rt. so East (Just East
Pornerov Home·&amp; Auto
paneling
; nail!ral ~as , ptentv
of Heck's), Athens. Ohio;
of water. 1 mile south of
phone 59J.8762.
Open 8 Til5
Middleport. Phone 991·6902.
8-25-2tp
Mond&amp;jl
lhru Saturday
a-27-3t p
5232
2
New
Homes,
all
electric,
3
•
'
PHONE 992-2550
606 E. Main, .Po~roy!. ~soxtO MOBILE HOME, $1700.
bedrooms, lull basement and ~----~--------~,,L---------------~
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
Call Chester 985·3379.
Conchas, New MOKica. $2,975.
garage, with lake frontage;
a-24-6tp
PRICE CONSTRUCTION,
No Dawn. No Interest. $25 mo. · at Fi ve Points area.
Real
E.
s
tate
For
Sale
roofing, porch repair and
'71 - 6Sx12 mobile home, 1'12 for 119 mos . Vacation
electrica l; phone 742·4286.
Paradise.
Free
Brochure.
2 BUILDING lots, 95' x 200'
bath, phone 992·3903.
a. 16-30tc
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
each ; phone 992·57a6.
8·27-3tc
PH.
992·2571
Blue with blue interior, full power equipment, Cllmak
2001DD. Alameda, California
8·2Htc SEPT iC tanks cleaneo . Miller
94501.
-· Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
Fro·m the largest
'tAStj paid for alt makes ·anli
8·6-JOtp
OR 992·39~5
model s of .mobile homes . -----------Bulldozer
Radiat~ to the
L-------~---' l
-::---:::::::;;;:::~~-1 662·3035.
2· 12·ttc Smallest Heater Core .
Ph(J1e area code 614-4~3-9531.
-"---'
.
H3·tfc
. , •'
Nathon Boggs
CLELAND
ONLY 7-1972 OLDSMOBILE$
SEPTic
TANKS
CLtANED
..
Rodlilor Specialist
~E IISONABLE rateo. Ph . 446
REALTY
FOR
THE
BEST
deal
In
a
"""'
REMAINING AT SALE PRICES
4782, Gallipolis, John Russet;,
or used mobile home, try
601 E. Main
1
O..ner
&amp; Operolor.
P1meroy, Oh'io
Kllnauga Mobile Home Sales,
1
&gt;·12-tfc
110 Mechanic Street
Kllnaugo, 0111o.
-::-:--':--:--:--::7·16·30tC
Ph. 99H174
According to Its· Otd English
c.
BRADFORD, Auctioneer 1.~------ Pome roy
'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
derivation, the word HOUSE
Complete Service
DOtl:R and back 1\oe work,'
Phone 949·3821
· COdilile . Oldsmobile
means a place to hldo.
ponds and septic tank s; B &amp; K:
Racine',
0111o
· Air Conditionen
WHATEVER A HOUSE
E&gt;ccavating, .Phone 992·5367,'
THE
LATEST
NEW
LISTING
.'Crltf Bradlord
992.53~2
GMAC Fln1m:lng Available
Porne..,_
MEANS TO YOU, WE'LL
•Awnings
Dick Karr, Jr .
1 ~
RENOVATED - Lovely 2 bedrooms, large liv ing, nice
s.1.tfc
FINO
ONE
TO
MEET
5·21
-tf_!;
kitchen and gos forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
Eves. Tli ~Til 5 P.M. llaf, .
·• Underpinni.n g
YOUR NEEDS! CALL O'DELL WHt: t:L allgnmem . - - - - - - -- - 1
to wall carpeting. Partial basement an large lat . Asking
" You 'll Ll&lt;e "'"' QualllyWayol, ~lng,.Buslness"
TODAY.
..
,
only $11,500.00.
localedotCrossroads, Rt. 124. TUNE -UPS, brake joos ana 1
Complete mobile homE
NICE LEVEL LOT
Complete front end service,
ather a uto work . Very
~erv,lce ~ plua g igantic
I
story
- 3 bedrooms. Bath.
tune up and brake service. . reasonable · rates . Wa ines
MIDDLEPORT
'display of mobile homes
.Dining R, Utility space .
Auto Sales
Wheel s balanced elec·
Aula Service. school trained .
4 BEDROOMS - 2 baths, nice kitchen with bar and cook
Auto Sales
,always available ot ...
Paneling. Porches. A QOOll
tron lca lly .
All
work . Route 1. Shade. Ollie 992-6541,
units. Garage and den In full basement. Covered patio an
1H8 PONTIAC Catallne, 2 dr. ' 641 V.W.. goad condition, goad
neighborhood. JUST 19,acxl.
guaranteed .
lloA&lt;nnA hl •
next to Whaley' s Paint Shop!
tires; phone 992·3019.
back ·of house. Asking $24,000.00. ·
hardtop, power brakes. power
MILLER
a.25-2tp
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
roles . Phone 742·3232 or
8-'l0-12tc
steering, air conditioning,
4 bedrooms. Bath. Modern
clean. price $1195. Call bit-.
992-3213.
I·U·nc
t MOBILE HOMES
LEVEL LOT
.UTOMOBILE Insurance been
kitchen. Storm Doors &amp;
ween I a.m. and s p.m. 992· Business Opportunities
CORN ER- With a lour room house, hils gas, city water .
.
1220
Wlllllntton
Blvd,
Lost'
your
Windows. Storage buildings. ·sEWING Machine Serv1ce, · cancelled?
7076. 9 p. m. Ia 10 p. m. phone
and eleclrlc. Asking only $2,500.00.
BELPRE, D.
operator's license? Call
cleon,oll, adjust, 1399, In your
992·7076 or 992·733-4.
SERVICE Stotlon for lease. '423-7521
.
1'12 ACRE of ground. CLOSE
home ; phone 992.5331.
29611·24-Jic
Excellent location . Paid
IN $16,900.
LOTS- LOTS - LOTS
6-1S·tfc
811·30tC
, POMEROY
--.....,.---:-:=:-:::-:::--::tnlnlng . Phone 992·5228-12. ' -6tc
I ACRE - Nlct laying on high ground . Chester water
WILL SACRIFICE ' 72 Olds
•
EXCELLENT- 2 bedroom
available. 11 lots In all.
-MIX
CONCRETE iEW ING ,;...... Hir'lt:~. Repelr
Real Estate For Sale
Delli 88, vinyl roof, air,
home with walk·ln cloaets. :READY
dellvtred
right
to !'Our servia., oil makes. 992·2214.
Lorge living room with
power steering, power • · nt·.l
}!Ai: IN E ~ 10 room house~
pro/ec'l.
Fast
and
easy.
FrH. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
'· brakes, low mileage. Phont '
IN
fi replace. Modorn kllchon · est motu: Phone 992-328•,'
bath, baaemont, garage,~
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
Authorized Singer Sales and
367-7530.
and dining. Utlllly. 2 car
1ots. Phone 9ol9·o1313.
·•
5 BEDROOMS - Near downtown shopping, nice kitchen
8-24-6tc· 2 or · 3 ACRES of . land.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,j . ,Service. We Sharpen Seiners.
garoge . Porches. JUST
ol-5·ttp:
with double sink. 2 porches and full basement. Agood buy
Middleport, 0111o.
.. ;
. ~29-tlc
·
Preferably In Fittwoods area
S12,900.
at only $7,500.00.
'69 PLYMOUTh GT 4.40, Hpted,
or on good hard surfac:ed ---....,..,.,----,-.
•
6·30·tfC
7 ROOM house and ·bath, newly
WE HAVE THE CON eleclrlc windows, Jood
road. Phone 992-6147.
:l:E:lJS FOR: Awnmgs, 'term j
~alnted,
Union
Ave .,
'wt LL Db light ha uling In ii. ·doors and windows, carports, • .1
condition. Phone 992·7 4 or
8-27-Jtc
TACTS, USE THEM FOR
LOOK FOR THE REO, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN, THEN
·
temoons . Phone 992.:i;Ol,
Pomeroy, phone 992·5641.
marq-., aluminum '-ldlng •
' " Nick Coates, Pomeroy;
THE SALE OF YOUR
YOU'LL KNOW IT' S FOR SALE . BUY FROM YOUR
8-27-Jtp OLD Furniture;·; oak tabies;·
8·27-6tc and r1lllng. ··A. Jacob, 11111 i
1·22·6tp
PROPERTY. JUST A
LOCAL BROKER; IT' S GOOO BUSINESS AND FOR .
r•preMntative •. F'Or 1ree' ,
organa, dilhtl, tloc:ks. braa . .-:----~---­
PHONE CALL AWAY.
THE ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'RE TRYING
estimates,
"Phone Charles
bldl,orcompletehOUHholds.
HOUSI;,
Chesler,
Ohio,
5
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
Sr.
1972 CAMARO VI, automallc,
FOR A BIGGER AND BETTER YEAR .
Lisle, Syracuse, V , "
Write M. D, Miller, At. 4, raorns, .beth, garage, 1 acre.
wllh power steering. Phont
REALTOR
Johnson and Son, Inc .
Pomeroy, Ohio, Call 992 6271. Phone 992·2355.
"2·1259
992-55S2.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
6-21-tfc 1
1-24-Jip
8-U·JIC
J.2·1f·
fino
--:----.-::-:--

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

"OWN A
CADD.I.AC,

Of Course You Can"
CADILLAC

'1295

-

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

-

SMITH NELSON

MOTORS. INC.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT .

.

i

ClPen

r •

.

a

=====;:T;;;;-;::=

\

,...

m

to Buy

-----....,..-

'

-•-'"·2NI

�•·

..

~-

•

t

•

~·

...,

. ..

..

,.• •·

J

... -·

•

•

•

•'II" "'

J

..

•

..

•

•

·'

'

,...,.~

.. · #

' '

24 - The Tlmes&amp;nlinel, Swlday, A~JR. 2'1, 1972

...

J•

\\.' ,1 \•.·

::.

••

~

·

·

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel.Clas~ifieds

,..

For Sale

WANT. ADS

INFORMATION
, DEAD\.INES
AUCTION. Saturday, Sep·
lj P.M. Dav .Before Pubtica tiorf
lember 2nd. I p. m. I have
• Monday Deadline 9 11 .m.
sold my home and will sell the
• Cancellation- Corrections
'Ifill bf.·accepted untll9 a .m . for.
personal property located just
Day of Publicat ion
off State Route 143 near the
REGULATIONS
chur
ch in Harrisonville, OhiO .
Tht Publisher reserves the

Watch for sate signs.
Warm Morning gas heater,
65 ,000 BTU. 2 refrigerators.
publisher will not be responsible,
for mol"'-.: than one , incorrect
Sun
Ray
gas
range,
insertion
Fr igida ire electric range ;
, RATES
Maytag washer {wringer
tFor Wan' Ad Serv ic e
type) , 5 pc. dinette, 2 utility
5 cents per Word one insertion
cab i ne t s,
G. E . electric
Minimum Charge 75c
heater,
treadle
sew in g
12 cents per word three
machine, 3 pc . bedroom suite,
consecutive lnse-r ti'oris.
sofa bed, rocker and other
18 cents per 'word sfx con
secu t ive Insertions .
chairs. halt tree, ironing
25 Per (('n l Discount on paid
board. stands. lamps, bed·

right ro edit or reject any ad ~
deemed
ob jectional .
The

aJs and ads paid w i thin 10 days .

CAR D OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 fo r 50 word min imum

Each addjtionat word 2c.
BLIND 4DS
Addi tional 25c Char'ge · per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOU'II~, &lt; .
.r 8:30a .m•. tQ S:OO.p.m, Da•IY.
D: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noor
saturday .

Card of ThanKs
WE WISH to express our sin ·

cere lhanks lo all who helped
in any way during the illness
.and death of our beloved

husband and fa ther; a specia l

thanks to those who sent
fl owers and cards, Ewing
Funeral Hom e, pallbearers
and Rev . Dear I Porter for his
consoling words.

ding.

hand

laals,

whee lbarrow, lawn mower,
ladders and other articles not
l isted . Wil lard 0 . Faudree.
owner . Terms: Cash . Not
responsible for acciden ts. The

Bradford Auclian Co .. C. C.
Brad ford. auctioneer.

8·27-llc
H&amp;N Day old or started leghorn
pul lets. Both floor or cage
grown ava ila ble. Poultry
housing and automa tion .
Modern P..oultry , 399 W. Main,
Pomeroy , 992 ·2164.

YAMAHA 250 Enduro, a months BLAKE

HOT POl NT se ll .defrosl ing FOR YOUR hoallh's sake eal 1972 SUZUK I GT380. excellent
refrigerator , very good
condition ; phone 992 -3061.
'

8·27-61c

organi cally grown tomatoes;
B. Quisenberry has large

ones. IOc pound at the old Posl

Office build ing , Syracuse,
Ohio.

condition, Bates windshield,

old, Norge elect •. .: range. like

padded backresl and IU9gage

new. Phone 99U109 .

rack, SB25 or best otter; pllone
667-3364, must sell.

daughters

8-2/. lfp
I WI SH to thank everyone who
was so kind and thoughtful
dur ing my recent stay at the
Holzer Med ica l Center. I

especially wish to thank
everyone who sent the many
nice fl owers and cards and
anyone else who helped in any
· way .

Mary M. Beard
8·2/. lfc

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of our son,
P,F.C. Thomas R. Lind, U. S.
Mari nes, who was killed in
action in Vietnam on Aug. 26,
1968. Tom would ha ve

ce lebrated his 26th bi rthday
on Aug . 27th , th is yea r.

modeL

Tao sudden to forget;
And WI!' who loved you dear ly,
Are the ones who can 't forg et.

S27 cash or

l

KOSCOT

KOS METICS •nd

wigs, more new products
com in~ soon. For free

7124.

8-23-4tc

CARRIERS
WANTED
IN

Clifton and
Hartford, W. Va.
PHONE 992-2 156

Dai~

The

Sentinel

PLAYHOUSE TOY train lo

success . We 're selling toy ~
and booking parties , having
fun and getting paid . As a
demo I have no delivering, no
coll ec tion , and I do not need
any experience . I get free
training. Final deadline for
hiring is Sept. 25, cal l me now,
don't wait. Margaret Fortune,

F IRST FLOOR, 2 room aparl·
menl in Pomeroy. Phone 992·
3028 .
8.27 -ltc

8- 10.ttc

4· 12·tf!

LEGAL NOTICE

I

992·2448
Pomeroy,

o.

Lost
LADIES' black clutch billfold in
Middleport Friday morning .
Bank deposit slip with nome .
Reword. Ann Bose, Portland,
0111o. Phone &amp;.4J.2oCJ9.
1·27·3tp

Sea led bids will be rece i\led
by the Me igs Loca l School

District Board of Education at
their off ice in the Meigs Juni or
High Schoo l Bui ld ing, Mid
dleport. Ohio , tor two (2)
Passeng er school buses until
12 :00 o'clock on September 11 ,
1972,
according
to
the
specUlcatlons of said Board ol
Education. Separate ·and ln .
dependent bids wilt be received
wit h respect to the chassis and
body type, and will sta te that
the buses, when assemb le d and
pr ior to delivery , compl y with
all
school
distric t
specifications, and all safe ly
regulations, and curren t Oh io
minimum standards tor sc hool
bus co nstruction of the
Depa rtme nt of Educa ti on
adopted by and with the con!e nt
of the Director of HiQhway
Sa fety pursuant to Section
4511 . 76 of th e Revised Code an·d
a ll other pertinent provisions of

law .

Specifications
and
in structions to bictders may be
ob ta ine d
from
Aulstan l
Super intend ent Morrison·,

Middleporl, Oh io.

Board of Educalion
reurves the right to re ject any
The

and ell bids.

By order of the Board of
Education .
L . W. McComas
Clerk -Treasurer

(8) 13. 20. 27

I.

K

t
JI j
1
J

~CONDES

(9)

3, 41

now

available

~

MO~

1

the

Pomeroy-Mason

Br idge ; phone IIJ-5308.
8-IS·IIC

(]

I.QY·.

E.O.M. SALE
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
1970 Dodge Polara, ......• ~~~ sm '1995

amro••rrx xxrx J
{ANwen IWond•y)

5

Factory air conditioning_, V-8 engine, automatic tra~s­
mlsslon , power steering, power brakes, good white side

walls, many mare extras. White finish , black vinyl roof.

1970 Ford Galaxie 500

I

Anlt~~er :

.

WAS S2J9l

Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T. Factory air. Low
mileage. Take your Labor Day vacation in this
beauty.

tires. like new.

WAS $19'15 $

··

11

7,fJa1~~~hh-.~kt

6--Sietvelass

cloaks
11 -0id pro noun

7~ -Wors kii,

76-Perfool'l"n"td

~

77- Level

78-E..,ergreen
tre11

16- Da ma&amp;:es

79-Completeneu

21- Biblical weeds
22-0pen to view

82-Punctuation

23-Evalui'ltes
24-Wipe out
25-Simia n
26-Transa ctlo ns

28-Periods of
time
3!)-Conjunction
32- Cooled la v&lt;t
33-French article
34- Measure of

weight
35-(ntell eet
36--Whip
37-limb

42--Q penwork
f abric

mark
64-Strons winds

LTD Coupe, 390 v.a engine, 3·speed, automatic, pawer
steering, POWer brakes, fa ctory air, grey finish. Goad
white wall tires, radio.
WAS S2295 NOW

1965 Buick ......................s595

14 5--Rent

8£-Walk

147-Range of hills
149-Japantse sash

88-lease
89-Story
90-Thw&amp;rts
92-Cublc meters
94-Settled
98- Goddess of

discord

99- E:qual
100-Male sheep
102-Compensate
103-Sailor !colloq .)
104- Varnlsh
lna:red lent
105-Ciothe d
106-Fathers
108-Land measure

43-Sow

109-Proceed

47- Set
49-Froth

110-Neaatlvt
prefix
111 - Phoenlclan
sun &amp;Od
112- Tells

50-Cushion
51-Talked idly

114-Piace
I 16--Corded cloth

54- Take one's

117-Encomlum

55- Happy
56-Hate
59-Pronoun
60-Chart

62-Hawkar
64 -Boundary

65-Preposltlon
66--Pald notlee
67- Relltlnt
69-Eagle's nest
70- Si!IUC)'
71-0ifspring

name

J 19-Farm anima it
120-Powdered

soapstone

IS~retk

marketplace
152-Fear
!54-Priest's
vestment
!56-Common
purple
seaweed
I 59-Rllnts

159-Carments
160-1$ borne
161--Seml-preclous
stone

DOWN

1- Vapld
2-Candle
1-Natlve metal
4- Note of scale

4 0-S t~lk

41 - Journey
42-Wanled

107-C halr

43-Fioat In air
44 - Partner
46--Nu r
48-Mental Image

perso n
112- 0ecays

49- E• cape
50-Shut up
51- 0ne 11iew of e

11 6--Soaks

11 3-KIIIe d
115-Gratultles

Fl

70-Consplrator
71-5!1 11

Ill

5-Wc.rm

73-Style ;;~f

em 1na
139- Word of sorrow

6--Paints

prlntlna
74 - Mac•ws

140-Accompllthment
144-Before

75-Chemlcal

145-Hawllitn

co mpound
77-Mora dellc•te
78- Santkrlt

·
wruth
J46-0rt•l1 of
heuin 1

7-Thoroughfares
8-Footllke part
9- Teutonlc de ity
ID-Pia:pen

1 1--Ctlara cterlstlc
12- Malo deer
13- Possess lve

14--Compau polr'lt

amount
131 -0ines

18- Sun sod

89-Birttrtd

19- Former

90--Mis repretant
91 - Babylonlan

pronoun

15-Reaard

16-Warfnth
17- Vase

Runran
rulers

dlaltet
80-l rrltates

-

87- 0anKers

· underworld

149-Eais
151-Kine of Bashe11
153-$ymbol for
ruthenium
155-Note of seal• '
157-Symbol for
Slt\ltr

I
I

radio,

tires, luggage rack . A nice one.

~~~ mu

'899
"

Power Steering &amp; Brakes, Automatic Trans .. white finish ,
blue viny l Interior, goad tires, rad io.

...-·-····---------------------

USED CARS...

VB. Real nice

-·

l
1

48,921 miles on it. This Week

I

only '139~
1
~-------------------J
We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our~Bond
P.M.

.8..

MITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

~

liMiMil
TIHICKS

992· 2174
Buick

Pontiac

MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO

..~

ONLY 12 NEW QiEVROLET CARS

GOING AT YEAR END PRICES.

We talk to you

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

'WMP0/1390

"Your Cllevy Dialer"

Gft YOUR DIAL

Open Eves. Till I

461 S. 3rd

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM HOUSE, bath, 2 car
garage, enc losed porch, 94-100
acre land , Rt. 1. Raci ne, Ohio.

like a pe150r..

992·2U6

Your Trade Is
Worth More NOW

Buy Of ALifetime!
Come In Now!

I

1969 lnllfz Ton Pickup

Open E.venings Till7 p. m. &amp; Sat. Till 5
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

Phone'

~49 -4785 .

a.2Htc

'Mobile Homes Filr Sale

gas and ele ctric,

WANTED - Your mobile horne
business. Veteran financing

Rt . I,

Middleport. Phone 992·2602.
8·21·81p

Middleport

Phone 992·2196

HOUSE in Long Bottom, phi&gt;ne'
985·3529.
6·1l ·tfc

CONVENIENT but seclu ded ~==-==,-----­
building
Rack Springs,
IR E,I, 5 I'/•
roomsAcre,
&amp; balh.
close
to lots
Highat School
&amp; Fair CHESH
ba semen
10
Ground ; ca ll or see Bil l Wille,
minutes from Gavin ; storm
992·2789 alter 5 p.m. week · windows, newly remodeled ;
d
ca rpeted dining area, large
ays .
8·6·30tc living room ; call after 5:30
a ROOM house, bath , large lot,

KEITH GOBLE FORD

Real Estate For Sale

weekdays,

U7- Free of
U&amp;-Guldg's hi h
1
8 1- Wela:ht of India
note

83-Communltt
84--:Piuc~y

I

''•·'

118-Lantem
t 19-Metropolls

tubitct
121--C hlnk
52-Part of
123-Brother of Odin
forti fic ation
125--Dinner course
53-Anaer (col loq .) r
(pl.}
55- Enlil lnelau planel26--Help5
56--Solt
127-Siddt
57- Roek
129- Hindu au lt•r
58-Pil chea
JJo-Greek leHer
61-Mexlcan . labor~~r l31-Min't name
63- Fall In d;ops
132-Condttclt
64-Conduct
134- F•II btl'llnd
fiB-Took by force
136--Country of A1i1

122-8undry
J24-Exl5t
125-Poses for
portrait
126-Cha nges
128-Fondle
129-lndeflnlte

13 2-Fa lsehood
133-Sprina:s

lll - Unlnterestlna

I

Local 1 owner new ca. trado .ln, beige finish, vi ny l In·

1966 Buick Wildcat Cpe.

WE NEED

I·-------------------~
This Week Special
I

1967 Clev. Impala St Wagon .... $1295

106--S tlt ches

15-'72 TRUCKS IN STOCK

Wildcat. All white. Runs real good. Make
some one a real nice car for the price.

NOW

6 cyl. Std. trans .

Excellent Selection ... Maverick, Mustang, Falcons, Torino,
Gran Torino, Galaxie 500, LTD 2 Dr. &amp; 4 Dr ... Shop Early For Big
Bargains. Also FIOO &amp; F250 Pickup Trucks- V-B's, Automatic
Transmissions.

1969 Ford ...................... s1595

350 v .a engine, automatic trans., pawer steering &amp; brakes,
vinyl interior, beige exterior fi nish . good w-w tires , radio .
A local car &amp; very nice.

&amp; brakes,

35 CARS .1N STOCK

Elec . 225 4 Dr . H.T. Full power and air. Real
nice. 67 model .

F-L 500 Wagon . Auto. Small
wagon . Local owner.

v.a, automatic, power steering

EXCELLENT SELECTION

1967 Buick only ............ s1595

1968 Buick LaSabre H.T. Cpe. •••.'1295

W· W

Sell down

LeSabre 4 Dr. Sedan . Factory air. One owner .
Real sharp. 69 model . Priced to sell .

NOW

WAS Sl395

AUG. &amp; SEPT.

1969 Buick .....................S2195

Chev. Kingswood St Wagon $2095

goad

135--Mtlslc: as
2o-Junctu ru
92-Fu r-b.arlnt
written
27- Unlt of
mammal . • •., ~
13a...:..O.mtll'l- •• ••••• • • ~ ~,..,... ,_'-1..,)(,. ·"-i3.....,.,. .. "-""afnt.i ......
ll9-PartMr
c urrenc y
95-Eplc po•m
140--Galle food to
29-Female 1heep
96-Ardtnt
141-By Will)' Of
(pl.)
97- lets fall
142- Supposin&amp; that 31-Poutned
99-Frolic
143-Symbol for
36-Trin~et
101-Couralt
tellurium
37-Auluant
105-En ciOiur'tl for
144- Lamb's pen
39- BeUow
animals

85-Sandarac tree

44-Unmarried
woman
45-Gra ln

part

1895

NOW

FORD

Sedan. Factory air. Low

350 cu. ln. V;8 engine, turbohydramatic, pawer steering &amp;
brakes, rad1a , red vinyl Interior, black finish. White wall

terlor ,

SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1972

Dr.

1970 Pontiac ..................s2895

I • • • • • • •• • • • • ,• • • I • •

Out They GO!

'72

owner. We want to sell this car .

NOW

miss ion , radio. A clean unit and very economica l.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
' ' '-

Coronet Cust . 4

1970 Chevrolet Impala Spt Cpe. '2195
1969 rrord

End of Model
GIGANTIC SELLDOWNIII

197l Oodge ........... only s2695

Station Wagon, beige finish, goad tires , 4-speed trans·

Jf'hat liar. J.UinlutritH ('011UIUH11tl
I&lt;Ot-LIPT-WITHOUT A ,INNY

72- CapUI::t1 1n
monkey

'1795

Hardtop coupe, V-8 eng ine. automatic transmission,
POwer. steering &amp; brakes, white finish , black vinyl top,
vinyl 1nterior, white wall tires, lik e new, radio.

NOIJ.:t'IOS

ACROSS

~~ sm5

A~

It's NOW Tlmell

Priced to move!

1968 Opel :................... ~~ m5 '845

JumbltOI FILMY UNCA, ILIVIN TAM,..

Yetlerdey' •

So Come In Now and Save Many s $ On
A New Buick, Pontiac or Opel. We
Have 4 Demos. That You Really Can
Save Some Money.

Interior, li ke new whlle·w!ll tires, radio.

Now lll'nll(le the eln:led lettel'll
to form the ourprl10 ONwer, •
IUflelted bJ the above cartoon.

BIG

AND OPELS IN STOCK.

v.s with automatic trans ., power steering &amp; brakes,
IU9gage rack, factory air, calor while wllh green vi nyl

HE l-EFT THI::O.

NOW!!

FINAL WEEK OF CLOSE OUT
CLEARANCE, ON ALL
NEW BUICKS, PONTIACS

Finest Cars - .&amp;st Service

WAS $1495

I. Vb, .d'i

~

_

pompous ly

LEGAL NOTICE

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

......

SEVERA L varielles of top
quality, tree ripened, canning

38- Be mistaken
40-Walk

" hone 992 -54~ .

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

'p oODLt pufJ~· c:., :,uver foy,

SUMMER clear.nce of pattern
books and imparted yarns .
Needlecraft Shop, Rl . 124
East , Syracuse . 10 a.m. to 7
p.m. dally except Sunday.
8-10·tfc

8·2J.61c

8·23·12tc

Air Conditioners

l

'\) ~".1'.!::.~~ -

tLOMBIE

my home; phone 992-3645
after 8: 30 p.m. or before 11
a.m .

graduate
of
Cincinnati "'j""A"'N"'D:-:4 -::Rc:ou
"'
. 7M,...,.,
fu-rn'"'r"'
s h-e.,.-da eft!
Conservatory of Music with 2:l
unfurPiished,
apartments
year s teach ing experience ;

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING
Window

8·25·2tc

above

Help Wanted

Pomeroy .

'

Rowe , Yellow Bush Rd .,
Rac ine . Phone 949-3746.

through early September ;
Bob's Markel , Mason , W. Va. ,

8·24·3tc

PIANO &amp; organ lessons by

"HEll"

budgel plan

peaches ;

truck , go ca rt tra iler, two
ut ility lrailers . Phone 992·

de monstrallon , phone 992 - - - - - - - - - - - 5113.
3 ROOM apartment, un ·
lurnished, 408 Spring Ave ..
8·11-tfc

phone 992-3825.

1'U/Ef'

i 9~6~4~F~O~R~D~E~c~o~n~o~li~n~e~v an
c

949·5414 or Barbara Lambert,
446·311.
REWARD, lor shopping at
IV
8·22·11C
Showalter's Wei Pel Shop, - ----'-'----Ches ler , Ohio: 10 per cent at
your total purchase ma'( be For Rent
applied lo the purchase a any TRA I LER , Brown 's Trailer
cera mic Items.
Park . Phone 992·3324.
a.2.JOtp
8·2Hic

- - - -- -

picked, man goes, Raymond

Un1&lt;ramble these four Jumble&amp;,
one letter to eaeh square, to
Corm four ordinary word1.

ba lance due of $88.21 or pay
56. 10 a month ; call 992·5331.
8·23-6tc

out of Pomeroy on September
8 and 9. Watch far itemized ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th.
list in Sunday, September 3rd .
Last chance to hop aboard the
Br adford Auction Co .

8-2/.31p

Llmeslone, Excels'"'
Salt Work s, E. Main St.,
Pomer oy, Phone 992-3891:
4·12-IIC

Keith Goble Ford In Middleport

,..... S.lldial lock lollell Prktsl

b-15-ffl

Walnut Console; will sell for

merchandise of the lat e Grace
Vauqhn wi ll be sold at

Ridge -Ba shan Rd . Some
antiques. odds. and ends.

COAL.

lomatoes, Sl.25

Park view Kennels, Phone 9'12·
5443.

DELUXE 8 track Stereo In

ENTIRE stock of antique

m. Watch lor sign, Eagle

all

8·25·6tc

KUHL' s BARGAIN CE N·
TER, "at caution light," Rt.
7, Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
Closed Mondavs.
8-21·6tc

Signed : Alma E. Miller.
8.2s.31p

and Wednesday . Starts at 9 a.

with

available. Phone 992-5641.

LARGE selection ol beautiful

1 WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted by any
one other than myself.

VARDSALE,Monday , Tuesday

Complete

8·21·21P

mahogany dining su ites;
bedroom outf its; also, usual
stock of other clean used
furniture, appliances at

B· _ t.p·
.23 6

peaches arriving Frid!~ A.M .

742·3656.

Notice

8·27 ·1tc

985·3816.

5 GUNS and 1.72 acre lei; Phone

Hoeflich and Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Lind.
8·2/. ltc

In the Grange
Hall al Rack Springs Fa ir
Ground an State Route 33 N,

excell ent condition; phone

Thursday A.M. Shippers Re
and White Georgia Bell e

damage in shi pping . Will take

8·2/· IIC

Yout memory is our keepsake, SALESMA N wanled, full or
pa rt time evenings, car
With which we'll never part ;
necessary. Drop a carQ with
God ha s you in hi s keeping ,
name, addrllS , ll&amp;and1pilone
We have you In ol!r heart.
rlumber to Mr. FOss. ' P. "0 .
Sadly missed by hi s parents,
Box 4133, Cincinna ti. Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Relno Lind and
45204.
grandparents, Mr. Edward

A~cllon

E.lbert~ 1970 HONDA CLIO Scrambler,

can-n ing ~each~s arrivln~

cleaning lools. Small paint CANN 1NG

BABYSITTER far 3 children in

To the one we loved so welL
It was a sudden ending ,

Red

- - - - --

"J ust a prayer from us who
REFINED woman In need of
loved you,
home to live in and care for
Precious kind and true ,·
ir'IValid woman . Nursi ng
Just to say how much we m iss
exper
ience no t ne cessa ry .
you,
Salary negot iable. Wri te E.
Because we thought the world of
Donaldson , 5440 Pheasant
you.
Drive, Orient, Ohio 43136.
You couldn 't say goodbye to us,
8-25-2tc
Perhaps 'twas 1ust as wed;
We never could l"lave said

goodbye ,

ond

.--------;,--

1971 KAWASAK I 100, like new,
$300. Phone 949·3915.
8·21·5tp
st ep -

and

. For Sale

Br ing
your . conta1ners .
8·25-31c 1971 YAMAHA 650, goad can·
Midway
Market, Pomeroy. 1973 CAMPERS and law profile
dition,
extras
inCluded,
1
8' 23-l 2tp ~K:-:E:-:N:-:N:-:::
Travel Trailers In stock,
E -::B-::E:-:C:-~
Pat:-a:-:to_e_s_ far
Phone 992·2582.
owner, $850 firm ; phone 992 Alhens, Ohio 45701 , 592·2158.
lowest
price In Tri -State area;
8·24·3tc
8·27-3tp ZIG-ZAG sewing machine, thi s win ter , nO~ ,. ready . Tom
6279.
1972 trailers, huge discount;
8·25-3tc
Sayre,
ph
one·
843-2436
.
ma chine is dressmaker
Camp Conley Staroraft Sales,
CANNIN G tomatoes and
8·2S.Jtp
model, lh fs machine makes
Rl . 62 , N. of Pf. Pleasant
mangoes . Geraldine Cleland,
MAPLE
Stereo
radio
cam
·
buttonho les, da r ns, em behind
Red Carpet Inn.
Racine.
Ohio
.
binalion, AM·FM radio. 4
G IRLS' 20" high ·r ise bike ; br oiderie s;
tak e
ove r APPLES Fitzpatrick Orchards,
o.25-7tc
8·16·tf&lt;
adult girl ·scout leader
payments ol $5.10 or pay M a
Sta.te Route 689. Phone speaker sound sys tem, 4
uniform, complet e ; phon e
spee d automatic cha nger,
Wilkesville 669-3785.
manlh ; ca ll 992 -533 1.
1910 ALLIS-CHA LM ERS HD.21 STER EQ.radl oCansole, 4 speed
992 3573.
8·23-6tc
8·17-10tc separa te controls . Balan ce
B, SN 10S1756 Hyd. full U
i nterm 1xed cha nger , ~ua I
8-27·31c
$78.29. Use aur ·budget terms .
blade
SN
6381,
21.000
Mar
k
II
vo lume control, 4 speaker
Ca ll 992·1085 .
sound sys tem, beautiful hand
8·25·6tc engine, encl osed Allen canopy
cab. Good condi tion , ready to
rubbed
Walnut finish .
work; 104 Galion Grader SN
Balance 566 .34. Use our
1972
ZIG·ZAG
sewing
machine
--GMP 20796, good condition,
budget terms . Call 992·1085.
lell in layaway . Bea utiful
N!E
'!W KJDOINb! ,
8·25-6tc
ready to work. Inquire by
HEY, SWI! WHY
pastel
color,
full
size
modeL
[ U'J.J'r EI.EN Fbt..I:A.
dialing
J
.
W.
Ashton,
CONT 'IOU ro 1\
All bui lt-in to buttonhole, do
Columbus (614) 486·9546 days MOBILE Home ail furnace,
t&lt;I&lt;IIJ twiCE f'
stretch sewing and fancy
or
(61 4) 457-0659 evenings and
lank, etc.; phone 992-5247.
stitching . Pay iust $48.75 cash
weekends
.
8·22·61p
or terms ava ilable. Trade-Ins
8·22-6tc
1
56
P
2
accepted. hone 99 · 4 .
---------AKC registered miniature
.
8·2Htc
Schnauzers. Ph . 446·2497.
'63 HONDA 300, phone 949·4012.
a.22-t2tc
VACUU M Cleaner new 1972
8·2S·Jtc
BLACK Diamond linamenf ;
cal l or write F. M. Guthr ie,

Mrs. E·thel Clark and son,
daughters.

8·21 -61c

~~A

'

For Sale

ForS~Ie

For Sale

For Sale

For Sale

'

··,

,

••'

•

Sat urday

Sunday, 367-7114.

&amp;

a.1a. 10tc

.Business Services

..

r"·::··===..::.========;-:;==========Ji';::======~==-==
I'
- --

·R
· o· OFING
eHEATING
ePLUMBING
eCARPENTR Y
eSPOU1lNG
ePAINTJ]\1'}
For Free Estimate

EARTH MOVING

Dow &amp; End loader wor",

. ponds ,

basement, land,
scaping. We have 2 sin
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.,
Free' Estimates. We also
' haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump .
trucks and low.boy lor hire.
S.e Bob or Roger Jtlten.
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525 ·
'' after 1 p.m. or phone · 992-'

.

EXPERT
.•
Wheet-AJignment
'5.5"'oJ

On Mnst Americim ~~
- GUI\RANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·

with no dawn payment ;
Valley
Estates Mobile 6 ROOM house. bath, aluminum
siding, garage, carpeting and
Homes, Rt. so East (Just East
Pornerov Home·&amp; Auto
paneling
; nail!ral ~as , ptentv
of Heck's), Athens. Ohio;
of water. 1 mile south of
phone 59J.8762.
Open 8 Til5
Middleport. Phone 991·6902.
8-25-2tp
Mond&amp;jl
lhru Saturday
a-27-3t p
5232
2
New
Homes,
all
electric,
3
•
'
PHONE 992-2550
606 E. Main, .Po~roy!. ~soxtO MOBILE HOME, $1700.
bedrooms, lull basement and ~----~--------~,,L---------------~
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH. Lake
Call Chester 985·3379.
Conchas, New MOKica. $2,975.
garage, with lake frontage;
a-24-6tp
PRICE CONSTRUCTION,
No Dawn. No Interest. $25 mo. · at Fi ve Points area.
Real
E.
s
tate
For
Sale
roofing, porch repair and
'71 - 6Sx12 mobile home, 1'12 for 119 mos . Vacation
electrica l; phone 742·4286.
Paradise.
Free
Brochure.
2 BUILDING lots, 95' x 200'
bath, phone 992·3903.
a. 16-30tc
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
each ; phone 992·57a6.
8·27-3tc
PH.
992·2571
Blue with blue interior, full power equipment, Cllmak
2001DD. Alameda, California
8·2Htc SEPT iC tanks cleaneo . Miller
94501.
-· Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
Fro·m the largest
'tAStj paid for alt makes ·anli
8·6-JOtp
OR 992·39~5
model s of .mobile homes . -----------Bulldozer
Radiat~ to the
L-------~---' l
-::---:::::::;;;:::~~-1 662·3035.
2· 12·ttc Smallest Heater Core .
Ph(J1e area code 614-4~3-9531.
-"---'
.
H3·tfc
. , •'
Nathon Boggs
CLELAND
ONLY 7-1972 OLDSMOBILE$
SEPTic
TANKS
CLtANED
..
Rodlilor Specialist
~E IISONABLE rateo. Ph . 446
REALTY
FOR
THE
BEST
deal
In
a
"""'
REMAINING AT SALE PRICES
4782, Gallipolis, John Russet;,
or used mobile home, try
601 E. Main
1
O..ner
&amp; Operolor.
P1meroy, Oh'io
Kllnauga Mobile Home Sales,
1
&gt;·12-tfc
110 Mechanic Street
Kllnaugo, 0111o.
-::-:--':--:--:--::7·16·30tC
Ph. 99H174
According to Its· Otd English
c.
BRADFORD, Auctioneer 1.~------ Pome roy
'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
derivation, the word HOUSE
Complete Service
DOtl:R and back 1\oe work,'
Phone 949·3821
· COdilile . Oldsmobile
means a place to hldo.
ponds and septic tank s; B &amp; K:
Racine',
0111o
· Air Conditionen
WHATEVER A HOUSE
E&gt;ccavating, .Phone 992·5367,'
THE
LATEST
NEW
LISTING
.'Crltf Bradlord
992.53~2
GMAC Fln1m:lng Available
Porne..,_
MEANS TO YOU, WE'LL
•Awnings
Dick Karr, Jr .
1 ~
RENOVATED - Lovely 2 bedrooms, large liv ing, nice
s.1.tfc
FINO
ONE
TO
MEET
5·21
-tf_!;
kitchen and gos forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
Eves. Tli ~Til 5 P.M. llaf, .
·• Underpinni.n g
YOUR NEEDS! CALL O'DELL WHt: t:L allgnmem . - - - - - - -- - 1
to wall carpeting. Partial basement an large lat . Asking
" You 'll Ll&lt;e "'"' QualllyWayol, ~lng,.Buslness"
TODAY.
..
,
only $11,500.00.
localedotCrossroads, Rt. 124. TUNE -UPS, brake joos ana 1
Complete mobile homE
NICE LEVEL LOT
Complete front end service,
ather a uto work . Very
~erv,lce ~ plua g igantic
I
story
- 3 bedrooms. Bath.
tune up and brake service. . reasonable · rates . Wa ines
MIDDLEPORT
'display of mobile homes
.Dining R, Utility space .
Auto Sales
Wheel s balanced elec·
Aula Service. school trained .
4 BEDROOMS - 2 baths, nice kitchen with bar and cook
Auto Sales
,always available ot ...
Paneling. Porches. A QOOll
tron lca lly .
All
work . Route 1. Shade. Ollie 992-6541,
units. Garage and den In full basement. Covered patio an
1H8 PONTIAC Catallne, 2 dr. ' 641 V.W.. goad condition, goad
neighborhood. JUST 19,acxl.
guaranteed .
lloA&lt;nnA hl •
next to Whaley' s Paint Shop!
tires; phone 992·3019.
back ·of house. Asking $24,000.00. ·
hardtop, power brakes. power
MILLER
a.25-2tp
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
roles . Phone 742·3232 or
8-'l0-12tc
steering, air conditioning,
4 bedrooms. Bath. Modern
clean. price $1195. Call bit-.
992-3213.
I·U·nc
t MOBILE HOMES
LEVEL LOT
.UTOMOBILE Insurance been
kitchen. Storm Doors &amp;
ween I a.m. and s p.m. 992· Business Opportunities
CORN ER- With a lour room house, hils gas, city water .
.
1220
Wlllllntton
Blvd,
Lost'
your
Windows. Storage buildings. ·sEWING Machine Serv1ce, · cancelled?
7076. 9 p. m. Ia 10 p. m. phone
and eleclrlc. Asking only $2,500.00.
BELPRE, D.
operator's license? Call
cleon,oll, adjust, 1399, In your
992·7076 or 992·733-4.
SERVICE Stotlon for lease. '423-7521
.
1'12 ACRE of ground. CLOSE
home ; phone 992.5331.
29611·24-Jic
Excellent location . Paid
IN $16,900.
LOTS- LOTS - LOTS
6-1S·tfc
811·30tC
, POMEROY
--.....,.---:-:=:-:::-:::--::tnlnlng . Phone 992·5228-12. ' -6tc
I ACRE - Nlct laying on high ground . Chester water
WILL SACRIFICE ' 72 Olds
•
EXCELLENT- 2 bedroom
available. 11 lots In all.
-MIX
CONCRETE iEW ING ,;...... Hir'lt:~. Repelr
Real Estate For Sale
Delli 88, vinyl roof, air,
home with walk·ln cloaets. :READY
dellvtred
right
to !'Our servia., oil makes. 992·2214.
Lorge living room with
power steering, power • · nt·.l
}!Ai: IN E ~ 10 room house~
pro/ec'l.
Fast
and
easy.
FrH. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
'· brakes, low mileage. Phont '
IN
fi replace. Modorn kllchon · est motu: Phone 992-328•,'
bath, baaemont, garage,~
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
Authorized Singer Sales and
367-7530.
and dining. Utlllly. 2 car
1ots. Phone 9ol9·o1313.
·•
5 BEDROOMS - Near downtown shopping, nice kitchen
8-24-6tc· 2 or · 3 ACRES of . land.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,j . ,Service. We Sharpen Seiners.
garoge . Porches. JUST
ol-5·ttp:
with double sink. 2 porches and full basement. Agood buy
Middleport, 0111o.
.. ;
. ~29-tlc
·
Preferably In Fittwoods area
S12,900.
at only $7,500.00.
'69 PLYMOUTh GT 4.40, Hpted,
or on good hard surfac:ed ---....,..,.,----,-.
•
6·30·tfC
7 ROOM house and ·bath, newly
WE HAVE THE CON eleclrlc windows, Jood
road. Phone 992-6147.
:l:E:lJS FOR: Awnmgs, 'term j
~alnted,
Union
Ave .,
'wt LL Db light ha uling In ii. ·doors and windows, carports, • .1
condition. Phone 992·7 4 or
8-27-Jtc
TACTS, USE THEM FOR
LOOK FOR THE REO, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN, THEN
·
temoons . Phone 992.:i;Ol,
Pomeroy, phone 992·5641.
marq-., aluminum '-ldlng •
' " Nick Coates, Pomeroy;
THE SALE OF YOUR
YOU'LL KNOW IT' S FOR SALE . BUY FROM YOUR
8-27-Jtp OLD Furniture;·; oak tabies;·
8·27-6tc and r1lllng. ··A. Jacob, 11111 i
1·22·6tp
PROPERTY. JUST A
LOCAL BROKER; IT' S GOOO BUSINESS AND FOR .
r•preMntative •. F'Or 1ree' ,
organa, dilhtl, tloc:ks. braa . .-:----~---­
PHONE CALL AWAY.
THE ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'RE TRYING
estimates,
"Phone Charles
bldl,orcompletehOUHholds.
HOUSI;,
Chesler,
Ohio,
5
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
Sr.
1972 CAMARO VI, automallc,
FOR A BIGGER AND BETTER YEAR .
Lisle, Syracuse, V , "
Write M. D, Miller, At. 4, raorns, .beth, garage, 1 acre.
wllh power steering. Phont
REALTOR
Johnson and Son, Inc .
Pomeroy, Ohio, Call 992 6271. Phone 992·2355.
"2·1259
992-55S2.
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
6-21-tfc 1
1-24-Jip
8-U·JIC
J.2·1f·
fino
--:----.-::-:--

NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS

"OWN A
CADD.I.AC,

Of Course You Can"
CADILLAC

'1295

-

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

-

SMITH NELSON

MOTORS. INC.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT .

.

i

ClPen

r •

.

a

=====;:T;;;;-;::=

\

,...

m

to Buy

-----....,..-

'

-•-'"·2NI

�'

'·

26 - The Thnef.SenUnel, Sunday, Allll. fl,

In Memcry

'

.,

1m

.

Notice

IN LOVING memory of Ora
DAY I!'ARE ,
Edna Cromllsh who passed SUN VALLEY Nursery School, .
away Aug. 26, 1971.
licensed by State ol Ohio, 1'1&gt;
In lov ing memory of you.
miles west of new hospital .
Mother,
Sun Vallev Dr. Ph. 446'577
As lime has wrought another
3657. Day care that says " we
year
·
care." · Madge · Hauldren;
How we miss your loving
Owner ; Loredilh &amp; John
presence
Hauldren, Operalors.
For you are no longer here.
114-H·
May you .rejoice with the angels
In !hat land of beauti~s rare
MALE student attending Ohio
4

No more suffering , no more
heartaches

University needs roommate
to share housetrailer. Quiet

..

•

~

•

'

I

.

~

...

~

.

Rul Estate For Sale

RUSSELL·
.\WOO .
REALTOR

Real Estate For SaiP

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT
RE-ALTY .

REALTY

&gt;

25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 444-2674
Lucille Bronnon
Eve. 446-1226

.446-1066

' Wnrld's' Largest

ANTIQUE ANTICS
1HE LEAOER SINCE IJOO IN
In that city bright and fair .
location. Ph. 446-4813.
I&lt;N ANTIQUE is something that
SERVING THE NATION'S
All is peace and happiness
202-3 no one would want If there
SERVICE
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
As you walk the streets of gold -::-:-::-::-:---- --__:
were more of them.
YES, Personalized servi&lt;:e
Ph. 446·00011
In thai city that's called Hea ven YAR 0 Sale at Jack McGinness;
whether in listing or selling.
.
FARMS
Where you never stiall grow old.
Te xas Rd .. Monday and YOU might just like this nice 3
Caii ·Brannon Really - It will
Sadly missed by her
Tuesday, 10 to 4. ·
pay.
ONE of Gailia Co.'s better
bedroom ~ , ...,e, 4"11liles from
202-2

Children and Grandchildren.

202-1
--------------

Help Wanted

ANNUAL CONFERENCE
MEETING
OF THE Gospel Tabernacle
ASsociation, Inc. of Patriot,

Ohio. Tentmeeling . Aug . 21
thru Aug. 27. Services Evening 7:30 p.m. Sunday
1:30 p.m.. Speakers Monday Eve., Rev . Addle

$MONEY$
Full or Part Time
Applications ·now

Lintz,

being

taken tor men and women.
Immediate open_
ing, must be

neal and dependable. Call
~rsonnel

Dept., 9 a.m. to S

p.m. Monday and Tuesday,
446·06,4.

BABYSITTER in my home 8
miles out 141. Ph . 379·2612:
202-3
::-::--:-:-::-:-~---

00 YOU NEED extra year
around Income? Beeline
Fashions is your answer. New
wardrobe each season. Call

446·4146.

202-3

:-------

SOMEONE with brush hog . Rio
Grande 245-5320.
---:--- - ---.:.202 -3

2

etc. Bob's Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. 446-4517.
16-lf

Wanted To Do

YAR_D SALE . Rear 128 State.
Fnday and Saturday, begins 9 BABYSITTING in my home in
Cenlenary, Ph. 446-0028.
a.m.
200-6
199-3
REMODELING, building new
rooms,

HUMANE SOCIETY
MEETING

cement,

roOflng,

siding, furnace Ins. J . H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.
68-H
-----.,..,-BABYSITTING in my home,

Office 446-1 066
Evening Call:
Ron Conaday,446-3636 ,
Russell D. Wood, 446-4618
Jahn I. Ri~hards, 446-0280 .

CONTRACTORS EQUIPMENT
1970 ALLIS-CHALMERS HO .
21 B

The WISEMAN
Agency

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. 44&amp;.1998

REALTOR

CHESHIRE - Spiii-Le'"l, 8 yr .
old, S rms., large balh, llv.
rm ., t8'x24' wifh F.P .. all

Cheap
housi ng , real nice, 3 bd . rm.,

-------

163 A. -

Beef, hog and grain

farm .

BT road in
School Dist.

base .,

-

with

SELLING at the rate of 2 or 3
properties each week makes
tr d ilfij:UII to kel!'p enough
l1stlngs. If you want yours
sold. cal l the Wiseman
Agency.

partial

you get ctcfse to S20,000, it's
all yours .

s

rm . frame,
H.W. floors, attach gar., fuel.

New Listing

30 A - Vinton area, like new . · oil fur ., storm doors and
windows, aluminum siding, ·
mobile home.
nice shrubbery and level loT.
Some can be bought with a
very small down payment.

Whether build ing or buying a
mobile home, call today .

12x6S MOBILE HOME on a 1 A.

very attractive Redwood Is
prIced in m ld Twenties and
is located at edge of town In.!
quiet spot . with no close
neighbors. Very nice kit chen, liv ing room , dining and
hall al l carpeted . See this one
now.

Price $20.000.

INVESTMENT - In city. good
business location, plus 2 Aprt.
rentals (could be JL Business
bldg . includes grocery and
meat processing equipment .
Potential income from Apt .
rentals $225 per mo. Price

New ListingBasement

lot. lik.e new, completely
$21,500,
furnished, tip out rm ., central
air , large patio with awning,
cellar and utility building EUREKA - River view, shady

WHERE else can you buy this
much for S6,800? Large lot
100'x100', four room home
plus all ff'le furniture. OINner
moving to Florida.

dining room, part basement,
gas forced air fur . garage and
outbuildings. 3 Acres of land,
well fenced.

built-in
kitchen
with
refrigerator, ai r cond,, all
drapes and curtains, $14,500.

VINTON

-

Completely

remodeled 2 story home with

OWNER

built-in kitchen, air cond and

·

lot. 6 rms . full dry base., H.W.

garage and plenty good
water . This house is built of
good materjals and well
constructed. Price $17,500.

Owner-Wants House
Sold This Week

plenty water, rooms are
paneled with tile ceilings .
Priced at $11,600 and included
the washer , dryer, and
cookstove and heating stove.

1 YEAR old 3 bedroom brick
(move- tomQJ row ). Just like
new throughout , wall to wall
carpet, 2 baths , beaut iful
kitchen (range oven built in), large rooms, large flat
lot in new sub -di vision .
$28,000.

We Have
25 New Homes
To Choose From

home, sound, wale!' fine, 2 A ·

·

to work .
NEW LISTING - CITY - KERR - All brick. HW and
Lovely 2 BR home on a flat
carpet firs., 7 rms. plus full
WALLPAPERING and pain shady lot. Can be bought base .. I A. lot. II has 3 baths
DISTINCTIVELY
ling , Call after S p.m. 446-9865. INQUIRE by dialing J. W.
furnrshed or unfurn ished.
and 2 car garage . Pri ce
DIFFERENT
202-1 Ashton. Columbus, Ohio (614)
486-9546 days, (614) 457-0659 IOEALL Y located . one story
reduced to SJS,OOO.
evenings and weekends.
PRice
bnck - All elednc - with a MIDDLEPORT home need painting,
Episcopal
Parish JOESlour
reduced . Lovely 12 rm . brick ST. RT. 218 - New . all elec .. S
197-6
picturesque
view
of
the
Ohio
siding, roofing , remodeling ,
on a corner lot . Could be used
r ms ., 2 car gar ., viny l sid . on
Ri ver .
W-W
&lt;:arpet
house, Second Avenue.
paneling, cement work,
.7 A. lot. $18.000.
as 2-3 or 4 apartments .
throughout,
well
designed
barbecue, patios, or garage, · For Rent
kitchen,
double
oven,
garage,
carport. etc.? You name 11. 4 BEDROOMS, kitchen. living
2 barns, tobacco base, 96 POMEROY - Rem odeled older BABY FARM - Loca ted on
we' ll do i t. Reasonable rates .
SEVERAL varieties of top
room , famll~ room, 2 baths on acres of land, priced low i n
Carter Rd .. s A., 2 stor y
home. Now being rented for
Call 446-0126 or 446-17S3.
quality tree ripened canning
large lot in Cheshire, $175 per today's market.
house,. 6 rm s., bath , la undry,
SlSS
per month . l ow down
119-tf
pe~ches, now available thru
month. Call I-614-836-33SO.
panel1ng &amp; ca rpet . It has
payment on $17,500 .
early. September. Bob' s
cellar, chicken house, storage
200-3
BUYING OR SELLING
Market, Mason, just above ROOF lNG and gufter work .
bldg . and garage. Plenty good
CALLUS
MILLSVILLAGE
Immediate
William Mitchell, 388-8507.
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
water . Price Sl4 ,900 .
HOME
with
air
BRANNON
REALTY
occupancy,
lovely
1
story
MOBILE
Phone 773-5308.
67-tf

SOME are finished ready tor

7:30 P.M.

occ upancy. other!!. in all
different stages of con struction You name It and
we ' l l have . Look now before
someone else buys the one
yo u wanted. We will help you
l in d the financ ing If it's
humanly. poss ible . Call Ike
Wise man tor all details.

------

Bargain Hunters
Here's A Bargain

- - - - - --

192-H

='7::-::-::-:-:-::---

I'ARAGE SALE F'iday,'
Saturday and Monday, 25, 26
and 28, At Evergreen

old

011

Rt. 160. Hand crocheted cape

and a new electric saw wig'
clothing, antique rock~,
misc. Items.
,

and

- - - : - -- - - - =201 -3
RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning . Service. Free
estim4tes. Ph. 446-0294, Ralph
A ~ _Dav.ls, owner .

_____

__;:J·tf

GLASS for all needs. Home
serv ice and Insurance claims .
Russ 's Glass Service, 70A Pine

Sf.. Rio Grande, Ohio. 2455048.
180-tf

------

Hoyt King wants you to
know that a bird in the hand
can be miRhty ticklish.
l

•

•

The oak leaf is symbolic of strength, honor,
glory-and backaches if
you have to rake !eaves
from under one of 'em.

PUBLIC
.NOTICE
We sell anything for
anybody. Bring your
Items· to Knotts Communi.t;y Auction Born.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. .
For oppointment *all
446-2917. Sale tvery
Saturdoy · Evening •I
70'Ciock.

TOOL

sharpening

conditioning, 2 bedroom , 322 - -- - - - -Third Ave. Ph . 446-3748 or 256-

saws,

scissors and shears, ,mowe.-.
blades, drill bits, barber

clippers, and cutlery. Sharp
Shop, ofley .rear 147 Second

Ave.

home with full basement,
Pr ice
formal dining room , fam ily GREEN ACRES reduced on this beauty, .4 Yt
6903.
room, 2 WB fireplaces
200-6
paftJ
lOOxJOO lot.
' old ran·ch , -H~ w ; - floorj~
beautiful kitchen , 3 Bd. rms .,
for Gallla CoUflly PRICE
NEW 2 bedroom mo blie homes . Headquarters
Real Estale. Listings needed .
reduced to $14,500! 2 Ph baths. This house Is like
new. Only S22.SQO.
Will lease or rent by week or
story home offers 4 BR, large

...

ii ¥;1D

Building Lots
2 Acres
EXCELLENT flat land for

Eldorado, frt. wheel
vinyl top, air. sharp.

NEW &amp; USED
1-'BEAMS, Channel, angle,
sheet and plate steel, rounds,

drive,

SINGER Sewtn'g MBchlne Sales
a. Service. All models In
stock. Free delivery . Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from S69.9f French City
Fabric Shoppe. Singer approved dealer, 58 Court Sl.
Ph. &lt;116-9255.
308-tf

1969 Chev. Pickup

adventure
camper.

'1395

pkg.

Nice

Two To Choose from. Red,
White. Were $895.00.

for

"SELL THE AUCTION

'795

On Route 33 just north of Athens, Ohio Signal Hill Farm No.2 (Next to Valley Trailer
Court): Mr. Cottingham is tired of the Dairy •
Business after 30 years and is going to
discontinue milking at Signal Hill Farm No.2 .

26 HEAD HOI.SlEIN OOWS! !
The entire herd will be sold. Good Young
Cows, 9 First Calf Heifers, 6 Fresh recently.
Remainder in all stages of lactation'. All from
artificial breeding - Herd has been artificially bred for years. Replace your Cull
Cows now for high fall production.
Health Papers Furnished .
Welcome to View
At Any Time!
Terms: Cash. Not Responsible for accidents.

E. A. COTTINGHAM, OWNER,
287 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO
Phone 614-593-8089

SHERmAN'S AUCTION SERVICE
Phone 614-448-2033

"Oae llmud, clip A11ve."

three

Aluminum Building s
Specia I Prices
During-July &amp; August

mobile homes. Present in·

r--------------------·

------

PAY ONLY ONE.UTILITY

------2 BEOROOM trailer . Hen·

derson , W. Va . 675-4130.
3 LOTS, 83 1-3 by ISO ft. each,
' 202-6 One mile from town , city
water. Phone 446-3933 after 5
p.
m.
For Trade
19_4•12
1963 SPORTS JAGUAR, would _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
like to trade for large
NEW 3 bedroom home with
moJorcycle. Call 446-4749.
brick front, 1 car garage 120
199- ~
It. frontage 1'/, miles from
-:;:---,---=------,~
rew hospital on Rt. 160, Call 2 BEDROOM TBWNHOUSES
Camping Equipment
367-7846 or 367-7481.
·JUST arrived. 1973 Starcraft
166-tf
Campers. All 1972 llnits huge
discount. We service what we
sell. Camp Conley Starcraft· FOR SALE by owner, New 3
Sales. 62 North or Point. bedroom home, less than 10
Pleasant behind Rad Carpet' miles from Gavin plant. For
Inn.
details call 367-7598.
For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250
200-6
- - - - - - -.....:.163-H

TARA

'

.

•·

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
NEW HOMES FOR SALE

.SPLIT LEVEL.

123'h Pine St.

Ph. 446-2783

67 FORD GAL 500
71 MERCURY COUGAR

CONVERTIBLE

2 dr . hardtop, V-8, auto., p. steering.

lac. air cond ., vinyl roof, bucket
seats, fa c. stereo tape system, w-s-w
tires, w-eavers, local ly owned In

I

'1095
65 BUICK WILDCAT

'695

· For Sale

ALL 1972
CHRYSLERS

65 CHEV.II

'795

4 dr. sedan. 6 cyl. engine, auto.
trans ., radio. Nl&lt;:e.

3 BR, 2112 baths, family room, basemint; ·lotaf electric
with Williamson heating and contra I· air coodltionlng
General Electric appliances, fuf!y carpeted, landscaped:
concrete drive &amp; streets, 2'12 car garage, dining balcony,
lot 9Sx175, co!u.'!_ty~~ter, Tara sewer system.

CONTEMPORARY
3 BR, .ilf&gt; baths, family room, basement, 1 car garage,
total electric with Williamson heeling and central air
conditioning, General Electric appliances, fully corpeted,
landscaped, concrete drive &amp; stree!t, dining ba !cony lot
?S•175, co~nty watir, Tore sewer system.
'

DUTOf COLONIAL BI-I.EVIL

3 SR. 2 baths, farge family roam, belomant 2 car garage
total electric· with Williamson heating a~d central al;
candltlonlng,, General Electric appliances, fully corpeled
landscaped, concrote drive &amp; streets, dining balcony, lot .
9Sx17S, county waler_,_Tere sewor system.

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENTS

.

.367-7250 '

ADDI

OHIO

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Grande. Phone 245-5115.
6-tf

- - - -- -

1972 ZIG.ZAG Sewing Ma cnone

and

left in layaway. Beautiful
pa stel color. full size model.
All built.in to buttonhole , do
stretch sew ing and fancy
st ilching . Pay just $48 .75 cash
or terms available. Trade·ins
accepted . Phone 446-4578.

PLYMOUTHS
66 CHEV. BELAIR

00

'495

4 Door, 8 cyl. eng ine, auto. trans .

- - - - --

69 MERCURY MONTEGO

Make Sure You Check With Us Before You
Buy.

'1595

10 Passenger Station Wagon, V-8.
aut. trans .. P. steering, P. brakes,
lac. air cond., luggage rack, wheel
covers, w-s-w tires. radio. tinted
glass, 19,000 miles.

Gal_
ripolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

2 dr. hardtop, p. steering, p. brakes,
foe . air, vinyl roof with many other
extras. Locally owned .

suite. living room suite, Speed
Queen automatic washer .

'1995

BASSET pup, AKC reg.. 31!&gt; MARBLE top dresser, ph. 388mooths, shots completed. 4468455 . Calf alter 4 p.m.
9836.
201-3
201 -6 - : : - : - : - - - : - - - 1967 FORD Mustang, clean,
"LOVE"
means
A.K.C .
reasonable. Ph. 388-8158.
Weimaraner Pup9wk•. Loyal
201 -3
Companion, top obed. Alert -""":c--~---watch clog and hunter . 379- 1966 CHEVELLE Conv. far sale
2597.
or trade. S85CI. Ph. 256·1354
201-4 after 6.
201·3

-----:-:-

USED FURNIT.UR'E - - - - -

suNK bed set complete with
springs and mattresses or can
be used as trundle bed - 3
real nice 2 pc. living roam
·suiiiiS - 2 coucheS - 2 ·end
tables - real nice desk with
chair- Speed Queen wringer
washer - twin size box
springs and mattress with
fogs - old t•ucl!"
·

. RICE'S

NEW &amp; . USED FURN.ITURE

1154 Socond An., -.nu
201-H

-1-11-~---

USED - Dinette set with six
chairs, black and white TV.

MOBILE ·HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE lfDMES
1966 Schull 121150, 2 bedroom
1961 Nuhuo 10xSO, 2 bedroom
1954 Andonon Bx36, 1 bedroo1T1
196'1 Cepolla SOx12, 2 bdrm.
1968 Kirkwood 60x12, 2 bdrlfl.
1962 Gibraltar 55x10, 2 bdrm
1&amp;5 MOBILE HOMES

SoCOIIII

&amp; Vlond St.
Pl. PIHwnt

(Ned to Heck's)

.171-tt

Plenty of free parking. Open
Friday until 8. Corbin and
Snyder, 955 Second Ave. 4461171.

189-tl

------

-------~14.0-tf
WILL sacrifice 72 Olds Delta 88,
vrnyl roof, air, PS, PB, low

V-8 engine,
Auto .
Tran ·
smission

200-6
CHILO'S PADDED ca r seat. $7.
Ca ll 446-0782.
200-3

·6s CSSO FORD tilt cab truck, 20
ft . aluminum van body, sale
or trade, new paint and tires ,
Good condit io n, also 1969
Camara drag car and 1972
Corvette, dr iven 5,000 mil es,

1969 DfRYSLER

mileage. Ph . 367-7530.

446-3273

G(lllipolts

For Sale

For Sale
Brown occ . chair, Kenmore
auto. washer, 3 pc. bedroom

69 CHEV. CAPRIQ

------

1970 DODGE
0.100 1f2 TON
PICKUP TRUCK

1970 FORD

1970

SUPER VAN

VOLKSWAGEN

V-8 engine

2 Qoor Sedan
With Air Cond.

Office Equip. Made to order,
Signs of all kinds.

DUSTER, on~

'695

available. Phone 446-4578.
198-6

TOP

20" X 24". Sl2.SO to $30 pair. ·
446-1397. Simmons Pig . &amp;

1972 GOLD

'3495

mode l. Compl ete with all
clean ing tools . Small paint
damage in shipping . Will ta ke
$27 cash or budget plan

MAGNETIC car ana HU l; l\.
signs . Available 6112" x 18" to

EXAMPLE:

71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE

198-6

VACUUM Cleaner new 1972

OVER COST

2 Or. Hardtop, V-8, aut. trans., P.
steering, vinyl roof. one owner,
white with blk. vinyl roof.

' . ' ''

KANAUGA, OHIO

Gallipolis, 0.

Eastern Ave.

4 Or. hardtop. V-8. auto. trans .. p.
steer ing , low mileage. locally
owned. Sharp.

I

Nobody knows small trucks like Datsun
'1095
·WOOD MOTOR SALES . , '"""·'· ··"'"-·SMITH A U·TO. - SA·LE·S·

68 FORD GAL 500

•

SOUTHERN COLONIAL

Datsun's new
Li'l Bustier.

289 cu . i~ . V-8 engine, aut. tran s., P. steering ,
W-S-W t1res, red finish with black tap, 33,000
actual miles.

'3195

I

4 BR, 2 baths, Family room, total electric with Williamson
Heating and Central air conditioning, Gene.·al Electric
appliances. fully carpeted, landscaped, conc~te drive &amp;
streets, 2'1l car garage, dining balcony, lot 75X:l75, county
water, Tara sewer system.

Meet

GALLIPOLIS
BLOCK CO.

Long wheel base, 8 cyl. engine,
excellent cond. with exception of
tires.

LOTS FOR SALE

12'x65• Mobile Home

together with 'h acre lot on
Raccoon Creek. Al l util ities.
Year round home Or vacation
retreat. Space for boat dock.
Cash for my equity, take over
· payments or wha tever. Call
256-132 1. Must see to ap.
prec1a1e .

30
- MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36 MONTHS

INVESTMENT PROPERTY -

come to owner over S250 per
2
2 STORY house, partly
month plus his home . Now Is
baths. modern kitchen, buillremodeled,
full
s1ze
the time fo buy this money
In elec. stove. city schools,
basement, 2 car garage, new
maker.
large lot. 446-0865 .
storm windows and doors, 1:14
LOCATED
on
Raccoon
Road
Evenings
·
202-3
near Cheshire. Call 367Oscar Baird, 446-4632
10XSO MOBILE home, fur - large home and garden plots ' acres
7114 after 5: 30p.m.
adjacent to large existing
D. J. Wetherholt, 446-4244
nished, 446-0865 .
187-12
Steven R. Belt, 446-9583
202-3 brick residence also beautiful - - - -- mobile home sites. Roads,
3 BEDROOM house, 446-0196. Electricity, Water Mains and
202-3 u~derground Telephone lines.
Foeld Office open from Noon
------MODERN 2 bedroom air unfit dark. Offered by Hobart
conditioned apartment, clean. Dillon and Russel Bailey,
Owners . P. 0 . BQx 516
ELECTRICITY
Ph. 446-4923.
.
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 .'
'.
202 3
We furnish Water · Sewage . Garbage Collection . Ample
- - ' - - - - - - - -- 193-tf
Parki"'! · TV Antenna • Wall-to-Wall Corpetlng •
MEN, Tired of Hotels and - - - - - - - - Draperoes
• Ranges . Refrfgerotors . Air Conditioning .
restaurant food? A clean ,
Gar_bage Dispos.Jis. Dishwashers . Heat Lamps . Privato
quiet room with refrigerator 2 - THREE bedroom · all
Patoos . Swimming Pool • Clubhouse.
·
electric
homes .
Call
and cooking facilities. SJS
Lakeview Estates 992-3975 or
month. Utliilles ald. 446-4416
992-2571 .
after 6 p.m.
202-6

1972 -

64 CHEV. PICKUP

bedroom horne plus two good

.

1970 HONDA 175 Scram bler.
Call 446·2217.

198-S

AUCTION
_SERVICE

.

2 BEDROOM trai ler, 63 model.
Ph . 446-4537.

- - -- - - )

we ll and coun ty water,
complete ly furn is hed and
ready to move in .
redecorated

7 USED heavy interior
with hardwar e, new misc.

p .m .

·ptl 446-3444

Nice

198·6

$795. Ph. 446-3891 after 5: 30

'

•ay s~eppard446-lltltlt
Denver K. Higley 446-0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur 446-0003

AKC r egis tered miniature
Schnauzers. Ph . 446-2497.

specia l sale now
on!
Tawney's 422 Second Ave.
I 56.If
7
-;:,9;::;7:;;
0-;-65o;;·c-;s"'sii"'t~
ig':"h~fn-:-in'"'g-,-m-u...;st sell

-AUCTIONEER

All electric five room
house,
15
acres.
Mercerville area. Ph .
256·6588.

use. Ph. 379-2166.

Was $1695.00.

'1895

COMPLETE line .qf men'•
.Pipes, G. B. 0., Ch•,.tari .
B.E! .s ., Jaby and Sav1ne11 o·

JIMME _SAYRE

.GOOD CLEAN used furn . 60X12 MOBILE home . 2
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn. 446- bedroom . Furnished or un 9523 .
furnished in Merc:ervllle In
walking distance of both
170-tf
schools. Ph. 256-6816.
202-3

. NEW tobacco sticks, ready to

.1969 Dodge Pickup 1966 VOLKSWAGEN
Long bed, V-8, 27,000 miles.

123-H

------

--:-:--~---

$350. Call 446-3891 after 5: 30
p.m.
196-6
- - - - -- -

panel ing . Ph . &lt;46·4336,

---.,..----~

OHIO RIVER
Realty

The brand-new Datsun Pickup. In just 13 years the Datsun Pickup
has become the No. 1 selling import truck in America. Our new Li'l Hustler
,,-- - ----"'
is designed to carry on the tradition.
It's a sensational-looking vehicle. There's the roomier,
full-vinyl cab with contoured seat, restyled instruments and
new power-flow ventilation system. There's a new two-stage
suspension, engineered to deliver a smooth ride whether light
or loaded. Best of all. there are new po)l'ler-assist brakes.
From Li'l Hustler we carry over all the things that
made us No. I in' the first place. Overhead cam engine that
delivers up to 25 miles per gallon. 6·foot all-steel load bed
with tie-down hooks. Rugged 4-speed fully-synchronized stick
shift. 6-ply-rated whitewalls. 5 including spare.
Drive the all-new Li'l Hustler today. ll's a whole lot of
little truck, from the people who should know.

15• FIBERGLAS boat. 35 hp ,

SpeciaL 2 Dr ., Air Cond., VB,
Auto. Trans.

'1995

materials, block, brick, sewer
pipes, window•, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.

New GMC
Truck Hoa~uarters
1962 v, fon GMC Pickup
1966 'I• ton GMC Pickup
1969 Oids 88
For Sale
'68 VW Red with blk . l nt~rlor .
Radio. Good Shape with air
shocks with whl . adapters .
Only $875 . Also Torquefllte
trans. with Chevy adapter ·
cheap. 446-2416.
1970 International Dump Truck.
Extra clean.
1969 2 T. GMC
'1967 Jeep Station wagon
19M o;, T. GMC PU
1961 Jeepsler
.
1967 '-'! .ton Chevrolet plckupl.i
1967 '14 T. Chev. PU
1964 '!l T. GM PU
biJ4 1/l T. GMC PU
New 11 II, camper
1966 ¥o ·T. GMC
1968 'h T. GMC PU
1960 - 1 Ton Ford flat .
1967 - •;, Ton GMC PickuP
1964 - CO 1600 International
truck
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1963 F600 Ford Truck
1966 ~ ·r:-GNiC PU
SOMMER'S . G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 PI,. St.
446-2532

"

1°6·6

1968 BUICK

Long bed, V-8, cust . cab, worth
more.

-----AL.L TYPES of building

- - -- --

wanted 1o tluy

handrubbed walnut console .
Pay ,balan ce of $96.80 or pay
$8 a month . Cal l 446·0255 .

'1495

Co ., Nelsonvltle,

----,--,---

8 TRACK sler eo in lovely

We like be· • No.I
so much we ' . cided
to do it again.

Evinrude. El ectric starter ,
ski equipment and trailer

mesh, rail, pipe, culverts and
equlpme~l . Prompt drilling .
Ohio, P, 0 . Box 298 , Ph. 7531554. Call collect.
181 -lf "

Call 446·0255.

26,000 miles, radio, one owner .
Sharp.

'3995

flats, reinforcing bars and ·
Neiman

Thi s mach ine makes bull on
holes , darns. em b .. all without
attac;:hments. Pay balance of
$39.41 or pay S6 per month .

1970.MAVERICK

------

SATURDAY, SEPT. 2 12:30 P.M.
ATHENS, OHIO

____

..

VER:Y

Neal Realty

DAIRY DISPERSAL!

..__

--

box springs S29-up, 955 Secon&lt;
Ave. 446-1171.
10·1'

AT SPECIAL
LOWER PRICES

154-tf

1972 ZIG ZAG sewi ng machine.

.CORBIN &amp; SNYDe-R
SERTA a. Bemco Mattresses t

month . Call 446-0683 or 446- 45 ACRES 1
formal dining room full
Home building In dandy
FARMS '
139-tf.
0008.
County G ~m f In Vlntoo basement• . lots of shade 15 A. modern S rm . home, 5 rural neighbOrhood, 5 minute
trom town . City school
190-tf
pond Rem~ fede7ces and trees. Route 141.
barns, 15 A. development drive
d istri ct ,
rural
water .
•
h
- - - - - -- -- e
wo
•tory
.
1
land. one of Gallia Co.'s best. Beaut iful at SS,OOO. Don't
S~a~ c~~.;;t S':'n:, decor. BELIEVE it or not! 4 rm s. bath 160 A. on St. Rt. 325, 100 A. miss
2 BEDROOM trailer . Phone 367seeing them , only 3 left .
We need 'male and female
7329.
bath and part ba
roo ms, and basement in city for less
tractor land. good bldgs. and
1
applicalions. Apply in person
Summer Cottage
190-tf
semen ·
than ss.ooo. Make us an offer.
plenty water .
only. No phone calls. Bob
104 ACRE Beef and Dairy.
Ranny Blackburn
204 A. near Lecta , lot s of t im On Raccoon Creek
Evans Steok House and Bob
TWO new trailers all electric, lf•
ber , 7 rm . house, 2 barns and
Farm. 6 room home. 2 barns.
Branch Manager
SLE
EPS 8, is fully turn Ished
Evans Drive-in.
Deep well. State Rt. 554. Call _ _ _ _ _ __;:.__ _
mile off Rl, 7. Call 446·1405 or
only $25.000.
and ready to use, road and
446·3468.
....ill A S mi. lrom Cheshire, on cr eek frontage . Approx . P/1
Th is farm reduced
181:11 ~46-4127.
Ward Rd .. no bldgs., un acres. $8,500.
s~. ooo due to retirement. Will
derlaid with coal. S20,000.
BABYSITTER Wanted for 2 :7
.
SL- E::-E::-P:-I-N_C._ R.:00
-- M'"'
s;_w_,
eekly
trade for home near town.
PRICE REDUCEO
Owner Anxious
23 A. Lincoln Pike , 7 rm . house,
year old child, References
rates.
Park
Central
Hotel.
barn
and
tab.
base
.
THE PRICE of this 14 acr~s
FOR: S19,900 here's a real
required . Mon. thru Fri., 7:30
308-tf 2 ACRE, roomy 2 bedroom
with 4 room block home ha s
fin e J bedroom home. nic e PIPES, Pipe•. Pipes, GBO,
to 5:30 p. m. P~ . 446-0918.
kitchen (rang e.oven), large
been reduced Sl.OOO. Located 90 A. plus, 30 A. tillable barn
200-3
Cheratan, BBB , Jobey ,
bath, basement, fen plenty water, good fences '
living room. hardwood
APARTMENT for construction home,
1112
miles
lrom
Vinton
on
Hilson,
and others . Tawney's
ced,
pines.
Addison
Twp
..
floors , flat lot, Jlh mile out
many young walnut, fob, bas~
men. Ph. 446-0756.
Keystone Road, it is fenced
$14,500 ,
Pipe
and
Trophy House. 422
SMALL gas motor repairman .
near
new
hospital.
we
sold
2
and most underlaid with coa l
267-tf
and most could be farmed or
Second Ave.
Apply In person, 43 Court St.
$15.750.
. in this neighborhood in 2
,.------used for pasture.
days. Belter Hurry .
199-tf
ACRE, 6 room two story
196-tf .
NICE sleeping rooms. $20 per 7 home,
WOULD CONSIDER
ANY HR. 446-19'8
State
Rt.
160,
Only
week. Lakeview Estates. Call
TRADING
"Cheapie"
111 ,200.
FEMALE receptionis t for
992-3975 or 992-2571.
3 BR HOME, full basemen! and
OLD ~ r oom br i ck on u Saturday clinic. For more
174-tf LOTS and small acreage for re cently re decora te d .
cellenl lot. Edge of town,
information call 446-0166 - - - - - - - - r~ldenhal or business, l lf1
Located at 27 Evans Heigh Is.
lots worth pri ce S5 , 400 .
·between 9 a.m. and 12 noon . SLEEP ING rooms for rent.
mole from Medical Center
Woul d consider trading for
Make offer .
198·7
Gallla Hotel. 446-9715.
Green Twp.
·
farm or Mob ile Home .
- - -- - THIRD AVE. &amp;
181 -lf
35 ACRES. 2'1&gt; miles from
MATURE lady to babysit for - - - - - - - - - ...- VINTdN, nice 2 bedroom home
SPRUCE ST.
Gallipolis. Ph . 446-4657.
one child from 8 to 5. Call 446- COTTAGE 2 rooms and bath, on Jackson St. Garden. Call 2 FAMILY dwelling with 4
202-6
1665.
452 Second Avenue
suitable for elderly couple or 2 446-4127
room s each and bath ea ch
446-3434 446-4775
'WAY" .
201 -3
ladles. Ph. 256-6233. price SSO
·
·
apt . Already rented . Buy
3 STORY building country
plus utilities.
NEAR hospllal. 4 aqe farm ;
1
today and start collecting FOUR ROOMS IN CITY - Nice
store, 1h acres.large garage.
small home for retiree or
rent.
201 -3 remodeled 3 bdrm. home,
SOON the children will be back
Ph . 643-9304.
couple. All clfy services, close
forced air heat, rural water .
Office Phone ~~6 - 1694
in school, what will you do - : : - - - - - - - - to st ores, beautiful area.
Price $11.500. See today!
Evenings
with your time? Sell Avon. FURNISHED apartment,
priced
under $10,000.
completely
remodeled,
new
·
Charles M. Neal, 446-1546
.
..
Call or write Mrs. Helen
furniture and appliances. All
J. Michael Neal, 446-1503
Yeager, Box 172, Jackson,
PLUSH MOBILE HOME utilities paid, adults only.
Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
Five rooms with bath plus
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn .. 4469523.
additional 20 x 2.8 ~ullding .
Plenty of water with drilled
201 -tf
BY OWNER

-----FURN . home, 4 bedroom.

Amesville, Ohio

nice
3
bedroom
home ,
full
basement, Iaroe lol . You 'll
love the kitchen . Laroe
carpete';! living room . Edge
of town, Sl6,500 buys it and
it's tr e by a baroain .
VER:Y,

-

RanCho Com

TO

Here's your
chance at a real. nice 3
bedroom···nome IDeated on a
large flat lot at edge of town .
Including Iaroe living and
dining room, nice kitchen
!range, retrig ., washer and
dryer stay.s). full basement,
central air and garage . Lot is
eKtra nice. Could be com .
mere lei

floors , liv . rm . carpeted ,

flat lot ; price $13,000.

MOVING

EUROPE .

basement. will sell or trade. NEAR K.C. H. SC.-Colonial. 2
RIO G
, story, 8 big rms ., bese .. 3
RANOE - Lovely 3 yr. baths. 3 A. 150,000.
old brock priced to sell $21 ooo
includes 6 rms., HW, flo~rs PATRIOT - 2 story, older
drapes .

All Going at September Prices.

159-H

BEOROOM ' RANCH . This

5

Kyger Creek NEIGHBORHOOD Rd .. 3 BR BABY FARM - s A. gentle
slope, s room house wllh bath.
modular home, utility rm .,

suoo

.NEED a CoPY mach(ne? Ex trem~ly convenient tor office '
use $95 . Wiseman Agency. Ph .
446-3643,

3 UN IT S ( ~If rented ) on a flit!
city lot in 400 block of Second
Ave . Price It yourself and if

shaded lot. Price $21 ,900.

LOTS OF LOTS
WE HAVE lots in all direcflons.

For Sale .

IF YOU are building a hew
home or r emodeling, see us.
We are buHders. Oislribulor
for Hotpoint Appli ances,
Allison Electric.

Only A Few 1972 Buiclls Left.

1969 Cadillac

Apartment House

finished rec . rm.. attached
gar. and located on •12 A.

29 A. - State Route 160, vacant
CHESHIRE $8,700.

For Sale

'

Evening:
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446 -4500
We Need Listings

Price S31,SOO.

full

GODD USED MOBILE HOMtS .
lZxSO 2 Br.
l%7 Horizon 12xSO 2 Br. ..
1970 Richardson 12x65 3 Br.
1965 Vlndale 10xS0 ·2 Br.
·1960 Van Oyke .JOx40 2 Br.
1960 Van Dyke lOxSO 2 Br.
Tri-County Mobile Homes
'
2013 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohia
446-0175

mo Skyline

Off. 446·3643

.carpet, gas fur . 2 car garage
in base . with laundry and
work area . Located on near 2
dCre lot with river frontage.

has new Aerobic Septic tank ,

equipment.·

carpet tf'lroughout, a dream
kitchen and laundry room, NEW LISTING, Route 141 close
to town. lovely home priced to
large closets and storage,
sell.
2 BR. LR. modern kitfront porch, large storage
chen
,
large family rm ., utility
building , rural water, plenty
rm
.,
WW
carpet, cen tral air,
shrubs and trees located on

SN 10SI756 Hyd. full U blade SN
6381, 21,000 Mark II engine,
enclosed Allen canopy cab.
SPACIOUS
Good Cond Ilion - ready to WELL KEPT older 2 story
work .
.
home, 3 BR and bath, formal

104 GALION Grader SN GMP
20796, Good condition- ready
202·3

day or night, 367-7653.

TUESDAY, THE 29th,

stor~~e, large laundry room
by k1lchen, storm windows
and doors, front porch,

detached garage,
city
O.; Tuesday - Rev . George
of land fenced with woven schools, quick possession. All
Minthouse. Rt . 1 Jackson,
this for only $18.800.
wire .
. O.; Wednesday- Rev. Elmer
Jeffers. Patriot, 0.; Thursday
- Rev . Jack Hamilton, CLOSE to City Limit, 2 BR with
ONE STORY BRICK
bath and fuel oil furnace, TV
Harveysburg , 0 .; Friday 3 SR. 1'12 bath, paneled and
room
and
front
porch.
Price
Rev. Daniel Cain, Canton.
carpeted family and living
reduced. Shown by ap·
Ohio ; Sa turday - Rev. Manly
room, beautiful kitchen and
pointment.
Severt, Rt. J. Patriot, 0 .;
connect ing laundry room,
Sunday, 1:30 p.m. - Rev.
attached
garage, large level
LARGE
older
house
being
William E. Moore, Sidney, 0 .;
lot,
concrete
street, Kyger
repaired. 3 BR, bath, gas
Rev.
William
Moore,
Creek
School
Oist.
Extra good
furnace and large lot in City
Presiding ; Viola Pennington,
financing
.
Buy
now
and be
limits.
Musi c. Come to Cadmus on
ready when school starts.
Route 141 in Gallia County. Go
Now vacanl.
East on Cadmus-Patriot Road WE HAVE .Iots up the River on
Rt. 7, and lOts down the River
about 4 miles to Patriot.·
ON ONE ACRE
on Raccoon Creek, and out
195-6
OF LAND
past the new Medical Center BEAUTIFUL
- - -- - new brick one
on
the
Kerr,
Bethel
Road
with
TWO - WA~ Radios Sales &amp;'
3
BR
ranch
style. W-W
story
· county water on them .
Service. New and used CB 1 s,
police monitors, antennas, ·

MASSIE

MERCERVILLE

ioYe Homes for 5*

Real Estate For Sale

farms . 146 A., mostly new
on t JJt ':flghway, full
large liv . rm. , nice bath,
JUST LISTED
fences, 2 barns, silo, . pond
basement, : ~. .. ara e,
coppe r plumbing , all tile
county water ·~-() ab~e. 1!::; A TWO STORY 8 room &amp; bath creek,· fronts on 2 rds., 1,352
ceil in~, oil fur ., 2 car garage.
home located on a large well lb. lob. base, 44 A. corn base
r,es. an extra bullo,ng lot over
Large shaded lot. Walk to
landscaped fl/2 lot. Beauliful 25 A. corn goes with sale:
;, Acre. Will finance, with low
school. Only Si2,SOO.
hardwood floors in LR &amp; modern home with full
down payment.
formal OR, banquet •ize basement.
NEAR Clay School - E.t~a
•
kitchen with double oven
AT NORTHUP, 2 BR house with
nice, 3 bdrm ... new carpet In
cooklop, disposal and plenty 115 A. - Close lo Rio, lots of
fuel oil furnace, fireplace in
li v. rm. , din . area , and haiL It
bottom land and lots of farm
town

li11lng -room, large kitchen
with knotty pine cabinets,
stove and
refrigerator ,
several outbuildings, one acre

Lucasville ,

-~---,--

Notice
,t!l

Rt.

Real Estate For Sale

1972 VOLKSWAGEN square
back, 446-079 7.

NEWPORT
4 DR. SEDAN

1969 DODGE
CORONET 500

68 OODGE
DART GTS

4 Dr. Sedan with
Air Cond .

2 DR. HARDTOP

With Air Cond .

200-6

Services Offered

all extras. Ca ll 245·5198 or 446- PAINTING. Interior and ex .
te rior , Free estimates,
3236.
BELco, call 446-1764 or 446·
202-3
1758.
200-6
PUREBRED Coll ie pups, Mrs.
Max Haffelt . 256-113 1.
202-3 LAST
Bl D home
im·

-

provements.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

alumrnum

ONE of the finer things of life. 1960 CHAMPION 10 x 50 !railer.
siding; ~utters. rooting
· Blue Lustre carpet and
50 State Street
new gas furna ce, S2,000. Ph .
repairs, b1g or small . Pay
Gallipolis, Ohio
upholstery cleaner. Rent elec.
only labor and material . Work
367-.7634.
shampooer $1. (Central
guaranteed, Free estimates .
202-12
Supply).
Ph . 388-8221.
196-6 POOOL E pup
Plumbing &amp;Heating
Services OfferArl
Services Offered
194-tf
and one
Dachshund, S20 each , Ph . 446·
THOMAS rAIN
&lt;:ARTER'S PLUMBING
MOBILE home with extra large
EXTERMINATING CO.
0278,
TERMITE PEST CON rROL
\
AND HEATING
add on, located in Rio Grande.
Termite &amp; Pe•t Control
202-3 FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
Cor.
Fourth &amp; Pine
All electric, w-w carpet,
. Wheelersburg, Ohio
Sackh_oe and Dozer ·s.rvlce.
Merrill
O'Dell.
Operator
for
Phone
446-3888
or 446-4477
appliances, furniture in - BOATfor sale. 1611. runabout 80
Septic tanks , farm ditching
Extermlnal Termite Service,
165-tf
eluded . 7 rooms, enclosed
C&amp;S
ElectrfcaT
-serv
ice'
&amp;
hOrse
Mercury
engine ,
ponds . Free Estimolts .
19 Belmont Or.
porch. large sforage shed.
R'epalrs. House wiring , . Phone 367-7579 or :U7-7706 .
trailer, Del Gingerich. 628
267-tf
STA~OAR[f
plenty of close! space. extra
elec:tric heat, motor con trols.
Fourth, Phone 446-3778.
146-tf
Plumbing
&amp; Healing
nice, 245-5448.
Free
est
imates.
Ph
.
446-45cn
202 -6
Central Air Conditioning
215
Third
Ave
.. 446·3782
199-3 - - - - - or 675-3361.
&amp; Healing
187-lf
22·11
CHILOCRAFT, IS volumes. Sll5.
Free Estimate•
SEPTIC TANKS
1970 17 FT. TRAVEL trailer,
Phone 446-~536.
Stewart's Hardware
RUSSELL'S
Cleaned and lnslaflad
BANKS
TREE
SERVICE
202-3
self contained, good con ·
Vinton, Ohio
PLUMBING&amp;
HEATING
Russell
's
Plumbing,
4(6-4782
FREE
estimates,
liability
In
dillon, 446-1943. •
144-lf
.
2
1
Go
Ilia
Ave.
446-4782
surance . Prun ing, trimming
"297-tf·
202-3 MOBILE home with extra large
297-1'
and cavity work, tree and
add-on, located in Rio
ALBERT EHMAN'
BOB
LANE
'
S
Complete
stump removol . Ph. 446·4953.
USED clothing, 1'12 to 16, exc.
Grande. All electr ic. w-w
Water Delivery Service
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser.
73-tf
condition. Ph . 446-3375.
carpet, appliances, furniture
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
AND HEATING
vice, 424'12 Fourth Ave .,
-~---202-3
included. 7· rooms, enclosed
Ph. 379-2133
Rcute160at Evergreen
9
a.m.1
Kanauga.
Office
hrs
.
.
GILLENWATER'S
septic
tank
porch, large slorage shed,
243-tf
Phone 446-2735
p,m. , Ph. 446-1049.
clecining and repalr , also
600 TOBACCO sticks. Ph. 446·
~lenty ol closet space, extra '7".,---- --:-----:
187-I
hou$e wrecking . Ph . 446-9499.
85-tf
nice . Ph. 245-5448 .
11
o
9706.
Estalil1'she'd In 1940.
202-3
202-tf
. IlENE PLANTS &amp; 5DN5
169-tf
HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
PLUMBING - l'ltating &amp; Air
-COMPLETE
water'
line
InIT'S Inexpensive to clean rugs TAKE soil away the Blue Lustre
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
stallatlon, backhoe, bulldozer
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave.
SS:OO Service Charg•
and upholstery with Blue
way from carpets and
Ph . 446-1637. ( Farmtrly
Del iverY.
Servl&lt;:e . Your
and boring m.achine servi ces.
Will remove your dead .
Lustre.
Rent
electric
upholstery. Rent electric
1
Brammer's Plumbing' &amp;
patronage
will
be
ap.
J
.
P.
Holley
245·5018
or
0.
R.
,
horse
and
cows
shampooer $1. Central Supply
shampooer Sl . Murphy s ,
Healing. )
..
predated . Ph. 446-0463.
Holley 245-5006.
· Call Jackson ~4531
Co .
1 Lower Store.
7-tl
111
-ff
202-6 _ _ _ _ _ _ _202-6 1.1---......,---11--~

---'-- - - -

·

-------

------'-:'-

------,..,....,.

------

"""-'------

---...,---

DEAD Sl&amp;K.

------------

------------

----

--v-1
' --.,.-~~f.-.."

�'

'·

26 - The Thnef.SenUnel, Sunday, Allll. fl,

In Memcry

'

.,

1m

.

Notice

IN LOVING memory of Ora
DAY I!'ARE ,
Edna Cromllsh who passed SUN VALLEY Nursery School, .
away Aug. 26, 1971.
licensed by State ol Ohio, 1'1&gt;
In lov ing memory of you.
miles west of new hospital .
Mother,
Sun Vallev Dr. Ph. 446'577
As lime has wrought another
3657. Day care that says " we
year
·
care." · Madge · Hauldren;
How we miss your loving
Owner ; Loredilh &amp; John
presence
Hauldren, Operalors.
For you are no longer here.
114-H·
May you .rejoice with the angels
In !hat land of beauti~s rare
MALE student attending Ohio
4

No more suffering , no more
heartaches

University needs roommate
to share housetrailer. Quiet

..

•

~

•

'

I

.

~

...

~

.

Rul Estate For Sale

RUSSELL·
.\WOO .
REALTOR

Real Estate For SaiP

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT
RE-ALTY .

REALTY

&gt;

25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 444-2674
Lucille Bronnon
Eve. 446-1226

.446-1066

' Wnrld's' Largest

ANTIQUE ANTICS
1HE LEAOER SINCE IJOO IN
In that city bright and fair .
location. Ph. 446-4813.
I&lt;N ANTIQUE is something that
SERVING THE NATION'S
All is peace and happiness
202-3 no one would want If there
SERVICE
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
As you walk the streets of gold -::-:-::-::-:---- --__:
were more of them.
YES, Personalized servi&lt;:e
Ph. 446·00011
In thai city that's called Hea ven YAR 0 Sale at Jack McGinness;
whether in listing or selling.
.
FARMS
Where you never stiall grow old.
Te xas Rd .. Monday and YOU might just like this nice 3
Caii ·Brannon Really - It will
Sadly missed by her
Tuesday, 10 to 4. ·
pay.
ONE of Gailia Co.'s better
bedroom ~ , ...,e, 4"11liles from
202-2

Children and Grandchildren.

202-1
--------------

Help Wanted

ANNUAL CONFERENCE
MEETING
OF THE Gospel Tabernacle
ASsociation, Inc. of Patriot,

Ohio. Tentmeeling . Aug . 21
thru Aug. 27. Services Evening 7:30 p.m. Sunday
1:30 p.m.. Speakers Monday Eve., Rev . Addle

$MONEY$
Full or Part Time
Applications ·now

Lintz,

being

taken tor men and women.
Immediate open_
ing, must be

neal and dependable. Call
~rsonnel

Dept., 9 a.m. to S

p.m. Monday and Tuesday,
446·06,4.

BABYSITTER in my home 8
miles out 141. Ph . 379·2612:
202-3
::-::--:-:-::-:-~---

00 YOU NEED extra year
around Income? Beeline
Fashions is your answer. New
wardrobe each season. Call

446·4146.

202-3

:-------

SOMEONE with brush hog . Rio
Grande 245-5320.
---:--- - ---.:.202 -3

2

etc. Bob's Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. 446-4517.
16-lf

Wanted To Do

YAR_D SALE . Rear 128 State.
Fnday and Saturday, begins 9 BABYSITTING in my home in
Cenlenary, Ph. 446-0028.
a.m.
200-6
199-3
REMODELING, building new
rooms,

HUMANE SOCIETY
MEETING

cement,

roOflng,

siding, furnace Ins. J . H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.
68-H
-----.,..,-BABYSITTING in my home,

Office 446-1 066
Evening Call:
Ron Conaday,446-3636 ,
Russell D. Wood, 446-4618
Jahn I. Ri~hards, 446-0280 .

CONTRACTORS EQUIPMENT
1970 ALLIS-CHALMERS HO .
21 B

The WISEMAN
Agency

Realty, 32 State St
Tel. 44&amp;.1998

REALTOR

CHESHIRE - Spiii-Le'"l, 8 yr .
old, S rms., large balh, llv.
rm ., t8'x24' wifh F.P .. all

Cheap
housi ng , real nice, 3 bd . rm.,

-------

163 A. -

Beef, hog and grain

farm .

BT road in
School Dist.

base .,

-

with

SELLING at the rate of 2 or 3
properties each week makes
tr d ilfij:UII to kel!'p enough
l1stlngs. If you want yours
sold. cal l the Wiseman
Agency.

partial

you get ctcfse to S20,000, it's
all yours .

s

rm . frame,
H.W. floors, attach gar., fuel.

New Listing

30 A - Vinton area, like new . · oil fur ., storm doors and
windows, aluminum siding, ·
mobile home.
nice shrubbery and level loT.
Some can be bought with a
very small down payment.

Whether build ing or buying a
mobile home, call today .

12x6S MOBILE HOME on a 1 A.

very attractive Redwood Is
prIced in m ld Twenties and
is located at edge of town In.!
quiet spot . with no close
neighbors. Very nice kit chen, liv ing room , dining and
hall al l carpeted . See this one
now.

Price $20.000.

INVESTMENT - In city. good
business location, plus 2 Aprt.
rentals (could be JL Business
bldg . includes grocery and
meat processing equipment .
Potential income from Apt .
rentals $225 per mo. Price

New ListingBasement

lot. lik.e new, completely
$21,500,
furnished, tip out rm ., central
air , large patio with awning,
cellar and utility building EUREKA - River view, shady

WHERE else can you buy this
much for S6,800? Large lot
100'x100', four room home
plus all ff'le furniture. OINner
moving to Florida.

dining room, part basement,
gas forced air fur . garage and
outbuildings. 3 Acres of land,
well fenced.

built-in
kitchen
with
refrigerator, ai r cond,, all
drapes and curtains, $14,500.

VINTON

-

Completely

remodeled 2 story home with

OWNER

built-in kitchen, air cond and

·

lot. 6 rms . full dry base., H.W.

garage and plenty good
water . This house is built of
good materjals and well
constructed. Price $17,500.

Owner-Wants House
Sold This Week

plenty water, rooms are
paneled with tile ceilings .
Priced at $11,600 and included
the washer , dryer, and
cookstove and heating stove.

1 YEAR old 3 bedroom brick
(move- tomQJ row ). Just like
new throughout , wall to wall
carpet, 2 baths , beaut iful
kitchen (range oven built in), large rooms, large flat
lot in new sub -di vision .
$28,000.

We Have
25 New Homes
To Choose From

home, sound, wale!' fine, 2 A ·

·

to work .
NEW LISTING - CITY - KERR - All brick. HW and
Lovely 2 BR home on a flat
carpet firs., 7 rms. plus full
WALLPAPERING and pain shady lot. Can be bought base .. I A. lot. II has 3 baths
DISTINCTIVELY
ling , Call after S p.m. 446-9865. INQUIRE by dialing J. W.
furnrshed or unfurn ished.
and 2 car garage . Pri ce
DIFFERENT
202-1 Ashton. Columbus, Ohio (614)
486-9546 days, (614) 457-0659 IOEALL Y located . one story
reduced to SJS,OOO.
evenings and weekends.
PRice
bnck - All elednc - with a MIDDLEPORT home need painting,
Episcopal
Parish JOESlour
reduced . Lovely 12 rm . brick ST. RT. 218 - New . all elec .. S
197-6
picturesque
view
of
the
Ohio
siding, roofing , remodeling ,
on a corner lot . Could be used
r ms ., 2 car gar ., viny l sid . on
Ri ver .
W-W
&lt;:arpet
house, Second Avenue.
paneling, cement work,
.7 A. lot. $18.000.
as 2-3 or 4 apartments .
throughout,
well
designed
barbecue, patios, or garage, · For Rent
kitchen,
double
oven,
garage,
carport. etc.? You name 11. 4 BEDROOMS, kitchen. living
2 barns, tobacco base, 96 POMEROY - Rem odeled older BABY FARM - Loca ted on
we' ll do i t. Reasonable rates .
SEVERAL varieties of top
room , famll~ room, 2 baths on acres of land, priced low i n
Carter Rd .. s A., 2 stor y
home. Now being rented for
Call 446-0126 or 446-17S3.
quality tree ripened canning
large lot in Cheshire, $175 per today's market.
house,. 6 rm s., bath , la undry,
SlSS
per month . l ow down
119-tf
pe~ches, now available thru
month. Call I-614-836-33SO.
panel1ng &amp; ca rpet . It has
payment on $17,500 .
early. September. Bob' s
cellar, chicken house, storage
200-3
BUYING OR SELLING
Market, Mason, just above ROOF lNG and gufter work .
bldg . and garage. Plenty good
CALLUS
MILLSVILLAGE
Immediate
William Mitchell, 388-8507.
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
water . Price Sl4 ,900 .
HOME
with
air
BRANNON
REALTY
occupancy,
lovely
1
story
MOBILE
Phone 773-5308.
67-tf

SOME are finished ready tor

7:30 P.M.

occ upancy. other!!. in all
different stages of con struction You name It and
we ' l l have . Look now before
someone else buys the one
yo u wanted. We will help you
l in d the financ ing If it's
humanly. poss ible . Call Ike
Wise man tor all details.

------

Bargain Hunters
Here's A Bargain

- - - - - --

192-H

='7::-::-::-:-:-::---

I'ARAGE SALE F'iday,'
Saturday and Monday, 25, 26
and 28, At Evergreen

old

011

Rt. 160. Hand crocheted cape

and a new electric saw wig'
clothing, antique rock~,
misc. Items.
,

and

- - - : - -- - - - =201 -3
RALPH'S Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning . Service. Free
estim4tes. Ph. 446-0294, Ralph
A ~ _Dav.ls, owner .

_____

__;:J·tf

GLASS for all needs. Home
serv ice and Insurance claims .
Russ 's Glass Service, 70A Pine

Sf.. Rio Grande, Ohio. 2455048.
180-tf

------

Hoyt King wants you to
know that a bird in the hand
can be miRhty ticklish.
l

•

•

The oak leaf is symbolic of strength, honor,
glory-and backaches if
you have to rake !eaves
from under one of 'em.

PUBLIC
.NOTICE
We sell anything for
anybody. Bring your
Items· to Knotts Communi.t;y Auction Born.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. .
For oppointment *all
446-2917. Sale tvery
Saturdoy · Evening •I
70'Ciock.

TOOL

sharpening

conditioning, 2 bedroom , 322 - -- - - - -Third Ave. Ph . 446-3748 or 256-

saws,

scissors and shears, ,mowe.-.
blades, drill bits, barber

clippers, and cutlery. Sharp
Shop, ofley .rear 147 Second

Ave.

home with full basement,
Pr ice
formal dining room , fam ily GREEN ACRES reduced on this beauty, .4 Yt
6903.
room, 2 WB fireplaces
200-6
paftJ
lOOxJOO lot.
' old ran·ch , -H~ w ; - floorj~
beautiful kitchen , 3 Bd. rms .,
for Gallla CoUflly PRICE
NEW 2 bedroom mo blie homes . Headquarters
Real Estale. Listings needed .
reduced to $14,500! 2 Ph baths. This house Is like
new. Only S22.SQO.
Will lease or rent by week or
story home offers 4 BR, large

...

ii ¥;1D

Building Lots
2 Acres
EXCELLENT flat land for

Eldorado, frt. wheel
vinyl top, air. sharp.

NEW &amp; USED
1-'BEAMS, Channel, angle,
sheet and plate steel, rounds,

drive,

SINGER Sewtn'g MBchlne Sales
a. Service. All models In
stock. Free delivery . Service
guaranteed. Models priced
from S69.9f French City
Fabric Shoppe. Singer approved dealer, 58 Court Sl.
Ph. &lt;116-9255.
308-tf

1969 Chev. Pickup

adventure
camper.

'1395

pkg.

Nice

Two To Choose from. Red,
White. Were $895.00.

for

"SELL THE AUCTION

'795

On Route 33 just north of Athens, Ohio Signal Hill Farm No.2 (Next to Valley Trailer
Court): Mr. Cottingham is tired of the Dairy •
Business after 30 years and is going to
discontinue milking at Signal Hill Farm No.2 .

26 HEAD HOI.SlEIN OOWS! !
The entire herd will be sold. Good Young
Cows, 9 First Calf Heifers, 6 Fresh recently.
Remainder in all stages of lactation'. All from
artificial breeding - Herd has been artificially bred for years. Replace your Cull
Cows now for high fall production.
Health Papers Furnished .
Welcome to View
At Any Time!
Terms: Cash. Not Responsible for accidents.

E. A. COTTINGHAM, OWNER,
287 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS, OHIO
Phone 614-593-8089

SHERmAN'S AUCTION SERVICE
Phone 614-448-2033

"Oae llmud, clip A11ve."

three

Aluminum Building s
Specia I Prices
During-July &amp; August

mobile homes. Present in·

r--------------------·

------

PAY ONLY ONE.UTILITY

------2 BEOROOM trailer . Hen·

derson , W. Va . 675-4130.
3 LOTS, 83 1-3 by ISO ft. each,
' 202-6 One mile from town , city
water. Phone 446-3933 after 5
p.
m.
For Trade
19_4•12
1963 SPORTS JAGUAR, would _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
like to trade for large
NEW 3 bedroom home with
moJorcycle. Call 446-4749.
brick front, 1 car garage 120
199- ~
It. frontage 1'/, miles from
-:;:---,---=------,~
rew hospital on Rt. 160, Call 2 BEDROOM TBWNHOUSES
Camping Equipment
367-7846 or 367-7481.
·JUST arrived. 1973 Starcraft
166-tf
Campers. All 1972 llnits huge
discount. We service what we
sell. Camp Conley Starcraft· FOR SALE by owner, New 3
Sales. 62 North or Point. bedroom home, less than 10
Pleasant behind Rad Carpet' miles from Gavin plant. For
Inn.
details call 367-7598.
For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250
200-6
- - - - - - -.....:.163-H

TARA

'

.

•·

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
NEW HOMES FOR SALE

.SPLIT LEVEL.

123'h Pine St.

Ph. 446-2783

67 FORD GAL 500
71 MERCURY COUGAR

CONVERTIBLE

2 dr . hardtop, V-8, auto., p. steering.

lac. air cond ., vinyl roof, bucket
seats, fa c. stereo tape system, w-s-w
tires, w-eavers, local ly owned In

I

'1095
65 BUICK WILDCAT

'695

· For Sale

ALL 1972
CHRYSLERS

65 CHEV.II

'795

4 dr. sedan. 6 cyl. engine, auto.
trans ., radio. Nl&lt;:e.

3 BR, 2112 baths, family room, basemint; ·lotaf electric
with Williamson heating and contra I· air coodltionlng
General Electric appliances, fuf!y carpeted, landscaped:
concrete drive &amp; streets, 2'12 car garage, dining balcony,
lot 9Sx175, co!u.'!_ty~~ter, Tara sewer system.

CONTEMPORARY
3 BR, .ilf&gt; baths, family room, basement, 1 car garage,
total electric with Williamson heeling and central air
conditioning, General Electric appliances, fully corpeted,
landscaped, concrete drive &amp; stree!t, dining ba !cony lot
?S•175, co~nty watir, Tore sewer system.
'

DUTOf COLONIAL BI-I.EVIL

3 SR. 2 baths, farge family roam, belomant 2 car garage
total electric· with Williamson heating a~d central al;
candltlonlng,, General Electric appliances, fully corpeled
landscaped, concrote drive &amp; streets, dining balcony, lot .
9Sx17S, county waler_,_Tere sewor system.

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENTS

.

.367-7250 '

ADDI

OHIO

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Grande. Phone 245-5115.
6-tf

- - - -- -

1972 ZIG.ZAG Sewing Ma cnone

and

left in layaway. Beautiful
pa stel color. full size model.
All built.in to buttonhole , do
stretch sew ing and fancy
st ilching . Pay just $48 .75 cash
or terms available. Trade·ins
accepted . Phone 446-4578.

PLYMOUTHS
66 CHEV. BELAIR

00

'495

4 Door, 8 cyl. eng ine, auto. trans .

- - - - --

69 MERCURY MONTEGO

Make Sure You Check With Us Before You
Buy.

'1595

10 Passenger Station Wagon, V-8.
aut. trans .. P. steering, P. brakes,
lac. air cond., luggage rack, wheel
covers, w-s-w tires. radio. tinted
glass, 19,000 miles.

Gal_
ripolis Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

2 dr. hardtop, p. steering, p. brakes,
foe . air, vinyl roof with many other
extras. Locally owned .

suite. living room suite, Speed
Queen automatic washer .

'1995

BASSET pup, AKC reg.. 31!&gt; MARBLE top dresser, ph. 388mooths, shots completed. 4468455 . Calf alter 4 p.m.
9836.
201-3
201 -6 - : : - : - : - - - : - - - 1967 FORD Mustang, clean,
"LOVE"
means
A.K.C .
reasonable. Ph. 388-8158.
Weimaraner Pup9wk•. Loyal
201 -3
Companion, top obed. Alert -""":c--~---watch clog and hunter . 379- 1966 CHEVELLE Conv. far sale
2597.
or trade. S85CI. Ph. 256·1354
201-4 after 6.
201·3

-----:-:-

USED FURNIT.UR'E - - - - -

suNK bed set complete with
springs and mattresses or can
be used as trundle bed - 3
real nice 2 pc. living roam
·suiiiiS - 2 coucheS - 2 ·end
tables - real nice desk with
chair- Speed Queen wringer
washer - twin size box
springs and mattress with
fogs - old t•ucl!"
·

. RICE'S

NEW &amp; . USED FURN.ITURE

1154 Socond An., -.nu
201-H

-1-11-~---

USED - Dinette set with six
chairs, black and white TV.

MOBILE ·HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE lfDMES
1966 Schull 121150, 2 bedroom
1961 Nuhuo 10xSO, 2 bedroom
1954 Andonon Bx36, 1 bedroo1T1
196'1 Cepolla SOx12, 2 bdrm.
1968 Kirkwood 60x12, 2 bdrlfl.
1962 Gibraltar 55x10, 2 bdrm
1&amp;5 MOBILE HOMES

SoCOIIII

&amp; Vlond St.
Pl. PIHwnt

(Ned to Heck's)

.171-tt

Plenty of free parking. Open
Friday until 8. Corbin and
Snyder, 955 Second Ave. 4461171.

189-tl

------

-------~14.0-tf
WILL sacrifice 72 Olds Delta 88,
vrnyl roof, air, PS, PB, low

V-8 engine,
Auto .
Tran ·
smission

200-6
CHILO'S PADDED ca r seat. $7.
Ca ll 446-0782.
200-3

·6s CSSO FORD tilt cab truck, 20
ft . aluminum van body, sale
or trade, new paint and tires ,
Good condit io n, also 1969
Camara drag car and 1972
Corvette, dr iven 5,000 mil es,

1969 DfRYSLER

mileage. Ph . 367-7530.

446-3273

G(lllipolts

For Sale

For Sale
Brown occ . chair, Kenmore
auto. washer, 3 pc. bedroom

69 CHEV. CAPRIQ

------

1970 DODGE
0.100 1f2 TON
PICKUP TRUCK

1970 FORD

1970

SUPER VAN

VOLKSWAGEN

V-8 engine

2 Qoor Sedan
With Air Cond.

Office Equip. Made to order,
Signs of all kinds.

DUSTER, on~

'695

available. Phone 446-4578.
198-6

TOP

20" X 24". Sl2.SO to $30 pair. ·
446-1397. Simmons Pig . &amp;

1972 GOLD

'3495

mode l. Compl ete with all
clean ing tools . Small paint
damage in shipping . Will ta ke
$27 cash or budget plan

MAGNETIC car ana HU l; l\.
signs . Available 6112" x 18" to

EXAMPLE:

71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE

198-6

VACUUM Cleaner new 1972

OVER COST

2 Or. Hardtop, V-8, aut. trans., P.
steering, vinyl roof. one owner,
white with blk. vinyl roof.

' . ' ''

KANAUGA, OHIO

Gallipolis, 0.

Eastern Ave.

4 Or. hardtop. V-8. auto. trans .. p.
steer ing , low mileage. locally
owned. Sharp.

I

Nobody knows small trucks like Datsun
'1095
·WOOD MOTOR SALES . , '"""·'· ··"'"-·SMITH A U·TO. - SA·LE·S·

68 FORD GAL 500

•

SOUTHERN COLONIAL

Datsun's new
Li'l Bustier.

289 cu . i~ . V-8 engine, aut. tran s., P. steering ,
W-S-W t1res, red finish with black tap, 33,000
actual miles.

'3195

I

4 BR, 2 baths, Family room, total electric with Williamson
Heating and Central air conditioning, Gene.·al Electric
appliances. fully carpeted, landscaped, conc~te drive &amp;
streets, 2'1l car garage, dining balcony, lot 75X:l75, county
water, Tara sewer system.

Meet

GALLIPOLIS
BLOCK CO.

Long wheel base, 8 cyl. engine,
excellent cond. with exception of
tires.

LOTS FOR SALE

12'x65• Mobile Home

together with 'h acre lot on
Raccoon Creek. Al l util ities.
Year round home Or vacation
retreat. Space for boat dock.
Cash for my equity, take over
· payments or wha tever. Call
256-132 1. Must see to ap.
prec1a1e .

30
- MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36 MONTHS

INVESTMENT PROPERTY -

come to owner over S250 per
2
2 STORY house, partly
month plus his home . Now Is
baths. modern kitchen, buillremodeled,
full
s1ze
the time fo buy this money
In elec. stove. city schools,
basement, 2 car garage, new
maker.
large lot. 446-0865 .
storm windows and doors, 1:14
LOCATED
on
Raccoon
Road
Evenings
·
202-3
near Cheshire. Call 367Oscar Baird, 446-4632
10XSO MOBILE home, fur - large home and garden plots ' acres
7114 after 5: 30p.m.
adjacent to large existing
D. J. Wetherholt, 446-4244
nished, 446-0865 .
187-12
Steven R. Belt, 446-9583
202-3 brick residence also beautiful - - - -- mobile home sites. Roads,
3 BEDROOM house, 446-0196. Electricity, Water Mains and
202-3 u~derground Telephone lines.
Foeld Office open from Noon
------MODERN 2 bedroom air unfit dark. Offered by Hobart
conditioned apartment, clean. Dillon and Russel Bailey,
Owners . P. 0 . BQx 516
ELECTRICITY
Ph. 446-4923.
.
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 .'
'.
202 3
We furnish Water · Sewage . Garbage Collection . Ample
- - ' - - - - - - - -- 193-tf
Parki"'! · TV Antenna • Wall-to-Wall Corpetlng •
MEN, Tired of Hotels and - - - - - - - - Draperoes
• Ranges . Refrfgerotors . Air Conditioning .
restaurant food? A clean ,
Gar_bage Dispos.Jis. Dishwashers . Heat Lamps . Privato
quiet room with refrigerator 2 - THREE bedroom · all
Patoos . Swimming Pool • Clubhouse.
·
electric
homes .
Call
and cooking facilities. SJS
Lakeview Estates 992-3975 or
month. Utliilles ald. 446-4416
992-2571 .
after 6 p.m.
202-6

1972 -

64 CHEV. PICKUP

bedroom horne plus two good

.

1970 HONDA 175 Scram bler.
Call 446·2217.

198-S

AUCTION
_SERVICE

.

2 BEDROOM trai ler, 63 model.
Ph . 446-4537.

- - -- - - )

we ll and coun ty water,
complete ly furn is hed and
ready to move in .
redecorated

7 USED heavy interior
with hardwar e, new misc.

p .m .

·ptl 446-3444

Nice

198·6

$795. Ph. 446-3891 after 5: 30

'

•ay s~eppard446-lltltlt
Denver K. Higley 446-0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur 446-0003

AKC r egis tered miniature
Schnauzers. Ph . 446-2497.

specia l sale now
on!
Tawney's 422 Second Ave.
I 56.If
7
-;:,9;::;7:;;
0-;-65o;;·c-;s"'sii"'t~
ig':"h~fn-:-in'"'g-,-m-u...;st sell

-AUCTIONEER

All electric five room
house,
15
acres.
Mercerville area. Ph .
256·6588.

use. Ph. 379-2166.

Was $1695.00.

'1895

COMPLETE line .qf men'•
.Pipes, G. B. 0., Ch•,.tari .
B.E! .s ., Jaby and Sav1ne11 o·

JIMME _SAYRE

.GOOD CLEAN used furn . 60X12 MOBILE home . 2
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn. 446- bedroom . Furnished or un 9523 .
furnished in Merc:ervllle In
walking distance of both
170-tf
schools. Ph. 256-6816.
202-3

. NEW tobacco sticks, ready to

.1969 Dodge Pickup 1966 VOLKSWAGEN
Long bed, V-8, 27,000 miles.

123-H

------

--:-:--~---

$350. Call 446-3891 after 5: 30
p.m.
196-6
- - - - -- -

panel ing . Ph . &lt;46·4336,

---.,..----~

OHIO RIVER
Realty

The brand-new Datsun Pickup. In just 13 years the Datsun Pickup
has become the No. 1 selling import truck in America. Our new Li'l Hustler
,,-- - ----"'
is designed to carry on the tradition.
It's a sensational-looking vehicle. There's the roomier,
full-vinyl cab with contoured seat, restyled instruments and
new power-flow ventilation system. There's a new two-stage
suspension, engineered to deliver a smooth ride whether light
or loaded. Best of all. there are new po)l'ler-assist brakes.
From Li'l Hustler we carry over all the things that
made us No. I in' the first place. Overhead cam engine that
delivers up to 25 miles per gallon. 6·foot all-steel load bed
with tie-down hooks. Rugged 4-speed fully-synchronized stick
shift. 6-ply-rated whitewalls. 5 including spare.
Drive the all-new Li'l Hustler today. ll's a whole lot of
little truck, from the people who should know.

15• FIBERGLAS boat. 35 hp ,

SpeciaL 2 Dr ., Air Cond., VB,
Auto. Trans.

'1995

materials, block, brick, sewer
pipes, window•, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.

New GMC
Truck Hoa~uarters
1962 v, fon GMC Pickup
1966 'I• ton GMC Pickup
1969 Oids 88
For Sale
'68 VW Red with blk . l nt~rlor .
Radio. Good Shape with air
shocks with whl . adapters .
Only $875 . Also Torquefllte
trans. with Chevy adapter ·
cheap. 446-2416.
1970 International Dump Truck.
Extra clean.
1969 2 T. GMC
'1967 Jeep Station wagon
19M o;, T. GMC PU
1961 Jeepsler
.
1967 '-'! .ton Chevrolet plckupl.i
1967 '14 T. Chev. PU
1964 '!l T. GM PU
biJ4 1/l T. GMC PU
New 11 II, camper
1966 ¥o ·T. GMC
1968 'h T. GMC PU
1960 - 1 Ton Ford flat .
1967 - •;, Ton GMC PickuP
1964 - CO 1600 International
truck
1967 '12 T. GMC PU
1963 F600 Ford Truck
1966 ~ ·r:-GNiC PU
SOMMER'S . G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 PI,. St.
446-2532

"

1°6·6

1968 BUICK

Long bed, V-8, cust . cab, worth
more.

-----AL.L TYPES of building

- - -- --

wanted 1o tluy

handrubbed walnut console .
Pay ,balan ce of $96.80 or pay
$8 a month . Cal l 446·0255 .

'1495

Co ., Nelsonvltle,

----,--,---

8 TRACK sler eo in lovely

We like be· • No.I
so much we ' . cided
to do it again.

Evinrude. El ectric starter ,
ski equipment and trailer

mesh, rail, pipe, culverts and
equlpme~l . Prompt drilling .
Ohio, P, 0 . Box 298 , Ph. 7531554. Call collect.
181 -lf "

Call 446·0255.

26,000 miles, radio, one owner .
Sharp.

'3995

flats, reinforcing bars and ·
Neiman

Thi s mach ine makes bull on
holes , darns. em b .. all without
attac;:hments. Pay balance of
$39.41 or pay S6 per month .

1970.MAVERICK

------

SATURDAY, SEPT. 2 12:30 P.M.
ATHENS, OHIO

____

..

VER:Y

Neal Realty

DAIRY DISPERSAL!

..__

--

box springs S29-up, 955 Secon&lt;
Ave. 446-1171.
10·1'

AT SPECIAL
LOWER PRICES

154-tf

1972 ZIG ZAG sewi ng machine.

.CORBIN &amp; SNYDe-R
SERTA a. Bemco Mattresses t

month . Call 446-0683 or 446- 45 ACRES 1
formal dining room full
Home building In dandy
FARMS '
139-tf.
0008.
County G ~m f In Vlntoo basement• . lots of shade 15 A. modern S rm . home, 5 rural neighbOrhood, 5 minute
trom town . City school
190-tf
pond Rem~ fede7ces and trees. Route 141.
barns, 15 A. development drive
d istri ct ,
rural
water .
•
h
- - - - - -- -- e
wo
•tory
.
1
land. one of Gallia Co.'s best. Beaut iful at SS,OOO. Don't
S~a~ c~~.;;t S':'n:, decor. BELIEVE it or not! 4 rm s. bath 160 A. on St. Rt. 325, 100 A. miss
2 BEDROOM trailer . Phone 367seeing them , only 3 left .
We need 'male and female
7329.
bath and part ba
roo ms, and basement in city for less
tractor land. good bldgs. and
1
applicalions. Apply in person
Summer Cottage
190-tf
semen ·
than ss.ooo. Make us an offer.
plenty water .
only. No phone calls. Bob
104 ACRE Beef and Dairy.
Ranny Blackburn
204 A. near Lecta , lot s of t im On Raccoon Creek
Evans Steok House and Bob
TWO new trailers all electric, lf•
ber , 7 rm . house, 2 barns and
Farm. 6 room home. 2 barns.
Branch Manager
SLE
EPS 8, is fully turn Ished
Evans Drive-in.
Deep well. State Rt. 554. Call _ _ _ _ _ __;:.__ _
mile off Rl, 7. Call 446·1405 or
only $25.000.
and ready to use, road and
446·3468.
....ill A S mi. lrom Cheshire, on cr eek frontage . Approx . P/1
Th is farm reduced
181:11 ~46-4127.
Ward Rd .. no bldgs., un acres. $8,500.
s~. ooo due to retirement. Will
derlaid with coal. S20,000.
BABYSITTER Wanted for 2 :7
.
SL- E::-E::-P:-I-N_C._ R.:00
-- M'"'
s;_w_,
eekly
trade for home near town.
PRICE REDUCEO
Owner Anxious
23 A. Lincoln Pike , 7 rm . house,
year old child, References
rates.
Park
Central
Hotel.
barn
and
tab.
base
.
THE PRICE of this 14 acr~s
FOR: S19,900 here's a real
required . Mon. thru Fri., 7:30
308-tf 2 ACRE, roomy 2 bedroom
with 4 room block home ha s
fin e J bedroom home. nic e PIPES, Pipe•. Pipes, GBO,
to 5:30 p. m. P~ . 446-0918.
kitchen (rang e.oven), large
been reduced Sl.OOO. Located 90 A. plus, 30 A. tillable barn
200-3
Cheratan, BBB , Jobey ,
bath, basement, fen plenty water, good fences '
living room. hardwood
APARTMENT for construction home,
1112
miles
lrom
Vinton
on
Hilson,
and others . Tawney's
ced,
pines.
Addison
Twp
..
floors , flat lot, Jlh mile out
many young walnut, fob, bas~
men. Ph. 446-0756.
Keystone Road, it is fenced
$14,500 ,
Pipe
and
Trophy House. 422
SMALL gas motor repairman .
near
new
hospital.
we
sold
2
and most underlaid with coa l
267-tf
and most could be farmed or
Second Ave.
Apply In person, 43 Court St.
$15.750.
. in this neighborhood in 2
,.------used for pasture.
days. Belter Hurry .
199-tf
ACRE, 6 room two story
196-tf .
NICE sleeping rooms. $20 per 7 home,
WOULD CONSIDER
ANY HR. 446-19'8
State
Rt.
160,
Only
week. Lakeview Estates. Call
TRADING
"Cheapie"
111 ,200.
FEMALE receptionis t for
992-3975 or 992-2571.
3 BR HOME, full basemen! and
OLD ~ r oom br i ck on u Saturday clinic. For more
174-tf LOTS and small acreage for re cently re decora te d .
cellenl lot. Edge of town,
information call 446-0166 - - - - - - - - r~ldenhal or business, l lf1
Located at 27 Evans Heigh Is.
lots worth pri ce S5 , 400 .
·between 9 a.m. and 12 noon . SLEEP ING rooms for rent.
mole from Medical Center
Woul d consider trading for
Make offer .
198·7
Gallla Hotel. 446-9715.
Green Twp.
·
farm or Mob ile Home .
- - -- - THIRD AVE. &amp;
181 -lf
35 ACRES. 2'1&gt; miles from
MATURE lady to babysit for - - - - - - - - - ...- VINTdN, nice 2 bedroom home
SPRUCE ST.
Gallipolis. Ph . 446-4657.
one child from 8 to 5. Call 446- COTTAGE 2 rooms and bath, on Jackson St. Garden. Call 2 FAMILY dwelling with 4
202-6
1665.
452 Second Avenue
suitable for elderly couple or 2 446-4127
room s each and bath ea ch
446-3434 446-4775
'WAY" .
201 -3
ladles. Ph. 256-6233. price SSO
·
·
apt . Already rented . Buy
3 STORY building country
plus utilities.
NEAR hospllal. 4 aqe farm ;
1
today and start collecting FOUR ROOMS IN CITY - Nice
store, 1h acres.large garage.
small home for retiree or
rent.
201 -3 remodeled 3 bdrm. home,
SOON the children will be back
Ph . 643-9304.
couple. All clfy services, close
forced air heat, rural water .
Office Phone ~~6 - 1694
in school, what will you do - : : - - - - - - - - to st ores, beautiful area.
Price $11.500. See today!
Evenings
with your time? Sell Avon. FURNISHED apartment,
priced
under $10,000.
completely
remodeled,
new
·
Charles M. Neal, 446-1546
.
..
Call or write Mrs. Helen
furniture and appliances. All
J. Michael Neal, 446-1503
Yeager, Box 172, Jackson,
PLUSH MOBILE HOME utilities paid, adults only.
Ohio. Ph . 286-4028.
Five rooms with bath plus
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn .. 4469523.
additional 20 x 2.8 ~ullding .
Plenty of water with drilled
201 -tf
BY OWNER

-----FURN . home, 4 bedroom.

Amesville, Ohio

nice
3
bedroom
home ,
full
basement, Iaroe lol . You 'll
love the kitchen . Laroe
carpete';! living room . Edge
of town, Sl6,500 buys it and
it's tr e by a baroain .
VER:Y,

-

RanCho Com

TO

Here's your
chance at a real. nice 3
bedroom···nome IDeated on a
large flat lot at edge of town .
Including Iaroe living and
dining room, nice kitchen
!range, retrig ., washer and
dryer stay.s). full basement,
central air and garage . Lot is
eKtra nice. Could be com .
mere lei

floors , liv . rm . carpeted ,

flat lot ; price $13,000.

MOVING

EUROPE .

basement. will sell or trade. NEAR K.C. H. SC.-Colonial. 2
RIO G
, story, 8 big rms ., bese .. 3
RANOE - Lovely 3 yr. baths. 3 A. 150,000.
old brock priced to sell $21 ooo
includes 6 rms., HW, flo~rs PATRIOT - 2 story, older
drapes .

All Going at September Prices.

159-H

BEOROOM ' RANCH . This

5

Kyger Creek NEIGHBORHOOD Rd .. 3 BR BABY FARM - s A. gentle
slope, s room house wllh bath.
modular home, utility rm .,

suoo

.NEED a CoPY mach(ne? Ex trem~ly convenient tor office '
use $95 . Wiseman Agency. Ph .
446-3643,

3 UN IT S ( ~If rented ) on a flit!
city lot in 400 block of Second
Ave . Price It yourself and if

shaded lot. Price $21 ,900.

LOTS OF LOTS
WE HAVE lots in all direcflons.

For Sale .

IF YOU are building a hew
home or r emodeling, see us.
We are buHders. Oislribulor
for Hotpoint Appli ances,
Allison Electric.

Only A Few 1972 Buiclls Left.

1969 Cadillac

Apartment House

finished rec . rm.. attached
gar. and located on •12 A.

29 A. - State Route 160, vacant
CHESHIRE $8,700.

For Sale

'

Evening:
Ike Wiseman
446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446 -4500
We Need Listings

Price S31,SOO.

full

GODD USED MOBILE HOMtS .
lZxSO 2 Br.
l%7 Horizon 12xSO 2 Br. ..
1970 Richardson 12x65 3 Br.
1965 Vlndale 10xS0 ·2 Br.
·1960 Van Oyke .JOx40 2 Br.
1960 Van Dyke lOxSO 2 Br.
Tri-County Mobile Homes
'
2013 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohia
446-0175

mo Skyline

Off. 446·3643

.carpet, gas fur . 2 car garage
in base . with laundry and
work area . Located on near 2
dCre lot with river frontage.

has new Aerobic Septic tank ,

equipment.·

carpet tf'lroughout, a dream
kitchen and laundry room, NEW LISTING, Route 141 close
to town. lovely home priced to
large closets and storage,
sell.
2 BR. LR. modern kitfront porch, large storage
chen
,
large family rm ., utility
building , rural water, plenty
rm
.,
WW
carpet, cen tral air,
shrubs and trees located on

SN 10SI756 Hyd. full U blade SN
6381, 21,000 Mark II engine,
enclosed Allen canopy cab.
SPACIOUS
Good Cond Ilion - ready to WELL KEPT older 2 story
work .
.
home, 3 BR and bath, formal

104 GALION Grader SN GMP
20796, Good condition- ready
202·3

day or night, 367-7653.

TUESDAY, THE 29th,

stor~~e, large laundry room
by k1lchen, storm windows
and doors, front porch,

detached garage,
city
O.; Tuesday - Rev . George
of land fenced with woven schools, quick possession. All
Minthouse. Rt . 1 Jackson,
this for only $18.800.
wire .
. O.; Wednesday- Rev. Elmer
Jeffers. Patriot, 0.; Thursday
- Rev . Jack Hamilton, CLOSE to City Limit, 2 BR with
ONE STORY BRICK
bath and fuel oil furnace, TV
Harveysburg , 0 .; Friday 3 SR. 1'12 bath, paneled and
room
and
front
porch.
Price
Rev. Daniel Cain, Canton.
carpeted family and living
reduced. Shown by ap·
Ohio ; Sa turday - Rev. Manly
room, beautiful kitchen and
pointment.
Severt, Rt. J. Patriot, 0 .;
connect ing laundry room,
Sunday, 1:30 p.m. - Rev.
attached
garage, large level
LARGE
older
house
being
William E. Moore, Sidney, 0 .;
lot,
concrete
street, Kyger
repaired. 3 BR, bath, gas
Rev.
William
Moore,
Creek
School
Oist.
Extra good
furnace and large lot in City
Presiding ; Viola Pennington,
financing
.
Buy
now
and be
limits.
Musi c. Come to Cadmus on
ready when school starts.
Route 141 in Gallia County. Go
Now vacanl.
East on Cadmus-Patriot Road WE HAVE .Iots up the River on
Rt. 7, and lOts down the River
about 4 miles to Patriot.·
ON ONE ACRE
on Raccoon Creek, and out
195-6
OF LAND
past the new Medical Center BEAUTIFUL
- - -- - new brick one
on
the
Kerr,
Bethel
Road
with
TWO - WA~ Radios Sales &amp;'
3
BR
ranch
style. W-W
story
· county water on them .
Service. New and used CB 1 s,
police monitors, antennas, ·

MASSIE

MERCERVILLE

ioYe Homes for 5*

Real Estate For Sale

farms . 146 A., mostly new
on t JJt ':flghway, full
large liv . rm. , nice bath,
JUST LISTED
fences, 2 barns, silo, . pond
basement, : ~. .. ara e,
coppe r plumbing , all tile
county water ·~-() ab~e. 1!::; A TWO STORY 8 room &amp; bath creek,· fronts on 2 rds., 1,352
ceil in~, oil fur ., 2 car garage.
home located on a large well lb. lob. base, 44 A. corn base
r,es. an extra bullo,ng lot over
Large shaded lot. Walk to
landscaped fl/2 lot. Beauliful 25 A. corn goes with sale:
;, Acre. Will finance, with low
school. Only Si2,SOO.
hardwood floors in LR &amp; modern home with full
down payment.
formal OR, banquet •ize basement.
NEAR Clay School - E.t~a
•
kitchen with double oven
AT NORTHUP, 2 BR house with
nice, 3 bdrm ... new carpet In
cooklop, disposal and plenty 115 A. - Close lo Rio, lots of
fuel oil furnace, fireplace in
li v. rm. , din . area , and haiL It
bottom land and lots of farm
town

li11lng -room, large kitchen
with knotty pine cabinets,
stove and
refrigerator ,
several outbuildings, one acre

Lucasville ,

-~---,--

Notice
,t!l

Rt.

Real Estate For Sale

1972 VOLKSWAGEN square
back, 446-079 7.

NEWPORT
4 DR. SEDAN

1969 DODGE
CORONET 500

68 OODGE
DART GTS

4 Dr. Sedan with
Air Cond .

2 DR. HARDTOP

With Air Cond .

200-6

Services Offered

all extras. Ca ll 245·5198 or 446- PAINTING. Interior and ex .
te rior , Free estimates,
3236.
BELco, call 446-1764 or 446·
202-3
1758.
200-6
PUREBRED Coll ie pups, Mrs.
Max Haffelt . 256-113 1.
202-3 LAST
Bl D home
im·

-

provements.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

alumrnum

ONE of the finer things of life. 1960 CHAMPION 10 x 50 !railer.
siding; ~utters. rooting
· Blue Lustre carpet and
50 State Street
new gas furna ce, S2,000. Ph .
repairs, b1g or small . Pay
Gallipolis, Ohio
upholstery cleaner. Rent elec.
only labor and material . Work
367-.7634.
shampooer $1. (Central
guaranteed, Free estimates .
202-12
Supply).
Ph . 388-8221.
196-6 POOOL E pup
Plumbing &amp;Heating
Services OfferArl
Services Offered
194-tf
and one
Dachshund, S20 each , Ph . 446·
THOMAS rAIN
&lt;:ARTER'S PLUMBING
MOBILE home with extra large
EXTERMINATING CO.
0278,
TERMITE PEST CON rROL
\
AND HEATING
add on, located in Rio Grande.
Termite &amp; Pe•t Control
202-3 FREE Inspection . Call 446-3245.
Cor.
Fourth &amp; Pine
All electric, w-w carpet,
. Wheelersburg, Ohio
Sackh_oe and Dozer ·s.rvlce.
Merrill
O'Dell.
Operator
for
Phone
446-3888
or 446-4477
appliances, furniture in - BOATfor sale. 1611. runabout 80
Septic tanks , farm ditching
Extermlnal Termite Service,
165-tf
eluded . 7 rooms, enclosed
C&amp;S
ElectrfcaT
-serv
ice'
&amp;
hOrse
Mercury
engine ,
ponds . Free Estimolts .
19 Belmont Or.
porch. large sforage shed.
R'epalrs. House wiring , . Phone 367-7579 or :U7-7706 .
trailer, Del Gingerich. 628
267-tf
STA~OAR[f
plenty of close! space. extra
elec:tric heat, motor con trols.
Fourth, Phone 446-3778.
146-tf
Plumbing
&amp; Healing
nice, 245-5448.
Free
est
imates.
Ph
.
446-45cn
202 -6
Central Air Conditioning
215
Third
Ave
.. 446·3782
199-3 - - - - - or 675-3361.
&amp; Healing
187-lf
22·11
CHILOCRAFT, IS volumes. Sll5.
Free Estimate•
SEPTIC TANKS
1970 17 FT. TRAVEL trailer,
Phone 446-~536.
Stewart's Hardware
RUSSELL'S
Cleaned and lnslaflad
BANKS
TREE
SERVICE
202-3
self contained, good con ·
Vinton, Ohio
PLUMBING&amp;
HEATING
Russell
's
Plumbing,
4(6-4782
FREE
estimates,
liability
In
dillon, 446-1943. •
144-lf
.
2
1
Go
Ilia
Ave.
446-4782
surance . Prun ing, trimming
"297-tf·
202-3 MOBILE home with extra large
297-1'
and cavity work, tree and
add-on, located in Rio
ALBERT EHMAN'
BOB
LANE
'
S
Complete
stump removol . Ph. 446·4953.
USED clothing, 1'12 to 16, exc.
Grande. All electr ic. w-w
Water Delivery Service
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
Bookkeeping and Tax Ser.
73-tf
condition. Ph . 446-3375.
carpet, appliances, furniture
Patriot Star Rl., Gallipolis
AND HEATING
vice, 424'12 Fourth Ave .,
-~---202-3
included. 7· rooms, enclosed
Ph. 379-2133
Rcute160at Evergreen
9
a.m.1
Kanauga.
Office
hrs
.
.
GILLENWATER'S
septic
tank
porch, large slorage shed,
243-tf
Phone 446-2735
p,m. , Ph. 446-1049.
clecining and repalr , also
600 TOBACCO sticks. Ph. 446·
~lenty ol closet space, extra '7".,---- --:-----:
187-I
hou$e wrecking . Ph . 446-9499.
85-tf
nice . Ph. 245-5448 .
11
o
9706.
Estalil1'she'd In 1940.
202-3
202-tf
. IlENE PLANTS &amp; 5DN5
169-tf
HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
PLUMBING - l'ltating &amp; Air
-COMPLETE
water'
line
InIT'S Inexpensive to clean rugs TAKE soil away the Blue Lustre
D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
stallatlon, backhoe, bulldozer
Conditioning . 300 Fourth Ave.
SS:OO Service Charg•
and upholstery with Blue
way from carpets and
Ph . 446-1637. ( Farmtrly
Del iverY.
Servl&lt;:e . Your
and boring m.achine servi ces.
Will remove your dead .
Lustre.
Rent
electric
upholstery. Rent electric
1
Brammer's Plumbing' &amp;
patronage
will
be
ap.
J
.
P.
Holley
245·5018
or
0.
R.
,
horse
and
cows
shampooer $1. Central Supply
shampooer Sl . Murphy s ,
Healing. )
..
predated . Ph. 446-0463.
Holley 245-5006.
· Call Jackson ~4531
Co .
1 Lower Store.
7-tl
111
-ff
202-6 _ _ _ _ _ _ _202-6 1.1---......,---11--~

---'-- - - -

·

-------

------'-:'-

------,..,....,.

------

"""-'------

---...,---

DEAD Sl&amp;K.

------------

------------

----

--v-1
' --.,.-~~f.-.."

�..

••

~

,...-~.

.·

.. ............
~

~.·

.

.;.~

·~

.

.
28-Th' ~1, Sunday, Aug. 'll, 1972

,
I''

.. ..•

I

•

AIRMAN FIFE
POMEROY - Airman
Eddie E. Fife, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence E. Fife of 303
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, has
been assigned to Chanute
AFB, nl., after completliltr'
Air Force basic training. The
airman has been assigned tn
the Tecbnicar Training
Center at Chanute for
specialized training · In
aircraft maintenance.
Airinan·· Flie ·'is :i 1972
gra.d~at e oi ·Meigs Higb
School. .

HOW OLD THE OOW? -Leverett Roulh, Rutland St.,
Middleport, is proud of the large tomatoes grown in his
garden this year. Some measure 6" across. His neighbor,
Louie Sauer claims Roush. has a "secret formula" for
growing tom:.tnes. He told Lou his secret was to use "good
old cow manure," but Lou s;~ys Roush won't tell him how old
the cow has to be!

· ·GAVIN PLANT'S cooilng tower num~r Olie can easily be seen from the
facilitY's coal supply area located wesi.of the main plant. Gavin Plant's
single smoke stack, at left, is approximatelY one-tenth completed. At more

than 1,000 feet in height, the Gavin stack will he one of the tallest structures
in the nation. The stack has electrostatic precipitators designed to remove
99.5 pet. of the furnaces' particulate emissions for preservation of the water
quality of the Ohio ,River.

Editor Takes Recorder, Camera, Pistol
Monroe County tobacco farmers who buy his newspaper.
"Anyone who wants lo kill me
can pick their time."
Seemingly, Madisonville,
population 3,300, is a quiet,
peaceful town, nestled in the
pastoral foothills of the Great
Smokey Mountains of East
Tennessee . But Hicks, the
hardswinging editor who lets
the chips fall none too gently,
calls Monroe County a hotbed
of bootleg whiskey traffic. He
has won 45 state and national
awards for his reporting.
"He's been on me for one
thing or another now for six
years, " drawled Sheriff
Kenneth Da\iS who rides herd
over Madisonville, Sweetwater
and several smaller hamlets.
The morning the most recent
fire ra ged through the Democrat office, Davis, an admitted
enemy of the edi tor, laughed
and said : "Everyone in this
county is suspect and I am the
biggest."
Back at his newly rented
offi ce, Hicks propped his feet
on the scarred oak desk to rest
added Hicks, a stocky, wavy- for a moment. Despite the fire,
haired man whose casual dress he doesn't pla n to miss a single
is indistinguishable from the iss ue.
"I'm not really that unpopuiao·," said Hicks, his eyes
bloodshot because g~ only fo ur
hours sleep in two days. "It's
just an organized group of
abou t 50 or 60 people who hale
me. There are some who are
just ignorant.
"Why, I had this 8-ycar-&lt;J id
kid 1110 up to me one day and
shout tDan Hicks, you 'r't! a so nof-a-bitch and sowebody ought
to kill you.' Now you know he
didn 't realty mean that."

By MICHAEL WILLARD
MADISONVILLE, Tenn.
(UP! )-Editor Dan Hicks Jr.
totes the tools of his trade on
the front seat of a battered old
pickup truck: a camera, a tape
recorder and a .38-caliber
pistol.
"People don't argue that
what I have to say is untrue,"
Your home is your castle. It said the soft-Bpoken owner of
probably represents the the weekly .. Monroe County
biggest investmen t you'll De~ocrat. They JUS! . say
ever make. And yo u'll be don t have ther~~htto,prmt 11.
smart to protect that invest- Last week,. they b~rned
ment with a State Farm outthecrusadmgJournalistfor
Homeowners Policy with the second . time: Since he
Inf lat io n Coverage. This returnedtohtsnallvecountym
low·cost package of protec· 1007, he has also heen beaten,
lion provides broader cover· shot at twice and had equipage for your home and be· ment stolen.
longings and for you, in ease "A friend warned lne that
of lawsuits ... at '"" "'" they are going to kill me next
less cos t than .A_
time," Hicks , 51, casually
remarked as he rummaged
many similar poli· cies. Call me for '"'"'""· through the charred debris of
the detaols!
what had heen his office. The
CARROL K. SNOWDEN toots of the arsonist-oootPark Central Hotel Bldg.
coated gasoline cans recovered
Second Ave., 446-4290
from the ruins- were propped
Home, 446·45l8
against a tree.
Galltpohs, Oh10
"
h
..
m1r IUIII r1u INt CASIIIliT cotmn
Yea , sure 1 carry a gun,

CASTLE
INSURANCE

.!

~g•t tH iu ttOOJIIIII, ,DM . ntiiiCII

Pfiil!-1 -1 1

SILVER .REPLAT.ING
REDUCED 20%

LAST 5 DAYS

AFTER
Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
Since the 'O iue of old "l.e,p laled

FOR INSTANCE

1tem 5 lOn t inues to soar .. 01 is is an
c,:ccllt&gt;n l tm1e to take advan t age of
these low, low prices to have your
worn silve rw are, antiques and fami ly

Artie It

Teapot

Re(.
" ~ 31

Sale Pric e

50 125.20

Creamer .. 16 50

13.20

he ir looms repl ated li ke new. These Can d l estic~

pieces are now more va luable tha n

!per inc hi I 80

1.44

ever and make wonderfu l gi ft s. All

Sugao bowl 18 25

14 .60

work QUADRU PLE Sl lVERP lA TED

Trays !per

by ou r skilled si lversmiths and SalE'

sq. in.) ... . 15

. 12

prices apply to Al l pieces.

OUR NEW REPAIR POLICY
trREE DENT REMOVAL and stra ighltWtl on i!ll 1le1T1t wr

s il ~erplll! .

Iii ONLY $1.95 FOR AN• AND ALL AOOITIONAL REPAIRS , no mat te r Mow
e.tensrve. an any piete we sil~erplate . lrlC;Iudu solde rr ng broken han dles .
legs, knolls, etc. (Onlr e1cept1ons are ror furnrsh ing new parls l

SALE ENDS AUGUST 31
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 Second Ave. ·

,

It's a Bum Rap

ASK ·TO WED ·
· GALLIPOLiS .:... . ~pplying
for a marriage license Frid&amp;y
·in Caliia county Probate Coll!'t
were .Roger Van Athey, 18,
.Cheshire, (fiick driver, . and
Donna · J~an Justice, 18,
Cheshira, athome.

" Gallipolis, Ohio

Certain people have tried to
kill him, or at least it looks that
way.
In 1967 two muscular youths
attacked him after he had
written of alleged corruption in
the County Road Department.
"Ten or 15 people saw U1e
fight," said Hicks. "But they
wouldn 't testify."

Several nights tater, Hicks
was working late at his office
when a truck raced by and both
barrels of a shotgun were
emptied in his direction. "A
second later they would have
blown my head off," he said.
Two years later his building
was fired on again. Then In
January, 1970, "on the coldest
night of the year someone
.poured gasoline under the
newspaper's door and set it on
fire."
Hicks also has had equipment stolen and a note was left
saying he would get it back if
he "quit rocking the boat. "
"I guess it's at the bottom of

when the man was sent to
prison,'' said Hicks with a
smile.
In a life that has seen much
violence directed toward him,
Hicks admits he "feared n for
his life, and adds "I'm scared
to death a member of my
family will be kidnaped ."
After the latest fire, Hick's
wife, Irene, exclaimed, ''We're
going to get out of town by
tomorrow.''

say "Come Home America,
1972, McGovern-Eagleton"
across their fronts.
According to Hill, Eagleton
said: "I'm a big man. I'll need
a size large. And my wife can
wear one, and I've got a little
boy and a little girl who would
like some.'' ·
~~ well ," said Hill, WC didn't
want to sell the shirt to him. I
told him we would like to give
him a couple dozen."
11

BATONS TO TWIRL
MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a N.B.T.A. Baton contest
held at the Meigs Jr. High
School in Middleport Sunday,
Sept. 3, sponsored by the Glo·
ettes. A Miss Autumn
Ma jorette Queen will be picked
in iour age groups. ·
Ail area twirlers are invited
to partict~ate . Food will be
sold. Trophies will be awarded
for solo twirling, basic strut,
military strut, fancy strut, two
baton, hoop, flag and duet
teams a~d corps.

They didn't, and the next
issue of the newspaper will
come out Wednesday.
"I love my husb;tnd and he
said he wanted to stay," she
said as she surveyed the ruins
of the burned-out Democrat.
On the front of each issue of
the newspaper is the motto :
"What the people don't know
will ~url them."
Hicks says he firmly believes
it.

Imi'IT, Qhio (UP!) - Dr,.
lflltold L. Enar$on; presidenteleet of Ohio Sta~ University
· wd ·. Slltut'daf · much of . the
- i:rltici~nl of higher educ~tion is
a · ·"hum rap" 'and charged
many of the critics ·"proceed
from
unreasonable · ex'
pectations, wilfull ignorance or
cruel prejudice.''
'Enarson made the comments
in a commencement address at
Kent State University . where
1,600students received degrees
including 550 at the graduate
level.
Enarson, currently president
at Cleveland State University,
said discontent with ad·
ministration
of
higher
education "reached its
crescendo" in 1~70.
He said despite the relative
calm of the last two years "the
issues and the discontent cannot be swept under the rug."
"I doubt that changing the
machinery of university
government will make much
difference," he said. "Rather it
is the heritage of stubborn attitudes that cripple our capacity
for mutual respect and team-

way they lit and look.

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SUIT FILED
GALLIPOLIS - Hughes
Funeral ·Home Inc., Athens,
Saturday filed a confessed
judgment suit in Galiia County
Common Pleas Court against
Charles William Andrews of
Mason, W. Va. PlainUff S!!eks
$596.92 plus interest from June
1, 1969.

·"r love you,'' said. "liove
you more than! can say."

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........ yoats.
'than·the
ylove for you 4eeper thpn the
highest motintairi. . .ic~ is Mount deepest ocean which is the ·
,Everest which is ·over .twenty. . .Marianas trench which is over
thirty-five thousand feet deep."
nine thousand feet h~gh."

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MIJ! ~EI(O .

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TE~RISLE.

BORE.! .

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.. .

You' ll like the

Plenty of Knit Stach for men and
you ng men.
I .~
'I ' I
~~
,1 I

f

.,..

Boys Sizes are from 6 to 18 in regulars
and in Sli ms a nd there's a good
selec ti on of S l ~1c k s for hl•sky boys .

. -· .

'

i -'!.r . .

Excellent selec ti on of styl es that please
the grade schoo l boys and are just right
tor high school and col lege age .

Try on a pair or t wo -

J)..,•otmll'o 1l1e .Cr~aler
Milltlle
Ohio
Vflllir•'
1·
1-.
•
•
' '• ·'
.'
"·
., .

• 1;,: • • '1.

Another big shipment of boys and
men' s fl are leg Slacks . Denim s. Cor duroy s. Brushed denims, Cotton and
Po lyes tar blends.

.r
!!' '

..

. wprk . . . . . . .
."!plead for the most difficult
· changes.ol.aU-tlio8e which·C!ln
O!)ly come !iom· tM head arid
. heart, '1 h~ said: ·.' · .
·
Enllrson iulid he recogniZed
lhe·basic crltlewns of ·varlous·
lriterest groups of the unlve.Sities but ivai-ned of the . "easy
~a~ · of tinkerlitg wlth the
machinery of (university) government.
"They (the critics) proceed
from
unreasonable expectatlons, wilful! ignorance of
cruel preju~lce," said Enarson. He said all this could be
taken in strike "except that
sniping distracts from issues
which are basic. "

MEN'S AND BOYS DEPARTMENT
ON THE 1st FLOOR FOR
BACK-TO-SCHOOL NEEDS
FOR SLACKS

r·~

'

.....

VISIT ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

the Tennessee River by now, ''

he said.
Acandid man who knows the
libel Ia ws, Hicks doesn't mind
naming those he believes are
responsible for the latest arson
attack, but insists that it be
kept off the record.
Although an outsider reading
the Democrat might find it less
than racy, each issue supplies
local residents with enough
gossip to last them until the
next weekly issue.
"We have more subscribers
than ther e are homes in
Monroe County," boasts Hicks.
"Some buy the paper up town
before they g~t to see it at
home because !hey can't wait
to read it.''
What do the townspeople in
Madisonville and Sweetwater
think of editor Hicks?
Youn g Bob
Re gis ter,
pumping gas at a local service
station looked up from washing
a windshield long enough to
remark, "Some people like
hirn . l don't. He makes up most
of tloat stuff."
A Sweetwater policeman, on
the other hand, said, "You
ca n't fault Hicks too much.
What he writes must be true.
He never gets sued."
But the crusading editor was
sued once- for $700,000
because he called a man a
"bootlegging czar."
"The suit was dismissed

These were Free
ANN ARBOR, Mich. iUPI)A new Ann Arbor firm
squandered its entire advertis·
ing budget on one big ad in a
left-wing tabloid for a new item
- McGovern-Eagieton T·
shirts.
Tioen Sen. Thomas Eagleton,
D·Mo., resigned as the Democratic vice presidential can·
didate.
But instead of being left with
thousands of unbought cam·
paign shirts, Idea Grafiks
received orders from all over
the country, including the
Smithsonian Institutution in
Washington and the Detroit
Historical Museum. The shirts
were a collector's item.
Then Idea Grafiks received
the big order.
According to co-owner Jerry
Hili, he picked up lhe telephone
this week •.o hear a caller say:
"Hello. This is Sen. Thomas
Eagleton."
"Ohmigod," said }JiiJ . "It's
really him."
Eagleton said he wanted to
buy some T-Bhirts.
The hand-Bcreen print shirts

...

' '

FOR SHIRTS

'•"

••

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There's a big selection of Shirts lor
boys and for men. All arranged lor
your easy se lection .

,)

The Boys Sh irts are in Sizes 6 to 20 -

Popular Styles and the Men's Shirts

SGT. STRIPBS... !l'OIJ,~VJI:R

are in sizes Sma ll (14· 14'12 ), Medium
(] 5-1511,), large ( 16-161h ) and extra
large (17 -17112 ) . Solid colors, smart
pa tterns , stripe s and there 's plenty
of Kn it Shir ts in dress and sport
model s.

J--------w

I TtittJK lTWo\LD
\-kJI?rlfte FiN~tAl­
srtaJClOrcz 'L'w= "1Atl=N.

Let us help you find the Men's or
Boys Shirts that will match and
wear with slacks you like .

.~ ~
1ZJ 61JII,..f'.
••.
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FOR
UNDERWEAR
Select Hanes Underwear lor

'

Men and Boys In his correct
size and style thai's suitable.
Boys Briefs In sizes 4 to 20 and
famous Hanes T-St'rirts in the
sa mes sizes. '
#

For the high sc hool and
college crowd there's Hanes

Briefs, Athletic Shorts, Undershirts, Tee Shirts, and
you' ll find every size
. Also select your Hanes Gym
1
Shorts now. Sizes 22 to 38.
White, 100 Pet. Cotton .

~c!~! ~~!Sot

Socks for men and boys.
T.V. Orton Socks In dozens
of solid colors. While
Athletic Socks with color
trim (high school cotorsl .
Cushion Foot Crew Socks
and many, many others.
Stock up on your Socks
now.

See All The Other Back To School
Clothes For Men and Boys
Sweater5, Jackelo, Pajamas, ilobn;
Wrngler Jeans, Athletic Supporters, N1me
Tee Shirts, Caps, Sweater Vests, Wembley
Ties, Paris Bells, Handkerchieh,
Suspenders and many other items you'll
want to see.

SHOP EVERY WEEKDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

by

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28-Th' ~1, Sunday, Aug. 'll, 1972

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AIRMAN FIFE
POMEROY - Airman
Eddie E. Fife, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence E. Fife of 303
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, has
been assigned to Chanute
AFB, nl., after completliltr'
Air Force basic training. The
airman has been assigned tn
the Tecbnicar Training
Center at Chanute for
specialized training · In
aircraft maintenance.
Airinan·· Flie ·'is :i 1972
gra.d~at e oi ·Meigs Higb
School. .

HOW OLD THE OOW? -Leverett Roulh, Rutland St.,
Middleport, is proud of the large tomatoes grown in his
garden this year. Some measure 6" across. His neighbor,
Louie Sauer claims Roush. has a "secret formula" for
growing tom:.tnes. He told Lou his secret was to use "good
old cow manure," but Lou s;~ys Roush won't tell him how old
the cow has to be!

· ·GAVIN PLANT'S cooilng tower num~r Olie can easily be seen from the
facilitY's coal supply area located wesi.of the main plant. Gavin Plant's
single smoke stack, at left, is approximatelY one-tenth completed. At more

than 1,000 feet in height, the Gavin stack will he one of the tallest structures
in the nation. The stack has electrostatic precipitators designed to remove
99.5 pet. of the furnaces' particulate emissions for preservation of the water
quality of the Ohio ,River.

Editor Takes Recorder, Camera, Pistol
Monroe County tobacco farmers who buy his newspaper.
"Anyone who wants lo kill me
can pick their time."
Seemingly, Madisonville,
population 3,300, is a quiet,
peaceful town, nestled in the
pastoral foothills of the Great
Smokey Mountains of East
Tennessee . But Hicks, the
hardswinging editor who lets
the chips fall none too gently,
calls Monroe County a hotbed
of bootleg whiskey traffic. He
has won 45 state and national
awards for his reporting.
"He's been on me for one
thing or another now for six
years, " drawled Sheriff
Kenneth Da\iS who rides herd
over Madisonville, Sweetwater
and several smaller hamlets.
The morning the most recent
fire ra ged through the Democrat office, Davis, an admitted
enemy of the edi tor, laughed
and said : "Everyone in this
county is suspect and I am the
biggest."
Back at his newly rented
offi ce, Hicks propped his feet
on the scarred oak desk to rest
added Hicks, a stocky, wavy- for a moment. Despite the fire,
haired man whose casual dress he doesn't pla n to miss a single
is indistinguishable from the iss ue.
"I'm not really that unpopuiao·," said Hicks, his eyes
bloodshot because g~ only fo ur
hours sleep in two days. "It's
just an organized group of
abou t 50 or 60 people who hale
me. There are some who are
just ignorant.
"Why, I had this 8-ycar-&lt;J id
kid 1110 up to me one day and
shout tDan Hicks, you 'r't! a so nof-a-bitch and sowebody ought
to kill you.' Now you know he
didn 't realty mean that."

By MICHAEL WILLARD
MADISONVILLE, Tenn.
(UP! )-Editor Dan Hicks Jr.
totes the tools of his trade on
the front seat of a battered old
pickup truck: a camera, a tape
recorder and a .38-caliber
pistol.
"People don't argue that
what I have to say is untrue,"
Your home is your castle. It said the soft-Bpoken owner of
probably represents the the weekly .. Monroe County
biggest investmen t you'll De~ocrat. They JUS! . say
ever make. And yo u'll be don t have ther~~htto,prmt 11.
smart to protect that invest- Last week,. they b~rned
ment with a State Farm outthecrusadmgJournalistfor
Homeowners Policy with the second . time: Since he
Inf lat io n Coverage. This returnedtohtsnallvecountym
low·cost package of protec· 1007, he has also heen beaten,
lion provides broader cover· shot at twice and had equipage for your home and be· ment stolen.
longings and for you, in ease "A friend warned lne that
of lawsuits ... at '"" "'" they are going to kill me next
less cos t than .A_
time," Hicks , 51, casually
remarked as he rummaged
many similar poli· cies. Call me for '"'"'""· through the charred debris of
the detaols!
what had heen his office. The
CARROL K. SNOWDEN toots of the arsonist-oootPark Central Hotel Bldg.
coated gasoline cans recovered
Second Ave., 446-4290
from the ruins- were propped
Home, 446·45l8
against a tree.
Galltpohs, Oh10
"
h
..
m1r IUIII r1u INt CASIIIliT cotmn
Yea , sure 1 carry a gun,

CASTLE
INSURANCE

.!

~g•t tH iu ttOOJIIIII, ,DM . ntiiiCII

Pfiil!-1 -1 1

SILVER .REPLAT.ING
REDUCED 20%

LAST 5 DAYS

AFTER
Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
Since the 'O iue of old "l.e,p laled

FOR INSTANCE

1tem 5 lOn t inues to soar .. 01 is is an
c,:ccllt&gt;n l tm1e to take advan t age of
these low, low prices to have your
worn silve rw are, antiques and fami ly

Artie It

Teapot

Re(.
" ~ 31

Sale Pric e

50 125.20

Creamer .. 16 50

13.20

he ir looms repl ated li ke new. These Can d l estic~

pieces are now more va luable tha n

!per inc hi I 80

1.44

ever and make wonderfu l gi ft s. All

Sugao bowl 18 25

14 .60

work QUADRU PLE Sl lVERP lA TED

Trays !per

by ou r skilled si lversmiths and SalE'

sq. in.) ... . 15

. 12

prices apply to Al l pieces.

OUR NEW REPAIR POLICY
trREE DENT REMOVAL and stra ighltWtl on i!ll 1le1T1t wr

s il ~erplll! .

Iii ONLY $1.95 FOR AN• AND ALL AOOITIONAL REPAIRS , no mat te r Mow
e.tensrve. an any piete we sil~erplate . lrlC;Iudu solde rr ng broken han dles .
legs, knolls, etc. (Onlr e1cept1ons are ror furnrsh ing new parls l

SALE ENDS AUGUST 31
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 Second Ave. ·

,

It's a Bum Rap

ASK ·TO WED ·
· GALLIPOLiS .:... . ~pplying
for a marriage license Frid&amp;y
·in Caliia county Probate Coll!'t
were .Roger Van Athey, 18,
.Cheshire, (fiick driver, . and
Donna · J~an Justice, 18,
Cheshira, athome.

" Gallipolis, Ohio

Certain people have tried to
kill him, or at least it looks that
way.
In 1967 two muscular youths
attacked him after he had
written of alleged corruption in
the County Road Department.
"Ten or 15 people saw U1e
fight," said Hicks. "But they
wouldn 't testify."

Several nights tater, Hicks
was working late at his office
when a truck raced by and both
barrels of a shotgun were
emptied in his direction. "A
second later they would have
blown my head off," he said.
Two years later his building
was fired on again. Then In
January, 1970, "on the coldest
night of the year someone
.poured gasoline under the
newspaper's door and set it on
fire."
Hicks also has had equipment stolen and a note was left
saying he would get it back if
he "quit rocking the boat. "
"I guess it's at the bottom of

when the man was sent to
prison,'' said Hicks with a
smile.
In a life that has seen much
violence directed toward him,
Hicks admits he "feared n for
his life, and adds "I'm scared
to death a member of my
family will be kidnaped ."
After the latest fire, Hick's
wife, Irene, exclaimed, ''We're
going to get out of town by
tomorrow.''

say "Come Home America,
1972, McGovern-Eagleton"
across their fronts.
According to Hill, Eagleton
said: "I'm a big man. I'll need
a size large. And my wife can
wear one, and I've got a little
boy and a little girl who would
like some.'' ·
~~ well ," said Hill, WC didn't
want to sell the shirt to him. I
told him we would like to give
him a couple dozen."
11

BATONS TO TWIRL
MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a N.B.T.A. Baton contest
held at the Meigs Jr. High
School in Middleport Sunday,
Sept. 3, sponsored by the Glo·
ettes. A Miss Autumn
Ma jorette Queen will be picked
in iour age groups. ·
Ail area twirlers are invited
to partict~ate . Food will be
sold. Trophies will be awarded
for solo twirling, basic strut,
military strut, fancy strut, two
baton, hoop, flag and duet
teams a~d corps.

They didn't, and the next
issue of the newspaper will
come out Wednesday.
"I love my husb;tnd and he
said he wanted to stay," she
said as she surveyed the ruins
of the burned-out Democrat.
On the front of each issue of
the newspaper is the motto :
"What the people don't know
will ~url them."
Hicks says he firmly believes
it.

Imi'IT, Qhio (UP!) - Dr,.
lflltold L. Enar$on; presidenteleet of Ohio Sta~ University
· wd ·. Slltut'daf · much of . the
- i:rltici~nl of higher educ~tion is
a · ·"hum rap" 'and charged
many of the critics ·"proceed
from
unreasonable · ex'
pectations, wilfull ignorance or
cruel prejudice.''
'Enarson made the comments
in a commencement address at
Kent State University . where
1,600students received degrees
including 550 at the graduate
level.
Enarson, currently president
at Cleveland State University,
said discontent with ad·
ministration
of
higher
education "reached its
crescendo" in 1~70.
He said despite the relative
calm of the last two years "the
issues and the discontent cannot be swept under the rug."
"I doubt that changing the
machinery of university
government will make much
difference," he said. "Rather it
is the heritage of stubborn attitudes that cripple our capacity
for mutual respect and team-

way they lit and look.

'

•

.

;

'

.

.

' ,.
1 ,..

; ..'\\·,:, ... ;
.• ,
•',

.'

·~

(

'. ~··•'&gt;"'•

. ·t '

••

,' I.
.• !

.

,::,•

•

'

....

,.

.'
"';.'

;''

·,

. \
~

-

...I

\~

SUIT FILED
GALLIPOLIS - Hughes
Funeral ·Home Inc., Athens,
Saturday filed a confessed
judgment suit in Galiia County
Common Pleas Court against
Charles William Andrews of
Mason, W. Va. PlainUff S!!eks
$596.92 plus interest from June
1, 1969.

·"r love you,'' said. "liove
you more than! can say."

•

!{ \

f

.
~

I,

~

I. '
!

!

l

...

I

·

i

'

l -'

I'

1
j •

·.

'.. .
'

........ yoats.
'than·the
ylove for you 4eeper thpn the
highest motintairi. . .ic~ is Mount deepest ocean which is the ·
,Everest which is ·over .twenty. . .Marianas trench which is over
thirty-five thousand feet deep."
nine thousand feet h~gh."

..

"'

,

...

'

... ,,.

.

. .' I . . .

.
' ..

MIJ! ~EI(O .

I

lSi

'A .

. ·t
·,

TE~RISLE.

BORE.! .

L ..,..'

.. .

You' ll like the

Plenty of Knit Stach for men and
you ng men.
I .~
'I ' I
~~
,1 I

f

.,..

Boys Sizes are from 6 to 18 in regulars
and in Sli ms a nd there's a good
selec ti on of S l ~1c k s for hl•sky boys .

. -· .

'

i -'!.r . .

Excellent selec ti on of styl es that please
the grade schoo l boys and are just right
tor high school and col lege age .

Try on a pair or t wo -

J)..,•otmll'o 1l1e .Cr~aler
Milltlle
Ohio
Vflllir•'
1·
1-.
•
•
' '• ·'
.'
"·
., .

• 1;,: • • '1.

Another big shipment of boys and
men' s fl are leg Slacks . Denim s. Cor duroy s. Brushed denims, Cotton and
Po lyes tar blends.

.r
!!' '

..

. wprk . . . . . . .
."!plead for the most difficult
· changes.ol.aU-tlio8e which·C!ln
O!)ly come !iom· tM head arid
. heart, '1 h~ said: ·.' · .
·
Enllrson iulid he recogniZed
lhe·basic crltlewns of ·varlous·
lriterest groups of the unlve.Sities but ivai-ned of the . "easy
~a~ · of tinkerlitg wlth the
machinery of (university) government.
"They (the critics) proceed
from
unreasonable expectatlons, wilful! ignorance of
cruel preju~lce," said Enarson. He said all this could be
taken in strike "except that
sniping distracts from issues
which are basic. "

MEN'S AND BOYS DEPARTMENT
ON THE 1st FLOOR FOR
BACK-TO-SCHOOL NEEDS
FOR SLACKS

r·~

'

.....

VISIT ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

the Tennessee River by now, ''

he said.
Acandid man who knows the
libel Ia ws, Hicks doesn't mind
naming those he believes are
responsible for the latest arson
attack, but insists that it be
kept off the record.
Although an outsider reading
the Democrat might find it less
than racy, each issue supplies
local residents with enough
gossip to last them until the
next weekly issue.
"We have more subscribers
than ther e are homes in
Monroe County," boasts Hicks.
"Some buy the paper up town
before they g~t to see it at
home because !hey can't wait
to read it.''
What do the townspeople in
Madisonville and Sweetwater
think of editor Hicks?
Youn g Bob
Re gis ter,
pumping gas at a local service
station looked up from washing
a windshield long enough to
remark, "Some people like
hirn . l don't. He makes up most
of tloat stuff."
A Sweetwater policeman, on
the other hand, said, "You
ca n't fault Hicks too much.
What he writes must be true.
He never gets sued."
But the crusading editor was
sued once- for $700,000
because he called a man a
"bootlegging czar."
"The suit was dismissed

These were Free
ANN ARBOR, Mich. iUPI)A new Ann Arbor firm
squandered its entire advertis·
ing budget on one big ad in a
left-wing tabloid for a new item
- McGovern-Eagieton T·
shirts.
Tioen Sen. Thomas Eagleton,
D·Mo., resigned as the Democratic vice presidential can·
didate.
But instead of being left with
thousands of unbought cam·
paign shirts, Idea Grafiks
received orders from all over
the country, including the
Smithsonian Institutution in
Washington and the Detroit
Historical Museum. The shirts
were a collector's item.
Then Idea Grafiks received
the big order.
According to co-owner Jerry
Hili, he picked up lhe telephone
this week •.o hear a caller say:
"Hello. This is Sen. Thomas
Eagleton."
"Ohmigod," said }JiiJ . "It's
really him."
Eagleton said he wanted to
buy some T-Bhirts.
The hand-Bcreen print shirts

...

' '

FOR SHIRTS

'•"

••

'

There's a big selection of Shirts lor
boys and for men. All arranged lor
your easy se lection .

,)

The Boys Sh irts are in Sizes 6 to 20 -

Popular Styles and the Men's Shirts

SGT. STRIPBS... !l'OIJ,~VJI:R

are in sizes Sma ll (14· 14'12 ), Medium
(] 5-1511,), large ( 16-161h ) and extra
large (17 -17112 ) . Solid colors, smart
pa tterns , stripe s and there 's plenty
of Kn it Shir ts in dress and sport
model s.

J--------w

I TtittJK lTWo\LD
\-kJI?rlfte FiN~tAl­
srtaJClOrcz 'L'w= "1Atl=N.

Let us help you find the Men's or
Boys Shirts that will match and
wear with slacks you like .

.~ ~
1ZJ 61JII,..f'.
••.
' .
.

FOR
UNDERWEAR
Select Hanes Underwear lor

'

Men and Boys In his correct
size and style thai's suitable.
Boys Briefs In sizes 4 to 20 and
famous Hanes T-St'rirts in the
sa mes sizes. '
#

For the high sc hool and
college crowd there's Hanes

Briefs, Athletic Shorts, Undershirts, Tee Shirts, and
you' ll find every size
. Also select your Hanes Gym
1
Shorts now. Sizes 22 to 38.
White, 100 Pet. Cotton .

~c!~! ~~!Sot

Socks for men and boys.
T.V. Orton Socks In dozens
of solid colors. While
Athletic Socks with color
trim (high school cotorsl .
Cushion Foot Crew Socks
and many, many others.
Stock up on your Socks
now.

See All The Other Back To School
Clothes For Men and Boys
Sweater5, Jackelo, Pajamas, ilobn;
Wrngler Jeans, Athletic Supporters, N1me
Tee Shirts, Caps, Sweater Vests, Wembley
Ties, Paris Bells, Handkerchieh,
Suspenders and many other items you'll
want to see.

SHOP EVERY WEEKDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

by

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WINTHROP
NO 1J.a&lt;E GaN&lt;:a SWIMMING
WITH 'THE GANG C:OWN
· AT BOCNet9 POND•••

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GOING~ 105CHCOI-

PI&lt;ET1Y 6CON NON.

NO MORE CHASING 11-lEIR
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GET "''S'E'L.r '!X)WN
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toN.'T \.\O~rc!Y
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SI-IE''S "TRYINIG

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l 011&gt; TO.l&gt;ESERVE' A .

· : SELFISH L.ITTLE
O~VIL. L.IKE YOU.ALL/VO(J EVER
THINK ABOUT
IS YOURSELF-

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WIL:L lAM MAKE PEP..CEIHt\CKEI&lt;Y .

MY

by Les .Carr~~J.

. THE.'5E.

'PIG$' KNUCKLES

ARE

;DEL!CI'OUS! .

.__. FOR HOURS! .

0 \D 'YOU ..
JUSTGE.\

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THAii TO
&lt;;HANGING A lY'~W~ITU RIBBON!"

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by Art Sa:a.sou1

THB BORN'LOSER

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M-IJORNI~,
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HG'S OUT It-Ill\~
K\TC.He;~ 0\Slt-lKI~'

SE!~Ri RE~'I\IJNTI

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DANCING GII?L.5 ....

BUI SIRE. IODAY
IS -rHc DANCING

GIRLS'·DAY 01=1=.

BUGS BUNNY
HMM!' TELL

SO"RY. FUDDSY.

YA WKAT... I'LL

NO REFUNDS! .ALL
SAI...ES AR'E:. I
FINAL .

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HIM reRiH'

PARKOr!

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ME AT I..EA51 ON£
DANCIN&amp; GIRL,
............. HI~ NOW.·.. .....

YOU CANT?/

LE.T YA

WHAT A GUY WONT
DO 10 A\OlD PAIN.

C\..YDE. Wll.l. tSE GIQ:AT
COMI'AN'r' FER YA I AN'
ALL HE EAT-s 1'3 51~D'i
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A I.OOK

YOU~ G~At)ES A~E TE~~~S~E
AND YOUR ATTITUt&gt;E IS'
AaoMINAB~El;

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WIN YOU RE WASTINQ YOUR .
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HAVf W~INKL.e~.
VOIJ GIViN ANI( n.OUGfiT
WHAT ¥CUlM OOING TO VOUR.
L:"''"·,, ' ~UTURSo •.VOUR CARiiaR.l

$1l,ALI.o Wi PUT 'IOU
bOWN FOr:t' 'A Sl&lt;t BUM i OR WOULD
'iOU IIATilBil Jill A SURF BUM'S.
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Weather
Mostly sunny and not as cool
today with highs in the mid 701
to low 80s. Clear tonight with
lows in the upper 50s and low
60s. Fa;r and a little warmer
tomorrow with highs in upper
70s to mid 80s.

enttne

Devoted To The lntere&amp;l$ Of The Meig&amp;-MliJion Area

VOL XXIV

;.:THE ~AME. ON' · .
~ At-L. D.A~ ·~oN~.;,

S"/LVIA PLA~S A
. RECORO~·.. ..

..·.)\NO DANCES
,. .· t o .· A SON~•'

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On the basis of prehistoric
cave drawings, early shaving
tools included shark's teeth
and clam shells.

,..

~,....

NO. 94

POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1972 ·

PHONE 992 2156

TEN CENTJ

Messy Weather Causing
Crowds at Fair to Lag

'

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Two
appearances by the Osmonds
were expected to perk up at·
tendance today at the Ohio
State Fair after disappointing
crowds showed up during the
1~y festival's first weekend.
Fair officials reported
224,689 visited the fair
Saturday and 244,&amp;18 Sunday.
They had hoped for 250,000 on

Sunday, but cloudy skies that
threatened rain apparently
kept many away.
The highly-popular Osmonds
will. perform in the graridstand
at 4:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Four days of harness racing
also began today with the $27,·
000 Ohio state trot for Z.year·
olds.
·
The Osmonds will perform

two more shows Tuesday. Then
Lynn Anderson appears Wed·
nesday, Ike and Tina Turner on
Thursday and Roberta Flack,
Bobby Vinton and AI Green on
Friday, Bob Hope will perform
Saturday and Sunday.
Miss Ohio Wool
Among those receiving
awards ·Sunday was Connie
Kline, 14, Polk, whose l,!W-

pound Angus steer was member , Miss Leppert will
selected as grand champion participate in the "Queen of
over all breeds in the Junior Queens" pageant next Sunday
when "Miss Ohio State Fair"
Fair.
Dave Arnet, 16, Brookville, will be crowned.
exhibited the r""erve grand · Other main attractions were
champion 1,050-pound the horse and pony pull con·
tests.
Charolais steer. ,
Herman Russell 's winning
Becky Leppert, 17, Dublin,
was named "Miss Ohio Wool pony team from Zanesville
Queen of 1~72." A 4-H Club captured top honors in the 411inch class with a pull of 4,2011
pounds over 14 feel. Edlin Lee
and Oscar Ethington of Pleasureville, Ky., won the 1972
pony pull championship in the
50-inch class with a 5,400-poimd
pull over 14 feet.
Hubert Potts of Maceo, Ky.,
took first place in the light·
weight horse pull, while \he
heayyweight title went to John
Drake's powerful horse team
from Camden, Mich. Potts'
team dragged 7,600 pounds of
concrete ?:/ feet while Drake's
At 7 p. m. S!IDday on Route pulled 8,500 pounds the same
141, eight-tenths of a mile north distance,
of the Lawrence County line,
Top Fowls ·
Jerry L. Spurlock, 24, Ironton,
Three poultry grand champi·
was southbound when Edith E. ons were chosen. The white
Stumble, 32, West Mansfield, Polish pullet entered by Wilbur
Ohio, was traveling north and Stauffer, Apple Creek, won the
swerved left of center and hit grand champion standard
the right front of the Spurlock award while the South Carolina
auto. Stumble's auto continued
(Conlinued on Page 8~
to the right and hit an em-

7 Accidents Make Only
Bumps i~ Man and Metal
The ToJ ·turers'
ApprenticeKINAH

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f',JO,Ac;f~ES

-At-.J'KIN AH
6H(X)TTH'
ONE AFTER
THAT?

.

NESS BEFO' PU:ASURE,

CHILLU~-Wl::

GOTTA RESKEW
A SCRAGG Wf.l.O 15 IN TH'
HANDSO'OtJR BLOOD
ENEMIES- Tl.f 'f(li(UMS!!

GIVE m!S NOTE. 10
TI4'CA5HIERAN' HE'LL GivE YO'

mAR

SOMEMONE'f

' Af.l ' MI::NTAL
STRE~I 'TH

NODOUe&gt;T-

!!

, Ah · i~ a Serda&amp;
an! IOc\d«.ct wif ·

Dyn4mi+e. Giv( '

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tneollyore
Monev or ah' 1\
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blow Yo'~ ·
-t-arnation 11

..

CAPTAIN EASY
~l.AZE7! THi~ A77!:MBLY OF THE

WDRLP'6 . .

M05T BEAUTIFUl- WOMEN FOR "RAOUL McKeE:"
COSMETIC" I~ GE-TTING OU/ OF HAND~

'IOU'~E

I&lt;:EFERRit.i&amp;
TO THE WAY
THAT ~RBEOU2
BLOtVE HA?
WA?H
CORNERED
~

WELL, Q' C·C·COUR2E YOU'RE
&amp;EAUTIFUI.-~ l GOT E:YE7!

E'&gt;·B·BUT-

stopped behind an unidentified
vehicle turning left.
Lonnie L. Drummond, 21,
Route I, Bidwell, was following
behind another unidentified
vehicle that was behind
Saunders' vehicle.
Drummond swerved off to
the left of the roadway to avoid
a collision with the second
unidentified auto, got back on
the road, but hit the rear of
Saunders' vehicle. There was
moderate damage to both.
Drummond was cited for
driving while intoxicated.
At 2 a. m. Sunday on Little
Kyger Road, six-tenths of a
mile north of State Route 7,
Samuel L. Huriow, 21, Addison,
traveling south last control on
wet pavement. He drove off to
the rig~!)'!!!! • . dl~h. There
were no arrests . Hurlow's
vehicle had minor damage.
Also at 2 a. m. Sunday on
State Route 7, one and nine·

tenths miles north of Gallipolis.
Martha Jean Nicholson, 25.
Route 3, Pomeroy. stopped to
turn left into a private
driveway when she wad struck
in the rear by an auto driven by
Gerald Provins, 24, Route 2,
Nor thup. Both ca rs were
moderately damaged. Provens
was cited for driving while
intoxicated .
At 3 p. m. Sunday on Rocky
Fork Road, three miles southwest of Mercerville, Harold E.
Watson, 46, Eureka Star Route,
was traveling west left of
center when he struck the left
front of a vehicle driven by
Mark D. Wright, 19, Route 2,
Fayetteville, Ark. There was
moderate damage to both
vehicles.
A passenger in the Watson
auto, EliP.tbeth Massey, 2,
Route 1, Gallipolis, received a
bump on llie forehead. Watson
was cited for driving left of
center.

bankment. Stumble was cited
for driving left of center. Both
cars
were
moderately
damaged.

·

TWO Attend
Recognition

At 7:55 p. m. on the State
Route 7 bypass, two and threetenthsmiiesnorthofthe·MeigsGallia line, Kelsy Roberts, 49,
u.LL
Ashland, Ky., was traveling
north when he lost control and
Recog nition Day is being
went off to the left into a ditch. observed today at the Ohio
Rober\.'! had apwent minot;,,.-S\at~oJ.\IIlior Fair.
injuries, but was not treated. . Invited guests this morning
There was minor damage to his at a ·special breakfast were
auto. He was cited for driving Margie Jeffers, Ohio winner in
while intoxicated.
home improvement; Jan
Holler, Ohio winner in the
Health program, and their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jeffers of near Albany, and Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Holier, Pomeroy
Route 3.
''Johnson's various partners
Alan Holter who was selected
and affiliates knew, or should to represent Ohio at the
have known, that Johnson has Nationa l Dairy Conference,
been a trustee of Ohio Univer· was unable to attend because
sity since 1947," Brown said. he has gone to the University of
''The defendants should have Kentucky where he is enrolled.
known that such actions were
This afternoon, Miss Holter
in violatllm of the law with re- allended the Ohio Teen Council
spect to · trustees and their and Miss Jeffers, runner-up for
fuduciary (trust and confi· Meigs County Junior Fair
dence) duties tD Ohio Univer· Queen, represented Meigs
sity and its beneficiaries, and County in the Ohio Junior Fair
the citizens of the state of Queen contest.
Ohio," Brown said.
A requirement is thai the
The attorney general queen contestant must be 16
charged the defendants with years of age by Jan. 1, and
"wanton and willful breach of Miss Holter, the Meigs Junior
good faith in utilizing a pnsition Fair Queen, does not meet that
of public trust for purposes of requirement.
self-dealing and their own
profits.
INFANT INJURED
"This action seeks to firmly
The Middleport E-R squad
establish the principal of law answered a call to 635 Hobart
that those in public office have St. at 7:48 p. m. Sunday for
a fuduciary relationship with Barbara Jean Edmonds, 13
the people of the state of Ohio months, who suffered a leg
and cannot use their trust po- laceration in a falL She was
sitions for purposes of personal taken to Veterans Memorial
profit," ·Brown added.
Hospital, treated and released.

F&gt;!ll.; ... Event

OU Trustee Sued for $372,000

'

FULL PHYSICAL .
AT 7 ';,._

The Gallia-Meigs State Highway Patrol investigated seven
traffic mishaps since noon
Saturday which resulted in
only minor bumps and bruises
to persons. Property damage
was light to moderate .
· The first occurred Saturday
at 2:26 p. m. on State Route 7.
one and one-tenth miles south
of the Meigs County line.
Richard G. Abels, 52, Route I,
Long Bottom, was northbound
behind an auto driven by
Sharon A. Cooper, 20, Route I,
Cheshire. Miss Cooper was
stopped to turn left when Abels'
car hit her's in the rear. There
was minor damage to the
Abets' vehicle and moderate to
Cooper's. Abets was cited for
failure to stop within an
assured clear distance.
AI 13:ll0 a. m. ~1!1'\b!Y QJI
State Route 7, four-tenlha of a
milP. north of Route 35, Gary A.
Saunders, 19, Cheshire, was
traveling north when he

AND

'UCH EYE~!

GREAT 6L0Wir-J6
ORB~

OF FIRE,!

HYPNOTIZIN6 ME&lt;
LIKE A HELPLE:~~

RABBin

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

r-------~~~~~~~
MY DEAR EA?V: IN CME: VOU DIDN'T
KNOW IT-- 5HE'5 THAT ECCENTRIC
SILtiONifiRE~~..ve:NU?IA VAI-J qeAVE:!

COLUMBUS (UP[) - State
Attorney General William J .
Brown today flied a f372,000
~awsuit
against
Ohio
University truiltee Fred H.
Johnson, charging him with

conflict of interest by !lOlling
life insurance to the university.
Jolutson is a local insurance
executive.
"As a direct result of such
dealings and transacti.ons,

fN:ews
' "'"·"' · ..·"· in' Briefi~·

By UDlted Pressllllernatl01181
BAKERSFIEW, CAIJF.- WINDS WHIPPED UP powder·
dry dust from freshly.plowed farmlands and blanketed two
freeways filled with cars returning home after weekend
vacations causing massive pileups that left more than 100 per·
sons dead and injured. About 80 vehicles smashed intD each other
in two pileups that occurred within 10 minutes and less than 15
mlles apart in southern San Joaquin Valley Sunday afternoon.
The California Highway Patrol said seven persons were
killed, about !16 injured in the accidents. C!lsualties were treated
at three hospitals in this Central Callfomia city. Names of the
dead and injured were being withheld untu their famllles are
notified. "The whole line of cars went boom ... boom ... boom like
a chain reaction," said Major Slliith, 24, Oakland, Cali!., who was
involved in one of the accidents.
CAPE KENNEDY- 111E LA8I' OF AMERICA'S moon
ahlps went to the launch pad today and its Apollo 17 cr!!Wf~~en
rode part of the way to marlt the end of an era for the mobile
launch concept alii sent eight Apollo teams to the moon.
'Astronauts Eugene A. German, Ronald E. Evans and Dr.
Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt watched their 363-foot rockelspacecraft combination edge out of the vehicle assembly
'building at dawn. ·
An hour after the rocket left Ita hangar, the astronauts
climbed aboard the massive elght-Q-ead transporter as it crept
toward the firing site on the Drstleg of the nation's last scheduled
moon trip this decade. The spacemen traveled about a half mlle.
They wW Jog more than one million mlle8 after launch in
December.

MUNICH-U.S. SWlMMERS BEGAN breaking world
records with the first splash In the Olympic Games today and a
North Hollywood, Call!., television script writer won America's
f1r1t medal, a silver in the small bore rill~ shooting. Gary Hall of
Garden Grove, CaW., BWlmmlng the flrat heat of the first event,
broke the Olympic 2QO.meter butterfly record with a 2:03.7. The
old mark was 2:06.6by Great Britain's Brian Brinkley.
1n .the next heat, Robin Backhaus of Redllnda, Calif.,
cracked \he ·!IJted world record with a 2:03.1. Hana FaSIIUICht of
w1111t Germany, who waa to win the next heat in 2:06.4, held the
world mark at 2:03.3.
.
Then came Mark Spitz, who Ia bidding here for an unprecedej)ted
-t!II·IO!dmedall, and he Dashed to a 2:02.1 to beat Backhaus'
time. Spliz hal a time of 2: OU in the Olympic triaII pending for
world reeopltloo.

SAN CLEMENTE, CAUF. -PRESIDENT NIXON looked
today toward a further reductloo in U.S. troops in VIetnam and
(Continued on Page 8)

Johnson received substantial
commissions and profits,"
Brown said.
The suit, filed in Franklin
County Common Pleas Court,
also named Rankin, Johnson &amp;
Co., Inc. of Columbus; Rankin
&amp; Rankin, Inc .. of Zanesville.
and Best-Johnson, Inc., of
Columbus, as defendants.
The suit says· the defendants
should be held liable for
commissions, profits , and
emoluments totaling $97,000,
plus interest. The attorney
general also is seeking punitive
damages of $250,000 and at·
torneys' fees of $25,000.

Olarge Filed

In One Mishap
The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenbach
in·.
vestigated two weekend accidents.
At 7 p.m. Saturday on
County Road 35 in Lebanon
Township, a car driven by
James E. Ritchie, 35, Portland
Route I, ran off the road intD a
ditch. Damage was "ex·
tensive ." Ritchie said his
brakes locked. He would he
charged with driving while
intoxicated, lawmen said.
At 10:45 a. m. Sunday on
State Route 338 near the
Racine corp, limits, moderate
damage was reported to a car
driven by JosephS. Manuel, 39,
Racine Route 2, when it was
struck by a car driven by
Ralph F. Neigler, Jr., 49,
Racine Route 2. The Neigler
car was backing from a
driveway when the accident
occurred. No charge was filed .
LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at II a, m.
Monday was 77 degrees under
sunny skies.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
High School Athletic Boosters
will meet at 8 this evening at
the high school in ~cine to
make plans for the first football game.

I·

l

IT'S BACK TO SCHOOL today for students in Meigs County. Entering Syracuse
Elementary for a full day of classes are Brian Allen, first grader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Allen, who maybe would rather he goingJishiq&amp;, and Sooia and Tonia Ash, filth gradw; twln
dausJtters of Mr. ami Mrs. Dick A.!h. Thl.s''.rene .was i"fpealed many times· today ail classes
resumed.

Fair Bug ·Prohe Wanted
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Democrats are calling for an
independenl investigation of
the alleged bugging of the
party's national committee
offices. Republicans want Sen.
George S. McGovern's campaign financing investigated.
~hese co unter cha llenges
developed following a report
last weekend by the General
Accounting Office (GAO), congressional investigative
agency, that charged the
Committee to Re-Elect the
President with II apparent or
possible violations of the 1971
Federal Election Campaign

Act in the ·handling of $350,000
in contributions.
The GAO said that $114,0110 of
the campaign funds was
deposited in the bank account
of Bernard L. Barker, one of
five men arrested with elaborate electronic gear June 17 in
the Democratic offices. Barker
is a former employe of the
Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA).
Referring to the Justice
Department investigation of
circumstances surrounding the
break-in, McGovern's political
director Frank Mankiewicz
said Sunday, "In a well·

Head Teachers Are Appointed
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District Board of
Education meeting in special
session Saturday appo in ted
two head teachers.
Larry Wolfe was appointed
head teacher at the Portland
Elementary School, which has
been reopened this year, and

ordered society you don't ask
the fox who got into the chicken
coop."
Mankiewicz said that a
special prosecutor should be
appointed, independent of the
Justice Department, "since
people in or near the adminis·
tration are obviously involved"
in the case.
He said in a CBS.TV interview that President Nixon
"is now sitting on a major
scandal...that affects the entire
administration. "
Maurice H. Stans, former
commerce secretary who now
directs fund-raising for Nixon's
campaign, insists he has no
idea how the money got to
Barker's account.
Stans called ~nday for a
GAO investigation of Me·
Govern's campaign organiza.
lion, ''which we have reason to
believe will be
very

William Baer was named head
teacher at the Syracuse
Ele mentary SchooL Both
appointments are for the 197273 school year only.
revealing .''
George Johnson was named
In a statement, Stans denied
substitute custodian at the any violations by the CommitSyracuse Elementary SchooL tee to Re-Elect the President.
(Continued on Page 8)

President Shines with ·Hollywood Stars
:·:·=·=·=·:::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::s?.::~:::::~:::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:~=:=:=:=::::::::::~:::::!:::::::::

By VERNON SCOTT
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPI)-Presidenl Nixon took
Hollywood by a landslide
Sunday, with more stars
turning out for a psrty at the
Western White House than
have been seen at any
Academy Award ceremony.
"I never knew there were so
many closet Republicans,"
cracked Vince Edwards,
television's Dr. Ben Casey, at
the turnout of about 400
traditionally Democratic show
business leaders.
The President, mixing and
chatting on an overcast, sultry
evening at his vWa overlooking
the PacUic, told his guests he
had a projectioo room inBtalled
in the White Houae "so I can
watch more movies. Pat and I
both love .motion pictures.
They:re not interupted by
commerciala."
He said that no X-rated flbn
has been shown in his pC"ivate
theater. "But we have shown
an hoor of an R-rated movie,
and that's as far as we're going

to go.u

"I don't want to sound
jingoistic but I prefer motion
pictures made in Hollywood.
This is where they began, this
is where tbey grew up and they
are .- an · American
phenomenon."
Pi"esidential adviser Henry
Kissinger, who takes a ribbing
for his image as the administration's swinging bachelor,
showed up with adress Jill St.
Jolut.
"Henry has tried for three
years arxl fmally persuaded
me to vote for the President,"
said Miss St. John.
Turning to nCjVsmen, Kissln·
ger quipped, "And you guys
thought I was just wasting my
time out here."
When reporters asked
Kissinger what his other
women friends would think of
his dating Miss St. Jolut, she
interjected "Let them eat their
he arts out."
The guests Included a
number who In tbe past have

gone out campaigning for
Democratic nominees, i n ~
clu,ding Frank Sinatra, now a
golfing pal of Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew, Jimmy
Durante and Charlton Heston.
The Republican stalwarts
were led by John Wayne, Clint
Eastwood, Jlnuny Stewart and
Glen Campbell.
Mingling with them was a
couple with a foot in both
camps, political and movie,
Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan.
It was a tw(}{;a bor party,
with Zsa. Zsa and sister Eva
both attending - and even
speaking to each other, an
unusual sight.
Comedians Dan i\OWan .and
Dick Martin of "Laugh In"
arrived directly from work at
NBC In Burbank, 70 miles to
the north, in a helicopter.
Among others attending
were Jack Benny, Richard
Crenna, Glenn Ford, Merv
Griffin, Debbie Reynold.s, her
former husband, Eddie Fisher,
Red S~elton , Mary Tyler

.....

Western White House Better
Than an Academy Awards Night

"A congressman recently
told me that 'll I had told my
old man when I Jived in Harlem
that some day .I woold talk to
the President of the United
States, he would have told me I
was crazy,"' the President
Outshining the glamor girls said.
"Well, I know this wl11 date
was the President's daughter,
Tricia Cox, a blonde charmer me, but if I had told my old
who drew more attention than man that someday I would
shake bands with Jack Benny,
mnst of the stars present.
Wandering among the he would have told me l was
guests, nattily dressed, was the crazy," Ni:ioo said.
Nixon thanked the entertal·
Rev. Billy Graham, who has
preached at Sunday White ners who had performed at the
House services. Asked 11 be White House during his Drat
was going to vote for Nixon, he term "Which I know WN I
grlnne~ and replied "I'm
great deal of trouble for you
and not even tax deductible."
leantna.
Jaclt tillY l!llid he had
He added "l'he only camvoted Dt. .ocratic in the pastpaign promise I'll matlnl
"! was for Truman"-41Ut this tonight Is that 111)'01\e Wbo
year he supports Nixon.
haan't been invited to the While
The President repaid the Houae yet, will be In the Mit
compliment.
four yean."

Moore and George Burns.
The younger crowd included
former football star Jim
Brown, Frankie Avalon, Mi·
chaei Cole, Elizabeth Bauer
and Chris ~nneUy.

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