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                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 1,1972

MH&amp;R Program Expanded
COLUMBUS ( UPI)~ov.
John J. Gilligan today an- ·
nonnced approval of a $15
million one-year contract to
expand five services or the
Department of Mental Health
and Retardation which
would benefit an estimated
10,000 persons.
Joining Gilligan in the an·
nouncement of the contract in

MASON DRIVE-IN
''

&lt;

I

'

:,

'J

I

/)( H'&lt;&lt;HINqll!l,

TONIGHT, SEPT. 1
DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"FRIENDS"
( Technicolor )

R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS

(Color)
I R)
SATURDAY, SEPT. 2
DOUBLE FEATURE
"THEY MIGHT BE
GIANTS"

Color
George C. Scott

which the slate Welfare Department provides some of the
funds and hel(lll administer the
program were Mental Health
Direetor Kenneth D. Gaver and
Acting Welfare Director
Robert B. Canary.
·
The contract calls for:
- An expansion of early
Short term psychiatric evaluation, testing and treatment for
people with mild forms of mental illness to permit them toreturn oo the community and oo
full or part tie employment.
-The establishment of 10 inpatient drug treatment units
and a post-release counseling
service for rehabilitated pa·
tients.
- The establishment of five
geriatric centers to serve the
psychiatric and rehabilitation
needs of elderly Ohioans.
- Expand drug education
programs designed to promote
awareness of the dsnger of

MEIGS TliEATRE
Tonight and Satorday

Joanne Woodward

September 1-2

G

ALSO
"THE MERCENARY"
Color

CATO'NINETAILS

ITechnicolor)
Jas Franciscus
Karl Malden
Catherine Spaak

Franco Nero
Jack Palance
Tony Musante

GP

WELCOME HOME,
SOLDIER BOYS

ITechnlcolor)

Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday
September 3-4-5

,Sunday, Monday

DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"PREACHERMAN
Amos Huxley

and Tuesday
September J.4.5

PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM

R

ITechnicolor)
Woody Allen

Ilene Kristen

Diane

PLUS
"WHO SLEW
AUNTIE ROO?" GP

Ke~ton

,

GOING HOME
{Technicolorl

Robert Mitchum

Color
Shelley Winters
"')ark Lester

GP
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

drug abuse.
· ~ Further development of
release
and
aftercare
programs to improve services
to patients leaving state
hospitals.
Gaver said the state institutions providing the evaluation,
testing and treatment as well
as other services included:
Fairhill Mental Health
Center of Cleveland; Portsmouth Receiving Hospital;
Woodside Receiving Hospital
of Youngstown; Fallsview
Mental Health Center of
Cuyahoga Falls; Cleveland
Psychiatric Institute and
Rollman Psychiatric Institute
of Cincinnati.
Gaver said units tD establish
the level of drug dependency
and provide detoxilication programs, counseling and methadone maintenance programs
would he established at:
Fallsvlew Mental Health
Cenler, Cuyahoga Falls;
Rollman Psychiatric Institute;
Columbus State Hospital;
Toledo Mzntal Health Center;
Cleveland Psychiatric In·
stiture; Woodside Receiving
·Hospital; Dayton Mental
Health Center; Athens Mental
Health Center; Cambridge
State Hospital and Tiffin State
Hospital.
Gaver said the geriartic centers to provide testing and
evaluation as well as day and
night care would be established
at:
Toledo Mental Health
Center; Hawhornden State
Hospital
near
Akron;
Massillon State Hospital;
Dayton Mental Health Center
and Athens Mental Health
Center.

Driver

Albert Reuter

Died Thursday
Alber/. G. Reuter, 94, of 1500
Vermo•1l St., Lawrence,
Kansas, formerly of Pomeroy,
died there Thursday.
Mr. Reuter was born on Feb.
15, 1878 in Pomeroy moving tD
Columbus in 1902. He was
employed for 30 years as · a
salesman in Columbus with the
Columbus Dry Goods Co. He
returned to Pomeroy in 1932
and resided with a sister,
Clara, until her death. In 1961
he moved to Lawrence to
reside with a brother, Adolph,
and a niece, Miss Lucille
Reuter. Mr. Reuter was a
lifelong member of the St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Magdalena Boehm
Reuter.
Surviving are a nephew, Carl
Reuter, Lawrence, and these
nieces, Mrs. Ira Zickafoose,
Pomeroy; Miss Lucille K.
Reuter, Lawrence; Mrs.
Mildred Swain, Topeka; Mrs.
Louise Shields, Sr., Mrs.
Frieda Baas, and a sister-inlaw, Mrs. Christina Brunn, all
of Columbus.
Friends may call at the HeldCoiner Funeral Home, 1166
Parsons Ave ., Columbus,
where services will be held at
lOa. m. Saturday with the Rev.
Larry Hoffsis officiating.
Burial will be in the Green
Lawn Cemetery. Omission of
flowers is requested.

You can do jusl aboul all ol your banking by mail .

pomeroy
rullond

pomeroy
national
bank

Jim Merritt

CINCINNATI - The Cin·
cinnati Reds announced today
lhat lefthanded pitcher Dave
Tomlin and catcher Sonny
Ruberto will join the club Sept.
I for the remainder of the 1972
regular season .
In making
the
announcement, Reds Executive
Vice-President and General
Manager Bob How sam said the
lwo Indianapolis players would
be the only additions ·to the
Cincinnati team in the last
month of the season.
Tomlin was 5·6 at In·
dianapolis with an earned run
no lnjuries or arrest.
average of 2.89. He pitched last
At 7 a. m. Thursday, a car night at Evansville but was not
parked at lhe owner's involved in the deeision.
residence, that of Sandra
Tomlin, 21, is a native of
Griffith , Rt . 1, Reedsville, Maysville, Ky. and makes his
apparently jumped out of gear, home in West Union, Ohio.
coasted over a hill, zoomed Used primarily as a reliefer by
through brush tearing down the Indians, he was 2-2 after
small trees, jumped a stump moving into the starting
and stopped after traveling rotation in late July. One of his
approximately &gt;00 feet.
victories was a seven-inning,
There was heavy damage to complete game shutout over
the car.
Denver.
Ruberto, 26, and a native of
Staten Island, N. Y., will back
up Johnny Bench, who has
DIVORCE ASKED
In Meigs County Common been nursing a fractured little
Pleas Court Betty A. Hut- fin ger, and Bill Plummer. He
cbinson, Rt. I, Rutland, has hit .247 with the Indians. He
filed suit for divorce against spent about half his time
Milo B. Htchinson, same ad· behind the plate and the rest at
dress , charging extreme second base and third base .
cruelty. In another case, the
court ruled that William R.
Stephenson, Sr., is to pay
Family Fund , Inc ., the sum of
$758.89 plus interest.
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
balloon race featuring the
LOCAL TEMPS
world's largest hot air balloon
The temperature in down- highlighls today's activities at
town Pomeroy at 11 a. m. the Ohio State Fair.
Friday was 77 degrees under
This is the ninth day of the 12sunny skies.
day exposition and fair of.
ficials are expecting improved
attendance over the Labor Day
weekend, when the entertainment calendar Includes
popular Bob Hope and teen
favorite David Casaldy.
Attendance Thursday was
154,142, slightly higher than the
152,149 figure for the eighth dey
last year. Total fair attendance
this year has been 1,439,879.
Today's race was scheduled
oo begin at noon from the in·
field of the race track.
British balloonist Julian R.P.
Noll, who last month set an
altitude record of 36,200 feet,
was to pilot the world's largest
baloon, an 84,000 cubic foot
Omega balloon.
The American champ, Bruce

Again
This Week

The Aristocrats
FEATURING

Bruce Stalnaker, vocalist
"THEY PLAY IT ALL"

MEIGS
INN
PomeJOY, Ohio
Ph. 992-3629

1Contlnoted from Page I)

with every grandmaster and
expert predicting victory'. An
A cou•se on · Appalachian · incredible 30th. move blunder
Culture will be offered at Rio by Spassky had opened th~
Grande College beginning on floodgatesc
The Russian, looking gaunt
Sept. 11. Meigs Counlians inand
tired after two months of
terested in enrolling are asked
to advise Mrs. Jennifer L. · joy and agony, finally sealed
Sheets, Meigs County ex· his 41st move and walked
slowly through the curtains.
tension agent, \192-3895.
lnstrucoor for the course will The last 45 minutes after the
be Fred Snuffer who was one of fateful move he had remained
the guest speakers at the well· seated, running a hand through
received program on Ap· his tousled hair, watching
•palacbian Culture at the Fischer leap' in and out for
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy glasses of juice.
"It's all over," said grand·
last February.
master
Svetozar Gligoric of
The course, Sociology 3~.
Yugoslavia.
"Why
he
covers an examination of the
cultural heritage of the region (Spassky) touched that
and the cultural influence of its poisoned pawn I shall never
social institutions. It is open to know. Spassky's 30th move was
anyone.and may he audited or a terrible mistake because it
taken for three hours credit. It opened the way for Fischer's
will be given Monday evenings pawn on a line which otherwise
beginning at 6:30p.m. Sept. 11 was closed.'.'
REYKJAVIK (UP!) - The
throughDec.ll. Thecostis$90.
Mrs. Sheets feels that the moves in the 21st game of the
course will be helpful to Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer
everyone interested in general World Chess Championship :
Fischer B
improvement of the area, Spassky W
I.
P-K4
P.QB4
which, she says, "can best be
2.
Kt-KBJ
P-K3
accomplished through a better
3.P.Q4
PxP
understanding of our people
4.
KtxP
P.QR3
and our institutions."
5. Kt.QBJ
Kt.QB3
The course will he offered
6. B-K3
KI·KB3
only if enrollment is sufficient
7.
B.QJ
P.Q4
to cover costs, Mrs. Sheets
8.PXP
PXP
said.
9. O.Q
B.Q3
10. KtxKt
PxKt
11. B.Q4
().4)
12. Q-B3
B-Itl
13. R B1-Kl
P-B4
l4.BxKt
QxB
PxQ
The Middleport Fire Dept. 15.QxQ
16.
R
R1-Ql
R
BI.QI
was called to the George
R Rl-Ktl
Hackett, Jr., residence on 17. B-K2
P-BS
Seventh Ave. at 9:08 p. m. 18. P.QK13
19.
KtxP
BxKt
Thursday when the Hacketts'
BxP ch
car caught fire . The blaze was 20. RxB
RxR
out before firemen left the 2l.KxB
22.
BxP
R-Q7
station, however.
RxQBP
AI 1:04 a. m. Friday the ~ . BxQRP
RxR
department received another 24. R·K2
25.
BxR
R.Ql
in a series of fa lse alarms. The
R.Q7
caller advised that Kay 's 26. P-R4
R-R7
Beauty Shop, 169 North Second '!1. B·B4
K-Bl
Ave., was 'on fire. Investigalion 28. K-Kt3
K-K2
disclosed that there was no 29. K-B3
30. P-KKt4
P-B4
fire .
31.
PxP
P-B3
At 9:10 a. m. Friday the
P-R3
Middleport E-R squad was 32. B-Kta
33
.
K-Kt3
K-Q3
called to Rutland for Sheila
R-R8
Adkins who was in ~n auto 34. K-B3
K-K4
apparently
enroute
to 35. K-Kt2
36.
B·K6
K·B5
Pomeroy. Hemorrhaging, she
R.QKta
was taken to Veterans 37. B.Q7
38. B-K6
R·Kt7
Memorial Hospital.
a9. B-B4
R-R7
40. B-K6
P·R4
OFFICES CLOSE
Adjourned,
The Mayor's office and the
Board of Public Mfairs in
Middleport will be closed all
EXTRAS OFFERED
day Monday for the observance
RACINE
- Extra aonuals
of Labor Day. Employes of
other departments also will be from the past school year at the
off duty in observance of the Southern Local School District
are available. Anyone wishing
holiday.
to purchase one of the books
may contact the office of Vinas
DYNAMITE HELPS
Lee at the high school In
LYSKILI, Sweden (UP!) - Racine.
He was sitting on dynamite and It saved his life. Leif
SPEAKER NOTED
Strndgaard, 27, a Swedish
miner, felllOOfeet down a shaft
The Rev. August Kuehl of
when the safety wires broke, Rochester, N. Y., will speak at
But the box or soft dynamite Grace Episcopal Church. at
slicks he sat upon cushioned 10:30 a. m. Sunday. The Rev .
the fall and he escaped unin- and Mrs. Kuehl will arrive in
jured.
Pomeroy Saturday afternoon .

Firemen Called
On False Alann

Better Attendance Expected

!he bank or
lhe century
establi shed 1872

The New

·offered

RedS R eCall

iConllnued from Page I)
Cheshire, driving an Jn.
ternational tractor, was
traveling east when he met an
on-coming truck in a curve.
Reese pulled his tractor to the
righl to allow room for the
other vehicle tD pass, went off
the berm too far, went 8CJ feet
and lurned over, skidding
approximately 15 more feet on
its right side.
Twenty-five tons of coal were
dumped into a hay field
belonging to Annie Ogden,
Wilkesville , Rt. l. There were

It's easy. And convenient . We're as near as
your nearest mail box. And we're open 24 hours a day.
If you like lhe idea, gel our tree Bank·by·Mail lorms.

Soc 323 ·spassky

Saturday
Night.

10 til 2

Middleport Merchants
Association
Meeting Tonight
At

We will be closed
Monday, Sept. 4,
Labor Day.

Co. &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Soclal Room
7:30p.m.

Comstock of Ann Arbof; Mich.,
was to fly the Piccard Gypsy
Balloon - a sphere constructed of a piece of material
from every balloon ever made
hy Piccard.

and Bertha Ashcraft of Hamilton won the prominent senior
citizen awards.
Senior citizen volunteer
award went to Mrs. Anna
Struewing of Yellow Springs.

Testing Was Intensive
Extensive testing, a vital
part of t~e ·individualized
program of Instruction, has
· been carried out at the
Bradbury School during the
first week of classes.
The testing was held so that
instruction can he planned to
meet the Individual need of the
student. Children - fifth and
sixih graders -were tested in
vocabulary, readin·g and
comprehension, spelling·
capitalization, punctuation
usage, map reading, reading
graphics
and
tables,
knowledge and use of reference
materials, mathematic con·
cepts and mathematics
problem solving.
Next week, the testing will
include Individually ad·
ministered reading tests and
further mathematics testing.
After the testing program has
been completed, the individual
needs of each student will be
available for the planning of

Unemployment
(Con Unued from Page 1)
workers. And the unemployment rate for Vietnam war era
veterans increased from 7.3
per cent up tD 7. 7 per cent.
The BLS said unemployment
Showed little change in most
occupational groups, ~cept
lhat joblessness In the durable
goods manufacturing industry
dropped from li. 7 per cent to 5
per cent, . lowest point in 'l1
months.
Looking back over the first
year of President Nixon's
wageprice controls, the BLS
said employment increased 2.6
million, with adult men accounting for 1.1 million of the
Increase, adult women 1
million
and
teenagers
500,000.
White workers accounted for
all but 200,000 of this increase.
PLAN HORSE SHOW
A horse show will be planned
when the Eastern Athletic
Boosters meet at 8 p. m.
Tuesday at the high school. All
members are asked to attend .

individual instruction.
Mrs. Beulah Casto of the
Leading Creek Conservancy
· Dlstric~ Is working at the
school as an aide.

HOSPITAL NEWS

POMEROY - "Make Labor Day
meaningful for Mother. Bring her and the
family to our Labor Day chicken bar-

Holzer Medical Center
BIRTHS- Mrs. James Coy,
son ·wellston; Mrs. Charles
Taylor, daughter, Gallipolis,
and Mrs. Marion Durham,
daughter, Minford.
DISCHARGES - Georgina
McCausland, Kenneth Keats,
Terry Cupp, Stanley Bowman,
Donald Fulton, Mrs. Richard
McKenzie and daughter, Betty
Hamron, Kenneth Belcher,
Sadie Justis, Ray Kline,
· Shannon .Robins, Shelly
Skidmore, Ruby Shoemate,
Stephen Marcum, Andy Lee,
James Cochran, Matthew
Beaver and Betty Ashburn.

becue."
That's the message Joe Struble of the
Pomeroy Fire Depdl'tment is spreading
today in preparation for the department's
annual Labor Day celebration in Pomeroy
on Monday.
The celebration wiU begin at 10:45
a.m. when a parade will move from behind
the Pomeroy Junior Righ School building
down Main St. to Butternut Ave., out
, Butternut to Fifth and .to the Mechanic St .
parking lot where it will disband.
There will be bands, emergency and
fire department vehicles of the area,
marching groups, military units and
(Continued on Page 2)

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Paul Siders,
New Haven; Charles Beegle,
Racine;
lola
Howell,
Pomeroy; ljarbara Douglas,
Guysville; John Bigelow,
Middleport; Douglas
LeMasters, Point Pleasant,
and Grover Klein, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Cynthia
Lane, Larry Thomas, Connie
Manley, Mildred Bissell, Alice
Coleman, Jenny Black,
Francis Klein, Franklin Roush
and Ramona Yonker.

Cloudy Sunday, showers
Lkely southeast. High temperatures ranging to the low
709. Continued cloudy Sunday,
chance of showers In southern
portions. Low in the 50's.
Monday clearing, partly sunny
most areas.

VOL VII NO. 31

Turner said Thursday he will break his controversial Dare To Be
Great finn into 500 smaller companies which will be sold or given
tD "little people" around the nation.
·
orders," Turner told a
"This will cornply with any
crowd of some 800 supporters, "But I will keep one part so 1 can
keep fighting for what I think is right." Turner is charged with 86
counts of violating Florida's uniform sale and security laws, and
he said he and his numerous firms are under legal fire in at least
38 states, including Ohio, as well as from the federal government.
CLEVELAND - RICHARD SKLAR, OHIO campaign coordinator for George McGovern, says the formation of an Ohio
labor movement on behalf of the Demoa"atlc presidential candidate is "greatly encouraging to our organiZation."
"I offer my congratulations and thanks to ~hainnan
Martin Hughes of the Communications Workers and Bill
Casstevens of the United Auto Workers," Sklar said. "Just the
existence of their committee is evidence the workln&amp; people of
this country realize the programs of McGovern and the
Democratic Party are in their beat Interests.

Open Saturday 9:30AM to 9:00PM

Save During Our Storewide
Labor Day Weekend Sale ! !
Sale prices on Fa II Dresses - Coordinate Sportswear -. Supp-Hose - Sleepwear - Custom-Made
Drapene_s - Infants Clothing - Mens Knit Slacks _
Sport Shirts - Shower Curtains - Dress Fabrics _·
Jewelry - Sl!eets and Pillowcases - Yarn . War
drobes and Cabinets - Boys Spo"iJ'irts.
-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

pitch.
The M-V James K. Ellis, a twin of the
Winchester, ·added to the Shearer fleet in
1972, recently pushed a tow of 24 loaded
coal barges up the river.
The crew of the M-V Winchester

consisted of Harry N. Calloway, Master ;
Lesler A. Frieden, Pilot; Lewis R. Haynes
and Dwight L. Taylor , engineers; John D.
Snead, mate ; Glen Smith, watchman;
Jerry C. Hedrick and Johnny L. Lilly,
deckhands, and Chila Carter. cook .

+

Your Invited (;ueM

tmts

Reaching Mort'
Than 11 ,()()()

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

l4 PAGES

THREE SFCTIONS

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1972

Pomerov-Middleport

SAIGON (UPI )-A bloody battle with
heavy casualties on both sides raged
through its second day Saturday 35 miles
north of Saigon where Communist forces
ambuShed a goverment battalion in the
first test of a new outer defense line around
the South Vietnamese capital, military
sources said.
The fighting continued in!D the night
Saturday as governmentJorces backed by
lllnk.li •nd artllierf attempted to break
through the ·Communist forces tD relieve
their 500.man unit. which waa badly
GALUPOUS - Residents and staff members of Gallipolis State Institute said mauled in the ambush Friday. The South
"farewell" to Chief Sopervlsor Clyde A. Bradbory, shown with John Mitch, Hospital Vietnamese lost 200 killed and 60 to 70
Administrator, right, Thursday afternoon when he retired, concluding more than 35 wounded and reported 18Cl North Vietyears' service.
namese dead, including 20 women.
A tea hororlng Mr. Brsdbury was attended by co-workers from every department,
Heavy fighting also swirled in and
who expressed their respect and affection for "Brad" with gifts of a diamond tie tack in around Que Son district capital at the
florentine gold setting and a banker's wallet of sealskin, both presented by Mrs. Laura eastern end of the Que Son valley, 350
Cornwell, R.N., Director of Nursing.
miles north of Saigon, where government
The Nursing Service Department also sponsored a luncheon in the institute Com- troops fought to push the Communists out
missary, Tuesday, attended by the Nursing Service Staff and Administrative Depart- of the town and recapture nearby Artillery
ment heads. A special guest was Mr. Bradbury's wife, Ethel.
Base Ross which was abandoned Aug. 19.
"Qife Son is just darn near totally
destroyed," an officer said. "There was a
bunch of North Vietnamese bodi~s all over
the place. Oh, Lord, the stench is terrible."
MISS JANE STOWERS, above,
Seven fights around Quang Tri, the
recently was crowned Miss Charm of
country's northernmost provincial capital,
Ohio . She is shown with her trophies at
the Neil House in Columbus where the
GALUPOUS - Principal James N. tendent, including those who are employed left 106 North Vietnamese dead at a cost of
M. Davis announced Saturday lhat all under the age and schooling certificate as more than six government troops killed
pageant was held.
and eight wounded, government spokesstudents who fall under the compulsory provided by law.
men said.
school age in Ohio for school attendance
The surge in fighting coincided with
(all students under 18 years of age who
North Vietnam's Independence Day.
have not graduated) must have registered
A Radio Hanoi broacast that announced
by Tuesday, September 5, 1972.
the release of three captured American
Students who are violating this law
JD
'[
pilots, the first tD be freed in three years,
who have not registered by this date will ntrf.l,(.f,er 0 .c
(Continued on Page 2)
itiO GRANDE - Miss Jane Stowers, he referred to the attendance officer for
court
action.
POMEROY
Only
a
few
coins
were
18, of Rio Grande was crowned Miss
For information, each parent, guar- stolen in a breaking and entering of the
Charm of Ohio, senior division, at the
recent Miss Charm Pageant held at the dian, or other person having charge of any Kapple Pennzoil Service Station on East
HOLIDAY HERE, TOO
Nell House in Columbus. She was also child of compulsory school age must send Main St. about I a.m. Saturday.
Readers are reminded tllat Monday,
Entrance inlo the station was gained
voted Miss Congeniality by the contestants such child to a school which conforms to
Labor
Day, there will he no publlcatlon
in the four age divisions represented at the the minimum standards prescribed by the by removing "pop out" metal·panels from
of The Daily Sentinel or The Galllpolls
State l!oard of Education for the full time an overhead door. A nearby resident saw
Pageant.
Dally Tribune In order that the stalls
the
school
attended
is
in
session.
the
intruder
and
called
police.
The
in·
Miss Stowers, daughter of Mr . and
may enjoy the national hollday. Regular
This applies to all of the above men· !ruder had fled from the station, however ,
Mrs. Stollie Stowers, is a 1972 graduate of
publication will be resumed Tuesday.
Gallla Academy High SChool, will enter tioned students except those who have when police arrive.:. Only a few coins were
been
properly
excused
by
the
superin·
m1ssmg
from
the
cash
register.
Rio Grande College this fall. In high school
she was a varsity cheerleader, member of
the National Honor Society, and was active
In other honorary and social organizations.
She reigned as the 1971 Miss Gallla
CoWlty and represented her county in the
Miss Parade of lhe Hills Pageant in
Nelsonville where she was second runnerup.
The Miss charm Pageant provided
each young lady who entered an opportunity to display her talents, modeling
ability, poise and personality. Each
ATHENS - Services for Handicapped assisting school distric!s with their in· General Assembly will follow through
with funding to Implement provisions of
contestant modeled a sports outfit, Children Direl:oor Robert L. Welnfurther dividual plans will include :
-A
two:day
conference
to
be
held
at
the district plans."
evening dress and gave a three-minute Saturday announced plans to assist school
In formal action, the Governing Board
talent prese~tatlon. For her talent ' districts in the 11-county SHC project area Rio Grande College on September 18 and
presentation MillS Stowers performed a with development of comprehensive plans 19 for the SHC project staff and outside voted unanimously to recommend. the
modern jazz dance routine to the theme to provide educational services for all consultants to develop several possible hiring of Mrs. Daisy Cook as Title lll EMR
alternative methods of providing services Models Coordinator to the project's fiscal
from "The Pink Panther."
handicapped children.
agent, the Athens County School Board.
Sponsoring her for the pageant were
Weinfurtner, speaking at the SHC for each category of handicap;
A
two-day
meeting
tentatively
set
for
Welnfurtner said the Governing
Central Soya of Gallipolis, Grover's Studio Govern ins Board's regular August
of ProfeiiSional Photography, Middleport, ~eeting In Athens, said Substitute Senate mid.Qctober for all superintendents in the Board's action followed an extensive
and Neal's Insurance Agency, Galllpolls. Bdl 405, adopted by the 109th General eleven-county region to establish the search for applicants and a series of in·
·
Assembly, requires that each of Ohio's 623 tentative school district plans;
terviews by the Board's screening com·
-Technical assistance by the SHC staff mlttee.
school districts submit such a plan to the
canadian
State l!oard of Education by next and outside consultants for individual
The EMR Models Coordinator Is
. Cool Roams
school boards dw;ing the months of Sep- responsible for monitoring experimental
December
1.
Southward over U.S.
classrooms for EMR children throughout
The . services fo~ Handicapped tember and j)ctober, and;
'
and
materials
aimed
at
-Conferences
Unseasonably cold 'Canadian air swept Children projeet row covers Athens,
the eleven .counties and providing inover the nation 'a mldlectlon S&amp;turdey Gallla, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs, Monroe, developing an awareness and knowledge service training for EMR teachers.
dampening the aplrila of vacationers on Morgan, Noble, Perry, Vinton and of special education and the Services for
Mrs, Cook, who reeeived her master's
the fint.full day ol the Labor Day hoilclay, Washington Counties. Handicapped HandicapPed Children project.
degree from MarShall University, has 17
"The tnteut• of '405"' • Welnfurtner years experience as a teacher and teacher
the UP! reported.
children aerved Include those who are
.
s
aid,
"Ia comprebenslve planning for all supervisor.
,
Scattered rain and thWideratotma enducable mentally'retarded, emotionally
loUond ID the Wlke of the cold front af- dlaturbed, neurol.oilcally handicapped or baadlcapped clllldren. Tbe leglalatloa Ia
Unda Bauer, coordinator of the SHC
fecting 111 area !rGm northwelt Milne to crippled, and th01e who have speech, almDar to IIIIi wbl&lt;b required com- project's lnstructlonal Resource Center,
prebeaalve plaaalag for vocalloaal annomced hours for the central IRC In
aoathwest Telu and frorn the aoulhern hearln&amp; or vision dlaorders.
l'lllnl Ul the Grell lAkes.
Welnfurlner Slid the strategy for eda,calloa by ID acboola. HopefUlly the Athens and for the IRC's satellites In

35 Y
, ears Service

Jucliea•

Shop Tonight Until 9:00 PM

bound for the Philip Sporn Plant above F. Shearer &amp; Sons by St. Louis Ship,
New Haven, W. Va. This tow of 30,000 tons, Division of Poll Industries, St. Louis, Mo.
covering more than three acres, is the in 1970. lt is powered by a General Motors
largest ever seen in the Upper Ohio River. · 2,850 hp engine, which turns a propeller
The M-V Winchester was built for 0. 109 .8 inches in diameter with 103 inches of

Gallioolis-Point Pleasanl.

Families

----------------15 CEr:HS

NewLine
Bloodied
By No

1Continued from Page 11

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY - River boat history was
made here Saturday when the M·V Win·
chester, owned by 0. F. Shearer &amp; Sons,
Inc., passed in front of PomeroyMiddleport with 32 loaded coal barges

)(-----------------------~...:..:..:.=.:

News .•• in Briefs

COLUMBUS -STATE OFF1CIALS from IS International
labor organizations met here Thursday to form the Ohio Labor
for McGovem-Shriver Committee. Martin J. Hughes, in·
ternational vice president ol the Cotrununlcations Workers of
America and William Casstevens, United AulD Workers, were
named co-chairmen of the committee which was to act on a nonfinancial basis.
·
"We have been formed solely to get the McGovern message
out," said Casstevens. "This committee will not be raising any
hard money." Caastevensand Hughes, both from Cleveland, said
the committee would attempt to make inroads for McGovern by
exposin&amp; his labor record to workers. He said j'YfcGovern has
voted pre&gt;-labor 94 per cent of the time while Nixon, while in
Congress, votedpr!Habor only 13per centofthetime.

Record Tow Claimed of 30,000 Tons of Coal in 32 Barges

Weather

Pleasant Valley Hospital
BIRTH - Mr. and Mrs .
.Thurman Oiler, Vinton,
deughter.
DISCHARGES - Amande
Burns, Henderson ; Clinton
Swisher II, Elmer Endicott,
Mrs. Elmer Jones, Elmer
Endicott, all Pt. Pleasant;
Mrs. Franklin Persinger,
Bancroft; Mrs. Neil Dilly,
Vienna; Tammy Nibert ,
Steven llenny, both Gallipolis
Ferry; Orville A. Casto, Leon;
Dorothy Boston, New Haven;
Art Campbell, Charlesoon .

''Fox and Hound''

This year's race was to be a
"fox and hound" event -with
the "fox" balloon lifting off at
noon and the seven entires
chasing.
The 6Q.rninute race winnter
is determined by the balloonist
landing closest to the lead balloon.
Prevailing winds determine
the course, expected to be
about 20 miles. Balloonists
compete for a purse of $10,1100.
Today's free entertainment
includes Roberta Flack, Bobby
Vinton and AI Green. Bob Hope
is scheduled Saturday and Sun·
day and David Casaldy winds
up the entertairunent Monday.
In Thursday's 4-11 Bicycle
competition, Tod Mills of Richland County and Carolyn
Temple of Delaware County
were winners in the l().to.12year~ld classes; Brent Sheffer
of Stark County and Judy
Breltkrezu of Warren County
took honors In the 13-to-1._
yearold division, and Eric
Klphard and Sylvia Ehlerding,
both of Clinton County, were
winners· In the 15-year-old
class.
Mrs. Philllp O'Day of Columbus won first prize for her
sauerkraut salad recipe In the
sauerkraut dey contest.
In senior citizen competition,
Mrs . Hilde Nichols of Cincinnati and Willlam Broxterman
of Cleves won the dance contest, while Theodore Berry of
Clnclnllatl, 1 city counclimlln,

.F iremen to
Mark Labor
Day Monday

to

GSI Ended

Deadline is Tuesday

'I

'•

,.,
·'

Jane Stowers

Only Co ins T.ak en by

Is Miss Otann

L .._-

f

ennzoz

YOUNG TONY KENNEDY, son of Mr. and Mrs. Junior Kennedy, Middleport
Route 1, holds the large trophy he and his six year old pony, "Chief," won at the
Ohio Slate 4-H Horse Show in Columbus. Tony was the youngest horseman taking
part.

Youngest Horseman
In Top Fair Work
BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT - Being the youngest
horseman at the Ohio State Fair 4-H Horse
Show didn't cramp the style of young Tony
Kennedy of Middleport.
No Sir! Tony still came through amid
the tough competition with his pony,
"Little Chief Handprint," to receive
grades of "A" in both showmanship and

CARRIE MOVES NORTH
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Tropical storm
Carrie slowly lumbered north off the East
Coast Saturday, its fringe winds and rains
ruining the Labor Day weekend for
millions of beach-goers from Virginia
Beach to Coney Island.

State .Will Assist Schools to Develop

Strong ~lans Aiding Handicapped Youths

~

Marietta and at Rio Grande College. The
Athens facility will be open from 9a.m. to S
p.m. on Monday, Tuesday and Friday;
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesday and
.from 5 p.m. 141 8 p.m. on Thursday.
The sate!Utes at Martella and Rio
Grande will he open from 4 p.m. to 8
p.m. on Thursday and from 10 a.m. to I
p.m. on Saturday. Ml" Bauer said the
Martella faciUiy wlll begin operation
September 7 while tile opening of the Rio
Grande satellite has been JHlSiponed
until shelvtns arrives.
Special education teachers may
arrange alternate times to use tile IRC
facilities by contacting Miss Bauer al
the Atbeos Cente.r.
In addition, she said, at least five inservice workshops .for s'Peclal education
teachers have been set for September and
October: September 7, 6:30 p.m .,
"Developing Understanding of Self and
Others," location to t·e announced; Sep·tember 21, 7 p.m. tD It p.m., Consumer
Education, Rio Grande IRC satellite, Yale
(Continued on page 2

horsemanship. He was among the few to
receive that high rating.
Tony is only eight years old - by 4-H
standards too young to be in 4-H work but qualified by being in the third grade of
school. Unless one has reached that grade
level he couid not take part in 4-H work
unless nine by Jan . 1, 1972.
At the Meigs County Fair where he
served as outrider for the harness race
program riding "Bachelor Boy," owned by
Mrs . Flossie Allensworth of Middleport,
Tony was selected by Judge AI Weygar.~!.
to represent Meigs County at the Ohio
State Fair. His grades were "A" in both
showmanship and horsemanship.
Tony's 4-H project, of course,ls the 'sixyear-old registe•ed Pony of America
named tittle Chief Handprint. Tony
purchased the pony in December, 1971,
with money he had won in horse shows .
"Chief" had never been ridden in the
show ring when he arrived in Meigs
County and, as a result, Tony spent many
hours during the winter and spring months
getting "Chief" ready for his debut in the
show circuit.
The hard work paid off In many enjoyable and exciting moments for the pair;
the highlig)lt being the trip to the State
Fair. Ron Meredith was judge at the state
event.
In addition to the trophy awarded
Tony and "Chief," they received a horse
blanket designating them as Meigs County
representatives. The blanket, given by an
admirer, caused considerable comment at
. the fair in Columbus as many thought the
identifying blanket an excellent idea.
While the State Fair participation
ranks as the highlight of 1972 for Tony and
"Chief," rwming close behind in excitement was their competlr.g and winning
two first places at the All American Youth
Horse Show, the largest young show In the
nation.
Third on the list of accompllllunenta
was attendlns the summet 4-H hone camp
at l.ucuvllle where Tony not on1J
developed his Lalent In handling hor,lllllat
also kept the cooks laughing with his quiJIII.
Starting at such an early age, 1'uay
has 10 more 'years In ._H work and wllh
such an excellent beglnnlnc year be'~ ae
to have many more "111011111111 to
remember".

�.

.

,.

Z- Tbe ~ 1'lllles- SeNinei,SIIrJdo¥, Sept. a,

State Help

15 Defendants 8re Fined

(Cmlinlial fnm page I)
a.B. Rio Grande; September 28, 7 p.m. to
I p.m., Conaumer FAucation, Athens IRC,
a.GIO N. McKlnley Ave., Athens; October
I, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Coosumer FAucatlon,
lbrletta IRC satellite, 215 Second St.,
Marietta; and October 12, 6:30 p.m.,
Sllnwh Reading Program, Marietta me
lltellite.
WelnfiJ'tner voiced appreciation to tie
Ohio University College of Education for
providing special education courses
during the swnmer to students wishing to
111111 len)porary certification to teach
EMa and LD (learning disabilities 1boae atudents who are neurologically
handiCapped or emotionally disturbed)
dma. Weinfurtner said that in AIJ8ust
tbere were 32 vacancies lhroiJ8hout the
.eleven counties In EMR and LD and that
tllat number bu been reduced to two.
· He added that the scheduled meeting
between the Governing Board and lOth
DlalriCt Cmgreuman Clarence E. Mlller
bu been pospooed until October.

POMEROY
Fifteen
defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonda in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Harry G. Brown,
Minersville and Lawrence
Yeauger, Cheshir~, $5 and
costs each, unsafe vehicle;
Lonnie C. James, Greenwood,
W. Va., Larry T. Fisher,
Jackson, Chester A. Wheaton,
Coolville, AHred D. M1J8rage,
Marietta and Jerry D. Swartz,
Middleport, $10 and costs each,
speeding; Alexander
Stojanouski, Vinto.n, $10 and
costs, passing over yellow line;
Laverne Peck, Albany, Rt. 3,
$10 and costs, left of center;
Fred A. Priddy, Middleport,
Rt. I, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Gerald Taylor,
Wellston, $5 and costs, insecure

2 Fires
Doused

Firemen
(Cmlinued from page I)
otheri taking part. Participants of the
parade are to be at the formation location
no later than 10:30.
Achicken barbecue wt11 get underway
(Ollowlng the parade. Dinners will be sold
to take out or residents niay eat at tables
'CII the upper parking lot in Pomeroy.
Serving wiU continue until the supply of
10111e SOO halves of chicken Is exhausted.

SPEECH 'l1IERAPIST - Susan Lynn Evans, 23, Athens, left, has been employed by the Gailla County Board of Education as speech therapist for the
county's four districts. She earned her B.S. and Masters Degree in Speech
Pathology from Ohio University. Mrs. Evans is checking a county map with
County School Superintendent Clarence E. Thompson.

Project FIND Needs Volunteers
POMEROY - VolunteeJ:S are wanled cumstances.
At the request of officials with the
alleviate hunger among older citizens.
White House Conf.erence on Aging, the Red
The American Red Cross ·has con- Cross has agreed, to the ~Jest of its ability,
tracted with the federal government to to mobilize volunteers who will be needed
mo.mt a campaign to Increase par- to make personal contacts with those older
tlclpatiCII of older persons In the Depart- persons who are not yet involved in food
ment ol Agriculture Food Assistance assistance programs and help alleviate
Procrama through Food Stamps and Food .hunger among the elderly.
Dilltributlon. There are~ goals:
Project FIND, the name of this
To lmmedlately relieve lhe problem of program, is a ·unique opportunity for the
malnutrition among the elderly.
community to serve a growing number of
To allow older persons that an arm of its people through the Red Cross. The need
\meriean Society cares about their cir- Is great and we know that we can count on
your support.
The role of the FIND volunteer is only
u
r&gt;- E
to assist in getting the application to the
not Uf}g• ating Champ Office of Public Assistance (Public
Welfare) either to assist applicant to fill
Downs 12 Frankfurters
out form at home to be mailed in, or til
transport the applicant to the Public
BROOKLYN (UPI) .:.. A petite coed Assistance office.
.
from Aatorla ~ ~evourild· l2 frank:The volun\ler must make h1s or her
,...._ ,lit·ft..i. '~UMe• today to beconfeoo-l.DJJtveryt~lto. tbe app_llcant, tpat he or
Coney Island'i 1972 hot dog-eating she does n?l know or cannot guarantee the
dwnplon. The winner, flve-{oot' Melody final deciSion 1l~ acceptance mto_ the
Andorfer, 18, bested a fleld of eight men program. That IS . for the professwnal
llld seven other women in the annual welf~e worker to Judge . II must also be
Labor Day weekend event at Nathans' ex~l~'!'ed th_at thiS pr?je_ct 1s not welfare.
Coney Island eatery.
Ehg~b~hty IS . not _litmted to persons
Mlsa Andorfer said she weighed 105 receiVmg pubhc assiStance.
.
Jba. before the contest.
Project FIND 1s a short term proJect
by the Melp County Red Cross to help

of 3 months. Time is therefore of the
essence.
The Red Cross suggests to "ret your
convictions about the worth of FIND shine
through."
To volunteer, call Meigs County Red
Cross, Cindy Coffman, 992-5468, 304
1•
Sycamore St., Middleport.

Bloodied
(Continued from page I)
also reported two more airmen were shot
down and captured 90 mUes south of Hanoi
last Sunday.
The U.S. command said a Navy F4
Phantom with a two-man crew was shot
down in the area at the time stated by the
Communists and both crewmen were .
~~missing.''

· Weather forecasters said a typhoon
.expected to Wt South Vietnam wlth full
fury Saturday slowed its movement across
the China sea and changed course for the
Red River Delta ricebowl area between
Hanoi and Haiphong. It was expected to
strike Sunday night.
Low clouds and raln In the Que Son area
Saturday cut airstrikes from a normal 30
to 40 to just two

GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer
firemen here extinguished two
fires Friday night.
Thefirstalarmcameat 10:22
p. rn. to ll6Second Ave., where
an electrical short was blamed
for a blaze in an upstairs
bedroom at the residence of
Morris Webster. Damage was
estimated at $65 to the building
and $125 to its contents.
A second alarm sounded at
II :27 p. m. to Rt. 7, four miles
south of Gallipolis where a 1970
Pontiac Firebird owned by
Vicki Carlene Mitchell, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, call8ht fire when a
gasoline tine bursted. Damage
was set at $800. The alarms
were the JOist and 102nd of the
year.

Driver Unhurt
In Accident
GALLIPOLIS - Phillip
Davis, 18, Rt: 2, ~trlot,
escaped injury in a single car
accident at 9:10 p. m. Friday
on Rt. 233, four and seventenths miles west of Rt. 141.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Davis lost
control of his car whlch ran of,
the right side of the Wghway
and rolled over. There was
moderate damage. No charge
was filed.
,
A second accident occurred
at 10:35 p. m. on Rt. 7, one-half
mile north of Rt. 553, where an
auto driven by Harold Young,
19, Gallipolis, struck a horse
which entered the highway.
Again, moderate damage
resulted .
GOING COOL

Conservationists Claim Foul
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
-tlonlat group charged
llaturday the Interior Depart..
ment Ia atlllldlling prairie dogs
wlth atrychnlne despite
President NlxQn's Feb. 2order
to halt the use of poisons on
federal lands for predator

control.
Friends of the Earth, a
Waablngton-baaed environmentalist organization, aald In
1 letter to Asat. Interior
Secntary Nathaniel P. Reed
lbat tbe practice was a
91olltlon ol the presidential

order.
animals.
The letter, signed by FOE
The department spokesman
wildlife director Tom Garrett, said poisoned grains were
said the strychnine alkaloid placed directly into prairie dog
being used to kill prairie dogs burrows and that it was the
Is a "secondary poison" -one nature of the animal to die in
that can kill an animal that Its hole rather than to come out
eatsonanotheranlmalthathas during Its deatjl agony.
taken the polson.
The only predator that was
Aspokesman for the Interior · likely to go . down into the
Department said strychnine prairie dog's hole and be exalkalolda were being used to posed to the deadly poison, he
control the burrowing prairie aald, was the now rare blackdogs but said this was bein~ footed ferret. However, he
done under strict rules, to said, the use of &lt;the poison was
prevent the poisoning of other banned In areas where ferrets

Record Award Made Victim
RENO, Nev. (UPI)-Nearly
t4 mlllllll, beUeved to be the
laraeat Judament ever
awarded a penooal injury
victim, wu depoelted In a
RinD bank Friday on behalf of
llilh Bulb and hill famUy.
Bu.h wu hurt Oct. 19, 19119,
wblle . belplng reassemble a
atut -nltcle used In open pit
mip!nr. A bolt 1:.-oke and
drotJped a 1,110 poWid electrlal control cabinet on blm.
Mn. Bulb filed suit against
WllliJI8bouse Air Brake Co.
lilt! General Electric Co. A
Wlllboe Diltrlct Court jury
IWUded t3 million to Bush and
• · • to bill wile for the Joaa
of . . hulblnd'l !mlp&amp;llionlldp. The Nevada SUpreme

VETERANS MEMORIAL

ADMITTED:

Gary
........ Marvin Dint, both
of "-'oy; Jimes Roosh,
Well Columbia; Nellie Jenks,
Alba; JoJJn Kauff, Hemlock
Gron; Loalle Cllidlff, (tary
N-r!:!q, Steven Stanley, aU

.fll-...

IIICHARGES: Ira Road,
Graet GriiQipf, Clarence
Wk*Hne, Wa)'De Glbbeaut,
·
lJI!i

y
D- uvtnlll.

Court upheld the verdict but set
aside the jury's award of
$50,000 to each of the three
chUdren.
· Atty. Willlam Bradley, who
handled the case for Mrs.
Bush, said the judgment Is the
largest ever awarded by a Jury
and upheld by a ~ for
personal injuries to one person.
In the Nevada Supreme

Court decision affirming the
jury award, Chief Justice
David Zenoff described the
condition of Bush, who was 27
when he was hurt near Ely.
"His Injuries are such that he
Is among the living dead. He
can neither communicate nor
do anything !01 himself, nor
wtiJ he ever be able to do so,"
Zenoff said.
"His mentality Is seriously
affected. He Is paralyzed below
the neck. His left eye Is
PLEASANT VALLEY
destroyed, his right eye ts
DISCHARGES : Sharon almost useless and although he
Thom,pson, Rutland; Mrs. does perceive, he Is mute. His
William Tucker , Grimms normal life expectancy Is 39
Landing; Jacqulyn Smith years from time of trial."
West Columbia; Johnny
Johnson, Mason; Fred Cornell
Buffalo; Mrs. D. N. Connors: Highwa~
Laura Hill, Mrs. Timothy
Da1J8herty and son, all of Point By' UDI!ed Press lnternatloaal
Pleasant.
Highway travel was heavy
Saturday as Americans took
advantage of the long Labor
DISCHARGES:
Sharon Day weekend for flnalsununer
Thompson, Rutland; Mrs. outings.
William Tucker, Grimms
The National Safety Council
Landing; Jacqulyn Smith, predicted between 580 and 680
West Columbia; Johnny persons would be killed before
Johnson, Mason; Fred Cornell, the 78-bour period ends at
Buffalo; Mrs. D. N. Connors, midnight Monday . Another
Laura Hill, Mrs. Timothy . 2.'1,000 to 27,000 will be Injured,
DaiJ8herly and son, all of Point according to tbe estimate.
Pleaaant.

REEDSVILLE - Eastern
High School band members are
to wear summer uniforms for
are known to exist.
participation in the Labor Day
The spokesman said the parade Monday.
poisoning of prairie dogs was
limited to areas where large
numbers burrowing into the
ground were considered a
menace to land conservation
practices.
Garrett, In hls letter to Reed,
said DWS officials had told him
WASHINGTON (UP!) about 200,000 acres of land with
prairie dog colonies we~e being Ending the final Investigation
"treated" this year with the of the My Lai massacre, Army
Secretary Robert F. Froehlke
poisoned grain.
The result, he said, would be ordered ·a veteran sergeant
the loss of other endang~red discharged and two officers
for
unanimals, such as the blacldoot- reprimanded
ed ferret and the kit !OJ:, and of professional conduct during
blrda such as the burrowing the 1968 Incident, the Army
owl and the bald eagle, as well announced Saturday.
Froehlke's non-judicial "adas of the prairie dogs themministrative action" agalnat S.
selves.
Garrett protested what he Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges, Col.
aald was "a deliberate policy of Nels A. Parson and Capt.
tlle U. S. government" to ldll Dennis H. Johnson raised to 13
off the prairie dogs, whose
unique "dogtowns" have long
been a feature of tbe western
plslns. It was such deliberate
policies, he ssid, that bad
AKRON, Ohlo (UP!) resulted in the disappearance Ohio's lamed 37th Division,
of the buffalo and the gray wolf whlch fo1J8ht In folD' wars Is
from the plains of the West. He holding lis 54th annual reunion
urged Reed to declare a here this weekend with about
moratoriwn on the poisoning of 4,000 veteral1ll attending.
prairie dogs on the publlc
One of the best known memlands, contending that such ~rs of the division Is Rudolph
action was, at the very least, a S. Uraprung, Cleveland, who
"violation of the aplrit" of the fought in three of the four wars
President's order prohibiting beginning with the Mexicantlle use of poisons for predator American conflict. He also
control.
fought in World War I and war

load; Ralph E. Hall, Pomeroy, within assured clear dlatance;
Rt. 4, $25 and costs, licenses Robert Rogers, Gallipolis, $10
suspejlded for 30 days, reclcless and costs, left of cenier.
Forfeiting bonds were
operation; Viola I. Cundiff,
,KeUsie
Roberts, Ashland, Ky.,
Charleston, $1&amp; and costs,
permitting minor to operate $257.50, driving while Invehicle; Richard Freeman, toxicated; Walter E. Toney,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, ex- Medina, $157.50, hit-skip ;
cessive apeed fall_ing to stop Yvonne Gorrell, Parkersburg

and. Lols W. Hoffman, Huntington, $27.50 each, speecllng;
Simon Jones, Jr., Albany, RD;
S25 Intoxication, $100, ani}·
destruction of property;
· Wendell A. Evans, MlnenvllJe,
$55, ap4iedlng; David Wade,
Athens, $27.50, stop algn
violation.

Land Partitions Asked
GALIJPOLIS - Two land
partition suits were filed
Saturday in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
Warren Ables of Cleveland
named Wanda Jacobs of
Center, Texas and Marshall M.
Carlisle of Jackson in an action. Plalntllf seeks partition of
his undivided one-half Interest
in 120 acres in Perry Twp., and
ol part of lot 79 In Knopp's
Addition to the Village of
t'beshlre In Cheshire Twp.
Ables asked the court to
order the proper\y be ap-

2 Accidents

praised and sold with the
proceeds of such sale
distributed and pald to the
plaintiff and defendants.
Vera Thomas and Mary
Darnell of Rt. I, Cheshire, filed
the other action against Jason
Thomas of Rt. I, Cheshire,
George Wesley Thomas of

Welcome, N. C. and· Carl
Koontz of Lexington, N. C.
. PlainUffs seek an Wldivided
one"llxth interest in 176 acres
in Cheshire Twp. '!'bey also
asked that the court appraise
the property and sell it with the
money divided to the parties
involved.

Quickness Will
Mark Marauders

MIDDLEPORT- The Meigs
Marauders wtiJ field probably
its quickest - but lightest defensive football unit since
GALLIPOLIS _No one was consolidation in 1967, acinjured or ciled in two minor cording to Head Coach Charles
traffic accidents Investigated Chancey.
Friday by city pollee officers.
Coach Chancey, ·speaklng toThe first mishap occurred on members of the MiddleportState St. where an auto Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
operated by wanda May evening following dinner at
FeUure, 29, Eureka Star Rt., Heath United Methodist
backed Into an auto operated Church, pr~cted no cham. Johnson, 20, Rt. I, plonship for his Marauders.
by Willis
Ewlngton.
There
was
But he said, " If we can get
moderate damage to both cars. Into the latter part of the
A second accident occurred season without serious Inon Fourth Ave. and Pine St. juries, while our boys are
where cars driven by Virginia getting experience, we'll be a
Us pretty good football team."
. hac1e49, ,Rt. 2, Gallipo,
M1
'B
R
He pointed· out that 19 of lhe
and Rita V. Bucleiey, , , t. I,
Cheshire, collided at the in- 22 starters from 1971's squad
tersection.
There
was graduated.
moderate damage to both cars.
He singled out quarterback
Mrs. Michael was charged witll Andy ..Vaughan for special
failure to obey an automatic . mention : "Andy is a strong
traffic signal.
boy, a fine athlete with great
lalent, and an outstanding
boy." Coach Chancey said
BACK IN POWER
Va1J8h&amp;n's exceptional lalents
SINGAPORE (UP!)
Prime Minister Lee Kuan
Yew's People's Action Party
swept back to power In lhll
teeming island republic
RIO GRANDE - Herman
Saturday when lt clinched a
majority of 33 parUamentary Martin, Vice Presidentand
Public
seats in nation-wide elections. Personnel
In power since 1959, the party Relations for Bob Evans
advocates a non-allgned policy Farms, Inc., retired on August
and has steered Singapore 14 . He will continue to serve on
clear of the superpowers. Bul the Board of Directors.
the government has welcomed Martin, one of the original
organizers of Bob Evans
trade with aU countries.
Farms, Inc., served as the first
plant manager at the comDIES IN FIRE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) pany's Xenia plant, from 1953
- Anna Symbollk, 61, dlec! In a to 1962. He became vice
fire at her house in suburban president-Personnel and
Struthers early Saturday. Public Relations in 1962.
Authorities said she was
In addition to his dulles as
burned over 80 per cent of her vice president, Mr. Martin had
served as chalr.nan 'and
body.

Are Minor

will be used as much as
possible as a runner and
passer . He sald Dallas Weber
is making the switch from
guard to fullback exceptionally
well.
The Marauders' defense will
be quick but not big . "We feel
we will have to go with apeed.
Our biggest player may be a
tackle (Lou McKinmiy) at 179
lbs." Oumcey foresaw his
defense stunting frequently
with surprise jabs on first or
second down to throw the
opposition for losses.
"If we let the other guys
grind It out we might be In
trouble," he said.
The Marauders · openlna
game is next Friday at
Marauder Stadium against
Reemetin (BIS).
Gene Riggs, president,
presided at the meellng.
Guests Introduced were
George Siddall, son-in-law of
Paul Smart, and Dr. Carl
Wood, Gallipolis.

Executive Has Retired
secretary of the company'a
Employee Profit Sharing
Trust.
A graduate of Ohio State
University with a B.A. and
M.A. in school administration,
Martin was a school administrator for 21 years and
superintendent of schools in
Groveport before joining Bob
Evans Farms.
He was reelected to the
company's board of directors
for a one-year term at the
company's annual meeting and
will serve as a consultant on a
part-time basis.

Pentagon Closes My Lai Book
the number of soldiers
punished in some form as a
result of My Lat. Another 12
men, originally charged, were
cleared.
"N~ other admlnlstratlve
acUons ... are contemplated,"
an- Army spokesman said.
"Basically, lhll wraps up the
My j..al case."
TWo court actlo1111, however,
must be completed before the
books are completely cl~~~~ed on
the slaiJ8hter of clvtllan VIet-

namese men, women and
children at .MY La! March 16,
1968, by a platoon of the
America! Dlvtslon's lith Infantry Brigade.
One of these Is the continuing
review of Lt. William L.
Calley's court martial conviction for the murder of at least
22 civtllans. Calle/s life sentence was reduced to 20 years at
hard labor, and Is now before
the u.s. Court of Mllltary
Review.
The other Is a suit fUed in a
U.s. District Court In Georgia
by Hodges, who was informed
of Froehlke's action agalnat
blm In June. Hodges Is seeking
each year.
to block his discharge, and on
"But our membenhip Is -June 7 obtained a temporary
holding Its own at about 4,000 restraining order agalnat the
nationally," aaid Wander. ''We Army.
.
are picking up new members,
The Army's announcement
men wh~~~~e kids are grown and Saturday gave no reasons for
they have the time and money Froehlke's actions. A apokesfor lt.''

·4000 at Reunion

II.

Travel Heavy Saturday
AUnited Press International
count at 1 p.m. EDT ahowed 70
traffic deaths nationwide.
Last year, 616,persons died
on the nation's highway during
the Labor. Day weekend.
Several states set up special
pollee units to patrol hlghwaya
and expressways ·In efforts to
decrease the nwnber of traffic
accidents. · In West VIrginia,
selected National Guard llllts
were also used to patrol
roadways.

The 37th also fought in Korea.

Ursprung was given the task
of shipping the unit into ahape
for World War II. ·
"We love Rudy now, no matter what we aaid about blm in'
th~~~~e early daya," ·aatd WUUam wner; Akron, reunion
committee chairman. "He
made us the roughest bunch to
hit the Islands and a Jot df us
came ba~ lhanU to him.''
Jaclr Wander, executive secretary of the aeaoclation, said
the division Is losing about 10
per cent of Ita membenhlp

man said, "We're not diScussIng speclfiCI, other than that

they did not meet the professional standarda of people with
their grade and experience.''
Froehlke ordered Hodgea, 27,
of DubUn, Ga., ~rged "for
the convenience of the government" and barred bill future
reenllatment. Hodges, a nineyear Army veteran, had been a
squad leader In Calley'a platoon.
The Army Secretary ordered
Paraon, 51, of Toledo, &lt;lilo,
stripped of bla Legion of Merit
award and placed a Jetter ol
censure In his file. Panon bad
been Amerlcal Dlvialon clief ol
staff.
He ordered a letter of
reprimand placed In the file ol
Johnson, 31, of ClakJand, Calif.,
who was an lnteWgence offialr
with the 11th Brigade at the
time of My Lat.

Inmate Moved for Own Safety
BIDI HAS BII;L
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Hubert H. Humplrey, 0Minn., aaJd Saturday be would
Introduce In the Senate next
week a bill 1o guard aga1n1t
abuses of t.unana IRibjected to
health experlnients. He said
.bla Intent was not to hamper
health reaearch, but "we must
act carefully to protect our
country from abuses In experimentation on human
beings, however rare IIICh
abuses might In fact be."

MANSFIELD, Ohio (0PI)David Riggs, an Inmate here,
has been ordered transferred
to the Lebanon Correctional
Institution for his own safety
after telling of Inmates attacks
upon other Inmates here, It was
reported Saturday.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
in a series of articles quoted
Riggs· aecounts of the attacks.
Since then, Rigga'llfe h~ been
threatened unless lhe Plain
Dealer retracts the stories, the
newspaper said.
Richard B. !go, uslstan,t
Ohio attorney genl!ral said
,
In 1916, the Allies turned Corrections Commissioner
back the Germana In World Bennett Cooper bad ordered
War l's Battle of Verdun.
the transfer 11 an "ac-

to the
commodation"
American Civil !Jbertlea
Union.
The ACLU has flied a
damage liUit agalnat Cooper
and other correct10111 officers
on behalf of Rlgga and also told
a U. S. District COlD'! judge In
Cleveland that RJaa' life wu
In danger.
Manafleld olftclala said he
CJJuld be protected at the
reformatory but RJaa, In a
letter to the PJmn Dealer, said
he had been attacked tw1ee llld
wu now being kept In a
punllhment cen and wu oniJ
allowed out late at nlibt for

exercise.

, ::.~~&gt;:_Times-Sentinel,&amp;mday,Sept. 3, urn
~
-------------------

Jlo,

.$

l Senior Citizen Couple Had Fun at State Fair

! Area Deaths
Clarice Startzman

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs
Clarice Startzrnan 55 of J4
Lincoln Street, Aihe~s. formerly of Point Pleasant, died
Fnday afternoon unexpectedly
from an apparent heart attack.
She was born on October 3
1916 in Waverly, w. va. ~
daughter of Albert R. and
Lyndall Nowery Kelly of
Parkersburg who survive.
Mrs. Startzman had resided in
Athens for the past ten years
and was employed by the
Athens County Welfare
Department and had formerly
been an employee of the Valley
Bell Dairy while residing in
Point Pleasant. She was a
member of the Athens First
United Methodist Church and
was a graduate of Mountain
State Business eollege,
Parkersburg.
Other survivors in addition to
her parents are her husband
Richard Startzman; one son:
Ri chard A. Startzrnan of
Plantentia, Ca)ifornia; one
Sister, Mrs. Gladys Schneider,
Col urn bus ; one brother Clyde
Kelly, Columbus and two
grandchildren .
I
Funeral service will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. in the CrowRussell Funeral Home with the
Rev. Charles S. Thompson
officiating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends will be received at
the funeral horne after 11 a.m.
today .

Mrs. Beaver
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Zenith
Beaver, Rt. 2. died at 2:30 a. rn.
Saturday in St. Mary 's
Hospital al Huntington. She
was admitted there Monday
aflernoon after suffering a selfinflicted bullet wound of the
head . She was a former employee of the Holzer Medical
Center. Her husband, Verne C.
Beaver died Aug . 22.
She is survived by three sons,
l-oren of Kemper Hollow Rd .;
James of Bidwell, and Ivan of
Rt. 2, Gallipolis; a da1J8hler,
Mrs. Peter Soponyai of Winter
Park, Fla ., and several
grandchildren.
Arrangements will be anno~tw ~i~'II.Jill me,f

FlDlt!l-818:" ·

Gertrude Taylor

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Sixtyone-year-old retiree George
MASON - Mrs. Bessie Bentz Kallal and his 58-year-old wife
Bollman , 84, formerly of Marion didn't come to the Ohio
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly State Fair to be bored by exFriday at her home. Born at hibits - they came to strut.
George and his wife of 32
Alfred, Ohio (Meigs County)
she was the daughter of the late years entered the senior
John and Angeline Lewis citizens dance contest and glided Uu:ough the waltz. But then
Behtz.
Mrs. Bollman was a member when the foxtrot came, they
of the Alfred United Methodist cut a rug.
Five other couples took it
Church and had been a cook in
Pomeroy res taurants many
years. Survivors include a twin
sister, Mrs. Bertha Schreiver
of Mason; two nephews, Walter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Bentz of Pomeroy, and Claire
E. Bentz , Olney, Ill., a niece, Ohio Highway Patrol, during
Mrs. Juanita Fisher of the month of August, arrested
109 car theft suspects and reCrestline, Ohio.
Last rites will be held at 2 p. covered 152 stolen cars worth
m. Tuesday from the White over half a million dollars, it
funeral Home at Coolville. was announced Saturday.
Patrol Supt. Col. Robert M.
Rev. Roy Deeter will officiate.
Burial will be In the Bentz Chiaramonte said since the
Cemetery at Alfred. Visitation
wlll be held at the funeral home
after 7 p. rn. today.
CLAUDE K. MOOHE

Bessie Bollman

and crafts demonstrations for it upon themselves to come out,
thousands of people like and I feel a lot younger," he
George and Marion.
said.
"The fair is tremendous, just
George worked as a jet prowonderful," the couple from pulsion engineer for North
Blacklick; Ohio, agreed. "You American Rockwell in Columcan spend an entire day in the bus until he was laid off three
three tents set up in the (senior years ago. Instead of looking
citizens) area.
for another job, he decided to
"But we want to see all the start his retirement a little
fair and if we tire out today, early.
we'll be back tomorrow, " they
"Retirement was the best
said.
thing that ever happened to.
George, an expert at the me/' he said. "I had satisfacwaltz, said he enjoys watching tion- from being a good engiteen-agers gyrate through neer, but I'm a lot more sattheir rock routines.
isfied now. "
" H they have their own
After taking some short
thing, that 's fine ," he said. training courses in carpentry,
"Some guys wouldn't be George now spends most of Ws
caught dead dancing a waltz, time dreaming up re-modeling
but I like it. It's my thing."
projects around his farm
Mrs. Kallal said rock dan- horne.
cing was good for the kids. "It
"f used to be proud that I
gives them a lot of exercise," played a small role in helping
she said .
an airplane to fly, " he said.
Although George said he saw "But that's nothing compared
a lot of young folks at the fair, to the pride I get from building
it dido 't make him feel old.
"f compare myself to other
elderly persons who don't take

Patrol Has Good Month

BRYAN KEITH STEWART

Funeral service for Claude
K.
Moore, 73, Greer
Community, Point Pleasant,
will be held Monday at 2 p.m. in
the Wilcoxen Funeral Horne
with burial to follow in the
Greer
cemetery
Mr. Moore, retired railroad
employee, died Thursday night
after a three year illness.
Survivors include one
daughter, one son, one sister,
six grandchildren and three ·
great grandchildren.
American Legion Post No. 23
will conduct graveside
services. Friends may call at
the funeral horne after 4 p.m.
today.

Funeral service Jor tO-day
old Bryan Keith Stewart, son of
William and Janie Stewart,
2810 Maple Avenue. will be held
Sunday 2 p.m. in the CrowHusseR funeral Horne with
burial to follow in Kirlcland
Memorial Gardens.
The Infant died Thursday in
Chlldren's Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio.
Surviving are his parents,
one brother. and grandparents.
Friends may call at the funeral
home.
Funeral service will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. in the CrowHussell Funeral Horne with the
Rev. Charles S. Thompson
Officiating. Burial will be in In Chicago, during the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. height of the gangland killFriends will be received at ing era of prohibition. there .
the funeral horne alter 11 a.m. ' were 227 murders between
Sunday:
1927 and 193(). and only two
convictions .
HARRY BIRCHFIELD

first of the year the patrol has
arrested 682 suspects,
recoverect 963 stolen vehicles
worth over two milllon dollars.
The patrol has started an intensive program to halt the
auto larceny problem in Ohio
which is costing residents over
$90 million in stolen property
and increased Insurance rates,
Chiaramonte said.
"Called the ·'BlueMax' prl)gram, all officers, prior to
stopping a car, run an immediate registration check to learn
if the vehlcle is reported stolen
or wanted for any other reason," said ChiaramonU!. "Our
men are now checking over
00,000 vehlcles each month."
Each time a patrolman recovers a stolen car and makes
an arrest, a ted lightning bolt is
attacked to his patrol car.
Chiaramonte said after earning five lightning bolts, the
patrolman is awarded an
"Ace" certificate and a special
license plate for his car.

Therr:'s no problems when you
can do things like come to the
fair and win a dance contl!l.t.'' .

" The tensions are gone
George said. 11 1 don 'l

DOW I II

COLO\\ •

,

/hr ·u/r ,

Sunday ~ Monday
and Tuesday

Tonighllhru
Wednesday

DEAN MARTIN
BRIAN KEITH

Snoopy
is now

'something
big'

a

ACINEMA CENT ER rllMS PRESENTAT!ON
AN...TICJNAl GENERAL PICT\...RES RELf.ASf
TECHNIC&lt;XOO · ;cp'.........

superstar!

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MASON DRIVE-l N
',' l

I I

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•1 I

i\ (,,IIIJIH 1 ~tqll!ly

MEIGS THEATRE

Tonight-Mon.- Tues.

Sept. 6th &amp; 7th

Sept. 3-4-S

Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.

CLOSED

DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"PREACHER MAN

Sept. 3·4 -l

PLAY lTAGAtN, SAM

ITechnicotor)
Woody Allen

KANAUGA DRIVE IN
WILL BE OPEN FRI.,
SAT., SUN. FOR
THE BALANCE
OF THE SEASON

R

Amos Huxley
Ilene Kristen
PLUS
"WHO SLEW
AUNTIE ROO?" GP

Diane Keaton
GOlNGHOME

{Technicolor)

Robert Mitchum
GP
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M .

ACINEMA COHEA f'I Lt.IS PRESfNl'.l •ON
A NATIONAl GENERAl PICHJRES RELEASE
l EC HNICClLOR•(C}o

Color
Shelley Winters

Cartoon

Mark Lester

OPEN MONDAY
LABOR DAY

11 TO 4
CASH, CHARGE,
LAY-AWAY
SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

'
Funeral service will be held
'
TIM ES-St;.YI'IIIEL
'
Sundav 2 o.m. In the Stevens
P~D• · u·~ o ~, e,, \"n" ~' " v •~•' on.o 'I
(c
I
Funeral Home for Harry L.
G II L lU00 LI S c., l ¥ !ll&lt; lllJ "'[
,.•n ""'0 A., c. ~ ..,~ ,, "to·" ~ &gt;eJ &lt; I
Birchfield, 70, Huntington,
5 ~&lt;0nd (1 ~\\ "O,I&amp;; o ~~·&lt;I
J
•&gt;•I'
former Mason County resident C.I" •DD hlI&gt;&lt; on..,
0
E DAil V
.. l&lt; N tl
Il l Cour•
Po .n N o,
0
•1119 I
who died Thursday.
• uo1&gt;1nto h~•• ... ~.- , ~ , •· ~ " ' "~ ~•ua• 1
So•v•o•w fn•••~a•• " "t.&gt;'&gt;d " " .... m1 , ,n11 I
ot
,).,•1'1 I'O \t 0 " " "
He is survived by his wife, moto••TEilM
'i 0 1 !U I! H iii~TI O "
I
I
..,,~t
(
a
,.,~,
d~
'
''
1"0
~~l'&gt;llov 10c "'' 1
Tiiersa Mayes Birchfield; one
M" ' L SU I UWi f'I IO I'I !i"!f~
I
T~t j:;t llt i)OI,~ lr ,b .. n• "' O~•o ..w• wuo I
, son_., ree dallRhterl;•. two 1I Ylft""•
· ooo• ' ' ' ' " ) 09, ••• moon1n 0 11 1
llfq"'ers and t11tee - . . I lllrtt MO~ tru H ,_ • '''"""""· ont ~n; 1
I llJ . ••• moniM " 1M•• "'o' ""• ~ ) oo
' "' 0•· •~ ~'"' ' M'. an• •••• • • ~ OQ 1,, I
Friends may, call at the 1 mono,,
II ~ i ' '"'« "'Jin T ~• •• 10
I
I T~t On ,ltd " ••U ~ ~ •t•nt• on•• 11 u '
1
CIW
oni ,IIU •u •nr 0/U , 0 , l&gt;ul, l• &lt;• l·"" I
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. 1 of I &lt; v&lt;'l~nf*l
a ••l&gt;•l&lt;"• • r• ta••rll lo '" '' I
today . Burial will be in Lone I J&gt;vb l•l"'" ono
• l•o In• '"l "
1
l
Oak cemeter.Y .
~-- ----- - - -- ---- ---~
~ · "•t

snar at my wife like I used to.

something entirely with my
Own hands .,
George and his wife cooled
off after their dancing and
agreed their marriage was better now than ever.

-------------------·
'1 -,,11,\\
PuD I• ~" · n;

Yllh\ne&lt;l he•t w•~ • ll&amp; t f&gt; r~ .~ ~ ~ • upl
Sl•w t &lt;lot
•'

~·

I

~ f.

Pa"' ~'h

ttl
ntw~~IDt•

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Gertrude Mae Taylor, 86, 407
Pike St., Kanauga, died at 4:30
p. rn . Friday in the Holzer
Medical Center Hospital. She
was horn Aug . 7, 1886, in
Jacksonville, m., da1J8hter of
the late Prentice and Cynthia
Clemons Weaver. She moved to
Gallia County seven years ago
to reside with a daughter, Mrs.
Otho Suiter of KanaiJ8a .
Mrs. Taylor was preceded in
death by her husband and two
brothers.
Surviving are five children,
Mrs. Suiter of Kanauga; Mrs.
George Thompson and Mrs.
Fred Carr of ·Burns, Oregon;
James Taylor . of Salem,
Oregon, and Eugene Taylor of
Allanta, Ga .; eight grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren, and one greatgreat-grandson.
Friends may call at Mlller's
Home for Funerals from 2-4
and 7-9today. The body will be
shipped to Bend , Oregon,
where funeral services wtiJ be
held Wednesday at the
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral
Home. Burial will follow in the
Pilot Beauty Cemetery there .

easy, but when George start~d
spinning Marion , the crol"d of
elderly spectators took notice.
"We don 't like to just walk
around when we come to the
fair," George said after winning the ·dance contest. "We
like to participate. We need
something to do.''
The highly-organized senior
citizens group at the fair has
lined up acuvlties like dancing,
musical productions and arts

nt,..~

n1•r ·~

POLYESTER
DOUBLE
KNITS

Bobby Sherman's "With love" and "Portrai t
of Bobby", Johnny Mathi s' "Worm", Mamas &amp;
Papas' " People like Us", Steppenwolf's "For
Ladies Only" and many, many others .

REGULAR
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3.77 YD.

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57

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Mon., Tuos., Wed., Thurs.-11 A.M.to 10 P.M.
F•i. &amp; Sat--11 A.M. to 11 P.M.
Clooed Sunday

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RAVIOLI DINNER with Meat ~auce .. ... .... . .... . . 2.2$
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T-BONE STEAK, (16 oz. ) U.S. Prime ........ . . . . . . .
GOLDEN FRIED SH_RlMP, Tartar Sauce ..............
HOME-BAKED HA'M, Hawaiian Pineapple Ring . .... .
FILLET OF WHITE FISH, Twtar Souce : .. ·. .. : .. . . ....
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OPEN .LABOR DAY 11 T~

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,.

Z- Tbe ~ 1'lllles- SeNinei,SIIrJdo¥, Sept. a,

State Help

15 Defendants 8re Fined

(Cmlinlial fnm page I)
a.B. Rio Grande; September 28, 7 p.m. to
I p.m., Conaumer FAucation, Athens IRC,
a.GIO N. McKlnley Ave., Athens; October
I, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Coosumer FAucatlon,
lbrletta IRC satellite, 215 Second St.,
Marietta; and October 12, 6:30 p.m.,
Sllnwh Reading Program, Marietta me
lltellite.
WelnfiJ'tner voiced appreciation to tie
Ohio University College of Education for
providing special education courses
during the swnmer to students wishing to
111111 len)porary certification to teach
EMa and LD (learning disabilities 1boae atudents who are neurologically
handiCapped or emotionally disturbed)
dma. Weinfurtner said that in AIJ8ust
tbere were 32 vacancies lhroiJ8hout the
.eleven counties In EMR and LD and that
tllat number bu been reduced to two.
· He added that the scheduled meeting
between the Governing Board and lOth
DlalriCt Cmgreuman Clarence E. Mlller
bu been pospooed until October.

POMEROY
Fifteen
defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonda in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Porter were Harry G. Brown,
Minersville and Lawrence
Yeauger, Cheshir~, $5 and
costs each, unsafe vehicle;
Lonnie C. James, Greenwood,
W. Va., Larry T. Fisher,
Jackson, Chester A. Wheaton,
Coolville, AHred D. M1J8rage,
Marietta and Jerry D. Swartz,
Middleport, $10 and costs each,
speeding; Alexander
Stojanouski, Vinto.n, $10 and
costs, passing over yellow line;
Laverne Peck, Albany, Rt. 3,
$10 and costs, left of center;
Fred A. Priddy, Middleport,
Rt. I, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Gerald Taylor,
Wellston, $5 and costs, insecure

2 Fires
Doused

Firemen
(Cmlinued from page I)
otheri taking part. Participants of the
parade are to be at the formation location
no later than 10:30.
Achicken barbecue wt11 get underway
(Ollowlng the parade. Dinners will be sold
to take out or residents niay eat at tables
'CII the upper parking lot in Pomeroy.
Serving wiU continue until the supply of
10111e SOO halves of chicken Is exhausted.

SPEECH 'l1IERAPIST - Susan Lynn Evans, 23, Athens, left, has been employed by the Gailla County Board of Education as speech therapist for the
county's four districts. She earned her B.S. and Masters Degree in Speech
Pathology from Ohio University. Mrs. Evans is checking a county map with
County School Superintendent Clarence E. Thompson.

Project FIND Needs Volunteers
POMEROY - VolunteeJ:S are wanled cumstances.
At the request of officials with the
alleviate hunger among older citizens.
White House Conf.erence on Aging, the Red
The American Red Cross ·has con- Cross has agreed, to the ~Jest of its ability,
tracted with the federal government to to mobilize volunteers who will be needed
mo.mt a campaign to Increase par- to make personal contacts with those older
tlclpatiCII of older persons In the Depart- persons who are not yet involved in food
ment ol Agriculture Food Assistance assistance programs and help alleviate
Procrama through Food Stamps and Food .hunger among the elderly.
Dilltributlon. There are~ goals:
Project FIND, the name of this
To lmmedlately relieve lhe problem of program, is a ·unique opportunity for the
malnutrition among the elderly.
community to serve a growing number of
To allow older persons that an arm of its people through the Red Cross. The need
\meriean Society cares about their cir- Is great and we know that we can count on
your support.
The role of the FIND volunteer is only
u
r&gt;- E
to assist in getting the application to the
not Uf}g• ating Champ Office of Public Assistance (Public
Welfare) either to assist applicant to fill
Downs 12 Frankfurters
out form at home to be mailed in, or til
transport the applicant to the Public
BROOKLYN (UPI) .:.. A petite coed Assistance office.
.
from Aatorla ~ ~evourild· l2 frank:The volun\ler must make h1s or her
,...._ ,lit·ft..i. '~UMe• today to beconfeoo-l.DJJtveryt~lto. tbe app_llcant, tpat he or
Coney Island'i 1972 hot dog-eating she does n?l know or cannot guarantee the
dwnplon. The winner, flve-{oot' Melody final deciSion 1l~ acceptance mto_ the
Andorfer, 18, bested a fleld of eight men program. That IS . for the professwnal
llld seven other women in the annual welf~e worker to Judge . II must also be
Labor Day weekend event at Nathans' ex~l~'!'ed th_at thiS pr?je_ct 1s not welfare.
Coney Island eatery.
Ehg~b~hty IS . not _litmted to persons
Mlsa Andorfer said she weighed 105 receiVmg pubhc assiStance.
.
Jba. before the contest.
Project FIND 1s a short term proJect
by the Melp County Red Cross to help

of 3 months. Time is therefore of the
essence.
The Red Cross suggests to "ret your
convictions about the worth of FIND shine
through."
To volunteer, call Meigs County Red
Cross, Cindy Coffman, 992-5468, 304
1•
Sycamore St., Middleport.

Bloodied
(Continued from page I)
also reported two more airmen were shot
down and captured 90 mUes south of Hanoi
last Sunday.
The U.S. command said a Navy F4
Phantom with a two-man crew was shot
down in the area at the time stated by the
Communists and both crewmen were .
~~missing.''

· Weather forecasters said a typhoon
.expected to Wt South Vietnam wlth full
fury Saturday slowed its movement across
the China sea and changed course for the
Red River Delta ricebowl area between
Hanoi and Haiphong. It was expected to
strike Sunday night.
Low clouds and raln In the Que Son area
Saturday cut airstrikes from a normal 30
to 40 to just two

GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer
firemen here extinguished two
fires Friday night.
Thefirstalarmcameat 10:22
p. rn. to ll6Second Ave., where
an electrical short was blamed
for a blaze in an upstairs
bedroom at the residence of
Morris Webster. Damage was
estimated at $65 to the building
and $125 to its contents.
A second alarm sounded at
II :27 p. m. to Rt. 7, four miles
south of Gallipolis where a 1970
Pontiac Firebird owned by
Vicki Carlene Mitchell, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, call8ht fire when a
gasoline tine bursted. Damage
was set at $800. The alarms
were the JOist and 102nd of the
year.

Driver Unhurt
In Accident
GALLIPOLIS - Phillip
Davis, 18, Rt: 2, ~trlot,
escaped injury in a single car
accident at 9:10 p. m. Friday
on Rt. 233, four and seventenths miles west of Rt. 141.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said Davis lost
control of his car whlch ran of,
the right side of the Wghway
and rolled over. There was
moderate damage. No charge
was filed.
,
A second accident occurred
at 10:35 p. m. on Rt. 7, one-half
mile north of Rt. 553, where an
auto driven by Harold Young,
19, Gallipolis, struck a horse
which entered the highway.
Again, moderate damage
resulted .
GOING COOL

Conservationists Claim Foul
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
-tlonlat group charged
llaturday the Interior Depart..
ment Ia atlllldlling prairie dogs
wlth atrychnlne despite
President NlxQn's Feb. 2order
to halt the use of poisons on
federal lands for predator

control.
Friends of the Earth, a
Waablngton-baaed environmentalist organization, aald In
1 letter to Asat. Interior
Secntary Nathaniel P. Reed
lbat tbe practice was a
91olltlon ol the presidential

order.
animals.
The letter, signed by FOE
The department spokesman
wildlife director Tom Garrett, said poisoned grains were
said the strychnine alkaloid placed directly into prairie dog
being used to kill prairie dogs burrows and that it was the
Is a "secondary poison" -one nature of the animal to die in
that can kill an animal that Its hole rather than to come out
eatsonanotheranlmalthathas during Its deatjl agony.
taken the polson.
The only predator that was
Aspokesman for the Interior · likely to go . down into the
Department said strychnine prairie dog's hole and be exalkalolda were being used to posed to the deadly poison, he
control the burrowing prairie aald, was the now rare blackdogs but said this was bein~ footed ferret. However, he
done under strict rules, to said, the use of &lt;the poison was
prevent the poisoning of other banned In areas where ferrets

Record Award Made Victim
RENO, Nev. (UPI)-Nearly
t4 mlllllll, beUeved to be the
laraeat Judament ever
awarded a penooal injury
victim, wu depoelted In a
RinD bank Friday on behalf of
llilh Bulb and hill famUy.
Bu.h wu hurt Oct. 19, 19119,
wblle . belplng reassemble a
atut -nltcle used In open pit
mip!nr. A bolt 1:.-oke and
drotJped a 1,110 poWid electrlal control cabinet on blm.
Mn. Bulb filed suit against
WllliJI8bouse Air Brake Co.
lilt! General Electric Co. A
Wlllboe Diltrlct Court jury
IWUded t3 million to Bush and
• · • to bill wile for the Joaa
of . . hulblnd'l !mlp&amp;llionlldp. The Nevada SUpreme

VETERANS MEMORIAL

ADMITTED:

Gary
........ Marvin Dint, both
of "-'oy; Jimes Roosh,
Well Columbia; Nellie Jenks,
Alba; JoJJn Kauff, Hemlock
Gron; Loalle Cllidlff, (tary
N-r!:!q, Steven Stanley, aU

.fll-...

IIICHARGES: Ira Road,
Graet GriiQipf, Clarence
Wk*Hne, Wa)'De Glbbeaut,
·
lJI!i

y
D- uvtnlll.

Court upheld the verdict but set
aside the jury's award of
$50,000 to each of the three
chUdren.
· Atty. Willlam Bradley, who
handled the case for Mrs.
Bush, said the judgment Is the
largest ever awarded by a Jury
and upheld by a ~ for
personal injuries to one person.
In the Nevada Supreme

Court decision affirming the
jury award, Chief Justice
David Zenoff described the
condition of Bush, who was 27
when he was hurt near Ely.
"His Injuries are such that he
Is among the living dead. He
can neither communicate nor
do anything !01 himself, nor
wtiJ he ever be able to do so,"
Zenoff said.
"His mentality Is seriously
affected. He Is paralyzed below
the neck. His left eye Is
PLEASANT VALLEY
destroyed, his right eye ts
DISCHARGES : Sharon almost useless and although he
Thom,pson, Rutland; Mrs. does perceive, he Is mute. His
William Tucker , Grimms normal life expectancy Is 39
Landing; Jacqulyn Smith years from time of trial."
West Columbia; Johnny
Johnson, Mason; Fred Cornell
Buffalo; Mrs. D. N. Connors: Highwa~
Laura Hill, Mrs. Timothy
Da1J8herty and son, all of Point By' UDI!ed Press lnternatloaal
Pleasant.
Highway travel was heavy
Saturday as Americans took
advantage of the long Labor
DISCHARGES:
Sharon Day weekend for flnalsununer
Thompson, Rutland; Mrs. outings.
William Tucker, Grimms
The National Safety Council
Landing; Jacqulyn Smith, predicted between 580 and 680
West Columbia; Johnny persons would be killed before
Johnson, Mason; Fred Cornell, the 78-bour period ends at
Buffalo; Mrs. D. N. Connors, midnight Monday . Another
Laura Hill, Mrs. Timothy . 2.'1,000 to 27,000 will be Injured,
DaiJ8herly and son, all of Point according to tbe estimate.
Pleaaant.

REEDSVILLE - Eastern
High School band members are
to wear summer uniforms for
are known to exist.
participation in the Labor Day
The spokesman said the parade Monday.
poisoning of prairie dogs was
limited to areas where large
numbers burrowing into the
ground were considered a
menace to land conservation
practices.
Garrett, In hls letter to Reed,
said DWS officials had told him
WASHINGTON (UP!) about 200,000 acres of land with
prairie dog colonies we~e being Ending the final Investigation
"treated" this year with the of the My Lai massacre, Army
Secretary Robert F. Froehlke
poisoned grain.
The result, he said, would be ordered ·a veteran sergeant
the loss of other endang~red discharged and two officers
for
unanimals, such as the blacldoot- reprimanded
ed ferret and the kit !OJ:, and of professional conduct during
blrda such as the burrowing the 1968 Incident, the Army
owl and the bald eagle, as well announced Saturday.
Froehlke's non-judicial "adas of the prairie dogs themministrative action" agalnat S.
selves.
Garrett protested what he Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges, Col.
aald was "a deliberate policy of Nels A. Parson and Capt.
tlle U. S. government" to ldll Dennis H. Johnson raised to 13
off the prairie dogs, whose
unique "dogtowns" have long
been a feature of tbe western
plslns. It was such deliberate
policies, he ssid, that bad
AKRON, Ohlo (UP!) resulted in the disappearance Ohio's lamed 37th Division,
of the buffalo and the gray wolf whlch fo1J8ht In folD' wars Is
from the plains of the West. He holding lis 54th annual reunion
urged Reed to declare a here this weekend with about
moratoriwn on the poisoning of 4,000 veteral1ll attending.
prairie dogs on the publlc
One of the best known memlands, contending that such ~rs of the division Is Rudolph
action was, at the very least, a S. Uraprung, Cleveland, who
"violation of the aplrit" of the fought in three of the four wars
President's order prohibiting beginning with the Mexicantlle use of poisons for predator American conflict. He also
control.
fought in World War I and war

load; Ralph E. Hall, Pomeroy, within assured clear dlatance;
Rt. 4, $25 and costs, licenses Robert Rogers, Gallipolis, $10
suspejlded for 30 days, reclcless and costs, left of cenier.
Forfeiting bonds were
operation; Viola I. Cundiff,
,KeUsie
Roberts, Ashland, Ky.,
Charleston, $1&amp; and costs,
permitting minor to operate $257.50, driving while Invehicle; Richard Freeman, toxicated; Walter E. Toney,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, ex- Medina, $157.50, hit-skip ;
cessive apeed fall_ing to stop Yvonne Gorrell, Parkersburg

and. Lols W. Hoffman, Huntington, $27.50 each, speecllng;
Simon Jones, Jr., Albany, RD;
S25 Intoxication, $100, ani}·
destruction of property;
· Wendell A. Evans, MlnenvllJe,
$55, ap4iedlng; David Wade,
Athens, $27.50, stop algn
violation.

Land Partitions Asked
GALIJPOLIS - Two land
partition suits were filed
Saturday in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
Warren Ables of Cleveland
named Wanda Jacobs of
Center, Texas and Marshall M.
Carlisle of Jackson in an action. Plalntllf seeks partition of
his undivided one-half Interest
in 120 acres in Perry Twp., and
ol part of lot 79 In Knopp's
Addition to the Village of
t'beshlre In Cheshire Twp.
Ables asked the court to
order the proper\y be ap-

2 Accidents

praised and sold with the
proceeds of such sale
distributed and pald to the
plaintiff and defendants.
Vera Thomas and Mary
Darnell of Rt. I, Cheshire, filed
the other action against Jason
Thomas of Rt. I, Cheshire,
George Wesley Thomas of

Welcome, N. C. and· Carl
Koontz of Lexington, N. C.
. PlainUffs seek an Wldivided
one"llxth interest in 176 acres
in Cheshire Twp. '!'bey also
asked that the court appraise
the property and sell it with the
money divided to the parties
involved.

Quickness Will
Mark Marauders

MIDDLEPORT- The Meigs
Marauders wtiJ field probably
its quickest - but lightest defensive football unit since
GALLIPOLIS _No one was consolidation in 1967, acinjured or ciled in two minor cording to Head Coach Charles
traffic accidents Investigated Chancey.
Friday by city pollee officers.
Coach Chancey, ·speaklng toThe first mishap occurred on members of the MiddleportState St. where an auto Pomeroy Rotary Club Friday
operated by wanda May evening following dinner at
FeUure, 29, Eureka Star Rt., Heath United Methodist
backed Into an auto operated Church, pr~cted no cham. Johnson, 20, Rt. I, plonship for his Marauders.
by Willis
Ewlngton.
There
was
But he said, " If we can get
moderate damage to both cars. Into the latter part of the
A second accident occurred season without serious Inon Fourth Ave. and Pine St. juries, while our boys are
where cars driven by Virginia getting experience, we'll be a
Us pretty good football team."
. hac1e49, ,Rt. 2, Gallipo,
M1
'B
R
He pointed· out that 19 of lhe
and Rita V. Bucleiey, , , t. I,
Cheshire, collided at the in- 22 starters from 1971's squad
tersection.
There
was graduated.
moderate damage to both cars.
He singled out quarterback
Mrs. Michael was charged witll Andy ..Vaughan for special
failure to obey an automatic . mention : "Andy is a strong
traffic signal.
boy, a fine athlete with great
lalent, and an outstanding
boy." Coach Chancey said
BACK IN POWER
Va1J8h&amp;n's exceptional lalents
SINGAPORE (UP!)
Prime Minister Lee Kuan
Yew's People's Action Party
swept back to power In lhll
teeming island republic
RIO GRANDE - Herman
Saturday when lt clinched a
majority of 33 parUamentary Martin, Vice Presidentand
Public
seats in nation-wide elections. Personnel
In power since 1959, the party Relations for Bob Evans
advocates a non-allgned policy Farms, Inc., retired on August
and has steered Singapore 14 . He will continue to serve on
clear of the superpowers. Bul the Board of Directors.
the government has welcomed Martin, one of the original
organizers of Bob Evans
trade with aU countries.
Farms, Inc., served as the first
plant manager at the comDIES IN FIRE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) pany's Xenia plant, from 1953
- Anna Symbollk, 61, dlec! In a to 1962. He became vice
fire at her house in suburban president-Personnel and
Struthers early Saturday. Public Relations in 1962.
Authorities said she was
In addition to his dulles as
burned over 80 per cent of her vice president, Mr. Martin had
served as chalr.nan 'and
body.

Are Minor

will be used as much as
possible as a runner and
passer . He sald Dallas Weber
is making the switch from
guard to fullback exceptionally
well.
The Marauders' defense will
be quick but not big . "We feel
we will have to go with apeed.
Our biggest player may be a
tackle (Lou McKinmiy) at 179
lbs." Oumcey foresaw his
defense stunting frequently
with surprise jabs on first or
second down to throw the
opposition for losses.
"If we let the other guys
grind It out we might be In
trouble," he said.
The Marauders · openlna
game is next Friday at
Marauder Stadium against
Reemetin (BIS).
Gene Riggs, president,
presided at the meellng.
Guests Introduced were
George Siddall, son-in-law of
Paul Smart, and Dr. Carl
Wood, Gallipolis.

Executive Has Retired
secretary of the company'a
Employee Profit Sharing
Trust.
A graduate of Ohio State
University with a B.A. and
M.A. in school administration,
Martin was a school administrator for 21 years and
superintendent of schools in
Groveport before joining Bob
Evans Farms.
He was reelected to the
company's board of directors
for a one-year term at the
company's annual meeting and
will serve as a consultant on a
part-time basis.

Pentagon Closes My Lai Book
the number of soldiers
punished in some form as a
result of My Lat. Another 12
men, originally charged, were
cleared.
"N~ other admlnlstratlve
acUons ... are contemplated,"
an- Army spokesman said.
"Basically, lhll wraps up the
My j..al case."
TWo court actlo1111, however,
must be completed before the
books are completely cl~~~~ed on
the slaiJ8hter of clvtllan VIet-

namese men, women and
children at .MY La! March 16,
1968, by a platoon of the
America! Dlvtslon's lith Infantry Brigade.
One of these Is the continuing
review of Lt. William L.
Calley's court martial conviction for the murder of at least
22 civtllans. Calle/s life sentence was reduced to 20 years at
hard labor, and Is now before
the u.s. Court of Mllltary
Review.
The other Is a suit fUed in a
U.s. District Court In Georgia
by Hodges, who was informed
of Froehlke's action agalnat
blm In June. Hodges Is seeking
each year.
to block his discharge, and on
"But our membenhip Is -June 7 obtained a temporary
holding Its own at about 4,000 restraining order agalnat the
nationally," aaid Wander. ''We Army.
.
are picking up new members,
The Army's announcement
men wh~~~~e kids are grown and Saturday gave no reasons for
they have the time and money Froehlke's actions. A apokesfor lt.''

·4000 at Reunion

II.

Travel Heavy Saturday
AUnited Press International
count at 1 p.m. EDT ahowed 70
traffic deaths nationwide.
Last year, 616,persons died
on the nation's highway during
the Labor. Day weekend.
Several states set up special
pollee units to patrol hlghwaya
and expressways ·In efforts to
decrease the nwnber of traffic
accidents. · In West VIrginia,
selected National Guard llllts
were also used to patrol
roadways.

The 37th also fought in Korea.

Ursprung was given the task
of shipping the unit into ahape
for World War II. ·
"We love Rudy now, no matter what we aaid about blm in'
th~~~~e early daya," ·aatd WUUam wner; Akron, reunion
committee chairman. "He
made us the roughest bunch to
hit the Islands and a Jot df us
came ba~ lhanU to him.''
Jaclr Wander, executive secretary of the aeaoclation, said
the division Is losing about 10
per cent of Ita membenhlp

man said, "We're not diScussIng speclfiCI, other than that

they did not meet the professional standarda of people with
their grade and experience.''
Froehlke ordered Hodgea, 27,
of DubUn, Ga., ~rged "for
the convenience of the government" and barred bill future
reenllatment. Hodges, a nineyear Army veteran, had been a
squad leader In Calley'a platoon.
The Army Secretary ordered
Paraon, 51, of Toledo, &lt;lilo,
stripped of bla Legion of Merit
award and placed a Jetter ol
censure In his file. Panon bad
been Amerlcal Dlvialon clief ol
staff.
He ordered a letter of
reprimand placed In the file ol
Johnson, 31, of ClakJand, Calif.,
who was an lnteWgence offialr
with the 11th Brigade at the
time of My Lat.

Inmate Moved for Own Safety
BIDI HAS BII;L
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Hubert H. Humplrey, 0Minn., aaJd Saturday be would
Introduce In the Senate next
week a bill 1o guard aga1n1t
abuses of t.unana IRibjected to
health experlnients. He said
.bla Intent was not to hamper
health reaearch, but "we must
act carefully to protect our
country from abuses In experimentation on human
beings, however rare IIICh
abuses might In fact be."

MANSFIELD, Ohio (0PI)David Riggs, an Inmate here,
has been ordered transferred
to the Lebanon Correctional
Institution for his own safety
after telling of Inmates attacks
upon other Inmates here, It was
reported Saturday.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
in a series of articles quoted
Riggs· aecounts of the attacks.
Since then, Rigga'llfe h~ been
threatened unless lhe Plain
Dealer retracts the stories, the
newspaper said.
Richard B. !go, uslstan,t
Ohio attorney genl!ral said
,
In 1916, the Allies turned Corrections Commissioner
back the Germana In World Bennett Cooper bad ordered
War l's Battle of Verdun.
the transfer 11 an "ac-

to the
commodation"
American Civil !Jbertlea
Union.
The ACLU has flied a
damage liUit agalnat Cooper
and other correct10111 officers
on behalf of Rlgga and also told
a U. S. District COlD'! judge In
Cleveland that RJaa' life wu
In danger.
Manafleld olftclala said he
CJJuld be protected at the
reformatory but RJaa, In a
letter to the PJmn Dealer, said
he had been attacked tw1ee llld
wu now being kept In a
punllhment cen and wu oniJ
allowed out late at nlibt for

exercise.

, ::.~~&gt;:_Times-Sentinel,&amp;mday,Sept. 3, urn
~
-------------------

Jlo,

.$

l Senior Citizen Couple Had Fun at State Fair

! Area Deaths
Clarice Startzman

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs
Clarice Startzrnan 55 of J4
Lincoln Street, Aihe~s. formerly of Point Pleasant, died
Fnday afternoon unexpectedly
from an apparent heart attack.
She was born on October 3
1916 in Waverly, w. va. ~
daughter of Albert R. and
Lyndall Nowery Kelly of
Parkersburg who survive.
Mrs. Startzman had resided in
Athens for the past ten years
and was employed by the
Athens County Welfare
Department and had formerly
been an employee of the Valley
Bell Dairy while residing in
Point Pleasant. She was a
member of the Athens First
United Methodist Church and
was a graduate of Mountain
State Business eollege,
Parkersburg.
Other survivors in addition to
her parents are her husband
Richard Startzman; one son:
Ri chard A. Startzrnan of
Plantentia, Ca)ifornia; one
Sister, Mrs. Gladys Schneider,
Col urn bus ; one brother Clyde
Kelly, Columbus and two
grandchildren .
I
Funeral service will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. in the CrowRussell Funeral Home with the
Rev. Charles S. Thompson
officiating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends will be received at
the funeral horne after 11 a.m.
today .

Mrs. Beaver
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Zenith
Beaver, Rt. 2. died at 2:30 a. rn.
Saturday in St. Mary 's
Hospital al Huntington. She
was admitted there Monday
aflernoon after suffering a selfinflicted bullet wound of the
head . She was a former employee of the Holzer Medical
Center. Her husband, Verne C.
Beaver died Aug . 22.
She is survived by three sons,
l-oren of Kemper Hollow Rd .;
James of Bidwell, and Ivan of
Rt. 2, Gallipolis; a da1J8hler,
Mrs. Peter Soponyai of Winter
Park, Fla ., and several
grandchildren.
Arrangements will be anno~tw ~i~'II.Jill me,f

FlDlt!l-818:" ·

Gertrude Taylor

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Sixtyone-year-old retiree George
MASON - Mrs. Bessie Bentz Kallal and his 58-year-old wife
Bollman , 84, formerly of Marion didn't come to the Ohio
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly State Fair to be bored by exFriday at her home. Born at hibits - they came to strut.
George and his wife of 32
Alfred, Ohio (Meigs County)
she was the daughter of the late years entered the senior
John and Angeline Lewis citizens dance contest and glided Uu:ough the waltz. But then
Behtz.
Mrs. Bollman was a member when the foxtrot came, they
of the Alfred United Methodist cut a rug.
Five other couples took it
Church and had been a cook in
Pomeroy res taurants many
years. Survivors include a twin
sister, Mrs. Bertha Schreiver
of Mason; two nephews, Walter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Bentz of Pomeroy, and Claire
E. Bentz , Olney, Ill., a niece, Ohio Highway Patrol, during
Mrs. Juanita Fisher of the month of August, arrested
109 car theft suspects and reCrestline, Ohio.
Last rites will be held at 2 p. covered 152 stolen cars worth
m. Tuesday from the White over half a million dollars, it
funeral Home at Coolville. was announced Saturday.
Patrol Supt. Col. Robert M.
Rev. Roy Deeter will officiate.
Burial will be In the Bentz Chiaramonte said since the
Cemetery at Alfred. Visitation
wlll be held at the funeral home
after 7 p. rn. today.
CLAUDE K. MOOHE

Bessie Bollman

and crafts demonstrations for it upon themselves to come out,
thousands of people like and I feel a lot younger," he
George and Marion.
said.
"The fair is tremendous, just
George worked as a jet prowonderful," the couple from pulsion engineer for North
Blacklick; Ohio, agreed. "You American Rockwell in Columcan spend an entire day in the bus until he was laid off three
three tents set up in the (senior years ago. Instead of looking
citizens) area.
for another job, he decided to
"But we want to see all the start his retirement a little
fair and if we tire out today, early.
we'll be back tomorrow, " they
"Retirement was the best
said.
thing that ever happened to.
George, an expert at the me/' he said. "I had satisfacwaltz, said he enjoys watching tion- from being a good engiteen-agers gyrate through neer, but I'm a lot more sattheir rock routines.
isfied now. "
" H they have their own
After taking some short
thing, that 's fine ," he said. training courses in carpentry,
"Some guys wouldn't be George now spends most of Ws
caught dead dancing a waltz, time dreaming up re-modeling
but I like it. It's my thing."
projects around his farm
Mrs. Kallal said rock dan- horne.
cing was good for the kids. "It
"f used to be proud that I
gives them a lot of exercise," played a small role in helping
she said .
an airplane to fly, " he said.
Although George said he saw "But that's nothing compared
a lot of young folks at the fair, to the pride I get from building
it dido 't make him feel old.
"f compare myself to other
elderly persons who don't take

Patrol Has Good Month

BRYAN KEITH STEWART

Funeral service for Claude
K.
Moore, 73, Greer
Community, Point Pleasant,
will be held Monday at 2 p.m. in
the Wilcoxen Funeral Horne
with burial to follow in the
Greer
cemetery
Mr. Moore, retired railroad
employee, died Thursday night
after a three year illness.
Survivors include one
daughter, one son, one sister,
six grandchildren and three ·
great grandchildren.
American Legion Post No. 23
will conduct graveside
services. Friends may call at
the funeral horne after 4 p.m.
today.

Funeral service Jor tO-day
old Bryan Keith Stewart, son of
William and Janie Stewart,
2810 Maple Avenue. will be held
Sunday 2 p.m. in the CrowHusseR funeral Horne with
burial to follow in Kirlcland
Memorial Gardens.
The Infant died Thursday in
Chlldren's Hospital, Columbus,
Ohio.
Surviving are his parents,
one brother. and grandparents.
Friends may call at the funeral
home.
Funeral service will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. in the CrowHussell Funeral Horne with the
Rev. Charles S. Thompson
Officiating. Burial will be in In Chicago, during the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. height of the gangland killFriends will be received at ing era of prohibition. there .
the funeral horne alter 11 a.m. ' were 227 murders between
Sunday:
1927 and 193(). and only two
convictions .
HARRY BIRCHFIELD

first of the year the patrol has
arrested 682 suspects,
recoverect 963 stolen vehicles
worth over two milllon dollars.
The patrol has started an intensive program to halt the
auto larceny problem in Ohio
which is costing residents over
$90 million in stolen property
and increased Insurance rates,
Chiaramonte said.
"Called the ·'BlueMax' prl)gram, all officers, prior to
stopping a car, run an immediate registration check to learn
if the vehlcle is reported stolen
or wanted for any other reason," said ChiaramonU!. "Our
men are now checking over
00,000 vehlcles each month."
Each time a patrolman recovers a stolen car and makes
an arrest, a ted lightning bolt is
attacked to his patrol car.
Chiaramonte said after earning five lightning bolts, the
patrolman is awarded an
"Ace" certificate and a special
license plate for his car.

Therr:'s no problems when you
can do things like come to the
fair and win a dance contl!l.t.'' .

" The tensions are gone
George said. 11 1 don 'l

DOW I II

COLO\\ •

,

/hr ·u/r ,

Sunday ~ Monday
and Tuesday

Tonighllhru
Wednesday

DEAN MARTIN
BRIAN KEITH

Snoopy
is now

'something
big'

a

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Sept. 6th &amp; 7th

Sept. 3-4-S

Tonight, Mon . &amp; Tues.

CLOSED

DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
"PREACHER MAN

Sept. 3·4 -l

PLAY lTAGAtN, SAM

ITechnicotor)
Woody Allen

KANAUGA DRIVE IN
WILL BE OPEN FRI.,
SAT., SUN. FOR
THE BALANCE
OF THE SEASON

R

Amos Huxley
Ilene Kristen
PLUS
"WHO SLEW
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Diane Keaton
GOlNGHOME

{Technicolor)

Robert Mitchum
GP
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M .

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OPEN MONDAY
LABOR DAY

11 TO 4
CASH, CHARGE,
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QUANTITIES LAST

'
Funeral service will be held
'
TIM ES-St;.YI'IIIEL
'
Sundav 2 o.m. In the Stevens
P~D• · u·~ o ~, e,, \"n" ~' " v •~•' on.o 'I
(c
I
Funeral Home for Harry L.
G II L lU00 LI S c., l ¥ !ll&lt; lllJ "'[
,.•n ""'0 A., c. ~ ..,~ ,, "to·" ~ &gt;eJ &lt; I
Birchfield, 70, Huntington,
5 ~&lt;0nd (1 ~\\ "O,I&amp;; o ~~·&lt;I
J
•&gt;•I'
former Mason County resident C.I" •DD hlI&gt;&lt; on..,
0
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.. l&lt; N tl
Il l Cour•
Po .n N o,
0
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who died Thursday.
• uo1&gt;1nto h~•• ... ~.- , ~ , •· ~ " ' "~ ~•ua• 1
So•v•o•w fn•••~a•• " "t.&gt;'&gt;d " " .... m1 , ,n11 I
ot
,).,•1'1 I'O \t 0 " " "
He is survived by his wife, moto••TEilM
'i 0 1 !U I! H iii~TI O "
I
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(
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d~
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Tiiersa Mayes Birchfield; one
M" ' L SU I UWi f'I IO I'I !i"!f~
I
T~t j:;t llt i)OI,~ lr ,b .. n• "' O~•o ..w• wuo I
, son_., ree dallRhterl;•. two 1I Ylft""•
· ooo• ' ' ' ' " ) 09, ••• moon1n 0 11 1
llfq"'ers and t11tee - . . I lllrtt MO~ tru H ,_ • '''"""""· ont ~n; 1
I llJ . ••• moniM " 1M•• "'o' ""• ~ ) oo
' "' 0•· •~ ~'"' ' M'. an• •••• • • ~ OQ 1,, I
Friends may, call at the 1 mono,,
II ~ i ' '"'« "'Jin T ~• •• 10
I
I T~t On ,ltd " ••U ~ ~ •t•nt• on•• 11 u '
1
CIW
oni ,IIU •u •nr 0/U , 0 , l&gt;ul, l• &lt;• l·"" I
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. 1 of I &lt; v&lt;'l~nf*l
a ••l&gt;•l&lt;"• • r• ta••rll lo '" '' I
today . Burial will be in Lone I J&gt;vb l•l"'" ono
• l•o In• '"l "
1
l
Oak cemeter.Y .
~-- ----- - - -- ---- ---~
~ · "•t

snar at my wife like I used to.

something entirely with my
Own hands .,
George and his wife cooled
off after their dancing and
agreed their marriage was better now than ever.

-------------------·
'1 -,,11,\\
PuD I• ~" · n;

Yllh\ne&lt;l he•t w•~ • ll&amp; t f&gt; r~ .~ ~ ~ • upl
Sl•w t &lt;lot
•'

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Pa"' ~'h

ttl
ntw~~IDt•

GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
Gertrude Mae Taylor, 86, 407
Pike St., Kanauga, died at 4:30
p. rn . Friday in the Holzer
Medical Center Hospital. She
was horn Aug . 7, 1886, in
Jacksonville, m., da1J8hter of
the late Prentice and Cynthia
Clemons Weaver. She moved to
Gallia County seven years ago
to reside with a daughter, Mrs.
Otho Suiter of KanaiJ8a .
Mrs. Taylor was preceded in
death by her husband and two
brothers.
Surviving are five children,
Mrs. Suiter of Kanauga; Mrs.
George Thompson and Mrs.
Fred Carr of ·Burns, Oregon;
James Taylor . of Salem,
Oregon, and Eugene Taylor of
Allanta, Ga .; eight grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren, and one greatgreat-grandson.
Friends may call at Mlller's
Home for Funerals from 2-4
and 7-9today. The body will be
shipped to Bend , Oregon,
where funeral services wtiJ be
held Wednesday at the
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral
Home. Burial will follow in the
Pilot Beauty Cemetery there .

easy, but when George start~d
spinning Marion , the crol"d of
elderly spectators took notice.
"We don 't like to just walk
around when we come to the
fair," George said after winning the ·dance contest. "We
like to participate. We need
something to do.''
The highly-organized senior
citizens group at the fair has
lined up acuvlties like dancing,
musical productions and arts

nt,..~

n1•r ·~

POLYESTER
DOUBLE
KNITS

Bobby Sherman's "With love" and "Portrai t
of Bobby", Johnny Mathi s' "Worm", Mamas &amp;
Papas' " People like Us", Steppenwolf's "For
Ladies Only" and many, many others .

REGULAR
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'

• -The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 3,1172

•

. S- The Sunday Tlmel- Sentinel, SUndly' Sepl3, 1972

Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollan, Route I, Minersville, are
·announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Unda Valerie, above, to Mr. Charles Thomas
Hamm, son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hamm of Minersville,
Route I. Both Miss Hollon and her fiance are graduates of
Southern !Dgh School, class of 1971. She is also a graduate of
the Marietta Valley Beauty School and is employed at lola's
Beauty Salon. Mr. Hammisassoclated with his father in the
operation of a dairy farm.
The open church wedding will beheld on Oct.l5 at 2:30p.
m. at the Forest Run United Methodist Church.

Rhonda Lee Ervin is Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, Racine, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Rhonda Lee, to Mr. SteveR.
Dailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dailey, Racine. Miss Ervin
is a 1970 graduate of Southern High School and is a junior in
the School of Nursing at Ohio State University. She Is
Jresently employed at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Dailey, a 1967 graduate of Southern !Dgh School,
served three years in the United States Navy with a l~onth
tour in Greece, and is currently a student at the Ohio Institute
of Technology, Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Winter-Nease Vows
Read in Zanesfield
Miss Shelly Ann Winter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Willard V. Winter, Bellefontaine, and Mr. Richard William
Nease, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George William Nease,
Bellefontaine, Route 3, were
united in marriage on Aug. 26
in a candlelight ceremony at
the United Methodist Church,
Zane~ield, Ohio.
The bridegroom is the
grandson of Mr. and .Mrs.
Clifford Phillips and Mr. and
Mrs. U. S. Nease, MinersviUe.
Officiating at the double ring
ceremony was the Rev. Fany
G. Mullaney, uncle ofthe bride,
assisted by the Rev. Brian
Wood. Mrs. Marvin Porschett,
organist, presented nuptial
music . The altar was
decorated with white daisy
mums with a rope of greenery
and mums draped above the
altar. Two seven'-branch
candelabra were used at the
altar along with pew candies.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride wore a gown of
her own design fashioned by
her mother. It was white
dacron sheer, fully lined, except for the sleeves which were
full and gathered into wide
fitted lace trtlnmed cuffs. The
filled bodice featured alter. natlng vertical bands of tiny
tuckJ and wide heavy lace with ·
,
•

.

a high standup lace collar. The
slightly gathered floor length
skirt, also had tucks and lace
and featured a wide flounce on
the bottpm. Lace encircled the
waist and skirt at the flounee.
The bride wore a wide brim·
med hat with a waist-length
veil attached at the back with
white daisy mums. She carried
long-stemmed yellow roses
with yellow ribbon.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Patricia Winter, her
sister, maid of honor; Miss
Kathy Wilgus, West Mansfield;
Miss Rexx Stewart of
Cuyahoga Falls, and Miss
Cynthia Nease, sister of the
groom, of Bellefontaine. They
were in identical dresses of
flocked dacron in willow green,
fashioned with fitted bodices,
raised waistlines, square
necklines edged in lace, and
ruffled sleeves. They wore
daisy mums tied with green
ribbons in their hair and
carried long. stemmed daisy
mums.
Miss Julia Mullaney, cousin
of the bride, of SPringfield, wu
the flower girl, and Maater ·
David Nease, brother of the
groom, was the ring bearer.
The acolytes were Miss Sandra
Nease, sister of the groom, and
Mr. . Christopher Winter,
(Continued on Page S)'

Daughter Born
'

Kathy King to Wed in December
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King, South Second Ave., Mid·
dleport, are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Kathy King, to John A. Elias,
son of John Elias, Mason, W.Va., and Mrs. Bertha Hayes of
Illinois.
·•
The bride-elect is a senior at Meigs High School. Her
fiance graduated from Wahama High School in 1971 and is
employed at Veterans Memorial Hospital. A December
wedding is being planned.

'Tis such a small world . . . .
Wh~n Iris and Aaron Kelton w{re traveling last month they
pulled mto Berry Patch Camping Park at Rapid City, S. D.
Spotting a camper with an Ohio license just across the way Iris
yelled over to Inquire, "Where from in Ohio."
'
To her surprise the voice which answered was Edith Bowen
Witt, .a girlhood friend and former teacher In Meigs County, now
restdtng at Ashtabula. Mrs. Witt and her husband Earl had
Intended to move on the next morning, but after meeting Iri~ and
Aaron who were with a camper caravan, stayed on a few days.

Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Louis Young

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Roger R. Black (formerly
Karolyn Soulsby) of Rutland,
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughtar, August 10, at
the Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 7 lb., 141'. oz.
and has been named Shelley
Kay.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. William T.
Soulsby of Route 2, Pomeroy,
and paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Warren D. Black
of Rutland. Mater.nal greatgrandparent is Mr . Herman
Kanode of Logan, Ohio .
Paternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Black
of Route 4, Pomeroy, and Mr.
SidneyTayloro!Milton, W. Va.

tended satin streamers tied in
lover's knots. She carried a
lavalier belonging to her late
aunt , Miss Kate Flck of
Pomeroy, which had been
given to Miss Fick by the
bride's grandfather in 1917.
The bride also carried a
handkerchief belonging to Mrs.
George Adams (June Unroe ), a
classmate, and carried by
many brides through the years.
Matron of honor for the bride
was Mrs. John Young who
wore a yellow crepe dress with
yellow lace side and back
panels. She carried a nosegay
of yellow sw~theart roses with
green streamers . John E.
·voung, son of the bridegroom,
served as best man.
'J'he- ooupl~ .. too~, 1a !Wedding
trip to Cincinnati. and through
porthw,esterp I.ndiana and
southern Michigan. They
reside at 1818North Main Ave.,
Sidney .
Agraduate of Pomeroy High
School the bride is employed
with Western and Southern
We Ins. Co . Mr . Young, son of
the late Mr. and Mrs . Earl
Young, is also a Pomeroy High
School graduate. He is general
foreman for the Monarch
Machine Tool Col at Sidney.
Among the guests at the
wedding were Miss Elizabeth
Fick, cousin of the bride, who
wore a beige crepe and lace
ensemble with matching accessories and a brown cymbidium orchid; Mrs. Carl Will,
and Miss Erma Smith of
Pomeroy, and Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Christman of Sidney.
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert L.
Hegnauer entertained at their
home, 545 Schug St., Berne,
Ind., on Saturday evening with
a rehearsal dinner. A
yellow and white color scheme
with flowers from their yard
decorated the table which was
centered with a two tiered
wedding cake topped with
three large wedding bells .
Attending were Mrs. Nli, Miss
Elizabeth Fick, Mrs. Will and
Miss Smith, Mrs. Don Moser,
and Mr . and Mrs. John Young.
A reception honoring the
couple was held on July 9 at

FLORENCE AND ARNOLD RICHARDS returned Thursday
night from Denver, Colo., where they spent IOdays visiting their
daughter, Rosetta Jo Buntnn and Brett, and Mrs. Richards'
brother, Tommy McCabe, and his family.
The flight to Colorado wss a first for Arnold. Probably the
highlight of their trip wss the chance to see their daughter
perlorm with the Cleo Parker Robinson Dancers at the Denver
Community Center. Not only did she.dance with others but was
featured in a solo at the performance.
Tommy and Jo were both on vacation while Arnold and
Florence were there so they all spent lots of time seeing
Colorado's sights. They toured the. National Center for Atmospheric Research, the Garden of the Gods, the Air Force
Academy, the Squaw Paths, vi81ted the ski slopes at Frazer,
Central aty, the Red Rock Park, and crossed the Royal Gorge.
While going through Mtlner Pass at the Continental Divide,
they got in a terrific snow storm which later closed the. pass.
·. They returned by way of the l!ertho\111 fass. Tommy, supe~r
1 of conventil&gt;na at the 0en..,.l, HnlolliHotel, lOok his sillier and
brother-ln~aw on a tour of the hotel.
The Richards were accompanied to Denver by their grandson, Vaughan Smith, of Columbus.

r.

I
'

Betty Rose
It makea aU llae difference In our elepnt (llllletal. S11Qe
bodice, fitted wellllllle and Oared oldrt late .. 1 YerJ
lembdlle oppell, ouiiiDed wllb potb polyeater pBe. It rtaas
die collar, loo, for l1ce.framlq Hattery.

MANY OTHER STYLES-TO CHOOSE
FROM

BY BETTY ROSE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RUTLAND - The 29th annual Grate reunion was held at
Royal Oak . Park, August 13,
with a large dinner served at
the park and an attendance of
69 and three visitors.
Marion Grate, president,

·By Katie Crow

Tony; Mr . and Mrs. Harry
McGlothlin, Union Furnace;
Mrs . Maxine Ashbaugh ,
Melinda, Juncation City ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Grate, Suzie,
Sherrie, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Grate, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. John Hersman, Castalia;
Mrs. Bonnie Nicholson, Mr.
and Mrs. George Grate, Ron,
Mike, Georgene, Beverly; Mr .
and Mrs. Herman Grate, Vicki,
Mr. and Mrs . Wendell Grate,
Jenny, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, Rev . and Mrs. Herbert
Grate, Araka, Herbert II, Mr .
and Mrs . David Grate, all of
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. John
Grate, New Haven; Rev. and
Mrs. William Lyons, David,
Colleen, Utica, Michigan; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Jones, John , Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grate, Marge,
Marla, of Marion; Mr. and
Mrs . Keever Grate, Kelley,
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Grate, Brian, Scott,
Kyle, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Bin Grate, South Charleston;
Mr . and Mrs . Ed Tewksbury,
Wellston ; Mr . and Mrs .

started the' meeting by giving
away prizes . Mrs. Alma
McGlothlin of Union Furnace,
won the prize for being the
oldest one present. A prize lor
the youngest was given to John
Kenneth Jones, three months,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Bill Jones,
Marion, Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
Tewksbury of McConnelsville,
won the door prize. Mrs.
Bonnie Nicholson, secretary
and treasurer, read the
minutes from last year's
reunion .
The 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry McGlothlin to be
celebrated September 10 was
announced. Marion Grate and
Bonnie Nicholson were elected
as officers for the next annual
reunion which will again be
held the second Sunday in Thomas Tewksbury, Trisha,
August at Royal Oak Park. McConnelsville; Mr . and Mrs.
There were a total of eight Gary Dudding and family,
families and their trailers Huntington.
which camped there during the
Visitors were Debbie Jewett,
weekend of the reunion.
Don Hysell, Rutland, and John
The following attended: Mr. Blosser, Union Furnace.
and Mrs. Thomas Sprouse,

Shower Given Bride-Elect
·NEW HAVEN - Mrs .
Charles Zerkle and Mrs.
Warren Weaver of New Haven
entertained at lbe Zerkle home
with a bridal shower honoring
Miss Linda Weaver. A yellow
and blue color scheme was
carried out in the decorations.
Games were played with
prizes going to Miss Mary Jane
Scites, Mi'!5 Jody Talbert, Mrs.
Bill Talbert, Mrs. Elson
SPencer. Mrs. Linda Crump
won the door prize. Refreshments, including a decorated
cake made by Mrs. Emery
Roush of Letart, were served.
Others attending were Miss
Penny Burris, Miss Rebecca
Burris, Miss Diana Talbert,

Weaver.
Also pr~senting gifts to the
bride-elect were Jo Ann
Embleton, Jane Dixie, Mr. and
Mrs. D. W. Embleton and
family, Macil Herdman, Leona
Machir, Vickie Spardling,
Catherine Pierce, Edith
Bumgarner, Lola Weaver ,
Melody Weaver, Carol Lathey,
Jerry and Carla Gibbs, Barbara Priddy, Mrs. Sara
Dawson, Mrs. Tribby Hari,
Mrs. Uoyd Smith, Mrs. Alice
Hunter, Mrs. Deana Murphy,
Mrs. Helen Knapp, Mrs .
Norma Bwngarner, Mrs. Lola
Boston, Mrs. Jeanette Grimm,
Mrs. Ora Clarke, Mr. and Mrs.
Buddy Kerns, Mr. and Mrs.
''Mi'f,'·lli!Uy Roush, Mri'.' Dicle CariArgabrtto, the Date Roach
Talbert, Mrs. Max Snyder, famtly, Tony Weaver, Anna
Mrs. Frank Spardling, Mrs. Allen and Ada Clark.
Robert Weaver, and Chrystal
MEET WITH BOARD
POMEROY - Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas, Mrs . Kate Jarrell and
Mrs. Carol Wolfe, teachers of
the Meigs Community Classes,
met with the Meigs County
Board of Retardation Monday
night to review plans for the
school year. It was noted that
the new bus is in operation, and
that Mrs. Alice Wolfe of Racine
has been added to the staff as,
an aide. Present for the
meeting were Ed Kennedy,
Mrs. Grace Weber, the Rev .
Bill Perrin, and Mrs. Denver
Rice .

~.

.Katie's Korner

IAt Royal Oak Park

"BRIGHT AS A DOLLAR and tickled to death" was a
friend's description of Mrs. Elizabeth McCumber on her 1ooth
birthday, Aug. 9.
Mrs . McCumber, who lived at Dexter up until a year ago,
was treated to an open house on her birthday at the Wellston
Nursing Home,405North Park Ave., Wellston. Numerous friends
and relatives went over for the observance taking flowers and
other gtfts. Congressman Clarence Miller even sent her a
bouquet.
Her day was a delight and she sends her thanks to those who
made it so.

~·

POMEROY - Vases of
daisies and two 14-branch
c•ndelabra decorated the altar
of the Cross United Church of
Christ at Berne, Ind., for the
wedding of Miss Evelyn J. Fick
of Pomeroy and Mr. Hobart
Louis Young of Sidney.
The wedding was an event of
Sunday, June 25, at 2:30p. m.
The Rev. Robert L. Hegnauer
olriciated at the double ring
ceremony following a program
of nuptial music presented by
Mrs . Don Moser, organist, and
Mrs. Gerald Nil, the former
Ramora Boice of Pomeroy.
Selections included "0 Perfect
Love", the "Wedding ?rayer"
sung by Mrs. Nil, "Wedding
Bells", "Calm as the Night",
and ''Adoration.'' 1 , 1 ~. 1., ,
For her wedding the bride,
daughter of t~e late Albert J.
Fick, wore a white satinessa
dress with a white rose em. bossed silk organza coat. The
coal was trimmed with
satinessa petal collar and
cuffs. Her veil of illusion was
held in place by a pearl
trimmed organza headband.
The bride carried a nosegay
of while roses with a white
yellow-throated catalaya orchid center from which ex-

By charlene Hoeflich

·.POMEROY - Paula Eichinger manages to keep her "sunny
side up" despite more health problems.
La~t week she underwent surgery at Children's Hospital for
co':"ection ~f a curvature of the spine and is now in a body cast
which Bile will be required to wear the next six months.
, The family expects Paula to he released from the hospital
etther this wee keno or early next week. She 'II be coming home by
ambulance, of course.
Arrangements already have been made for her home
tutoring to start as soon as she Is physically able. An excellent
student, Paula is in the eightb grade.
Knowing the problems facing Paula in her long confinement,
the E.tchingers went out of the way to see that she had an
es.pectally enjoyable summer. She camped, went visiting, had in
fnends and relatives as often as she wanted, and took in the
Metgs County Fair about every day.
. Paula certainly has what it lakes, but her friends these next
SIX months can make life brighter by sending a card, or dropping
by lor a chat.

THE SHAPE'S THE THING
9' d)

Terrie Lee Miller to Wed
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Miller, Route I, Rutland, are
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Terrie Lee, to Mr. Delbert Wayne Teaford,
Jr., of Racine, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Delbert W.
Teaford, Sr.
Miss MiUer is a 1969 graduate of Meigs Local Higt. School
and a 1970 graduate of Nationwide Beauty Academy in
Columbus. She is currently employed at Helen's Beauty Shop
in Pomeroy. Mr. Teaford attended Racine School and is
employed with the new Remington Rand plant in Marietta. A
late October wedding is being planned.

IComer

Miss Erma Smith, Mrs. Carl
Will, MISs Bichman, Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Struble, Mr. and
Mrs. Trell Schoenleb, Mrs.
George Kom, Sr., Mrs. Paul
Chapman, ail of Poffieroy.
Mrs. Paul Nease, Miss Sybil
Ebersbach, Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Miss Mary Virginia
Reibel, Mrs. Leonard Jewell,
Mrs. Phil Globokar, Mrs .
James Fugate, Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Miss Mary E. Chapman,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Joe WUson,
Mrs. Ernest Lallance, Mrs.
Gleim Lambert, Middleport;
Miss Shari Williams, Mrs ,
aair Karr, Mrs. Martha J.
WiUiams, Minersville; Mrs.
Charles Ackley, Mrs. Robert
Ackley, Guysville; Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Rllclne; Mr. and Mrs.
George Adams, . Brant and
Ualre Lynn, Gallipolis, and
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ,
Cleveland.

Trinity · Ulurch in Pomeroy
with members of the Friendly
Circle hosting the affair .
Guests were registered by Mrs.
Loonard Russ and refreshments of punch, cake, coffee
and nuts were served by Mrs.
·Carl Will, Mrs. Martha J.
Williams and Miss Marie Bich·
man.
. A pink and white color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations of the table Which
was centered with a three
Uered wedding cake.
Guests at the reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Fick,
Columbus; Mrs. Orville
Rhodes, Racine; Mrs. Geoffrey
Wilson and Kelly, Mrs. Carl
Moore, Mrs. Clifford Young
and Skip, Mr. and Mrs. D. A.
. Canaday,
Mrs , Robert
Schuster, Mrs. Charles Eskew,
Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Boice, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Blaetinar, Mrs.
Robert Hoeflich and Jayne,
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Morarity,

I .

October Wedding Planned

Co~;;~it'Yl Grate Reunion Held

Evelyn Fick is Wed in Indiana on June 25

SUNDAY
TUESDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
HARRISONVILLE PTO,
p.m. Sunday at Syracuse Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
United Methodist Church by Harrisonville school.
• the Rev. Murre! Floyd.
EASTERN
Athletic
ANNUAL Swartz Family Boosters, 8 p.m . Tuesday, at
Reunion , Sunday, Woode · high school. Horse show to be
Grove at Alfred. Family and discussed. All members urged
friends invited.
to attend .
MONDAY
MEIGS County Alcohol and
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, Drug Abuse Committee
stated meeting, 8 p.m. Monday meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
at Masonic Temple . Worthy St. Paul Lutheran Church,
, Matron asks as many officers Pomeroy. Program will be
and members possible be county teenagers reporting on
present because of important summer alcohol and drug
business to be discussed.
abuse institution which they ·
(Continued from page 4)
CHESTER FIRE Depart- attended.
ment annual Labor Day
SOUTHERN Band Boosters, brother of the bride.
Mr . James Nease of Route 3,
celebration , Monday. Bar- 8 p.m. Tuesday at the high
becued chicken and spareribs, school. Important meeting and Bellefontaine, served as best
homemade ice cream. Parade ail interested persons are man for his brother, and the
ushers were Mr . Tony Winter,
starting, 1:30 p.m. Parade urged to attend.
Rt. 3, BeUeforitalne, brother
participants be at lire house by
WEDNESDAY
of the bride; Mr. Robert
1:30 p.m.
MEIGS CHAPTER Gibbons and Mr. John Deisher,
TUESDAY
American Cancer Society lilso of Bellefontaine.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, dinner to honor crusade
For her daughter's wedding,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 chairmen and board members, Mrs. Winter wore a yellow and
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus 7p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy white double knit polyester
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. American Legion Hall. ·
sleeveless dress with white
social room.
accessories. Mrs. Nease was in
CLEAN UP night by Meigs
an emerald blue brocade enBand Boosters at food booth at
semble and bOth mothers had
Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy.
white orchid corsages.
Take rags and buckets.
A reception honoring the
B. H. SANBORN Missionary
couple was held in the church
Society, Middleport First
social rooms. Guests were
Baptist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
registered by Miss Theresa
evening at the church.
POMEROY - A rummage Winter, a cousin of the bride, of
saJe was announced for Sept. 7 Marysville, and the hostesses,
and 8 at Thursday night's all cousins, Miss Laura
meeting of the One-Won.OOe Grooms, Miss Connie Grooms,
Class of the Pomeroy First Miss Barbara Grooms, and
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Miss Cynthia Rockhold, all of
MIDDLEPORT- Mrs. Dale Baptist Church.
Mrs . Ellen Couch, Mrs. Rllymond.
Walburn and daughter, Jill
The couple resides at 115
Ann, entertained recently with Burton Smith and Mrs. Ula
Park
Ave., Urbana. The new
·an indoor picnic honoring Mrs · Price of the ways and means
Mrs.
Nease
is a graduate of
Dana Hammon her 86th birth· committee · have planned the .
day anniversary. Attending sale. Mrs. Mary Shelton L~gan Hills High School,
were Mrs. Ferne Bradbury, presided at the meeting at- Zanesfield, and attended Ohio
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner, tended by 13 members. The State University two years. She
and Mrs. J. Q. Rice. Mrs. Amy group sang the clsss song, "He will be attending Urbana
• Humphrey joined the group Keeps Me Singing" which was College this fall.
Mr. Nease Is also a graduate
followed by devotions by Mrs.
, during the evening.
of
Logan Hills High School and
Caryl Cook on the theme
attended
Miami University and.
"August Days." She · read
"Parade of Days" and "The Urbana College. He is em·
,,
ON iiONOR ROLL
Ripened Seeds.... The Rev. ployed at Igle'a in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllrtord
~. POMEROY- Mrs. Marshall Robert Kuhn had prayet.
' Roush (Deborah HID) and Mrs.
Roll call was taken and the Phllllps, Mr. and Mrs. U. s.
1- Darrell Norris (Jan Hill) of treasurer's report was given. Nease, MinersVille; Mr. and
·• Letart Falll were listed on the The closing prayer was by Mrs. Mrs. Clarence Massar,
' honor roll for the summer Shelton. Mrs. Harriett Sterrett Pomeroy, and Mr. and . Mrs.
.., semester at Rio Grande and Mrs. Margaret Bailey Herbert Davia of Athens at·
served a dessert course.
· tended the wedding.
, College.

Winter-Nease

4-H Clubs Will Give Program

• ••

It Takes Furniture Too!
T6t Finest .Seltdl011
And Tllf hsl Valm
AHYWHEREI

BAKER.

..
IN MIDDIIPOir·
.

Mrs. Richard William Nease

0

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOl T

CUT YOUR

TROUBLE COMES IN BUNCHES. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fox
of Laurel Cliff are having more than their share. Their oldest
daughter, Eloise Ro.ush, died uneljlectedly recently from an
apparent heart attack.
Their other two daughters, lola Howell of Pomeroy and Ruth
Douglas of Guysville, are both patients at Veterans Memorial
Hospital where they un.derwent major surgery Friday. Both are
in the same room, 124, and both underwent the same operation. ·
., Certainly hope things begin to look up for this family.

SINCERELY HOPE THAT our dear friend and neighbor,
Mrs. Rachel McBride, wliJ be better soon. Rachel is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center where she went for surgery but unfortunately the operation could not be performed due to a heart
condition.
If ail goes well she will be home within the next ten days. God

bless and may you have a speedy recovery.
IT CERTAINLY WAS wonderful to see a dear friend Friday,
Mrs. Frank (Cora) Buck, formerly of Antiquity who now resides
in Columbus.
Mrs. Buck has suffered two serious heart attacks which
certainly have not affected her ability to be out and around. She
has retained her atiractiveness, obvious when I saw her in her
handsome red, white and blue outfit.
She was a delight to see.

THE REV. AND MRS. AUDRY MilLER, Middleport,
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary Aug. 29. On this very
special day their fifth grandson was born, Roger Lee, son of

AIR CONDITIONING

COSTS UP TO

DEMANDS LICENSES
BAD OLDESLOE, Germany
(UP!) - Klaus Klingner, a
Social Democratic deputy in
the Schleswig-Holstein state
Parliament, has demanded
li cense plates for either
amateur horse riders or their
mounts to help track down
riders molesting pedestrians in
public forests. He did not make
it clear whether the plate
should be fastened on the horse
or its rider.

SYMPAlHY
FLOWERS
"Express your Thoughts
when Words are Hard to
Find. "

Dudley's Aorist
Serving' Gallipolis,
Middleport,
Pomeroy, O.
&amp; Mason Co., w. Va.

\

l

HAGAN
CELLULOSE
INSULATION

ANY HOME, new or old. can
be fully insulated to cut
your cooling costs . Our
trained crew blows SUP'- ·
rior Hagan Insulation in
attic and walls without
muss or fuss . . . without
disturbing your household
routine. The fuel savings
pay for Ihe job.

PHONE 992-5321
FOR FREE ESTIMATE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BIGCANTAWUPES
LETART FALLS -Robert
D. Ashley, living at Letart
Falls, is upholding the
gradition of growing outstanding vegetables in the
Letart bottoms. Ashley is
producing eight cantaloupes
"to the bushel." Four weighed
seven pounds; three weighed
eight pounds; and one was a six
pounder. 'I'Wenty.flve Inches In
circumference, the meloos are
oot only •large but delicious. ·

••••••••••••••••••••

i -Miss
•••
•••
••
••
•

Ame~ica .

~

SAVE NOW FOR

Shoes

YOUR CHILDREN'S FUTURE

•
•
••••••••••••••••••

There is no better investment for your children
than a college education. It's easy to get
started in a savings account to make their
future more secure. Stop in today!

Ah oy, mate' Here's a
shipshape accen t on a
fun -fash io n wave.
Ready to ho ist anchor
with tank tops, wideleg pants and the new
nauticals.

BIJ\CK SHAG
BROWN SHAG

PAID ON

PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

SCHOOL'S IN
PLEASE DRIVE
CAREFULLY

All The Senices Of ASavings and Loan
1. Hom~ Construction Loans
2. Home Purchase Loans
3. Home Improvement Loans
4. Home Consolidation Loans
5. Mobile Home Loans

6. ChristmjS\Ciub
7. Vacation Club
8. Travelers Checks
9. Money Orders

MEIGS BRANCH

.

'

BY INSULA riNG
YOUR HOMEWITH

o~f~RII:c::in~ei.~_:...:;::::;:::;;...::::::::::.::::::::::
to remember.

Sponsor Sale

,.

%

Edward
Findley
The and
29thElizl!beth
of August
will be a da
Congratulations!

Church Class to

"IT TAKES A HEA, Of UYIH&amp; o o
TO MAKF. A HOUSE A'HOM!f'

rum

POMEROY - Having a great time
is
Jennifer Menchini, daughter of Jackie Menchini and the late
Renzo Menchini. She departed on Aug . 1.
· She spent four days in Rome and several more in Viagreggio
which is similar to our ocean resorts. She also visited relatives in
San Cassiano where her father, now deceased, was born and
raised. The past week she has been in Venice. She plans to return
home the middle of September.
Jennifer, who is a registered nurse, having graduated from
Ohio state in June also has a Bachelor Qf Science Degree .

BELATED BIRTHDAY wishes to Clara Grueser and Fannie
PhiUips, twin sisters, both of Minersville, who celebrated their
78th birthdays Thursday.

SALEM CENTER - The is advisor or the participating
community girls and boys 4-H 4-H clubs.
clubs will present the program
when the Salem Center PTA
meets at 7•30 p.m. on Monday,
Sept. II, at the school.
The program will include
modelin g
of
clothes,
achievement reports and
display of exhibits many of
which are featured at the
Meigs County Fair.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, a former
principal of the school and now
a Meigs County school
supervisor, will be on hand to
present awards won by Salem
Center School pupils at the
school exhibit of the Meigs
County Fair. Mrs. Roberta
Wilson,, principal , will in troduce new parents and
teachers and Mrs. Alma Smith
will presen t a de votional
period. Mrs. Minnie Thornton

·~

THE

The Athens County
_Savings &amp; Loan Co.

SHOE , BOX
'

Where Shoes are sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT,O.

Elrl F. lngel•. Jr., Mgr.
296 W. Second
Pomeroy Ohio

'

•I)
--

Mon., T!lf•·• Wod. - t to ~
Tllurldoy &amp; Sltvnloy - t hi Noon

Friday - 9 to •

I

�'

'

• -The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 3,1172

•

. S- The Sunday Tlmel- Sentinel, SUndly' Sepl3, 1972

Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollan, Route I, Minersville, are
·announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Unda Valerie, above, to Mr. Charles Thomas
Hamm, son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hamm of Minersville,
Route I. Both Miss Hollon and her fiance are graduates of
Southern !Dgh School, class of 1971. She is also a graduate of
the Marietta Valley Beauty School and is employed at lola's
Beauty Salon. Mr. Hammisassoclated with his father in the
operation of a dairy farm.
The open church wedding will beheld on Oct.l5 at 2:30p.
m. at the Forest Run United Methodist Church.

Rhonda Lee Ervin is Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, Racine, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Rhonda Lee, to Mr. SteveR.
Dailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dailey, Racine. Miss Ervin
is a 1970 graduate of Southern High School and is a junior in
the School of Nursing at Ohio State University. She Is
Jresently employed at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Dailey, a 1967 graduate of Southern !Dgh School,
served three years in the United States Navy with a l~onth
tour in Greece, and is currently a student at the Ohio Institute
of Technology, Columbus. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Winter-Nease Vows
Read in Zanesfield
Miss Shelly Ann Winter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Willard V. Winter, Bellefontaine, and Mr. Richard William
Nease, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George William Nease,
Bellefontaine, Route 3, were
united in marriage on Aug. 26
in a candlelight ceremony at
the United Methodist Church,
Zane~ield, Ohio.
The bridegroom is the
grandson of Mr. and .Mrs.
Clifford Phillips and Mr. and
Mrs. U. S. Nease, MinersviUe.
Officiating at the double ring
ceremony was the Rev. Fany
G. Mullaney, uncle ofthe bride,
assisted by the Rev. Brian
Wood. Mrs. Marvin Porschett,
organist, presented nuptial
music . The altar was
decorated with white daisy
mums with a rope of greenery
and mums draped above the
altar. Two seven'-branch
candelabra were used at the
altar along with pew candies.
Given in marriage by her
father the bride wore a gown of
her own design fashioned by
her mother. It was white
dacron sheer, fully lined, except for the sleeves which were
full and gathered into wide
fitted lace trtlnmed cuffs. The
filled bodice featured alter. natlng vertical bands of tiny
tuckJ and wide heavy lace with ·
,
•

.

a high standup lace collar. The
slightly gathered floor length
skirt, also had tucks and lace
and featured a wide flounce on
the bottpm. Lace encircled the
waist and skirt at the flounee.
The bride wore a wide brim·
med hat with a waist-length
veil attached at the back with
white daisy mums. She carried
long-stemmed yellow roses
with yellow ribbon.
The bride's attendants were
Miss Patricia Winter, her
sister, maid of honor; Miss
Kathy Wilgus, West Mansfield;
Miss Rexx Stewart of
Cuyahoga Falls, and Miss
Cynthia Nease, sister of the
groom, of Bellefontaine. They
were in identical dresses of
flocked dacron in willow green,
fashioned with fitted bodices,
raised waistlines, square
necklines edged in lace, and
ruffled sleeves. They wore
daisy mums tied with green
ribbons in their hair and
carried long. stemmed daisy
mums.
Miss Julia Mullaney, cousin
of the bride, of SPringfield, wu
the flower girl, and Maater ·
David Nease, brother of the
groom, was the ring bearer.
The acolytes were Miss Sandra
Nease, sister of the groom, and
Mr. . Christopher Winter,
(Continued on Page S)'

Daughter Born
'

Kathy King to Wed in December
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King, South Second Ave., Mid·
dleport, are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Kathy King, to John A. Elias,
son of John Elias, Mason, W.Va., and Mrs. Bertha Hayes of
Illinois.
·•
The bride-elect is a senior at Meigs High School. Her
fiance graduated from Wahama High School in 1971 and is
employed at Veterans Memorial Hospital. A December
wedding is being planned.

'Tis such a small world . . . .
Wh~n Iris and Aaron Kelton w{re traveling last month they
pulled mto Berry Patch Camping Park at Rapid City, S. D.
Spotting a camper with an Ohio license just across the way Iris
yelled over to Inquire, "Where from in Ohio."
'
To her surprise the voice which answered was Edith Bowen
Witt, .a girlhood friend and former teacher In Meigs County, now
restdtng at Ashtabula. Mrs. Witt and her husband Earl had
Intended to move on the next morning, but after meeting Iri~ and
Aaron who were with a camper caravan, stayed on a few days.

Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Louis Young

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Roger R. Black (formerly
Karolyn Soulsby) of Rutland,
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughtar, August 10, at
the Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 7 lb., 141'. oz.
and has been named Shelley
Kay.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. William T.
Soulsby of Route 2, Pomeroy,
and paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Warren D. Black
of Rutland. Mater.nal greatgrandparent is Mr . Herman
Kanode of Logan, Ohio .
Paternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Black
of Route 4, Pomeroy, and Mr.
SidneyTayloro!Milton, W. Va.

tended satin streamers tied in
lover's knots. She carried a
lavalier belonging to her late
aunt , Miss Kate Flck of
Pomeroy, which had been
given to Miss Fick by the
bride's grandfather in 1917.
The bride also carried a
handkerchief belonging to Mrs.
George Adams (June Unroe ), a
classmate, and carried by
many brides through the years.
Matron of honor for the bride
was Mrs. John Young who
wore a yellow crepe dress with
yellow lace side and back
panels. She carried a nosegay
of yellow sw~theart roses with
green streamers . John E.
·voung, son of the bridegroom,
served as best man.
'J'he- ooupl~ .. too~, 1a !Wedding
trip to Cincinnati. and through
porthw,esterp I.ndiana and
southern Michigan. They
reside at 1818North Main Ave.,
Sidney .
Agraduate of Pomeroy High
School the bride is employed
with Western and Southern
We Ins. Co . Mr . Young, son of
the late Mr. and Mrs . Earl
Young, is also a Pomeroy High
School graduate. He is general
foreman for the Monarch
Machine Tool Col at Sidney.
Among the guests at the
wedding were Miss Elizabeth
Fick, cousin of the bride, who
wore a beige crepe and lace
ensemble with matching accessories and a brown cymbidium orchid; Mrs. Carl Will,
and Miss Erma Smith of
Pomeroy, and Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Christman of Sidney.
The Rev. and Mrs. Robert L.
Hegnauer entertained at their
home, 545 Schug St., Berne,
Ind., on Saturday evening with
a rehearsal dinner. A
yellow and white color scheme
with flowers from their yard
decorated the table which was
centered with a two tiered
wedding cake topped with
three large wedding bells .
Attending were Mrs. Nli, Miss
Elizabeth Fick, Mrs. Will and
Miss Smith, Mrs. Don Moser,
and Mr . and Mrs. John Young.
A reception honoring the
couple was held on July 9 at

FLORENCE AND ARNOLD RICHARDS returned Thursday
night from Denver, Colo., where they spent IOdays visiting their
daughter, Rosetta Jo Buntnn and Brett, and Mrs. Richards'
brother, Tommy McCabe, and his family.
The flight to Colorado wss a first for Arnold. Probably the
highlight of their trip wss the chance to see their daughter
perlorm with the Cleo Parker Robinson Dancers at the Denver
Community Center. Not only did she.dance with others but was
featured in a solo at the performance.
Tommy and Jo were both on vacation while Arnold and
Florence were there so they all spent lots of time seeing
Colorado's sights. They toured the. National Center for Atmospheric Research, the Garden of the Gods, the Air Force
Academy, the Squaw Paths, vi81ted the ski slopes at Frazer,
Central aty, the Red Rock Park, and crossed the Royal Gorge.
While going through Mtlner Pass at the Continental Divide,
they got in a terrific snow storm which later closed the. pass.
·. They returned by way of the l!ertho\111 fass. Tommy, supe~r
1 of conventil&gt;na at the 0en..,.l, HnlolliHotel, lOok his sillier and
brother-ln~aw on a tour of the hotel.
The Richards were accompanied to Denver by their grandson, Vaughan Smith, of Columbus.

r.

I
'

Betty Rose
It makea aU llae difference In our elepnt (llllletal. S11Qe
bodice, fitted wellllllle and Oared oldrt late .. 1 YerJ
lembdlle oppell, ouiiiDed wllb potb polyeater pBe. It rtaas
die collar, loo, for l1ce.framlq Hattery.

MANY OTHER STYLES-TO CHOOSE
FROM

BY BETTY ROSE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RUTLAND - The 29th annual Grate reunion was held at
Royal Oak . Park, August 13,
with a large dinner served at
the park and an attendance of
69 and three visitors.
Marion Grate, president,

·By Katie Crow

Tony; Mr . and Mrs. Harry
McGlothlin, Union Furnace;
Mrs . Maxine Ashbaugh ,
Melinda, Juncation City ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Grate, Suzie,
Sherrie, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Grate, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. John Hersman, Castalia;
Mrs. Bonnie Nicholson, Mr.
and Mrs. George Grate, Ron,
Mike, Georgene, Beverly; Mr .
and Mrs. Herman Grate, Vicki,
Mr. and Mrs . Wendell Grate,
Jenny, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, Rev . and Mrs. Herbert
Grate, Araka, Herbert II, Mr .
and Mrs . David Grate, all of
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. John
Grate, New Haven; Rev. and
Mrs. William Lyons, David,
Colleen, Utica, Michigan; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Jones, John , Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Grate, Marge,
Marla, of Marion; Mr. and
Mrs . Keever Grate, Kelley,
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Grate, Brian, Scott,
Kyle, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Bin Grate, South Charleston;
Mr . and Mrs . Ed Tewksbury,
Wellston ; Mr . and Mrs .

started the' meeting by giving
away prizes . Mrs. Alma
McGlothlin of Union Furnace,
won the prize for being the
oldest one present. A prize lor
the youngest was given to John
Kenneth Jones, three months,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Bill Jones,
Marion, Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
Tewksbury of McConnelsville,
won the door prize. Mrs.
Bonnie Nicholson, secretary
and treasurer, read the
minutes from last year's
reunion .
The 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry McGlothlin to be
celebrated September 10 was
announced. Marion Grate and
Bonnie Nicholson were elected
as officers for the next annual
reunion which will again be
held the second Sunday in Thomas Tewksbury, Trisha,
August at Royal Oak Park. McConnelsville; Mr . and Mrs.
There were a total of eight Gary Dudding and family,
families and their trailers Huntington.
which camped there during the
Visitors were Debbie Jewett,
weekend of the reunion.
Don Hysell, Rutland, and John
The following attended: Mr. Blosser, Union Furnace.
and Mrs. Thomas Sprouse,

Shower Given Bride-Elect
·NEW HAVEN - Mrs .
Charles Zerkle and Mrs.
Warren Weaver of New Haven
entertained at lbe Zerkle home
with a bridal shower honoring
Miss Linda Weaver. A yellow
and blue color scheme was
carried out in the decorations.
Games were played with
prizes going to Miss Mary Jane
Scites, Mi'!5 Jody Talbert, Mrs.
Bill Talbert, Mrs. Elson
SPencer. Mrs. Linda Crump
won the door prize. Refreshments, including a decorated
cake made by Mrs. Emery
Roush of Letart, were served.
Others attending were Miss
Penny Burris, Miss Rebecca
Burris, Miss Diana Talbert,

Weaver.
Also pr~senting gifts to the
bride-elect were Jo Ann
Embleton, Jane Dixie, Mr. and
Mrs. D. W. Embleton and
family, Macil Herdman, Leona
Machir, Vickie Spardling,
Catherine Pierce, Edith
Bumgarner, Lola Weaver ,
Melody Weaver, Carol Lathey,
Jerry and Carla Gibbs, Barbara Priddy, Mrs. Sara
Dawson, Mrs. Tribby Hari,
Mrs. Uoyd Smith, Mrs. Alice
Hunter, Mrs. Deana Murphy,
Mrs. Helen Knapp, Mrs .
Norma Bwngarner, Mrs. Lola
Boston, Mrs. Jeanette Grimm,
Mrs. Ora Clarke, Mr. and Mrs.
Buddy Kerns, Mr. and Mrs.
''Mi'f,'·lli!Uy Roush, Mri'.' Dicle CariArgabrtto, the Date Roach
Talbert, Mrs. Max Snyder, famtly, Tony Weaver, Anna
Mrs. Frank Spardling, Mrs. Allen and Ada Clark.
Robert Weaver, and Chrystal
MEET WITH BOARD
POMEROY - Mrs. Jeanette
Thomas, Mrs . Kate Jarrell and
Mrs. Carol Wolfe, teachers of
the Meigs Community Classes,
met with the Meigs County
Board of Retardation Monday
night to review plans for the
school year. It was noted that
the new bus is in operation, and
that Mrs. Alice Wolfe of Racine
has been added to the staff as,
an aide. Present for the
meeting were Ed Kennedy,
Mrs. Grace Weber, the Rev .
Bill Perrin, and Mrs. Denver
Rice .

~.

.Katie's Korner

IAt Royal Oak Park

"BRIGHT AS A DOLLAR and tickled to death" was a
friend's description of Mrs. Elizabeth McCumber on her 1ooth
birthday, Aug. 9.
Mrs . McCumber, who lived at Dexter up until a year ago,
was treated to an open house on her birthday at the Wellston
Nursing Home,405North Park Ave., Wellston. Numerous friends
and relatives went over for the observance taking flowers and
other gtfts. Congressman Clarence Miller even sent her a
bouquet.
Her day was a delight and she sends her thanks to those who
made it so.

~·

POMEROY - Vases of
daisies and two 14-branch
c•ndelabra decorated the altar
of the Cross United Church of
Christ at Berne, Ind., for the
wedding of Miss Evelyn J. Fick
of Pomeroy and Mr. Hobart
Louis Young of Sidney.
The wedding was an event of
Sunday, June 25, at 2:30p. m.
The Rev. Robert L. Hegnauer
olriciated at the double ring
ceremony following a program
of nuptial music presented by
Mrs . Don Moser, organist, and
Mrs. Gerald Nil, the former
Ramora Boice of Pomeroy.
Selections included "0 Perfect
Love", the "Wedding ?rayer"
sung by Mrs. Nil, "Wedding
Bells", "Calm as the Night",
and ''Adoration.'' 1 , 1 ~. 1., ,
For her wedding the bride,
daughter of t~e late Albert J.
Fick, wore a white satinessa
dress with a white rose em. bossed silk organza coat. The
coal was trimmed with
satinessa petal collar and
cuffs. Her veil of illusion was
held in place by a pearl
trimmed organza headband.
The bride carried a nosegay
of while roses with a white
yellow-throated catalaya orchid center from which ex-

By charlene Hoeflich

·.POMEROY - Paula Eichinger manages to keep her "sunny
side up" despite more health problems.
La~t week she underwent surgery at Children's Hospital for
co':"ection ~f a curvature of the spine and is now in a body cast
which Bile will be required to wear the next six months.
, The family expects Paula to he released from the hospital
etther this wee keno or early next week. She 'II be coming home by
ambulance, of course.
Arrangements already have been made for her home
tutoring to start as soon as she Is physically able. An excellent
student, Paula is in the eightb grade.
Knowing the problems facing Paula in her long confinement,
the E.tchingers went out of the way to see that she had an
es.pectally enjoyable summer. She camped, went visiting, had in
fnends and relatives as often as she wanted, and took in the
Metgs County Fair about every day.
. Paula certainly has what it lakes, but her friends these next
SIX months can make life brighter by sending a card, or dropping
by lor a chat.

THE SHAPE'S THE THING
9' d)

Terrie Lee Miller to Wed
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Miller, Route I, Rutland, are
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Terrie Lee, to Mr. Delbert Wayne Teaford,
Jr., of Racine, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Delbert W.
Teaford, Sr.
Miss MiUer is a 1969 graduate of Meigs Local Higt. School
and a 1970 graduate of Nationwide Beauty Academy in
Columbus. She is currently employed at Helen's Beauty Shop
in Pomeroy. Mr. Teaford attended Racine School and is
employed with the new Remington Rand plant in Marietta. A
late October wedding is being planned.

IComer

Miss Erma Smith, Mrs. Carl
Will, MISs Bichman, Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Struble, Mr. and
Mrs. Trell Schoenleb, Mrs.
George Kom, Sr., Mrs. Paul
Chapman, ail of Poffieroy.
Mrs. Paul Nease, Miss Sybil
Ebersbach, Mrs. Ben Neutzling, Miss Mary Virginia
Reibel, Mrs. Leonard Jewell,
Mrs. Phil Globokar, Mrs .
James Fugate, Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Miss Mary E. Chapman,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Joe WUson,
Mrs. Ernest Lallance, Mrs.
Gleim Lambert, Middleport;
Miss Shari Williams, Mrs ,
aair Karr, Mrs. Martha J.
WiUiams, Minersville; Mrs.
Charles Ackley, Mrs. Robert
Ackley, Guysville; Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Rllclne; Mr. and Mrs.
George Adams, . Brant and
Ualre Lynn, Gallipolis, and
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ,
Cleveland.

Trinity · Ulurch in Pomeroy
with members of the Friendly
Circle hosting the affair .
Guests were registered by Mrs.
Loonard Russ and refreshments of punch, cake, coffee
and nuts were served by Mrs.
·Carl Will, Mrs. Martha J.
Williams and Miss Marie Bich·
man.
. A pink and white color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations of the table Which
was centered with a three
Uered wedding cake.
Guests at the reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Fick,
Columbus; Mrs. Orville
Rhodes, Racine; Mrs. Geoffrey
Wilson and Kelly, Mrs. Carl
Moore, Mrs. Clifford Young
and Skip, Mr. and Mrs. D. A.
. Canaday,
Mrs , Robert
Schuster, Mrs. Charles Eskew,
Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Boice, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Blaetinar, Mrs.
Robert Hoeflich and Jayne,
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Morarity,

I .

October Wedding Planned

Co~;;~it'Yl Grate Reunion Held

Evelyn Fick is Wed in Indiana on June 25

SUNDAY
TUESDAY
EVENING services, 7:30
HARRISONVILLE PTO,
p.m. Sunday at Syracuse Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
United Methodist Church by Harrisonville school.
• the Rev. Murre! Floyd.
EASTERN
Athletic
ANNUAL Swartz Family Boosters, 8 p.m . Tuesday, at
Reunion , Sunday, Woode · high school. Horse show to be
Grove at Alfred. Family and discussed. All members urged
friends invited.
to attend .
MONDAY
MEIGS County Alcohol and
RACINE Chapter 134, OES, Drug Abuse Committee
stated meeting, 8 p.m. Monday meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
at Masonic Temple . Worthy St. Paul Lutheran Church,
, Matron asks as many officers Pomeroy. Program will be
and members possible be county teenagers reporting on
present because of important summer alcohol and drug
business to be discussed.
abuse institution which they ·
(Continued from page 4)
CHESTER FIRE Depart- attended.
ment annual Labor Day
SOUTHERN Band Boosters, brother of the bride.
Mr . James Nease of Route 3,
celebration , Monday. Bar- 8 p.m. Tuesday at the high
becued chicken and spareribs, school. Important meeting and Bellefontaine, served as best
homemade ice cream. Parade ail interested persons are man for his brother, and the
ushers were Mr . Tony Winter,
starting, 1:30 p.m. Parade urged to attend.
Rt. 3, BeUeforitalne, brother
participants be at lire house by
WEDNESDAY
of the bride; Mr. Robert
1:30 p.m.
MEIGS CHAPTER Gibbons and Mr. John Deisher,
TUESDAY
American Cancer Society lilso of Bellefontaine.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, dinner to honor crusade
For her daughter's wedding,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 8:15 chairmen and board members, Mrs. Winter wore a yellow and
p.m. Tuesday at the Columbus 7p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy white double knit polyester
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. American Legion Hall. ·
sleeveless dress with white
social room.
accessories. Mrs. Nease was in
CLEAN UP night by Meigs
an emerald blue brocade enBand Boosters at food booth at
semble and bOth mothers had
Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy.
white orchid corsages.
Take rags and buckets.
A reception honoring the
B. H. SANBORN Missionary
couple was held in the church
Society, Middleport First
social rooms. Guests were
Baptist Church, 7:30 Tuesday
registered by Miss Theresa
evening at the church.
POMEROY - A rummage Winter, a cousin of the bride, of
saJe was announced for Sept. 7 Marysville, and the hostesses,
and 8 at Thursday night's all cousins, Miss Laura
meeting of the One-Won.OOe Grooms, Miss Connie Grooms,
Class of the Pomeroy First Miss Barbara Grooms, and
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Miss Cynthia Rockhold, all of
MIDDLEPORT- Mrs. Dale Baptist Church.
Mrs . Ellen Couch, Mrs. Rllymond.
Walburn and daughter, Jill
The couple resides at 115
Ann, entertained recently with Burton Smith and Mrs. Ula
Park
Ave., Urbana. The new
·an indoor picnic honoring Mrs · Price of the ways and means
Mrs.
Nease
is a graduate of
Dana Hammon her 86th birth· committee · have planned the .
day anniversary. Attending sale. Mrs. Mary Shelton L~gan Hills High School,
were Mrs. Ferne Bradbury, presided at the meeting at- Zanesfield, and attended Ohio
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner, tended by 13 members. The State University two years. She
and Mrs. J. Q. Rice. Mrs. Amy group sang the clsss song, "He will be attending Urbana
• Humphrey joined the group Keeps Me Singing" which was College this fall.
Mr. Nease Is also a graduate
followed by devotions by Mrs.
, during the evening.
of
Logan Hills High School and
Caryl Cook on the theme
attended
Miami University and.
"August Days." She · read
"Parade of Days" and "The Urbana College. He is em·
,,
ON iiONOR ROLL
Ripened Seeds.... The Rev. ployed at Igle'a in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Cllrtord
~. POMEROY- Mrs. Marshall Robert Kuhn had prayet.
' Roush (Deborah HID) and Mrs.
Roll call was taken and the Phllllps, Mr. and Mrs. U. s.
1- Darrell Norris (Jan Hill) of treasurer's report was given. Nease, MinersVille; Mr. and
·• Letart Falll were listed on the The closing prayer was by Mrs. Mrs. Clarence Massar,
' honor roll for the summer Shelton. Mrs. Harriett Sterrett Pomeroy, and Mr. and . Mrs.
.., semester at Rio Grande and Mrs. Margaret Bailey Herbert Davia of Athens at·
served a dessert course.
· tended the wedding.
, College.

Winter-Nease

4-H Clubs Will Give Program

• ••

It Takes Furniture Too!
T6t Finest .Seltdl011
And Tllf hsl Valm
AHYWHEREI

BAKER.

..
IN MIDDIIPOir·
.

Mrs. Richard William Nease

0

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOl T

CUT YOUR

TROUBLE COMES IN BUNCHES. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fox
of Laurel Cliff are having more than their share. Their oldest
daughter, Eloise Ro.ush, died uneljlectedly recently from an
apparent heart attack.
Their other two daughters, lola Howell of Pomeroy and Ruth
Douglas of Guysville, are both patients at Veterans Memorial
Hospital where they un.derwent major surgery Friday. Both are
in the same room, 124, and both underwent the same operation. ·
., Certainly hope things begin to look up for this family.

SINCERELY HOPE THAT our dear friend and neighbor,
Mrs. Rachel McBride, wliJ be better soon. Rachel is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center where she went for surgery but unfortunately the operation could not be performed due to a heart
condition.
If ail goes well she will be home within the next ten days. God

bless and may you have a speedy recovery.
IT CERTAINLY WAS wonderful to see a dear friend Friday,
Mrs. Frank (Cora) Buck, formerly of Antiquity who now resides
in Columbus.
Mrs. Buck has suffered two serious heart attacks which
certainly have not affected her ability to be out and around. She
has retained her atiractiveness, obvious when I saw her in her
handsome red, white and blue outfit.
She was a delight to see.

THE REV. AND MRS. AUDRY MilLER, Middleport,
celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary Aug. 29. On this very
special day their fifth grandson was born, Roger Lee, son of

AIR CONDITIONING

COSTS UP TO

DEMANDS LICENSES
BAD OLDESLOE, Germany
(UP!) - Klaus Klingner, a
Social Democratic deputy in
the Schleswig-Holstein state
Parliament, has demanded
li cense plates for either
amateur horse riders or their
mounts to help track down
riders molesting pedestrians in
public forests. He did not make
it clear whether the plate
should be fastened on the horse
or its rider.

SYMPAlHY
FLOWERS
"Express your Thoughts
when Words are Hard to
Find. "

Dudley's Aorist
Serving' Gallipolis,
Middleport,
Pomeroy, O.
&amp; Mason Co., w. Va.

\

l

HAGAN
CELLULOSE
INSULATION

ANY HOME, new or old. can
be fully insulated to cut
your cooling costs . Our
trained crew blows SUP'- ·
rior Hagan Insulation in
attic and walls without
muss or fuss . . . without
disturbing your household
routine. The fuel savings
pay for Ihe job.

PHONE 992-5321
FOR FREE ESTIMATE

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BIGCANTAWUPES
LETART FALLS -Robert
D. Ashley, living at Letart
Falls, is upholding the
gradition of growing outstanding vegetables in the
Letart bottoms. Ashley is
producing eight cantaloupes
"to the bushel." Four weighed
seven pounds; three weighed
eight pounds; and one was a six
pounder. 'I'Wenty.flve Inches In
circumference, the meloos are
oot only •large but delicious. ·

••••••••••••••••••••

i -Miss
•••
•••
••
••
•

Ame~ica .

~

SAVE NOW FOR

Shoes

YOUR CHILDREN'S FUTURE

•
•
••••••••••••••••••

There is no better investment for your children
than a college education. It's easy to get
started in a savings account to make their
future more secure. Stop in today!

Ah oy, mate' Here's a
shipshape accen t on a
fun -fash io n wave.
Ready to ho ist anchor
with tank tops, wideleg pants and the new
nauticals.

BIJ\CK SHAG
BROWN SHAG

PAID ON

PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

SCHOOL'S IN
PLEASE DRIVE
CAREFULLY

All The Senices Of ASavings and Loan
1. Hom~ Construction Loans
2. Home Purchase Loans
3. Home Improvement Loans
4. Home Consolidation Loans
5. Mobile Home Loans

6. ChristmjS\Ciub
7. Vacation Club
8. Travelers Checks
9. Money Orders

MEIGS BRANCH

.

'

BY INSULA riNG
YOUR HOMEWITH

o~f~RII:c::in~ei.~_:...:;::::;:::;;...::::::::::.::::::::::
to remember.

Sponsor Sale

,.

%

Edward
Findley
The and
29thElizl!beth
of August
will be a da
Congratulations!

Church Class to

"IT TAKES A HEA, Of UYIH&amp; o o
TO MAKF. A HOUSE A'HOM!f'

rum

POMEROY - Having a great time
is
Jennifer Menchini, daughter of Jackie Menchini and the late
Renzo Menchini. She departed on Aug . 1.
· She spent four days in Rome and several more in Viagreggio
which is similar to our ocean resorts. She also visited relatives in
San Cassiano where her father, now deceased, was born and
raised. The past week she has been in Venice. She plans to return
home the middle of September.
Jennifer, who is a registered nurse, having graduated from
Ohio state in June also has a Bachelor Qf Science Degree .

BELATED BIRTHDAY wishes to Clara Grueser and Fannie
PhiUips, twin sisters, both of Minersville, who celebrated their
78th birthdays Thursday.

SALEM CENTER - The is advisor or the participating
community girls and boys 4-H 4-H clubs.
clubs will present the program
when the Salem Center PTA
meets at 7•30 p.m. on Monday,
Sept. II, at the school.
The program will include
modelin g
of
clothes,
achievement reports and
display of exhibits many of
which are featured at the
Meigs County Fair.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, a former
principal of the school and now
a Meigs County school
supervisor, will be on hand to
present awards won by Salem
Center School pupils at the
school exhibit of the Meigs
County Fair. Mrs. Roberta
Wilson,, principal , will in troduce new parents and
teachers and Mrs. Alma Smith
will presen t a de votional
period. Mrs. Minnie Thornton

·~

THE

The Athens County
_Savings &amp; Loan Co.

SHOE , BOX
'

Where Shoes are sensibly Priced

MIDDLEPORT,O.

Elrl F. lngel•. Jr., Mgr.
296 W. Second
Pomeroy Ohio

'

•I)
--

Mon., T!lf•·• Wod. - t to ~
Tllurldoy &amp; Sltvnloy - t hi Noon

Friday - 9 to •

I

�7- TbeSII!daJTimes·Se~l. SUnday' Sept. 3, 1972

6-The &amp;rlda:y Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Sept. 3, 1972

New Sewer Tap Connections Procedure Clarified

•

.

GALLIPOLIS
City
Manager D. Kenneth Morgan
Satl!l'dayexplainedprocedures
to be followed by residents of
the Nort hwest Drainage
District in order to connect to
the new sanitary sewer
system.
Morgan said the first step is
to apply for a sewer lap. The

HYGRADE ALL MEAT
20 CT• .1 "h LB.

I

.

application form can be filled
out in either City Auditor
Frances Worman's office or
the water departmen t office. It
must be accompanied by the
$250 tap fee .
The city iQsp~ctor will then
inspect the location of the
proposed lap and recommend
accepta nce or rejection.

Following acceptance, the necessity of adequate inapplicant will be informed of slallatiun for conformance to
the connection requirements of the requirements of the Enthe City and the Ohio Depart- vironmental
Protection
ment of Health, and also, Agency (EPA), Ohio Departprocedures and materials to be men! of Health and the City of
used in the connection.
Gallipolis. This ordinance is on
Ordinance No. 71).39, passed file for inspection anytime.
by the City Commission on
The requirements of the
November 3, 1970, reflects the ordinance are necessary and

PKG.

POPLAR BRAND SLICED
I

'

I.G.A. HOMOG.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY COMPANY has moved Into
its spacious newly remodeled quarters on Middleport's North
Second Ave. The bullliln8 was formerly occupied by M&amp;R
Sloeliner and before that - for many years the former Meigs
Grocery. The new bullliln8 offers free parking space to
customers In the front and backofthestore and a loading and

1h GALLON
CARTON
Right
Reserved
To Limit Quantities.

anloaliln8 dock. RDbert King has been in business since 1951
and was located in the former Masonic building for 10 years.
King will continue to offer to his customers a quality line of
building products . Pictured In the attractive lobby of the
boilding are, 1-r, King, Jeanette Carter and Sharon Russell,
employes. A Special Opening is planned in October .

.

.

&lt;ssential for the successful
operation of th e sanita ry
system, therefore, the City of
Gallipolis
will
enforce
adherence through strict inspection by a City Inspector
before any service is connected
to the system.
The City will, therefore,
require all services and connections to be laid with
vi lrified clay, compression
joint, bell-and-spigot pipe,
meeting American Society for
Testing and Materials ( ASTM )
specification C-425-71.
The City Inspector must
approve all materials and
installation procedures before
the ditches are covered and
before any connection is made
to the main line. All storm
water must be kept out of the
system so as to eliminate water
which cannot be handled by lift
station pumps.
In previous years, by-pass,
or overflow systems, have been
permitted in sa nitary in stallations, however, with the
strict anti-pollution laws now in
effect, the overflows, or bypass devices, are not permilled.
Furthermore, should storm
water gel in to the sa nitary
system the excessive flow will
be uncontrollable. This is, also,
the purpose for requiring
sealed joint premium pipe. The
premium, sealed joint pipe will
eliminate excessive infil tration
of storm water during rainy
seasons.
For those with septic or

•erobic tanks, these will be bypassed and the sanitary connection will be made direcUy
fr om the home's sanitary
sewer to the city 's sewer
system, thus eliminating the
need for the septic or aerobic
lank.
The complete sanitary
system should be available
within the next three weeks.
TI1ere£ore, as previously explained, should the service be
wanted contact the City
Auditor or City Water
Deparlmen I. (Phone 446-1424).
and submit the tap fee and
application.
The constructio n of the
service line to the tap will be
performed by the applicant, or
his designated representative,
(P1Uf11ber, con tractor, etc.).
However, the connection to the
sa nitary system must be
completed by the employees of
the City of Gallipolis.
The total charge for a single
residential sa nitary tap connection will be as follows: Tap
fee to City, $250 plus labor and
materials, pius 20 pet. administrative fee based on the
labor and material only. For
example, should a plumber
charge $100 to lay the pipe from
an existing sewer line to the
City's main line, and should the
City's labor and ma ter ial
charge be $50, the dweller's
cost would be $250 tap fee,
(paid when application was
submitted), plus $100, paid to
your plumber, or con tractor;
$60 (invoiced to you following

connection), and calculated, as
$50 plus 20 pet. administrative
fee, or $10, for a total of $410.
Sewer use fees are
established by ordinance and
are based on Chapter 913,
Section 913.12, Gallipolis City
Codified Ordinance. II says:
"The monthly sanitary
sewer rates are all users of
such services outside the
corporate limits shall be one
hundred ( 100) percent of the
water bill outside the corporate
limits. For example, should
one US(! the minimwn water
allocation of nine thousand
19,000) gallons per quarter, at
the present rate of $11.25, the
sanitary sewer rate would be
$11.25, for a total billing of
$22.50, including water and
sewer charged for the quarter .
The tap fees are, also
established by ordinance are
as follows:
Single family dwelling, $250.
Multiple fam ily dwelling ,
$250 per unit.
Motel or hotel, $250 first unit,
plus $100 for each additional
unit.
Business or professional
building, $500. (Includes four
141 lavatories , commodes ),
each additional lavatory,
com mode or combination
thereof, $100 additional tap fee.
Restaurants, Drive-ins, $250;
Seating capacity,4 10 or less,
$350; II to 25, $450; 25 to 35,
$550; over 36, $650.
Service stations, $350.
Mobile home parks, $250 per
mobile home.

In a Jdition to the above tap
fee, a charge shall be made for
labor and material for making
the tap, plus a 20 percent 1 dministrative fee on the lab •r
and materiaL
Shouid there be any additional questions pertaining to
par licular connection, the
public is urged to call Mr.
Morgan's office.

QUICK QUIZ
Q- What is plant cover,
in conservatio11 termi11ology?
A-The combination of ail
plant life-moss, grass,
shrubs, trees-on any soil
surface.

Q- What is the difference
between a nectarine and a
peach?
A- Nectarines are smooth
and peaches are (uzzy. They
come from identical trees.

Q- Wh o was John Birch?
A- A Baptist missionary·
and USAF officer in World
War II, after whom the John
Birch Society was named.

Q- Who is the patron
sai 11t of medical doctors?
A- Saint Luke. His symbol is the ox, a sacrificial
animal.
Q-A re any birds mute?
A- The brown pelican and
frigate bird are virt u al l y
mu te.

Q- How many stars can
you see without a telescope?
A- About 4,000, on a clear
night.

OPEN LABOR DAY
9 TIL 9

FROZEN

WITH
COUPON

l

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY ONLY

0

I
\

BAG

• ••

~.J

•

(

I

OR 16x20xl

WITH COUPON

DEL MONJE

1

h SIZE

1

CAN

BAGS

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

I

I
I
I

I

I

"

M&amp;R FOODLINER

ER
.
WELS
Jo

WITH
LIMIT 1 COUPON COUPON
EXPIRES 9472 -

THANK YOU

M&amp;R FOODLINER

i~· 25~
WITH COUPON
LIM IT 1 COUPON

,

M&amp;R .FOODLINER .

·cHERRY ~~~l29!,'"
PIE
COUPON
.
IN
G
LIMIT 2 CANS
Fl LL .
EXPIRES
~72

-

M~DDLEPORT

M&amp;R

SHOPPING
CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.
j

OPEN

BOR DAY 9-9

I
I
I

�7- TbeSII!daJTimes·Se~l. SUnday' Sept. 3, 1972

6-The &amp;rlda:y Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Sept. 3, 1972

New Sewer Tap Connections Procedure Clarified

•

.

GALLIPOLIS
City
Manager D. Kenneth Morgan
Satl!l'dayexplainedprocedures
to be followed by residents of
the Nort hwest Drainage
District in order to connect to
the new sanitary sewer
system.
Morgan said the first step is
to apply for a sewer lap. The

HYGRADE ALL MEAT
20 CT• .1 "h LB.

I

.

application form can be filled
out in either City Auditor
Frances Worman's office or
the water departmen t office. It
must be accompanied by the
$250 tap fee .
The city iQsp~ctor will then
inspect the location of the
proposed lap and recommend
accepta nce or rejection.

Following acceptance, the necessity of adequate inapplicant will be informed of slallatiun for conformance to
the connection requirements of the requirements of the Enthe City and the Ohio Depart- vironmental
Protection
ment of Health, and also, Agency (EPA), Ohio Departprocedures and materials to be men! of Health and the City of
used in the connection.
Gallipolis. This ordinance is on
Ordinance No. 71).39, passed file for inspection anytime.
by the City Commission on
The requirements of the
November 3, 1970, reflects the ordinance are necessary and

PKG.

POPLAR BRAND SLICED
I

'

I.G.A. HOMOG.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY COMPANY has moved Into
its spacious newly remodeled quarters on Middleport's North
Second Ave. The bullliln8 was formerly occupied by M&amp;R
Sloeliner and before that - for many years the former Meigs
Grocery. The new bullliln8 offers free parking space to
customers In the front and backofthestore and a loading and

1h GALLON
CARTON
Right
Reserved
To Limit Quantities.

anloaliln8 dock. RDbert King has been in business since 1951
and was located in the former Masonic building for 10 years.
King will continue to offer to his customers a quality line of
building products . Pictured In the attractive lobby of the
boilding are, 1-r, King, Jeanette Carter and Sharon Russell,
employes. A Special Opening is planned in October .

.

.

&lt;ssential for the successful
operation of th e sanita ry
system, therefore, the City of
Gallipolis
will
enforce
adherence through strict inspection by a City Inspector
before any service is connected
to the system.
The City will, therefore,
require all services and connections to be laid with
vi lrified clay, compression
joint, bell-and-spigot pipe,
meeting American Society for
Testing and Materials ( ASTM )
specification C-425-71.
The City Inspector must
approve all materials and
installation procedures before
the ditches are covered and
before any connection is made
to the main line. All storm
water must be kept out of the
system so as to eliminate water
which cannot be handled by lift
station pumps.
In previous years, by-pass,
or overflow systems, have been
permitted in sa nitary in stallations, however, with the
strict anti-pollution laws now in
effect, the overflows, or bypass devices, are not permilled.
Furthermore, should storm
water gel in to the sa nitary
system the excessive flow will
be uncontrollable. This is, also,
the purpose for requiring
sealed joint premium pipe. The
premium, sealed joint pipe will
eliminate excessive infil tration
of storm water during rainy
seasons.
For those with septic or

•erobic tanks, these will be bypassed and the sanitary connection will be made direcUy
fr om the home's sanitary
sewer to the city 's sewer
system, thus eliminating the
need for the septic or aerobic
lank.
The complete sanitary
system should be available
within the next three weeks.
TI1ere£ore, as previously explained, should the service be
wanted contact the City
Auditor or City Water
Deparlmen I. (Phone 446-1424).
and submit the tap fee and
application.
The constructio n of the
service line to the tap will be
performed by the applicant, or
his designated representative,
(P1Uf11ber, con tractor, etc.).
However, the connection to the
sa nitary system must be
completed by the employees of
the City of Gallipolis.
The total charge for a single
residential sa nitary tap connection will be as follows: Tap
fee to City, $250 plus labor and
materials, pius 20 pet. administrative fee based on the
labor and material only. For
example, should a plumber
charge $100 to lay the pipe from
an existing sewer line to the
City's main line, and should the
City's labor and ma ter ial
charge be $50, the dweller's
cost would be $250 tap fee,
(paid when application was
submitted), plus $100, paid to
your plumber, or con tractor;
$60 (invoiced to you following

connection), and calculated, as
$50 plus 20 pet. administrative
fee, or $10, for a total of $410.
Sewer use fees are
established by ordinance and
are based on Chapter 913,
Section 913.12, Gallipolis City
Codified Ordinance. II says:
"The monthly sanitary
sewer rates are all users of
such services outside the
corporate limits shall be one
hundred ( 100) percent of the
water bill outside the corporate
limits. For example, should
one US(! the minimwn water
allocation of nine thousand
19,000) gallons per quarter, at
the present rate of $11.25, the
sanitary sewer rate would be
$11.25, for a total billing of
$22.50, including water and
sewer charged for the quarter .
The tap fees are, also
established by ordinance are
as follows:
Single family dwelling, $250.
Multiple fam ily dwelling ,
$250 per unit.
Motel or hotel, $250 first unit,
plus $100 for each additional
unit.
Business or professional
building, $500. (Includes four
141 lavatories , commodes ),
each additional lavatory,
com mode or combination
thereof, $100 additional tap fee.
Restaurants, Drive-ins, $250;
Seating capacity,4 10 or less,
$350; II to 25, $450; 25 to 35,
$550; over 36, $650.
Service stations, $350.
Mobile home parks, $250 per
mobile home.

In a Jdition to the above tap
fee, a charge shall be made for
labor and material for making
the tap, plus a 20 percent 1 dministrative fee on the lab •r
and materiaL
Shouid there be any additional questions pertaining to
par licular connection, the
public is urged to call Mr.
Morgan's office.

QUICK QUIZ
Q- What is plant cover,
in conservatio11 termi11ology?
A-The combination of ail
plant life-moss, grass,
shrubs, trees-on any soil
surface.

Q- What is the difference
between a nectarine and a
peach?
A- Nectarines are smooth
and peaches are (uzzy. They
come from identical trees.

Q- Wh o was John Birch?
A- A Baptist missionary·
and USAF officer in World
War II, after whom the John
Birch Society was named.

Q- Who is the patron
sai 11t of medical doctors?
A- Saint Luke. His symbol is the ox, a sacrificial
animal.
Q-A re any birds mute?
A- The brown pelican and
frigate bird are virt u al l y
mu te.

Q- How many stars can
you see without a telescope?
A- About 4,000, on a clear
night.

OPEN LABOR DAY
9 TIL 9

FROZEN

WITH
COUPON

l

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY ONLY

0

I
\

BAG

• ••

~.J

•

(

I

OR 16x20xl

WITH COUPON

DEL MONJE

1

h SIZE

1

CAN

BAGS

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

I

I
I
I

I

I

"

M&amp;R FOODLINER

ER
.
WELS
Jo

WITH
LIMIT 1 COUPON COUPON
EXPIRES 9472 -

THANK YOU

M&amp;R FOODLINER

i~· 25~
WITH COUPON
LIM IT 1 COUPON

,

M&amp;R .FOODLINER .

·cHERRY ~~~l29!,'"
PIE
COUPON
.
IN
G
LIMIT 2 CANS
Fl LL .
EXPIRES
~72

-

M~DDLEPORT

M&amp;R

SHOPPING
CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.
j

OPEN

BOR DAY 9-9

I
I
I

�9- Ti.1 Sullday Timel· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 3, 1972

.

...

•

•
'

•

.

•

•

.. .

..

,•

PICNIC AT PARK
POMEROY - Tbe golden
weddlag anniversary of Mr,
'. and Mrs. Allen Taylor,
Racine Route 1, Aug. 31, was
ebserved with a picnic
Sullday at Forked Run Slate
Park.
•·
All live of the Taylor
clllldren were present lor the
observance. Attending were
Mrs. Warrea (Pauline)
Rose, Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Bickers
and children, Mr.
•
aDd
Mrs.
Chester Rose and
.
Paul, Mr. and Mn. Leo
•
Taylor and cblldrtn, Mr. and
,
Mrs. 'Frank (Blondena)
. . · Hudson and daughter, Mr.
' ___
ud Mrs. Gene Hudson, aU of
'' ' '
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs.
.
Jtlbuon (Doris) Wllson and
'
cblldren, Mr. and Mrs .
George Sprouse and son, all
of Columbus, and Mr. and
Mrs. Shelby (Ruby) Pickens
and c.1lldren of Syracuse.

..

•

Mr. afl{j Mrs. Robert D. Ashley
RACINE- Recently, Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Ashley of
Route 2, Racine, were pleasantly surprised on their 25th
wedding anniversary by their children and the Racine
Grange. The observance was held at the home of Mrs.
Ashley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cilfford Holter of Route 1,
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley received several nice gifts of silver
and a four-tiered wedding cake baked by Mrs. Curtis
Johnaon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Morris, Mrs .
Emn)a Adams, Miss Mary Virginia Easterday, Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cross, Donna
Cr~, Del&gt;Qrah Cross, Denise Cross, Della Cross, Jeff
Harns, Bill Beegle, Clifford Ashley, Keith Ashley, Heidi
Ashley, and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Holter.
Sedning gifts were Mrs. Lela Easterday and Diana Cross
of Cohunbus.
Assisting with the serving of refreslunents were Mrs.
Cross and daugh!Alrs. Also celebrating the same anniversary
date, their 23rd, were Mr.and Mrs. Earl Cross.

Dinner Given
Pastoral Couple
POMEROY - A turkey
dinner was served recently at
the Minersville United
Methodist Church under
sponsorship of the Women's
Society of Christian Service to
welcome the new pastor, the
Rev. Merrill Floyd, and his
wile.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Bradford Maag, Mr. and Mrs.
Hosmer Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Russell, Sherrie and
Mark, Mrs. Elsie Forbes, Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, Mrs . Sadie
Brown, Mrs. Stella Grueser,
Mrs. Herbert Pugh, Mrs. Lillie
Starcher, Mrs. Fannie Phillips,
Mrs. Adolph Grueser, Mrs.
Clara Frances McMaster,
Clifford Philips, Mrs. Charles
Grueser and son, Jon, Mrs.
Margarette Roush and son,
Jerry, Mrs. Karl Grueser.

September, or any Month,
Is No Time to KiJI a Kid
COLUMBUS - Eugene P.
O'Grady, Ohio Highway Safety
Director, Saturday announced
that Governor John J . Gilligan
has. proclaimed September, as
"Don't Kiil A Kid Month" in
Ohio. In 1971 alone, 548 schoolage youngsters were· killed in
traffic-related accidents, anrl
through June, 1972, there have
been 264 fatalities in this age
group. O'Grady said last year's
figures include 94 children between the ages of five and nine.
A massive volunteer campaign has been lal!Dched to
reduce school area accidents
through the cooperation of the
Department of Highway
Safety, the Ohio Depariment of
Education, the Governor's
Traffic Safety Committee, the
State Highway Patrol, the Ohio
Broadcasters Public Service
Foundation and the Ohio
Association of Insurance
Agents.
Nationally, approximately
4,000 children five through 14
years old died in 1971 traffic

accidents. These tragedies
accounted for nearly 25 per
cent of the entire death toll in
this age group. ·
The most accident-prone
scboolagers are
klndegarten pupUs, whose rate
Is twice that of all pupils.
Children In grades fowr
through 6 bad fewest accidents, substantially outshining their high school
counterparts as well as
youngsters.
With school bells ringing
again, O'Grady asks motorists
to be particularly careful near
schools and playgrounds,
particularly during inclement
weather when youths are inclined to skip normal safety
precautions.
Achild is more likely to dart
between cars in the rain to
escape discomfort, and his
footing is reduced as well.
When a motorist observes an
active group of youngsters, he
should be anticipating that one
child might suddenly enter the

Apple Grove

street. A stray ball or pet often
is followed by small children.
In conj unction with the
campaign, O'Grady stated, the
Ohio AssOciation of Insurance
Agents, who originated the
campaign under the direction
of Joe R. Roby, Mansfield,
President,
have
made
available public service
newspapers advertisements,
radio and television announcements,
bumper
stickers, window posters and
other related promotional
materials.

3 Participate
In Electric Day
POMEROY - Three Meigs .
County 4-H club members
participated in 4-H Electri~
Day on Friday, Sept. I at the
Ohio State Junior Fair .
Participating in Electric I
was Brenda Bishop, daugh!J!r
of Mr . and Mrs. Allen Bishop.
Glenn and Eddie Kennedy, ·
sons of Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Kennedy, participated in
Electric II and Electric Ill. ·
These young people had their
electric projects on display and
were with the projects for one
hour explaining them to fair
visitors. Taking the group to
Columbus was Mrs . Allen
Bishop.

NAME OMITIED
SYRACUSE - The name of
Darlene Duncan was unintentionally omitted from the
list of names attending the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
birthday dinner for Mr.
Arthur Hill, son of Mr. and Malcolm Guinther.
Mrs . Dallas Hill, entered
school
at
agriculture
Morehead State University at
RUMMAGE SALE
Morehead, Ky., last week.
POMEROY - The Sew-RiteTommy Roseberry of Old
Sewing
Club will stage a
Town Flats spent Saturday
rummage
sale Tuesday and
night wilh Dean HilL
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 3
children returned home p.m. in the Coats Building ,
Sunday from a week's vacation North Second Ave ., Midat Dearborn, Mich., and Cedar dleport.
Point, Ohio. Enroute home
PEACH FORK - Recent
they spent Saturday night with
guests of Sallie Byers, Peach
Mrs. Ables' brother, Mr. and
Fork Road, have been Paul
Mrs. Carroll Balser at MansGUESTS OF GRUESERS
Toops, Mabel Grimmette,
field. Mrs. Alice Balser stayed
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Bonnie Chavis, Columbus,
RIO GRANDE - The fifth Meadows, Randy Jr. and
RIDE TO PARK
at the Abies home during their Jack McDowell and Mr. and Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Gains
annual reunion of the late Richard, Akron; Mr. and Mrs.
REEDSVILLE _ Members absence.
Mrs. Steven McDowell and Strouse and children, Gains
.Willie and Ada Meadows was Fred Smith and James, Gail of Riverview Girl Scout Troop
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence daughter of Brookline, N. Y. Jr., Trina, West Jefferson,
held Sunday, Aug . '1:1, at Bob Shaffer and Donald Shaffer, all
recently
rode
their
bicycles
Balser
and children of Tuppers were recent visitors of Mr. and Ohio; Mr . and Mrs. Arvin J .
67
Evans shelter house at Rio of Racine; Mr. and Mrs . to Forked Run State Park. A Plains and Mrs. Alice Balser Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Whilt and son, Bruce,
Grande.
•
Wesley Houck, Mrs. Maxine hike was conducted by the spent Wednesday at Camden
Columbus, all overn ight
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Houck, Vernon, Charles and Park Naturalist, Rick Quam Park .
guests; Mrs. Ezalea Odister,
~
Joe Clagg, Tony, Marty, Troy Usa, Crown City ; Mr. and Mrs. for the girls. A lunch of sweet
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell and
KEISER RETURNS .
Pomeroy' who spent several
and Jody, Mrs. Bill White and Dwayne Clark and Galen , corn, hot dogs, tomatoes, and daughter' Lorna , returned
POMEROY - Harry Keiser days with Mrs. Byers while her
Louanne White, Susan Mc- Goodletsville, Tenn., and Miss
d k d &lt;· orlo rr
r . has returned to hiS Minersville SISter, Mrs. Zueielia Smith,
t &lt;Olllooht all of Columbus; Mrs. Debliie-Bldley"O'allljloffs,.."~·"" ,,......,.,w~eP!I!)'" W coo ~ -~ "'\!"~Z Oil!,.,~. Y~~ - 19~· 1~,, hoffie'·a!fet·'vi!lttnrtn"'MenJ!lo ""''lisW!SI!IIrg"'if''I''~"'
by the scouts
and their
Mrs.· James Hunt, field
· Garney Elliott, Janet and
The oldest ' attending was Girls
attending
were leaders.
Debra CaMnradaa.nd
.
· with Mr. and Mrs . Bill church work, and Mr. and Mrs.·
Keith, Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Ruby Meadows; traveling Lewis, Sheila Buchanan, Susan Mrs. Betty Wickline and son, Dillard.
John Hess and . family, John
~ Francis Elliotl, Robbie, Johny the greatest distance was Hannum, Kay Balderson, Judy Scottie, spent a week with Mrs.
Jr., James, Davrd, Kathy and
• and Gina, Morehead, Ky., Mr. Howard Meadows, and the Holter , leaders Marilyn Hunt's sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Ada, and brother, Ernest Hess,
and Mrs. Wayne Elliott and yowrgest present was Jody Hannum, Orva Jean Holter, Pete Bearhs at Portsmouth,
The Almanac
all of Logan , W. Va.
Dwayne, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Lynn Clagg, eight months.
and Ruth Anne Balderson. Va.
By United Press International
On Tuesday, guests were
( James, Terry and Kelly, Mr.
Officers are Kenneth Guests included Teresa
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson Today is Sunday, Sept. 3, the Paul Toops, and Mabel
• and Mrs . Doug Meadows, Meadows, president; Richard Chichester and Mark Holter. and children visited Mrs . 247th day of 1972 with 119 ·to Grmunette, Columbus.
•• Nancy and Tim, all of
Erma Wilson Sunday. Chester follow .
..• Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs . Meadows, vice president; Ruth
AnnSmith, secrelary, andMae
VanMeterofMorningStarwas
The moon is between its last
'T'
Richard Meadows, Janice,· Thivener, treasurer.
a recent guest of Mrs. Wilson. quarter and new phase .
tO
.l
Carol and Dick, Mrs. Ruby
DINNER GIVEN
Mrs . Herbert Roush called
The morning stars are
Meadows, all of Crown City;
CHESTER_ Mr. and Mrs. on Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eich Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
POMEROY - The Rev. and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Robert
Wood
and
children,
Friday
afternoon.
Mr.
and
The
evening
stars
are
M
ars
Mrs.
Paul Daggett and
Meadows, Uniontown, Ohio;
daughter, Sarah, returned this
Bob, Debbie and Sandy, held a Mrs . Eich left Saturday and Jupiter.
Mrs.
Cora
Strickland,
week to Center, Texas, after
dinner
at
their
Chester
home
morning
to
make
their
home
in
Those
born
on
this
date
are
Columbus; Mr . Howard
TO ENTER HOSPITAL
visiting here with Mrs. Velma
Sunday, Aug . 'll, honoring Mr. Tripoli, Libya , where Mr. Eich under the sign of Virgo.
Meadows, Kim and Lynn ,
MIDDLEPORT - Keith and Mrs. Virgil M. Wood, is associated with Esso
American
engineer
Louis
Douglas
and in Massachusetts
, Goodletsville, Tenn.; Mrs. Mae Black of Middleport will be
with
the
Rev. Mr. Daggett's
Springfield,
on
their
25th
Standard
Ubya.
They
will
be
Henri
Sullivan
was
born
Sept.
3,
; Thlvener and Mr. and Mrs. admitted to Children's Hospital
relatives.
: Luke Settle, Lynn and Jeff, all Tuesday for medical treat· wedding anniversary . Others there for six months. When Mr. 1850.
Mrs. Douglas flew to Texas
attending were Mrs. Letha Eich retires in two years they
On !his day in history:
of Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Joe men!. He will be accompanied
plan
to
build
a
new
home
at
In
1783,
the
signing
of
the
on
June 28 for a visit with her
od Mr . an d Mr s. Roy
Mellon and Michael Milton and to Col umbus by his grand- Wo,
Treaty of Paris officially ended daughter and family, and
Mark Leppert, all of Wor- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Christy, Chester, and Mr. and Letart Falls.
Mrs
.
Harold
Hawk,
Mark,
Mrs
.
George
(Hamona)
the Revolutionary War. Ameri- returned here with them in
thington, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Francis.
Dean and Kristi, Hockingport. Yonker fe ll down stairs at her ca had won its independence early August. During the
Daggetts' visit they spent some
A decorated cake was served home Saturday morning and is from Great Britain.
time with Mrs. Euda Hamrick,
following the dinner.
a patient at Veterans Memorial
made ice cream were enjoyed grandmother, of Mrs. Daggett,
HospitaL
By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm at the home of Mr. and Mrs. at Ivydale, W. Va.
attended a bsseball game In Jack Sargent at Racine
Buffet ...
Wednesday evening by Mr. and
Cincinnati on Sunday.
PICNIC ENJOYED
Mrs.
Raymond Robinson and
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman spent
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and a weekend with Mrs. Iva Robin of New Bern, N. C., Mr.
Mrs. Denver Rice entertained Alexander at Westerville and and Mrs . Herbert Sayre, Mr.
VISITORS COME
with a picnic Thursday night at also visited Mrs. Emily Stock- and Mrs. Herbert Shields, Mrs.
LONG BOTTOM - Recent
' the Cherry Ridge farm the dale at Westerville.
Marlene Fisher and children, guests of Mrs. Edna Sumchildren of the Primary 3 Class
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Davis of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson and merfield were Mr. and Mrs.
of the Middleport Church of Parkersburg and Mr. and Mrs . children and Mrs. Bertha Charles Summerfield and
Christ. Mrs. Raymond Baker Jim Roush were Sunday gues~ Robinson.
Ricky, of Savannah, Ga. ; Miss
surprised her daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Harry Hill and nephews, Martha Summerfield, Los
Angela, and Mrs. Rice with a Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Frank and Tim lhle, of Racine An geles, Calif.; Mr. Buel
.sto 9:Jo-S2.50all you can eat, (or AI a Carte).
birthday cake. Others at- Norris.
enjoyed a week's vacatlon Summerfield and Ronnie, of
tending were Billy Rice,
Jacksonvwe, Fla.; Mr. and
Dale Donohew of Logan, who fishing in West Virginia.
Minday Long, Becky Long, has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. The Letart Falls ball team Mrs. Cecil Caldwell, Mr. and
Tammi Slobart, Barbie Moyer, Roy Donohew, has returned to enjoyed a party at the Com- Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell and
Bobby Fox, Kathy Hess , and Oklahoma City, Okla., where munity1Iall Thursday evening. Kenny, Mr. and Mrs. Rexal·
'
Robin Herald.
he is enrolled in college.
Hosts were Mr. and Mrs. Summerfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs, Randall Randall Roberts. Attending Bob Murphey, of Reedsville
Roberts and children, Mrs. were Chris Wolfe, James and RD: Mr. and Mrs . Gerald Lee
Edna Roush and Mrs. Gladys David Foreman, Chuck and Summerfield and Amber, of
Shields of Racine were shop- Robin Fortune, Rick Miller, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs.
ping in Parkersburg Sunday. Steve Riffle, Todd Roberts, Roger Adams and Lori of
IN SPRINGFIELD
Mrs. Emma Yokley of Kenny Parsons, Jimmy Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
RACINE - ~r. and Mrs. Columbiana and sister, Mrs. Powell, Rex and Jeff Thornton Parker, Bobby and Lori of
Robert D. Ashley and Keith Iva Orr called on Mrs. Herbert and the hosts.
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Wide Menu
· Drinks and
and
Heidi
recently
visited
with
Mrs.
Florence
Adams
visited
Herbert
Parker, Syracuse, and
Roush
Sunday
evening.
Choice
Dessert Extra .
Mr. and Mrs. Murl Ashley at.
DCFN Carl Lee Robinson of Mrs. Clara Adams at Racine Sherman Summerfield, l.llng
Oider our regular menu every nights to 10.
the Ohio Masonic Home in Norfolk, Va., spent a weekend Monday .
Bottom, RD.
Springfield.
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields and visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie
GUEST COMES
Powell at Racine. Miss Millie
RACINE - Mrs. Lillian Ripley of Charleston spent the
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Henderson, of Athens, was a weekend wi lh the Shields also.
weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher held a
Relax •..
in for a Delicious
Robert Ashley and family of picnic at Forked Run Lake
Racine.
Sunday honoring her daughter
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
MON.-FRI.. 4 TO 6 PM
Amy's birthday. Attending
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
PRETZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
were Amy's grandparents, Mr.
malt, shake, cone or s11ndae.
You'll bt happy when you come here.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields, Mr.
SALE PLANNED
and Mrs. Bill Robinson and
POMEROY - A rummage family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
sale will be held ·from 9 a.m. to Sargent, Millie Ripley, John
I
4 p.m. Thursday and Friday at Fisher, Stephanie Radford and
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
t
PH. 992-3629.
POMEROY
the Pomeroy First Baptist Sharon Lessle.
Long Bottom. 0.
A steak barbecue ' and home
~ ~~~~~~~~~~ Church.

Meadows Family Reunited

h·-

News, Events

AA UW Invites
New Members

Visitors Come

To Peach Fork

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SAFETY CONCERNED lndlvlduala repreaenlu.l Jill'•
ticlpatlngorganizatlons In the September, "Don't KiD AKid·
Month", proclaimed by Governor John J. Gilligan, pose In
front of a billboard located at the Ohio Stste Fairgrounds In
Columbus. Left to right : Hanford L. Combs, representing
Martin W. Essex, head of the Ohio Department of EducaUon ;
Col. Robert M. Chiaramonte, Superintendent, Ohio state
Highway Patrol; Ms. Jean Werts, chalrmsn, Women's
Division, Governor's Traffic Safety Committee; Douglas N.
Avery, Executive Vice-President, Ohio Association of Insurance Agents, Inc. and Eugene P. O'Grady, Director, Ohio
Department of Highway Safety.

MARlETT A - The new 20percent increase in social
security benefits will begin
with regular checks for the
mon lh of September to be
delivered in early October,
according to Eugene Ermatinger, social security
district manager in Marietta.
"No application is needed for
the 20 percent increase," he
said. "The Social Security
Administration will rertgure
payments for everyone getting
social security benefits and
pay the increased benefits in
the October checks."
Social security pays monthly
cash benefits to 28 miiJion
people - retirement and
disability benefits to eligibleworkers and their families ;
survivors benefits to the

f

The MEIGS INN

Dri~e

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

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Lakin-Elliott Plan
Susan Warner's December Marriage

t'l\1ll~ii~iMO~rs

who were insured under social
security.
Under the new law, the
average social security
payment to retired workers
will increase from $134 to $162 a
month. The average payment
to a disabled worker with a
wife and children will increase
from $295 to $354 a month. The
average payment to a widowed
mother with two young
children will increase from
$322 to $386 a month.
The new law will also tie
futur e social security benefit
increases to the cost of living,
Mr. Ermatinger said .
"If the cost of living increases 3 or more percent in a
year," he said, "monthly social
security payments will also
increase, starting the following
January - unless a general

SUSAN BETH WARNER

,prior year."

The cost of living will be
measured by the U. S.
Department of Labor's
monthly Consumer Price Index. "Tying benefits to the cost
of living will help protect the
purchasing power of people
getting social security
payments," Mr. Ermatlnger
said. This provision was
reco mmended by President
Nixon in 1969.
Both the social security
co ntributions rate and the
contribution and benefit base
(the earnings on which contributions are paid) will increase under the new law. The
present rate for both em.
ployees and employers is 5.2
J)etcent 'Of annual earnliigSup
to $9,000. Under the new law,
lhe rate will increase next year
to 5.5 per cent and the bsse wiD
increase to $10,800 for 1973. In
1974, the base will increase to
$12,000.
" After 1974," Mr. Ermatinger said, "the social
security contri bution and
benefit base will he adjusted
automatically to keep pace
with rising wages whenever
benefits
are
adjusted
automatically to take accoUnt
of increases In the cost or
living. Workers whose earnings equal or exceed the prior
base will contribute more to
social security when the base
increases - but they can ex,
peel higher social security
benefits in the future. Benefit
amounts are bssed on average
earnings."

A
SPECIAL
FOR EVERYONE

RAY - Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond S. Wright, Rt. I,
Ray, Ohio, wish to announce
the engagement of their
daughter, Sandie, to William
(Bill) Myers, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Myers , Rio
Grande.
Sandie is a 1968 graduate of

Rebecca Sue Lakin

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benefit increase was enacted
or became effective during the

I

Have You Heard?
HAPPY HOUR

Sandie Wright-Bill
Myers Are Engaged

I

Begin in October

BUFFET

r--------------lillliiiiiii!!!!!ll•
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MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

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Fatter Otecks to

AN EVENING

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

Sandie Wright

8etrothal Told

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PT. PLEASANT - Mr . and
Mrs. Ralph E. Warner of Sandy
Heights
announce
the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their only
daughter, Susan Beth, to Curtis
Ray Newsome Jr., formerly of
Point Pleasant and now of
Newport News, Va.
He is the son of Mrs. Jean
Newsome of 821 30th
Street,and Curtis R. Newsome
also of Point Pleasant.
The Rev. Charles S.
Thompson will officiate for the
double ring ceremony at seven
thirty in the evening,

"'.S!lll~Riber ..,/!Q,~ iq

1

r,lnj}Y

United Methodist Church.
Miss Warner, a graduate of
Wahama High School and the
Gallipolis Business College, is
employed by the West
Virginia Department of
Employment Security at its
Point Pleasant office on Sixth
Street.
Mr. Newsome is a graduate
of Point Pleasant High School
and is an employee of the
Newport News Shipbuilding
and Dry Dock company,
Newport News, Va.
The custom of open church

GALUPOL!S - Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Lakin, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter
Rebecca Sue to Mike E. Elliott,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Elliott, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a graduate
of Gallia Academy High School

and Preston Beauty College .
She is employed at Juanita's
Beauty Shoppe. ·Her fiance, a
graduate of Gal!ia Academy
High School, is presently a
geology major at Morehead
State University.
A December wedding is
being planned.
.: I

Three Troops Camp
GALLIPOLIS - Girl Scout
Cadet Troop 1111 led by Mrs.
Bill Shaffer, and Senior Troop
1181 Jed by Mrs. John Groth,
have returned from a camping
trip to Forked State Park Aug.
21-23. While there, they mel

Cora Dunsmore Chosen As RA
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Cora Dunsmore, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore, 848 Fourth Ave .,
Gallipolis, has been selected as
a resident advisor at Wittenberg University for the 1972-

resident counselors on every
73 school year.
Miss Dunsmore is a floor or section of each
sophomore majoring in in- residence haiL These student
staff members aid in the
ternational studies.
operation of the hall, as well as
Wittenberg resident advisors serve the residents as peer
are students who represent the counselors.

FA C Features
Two Exhibits
GALLIPOLIS
Two
exhibits will he featured in the
French Art Colony galleries at
Riverby the .month of September .
From the Dupont-Crummett
Graphic Art Center in
Charleston, W. Va ., a display of
drawing layouts, color panei
overlays and final products
demonstrates the processes
!hat are used in advertising
art. In 1963 Phil Dupont and
Paul Jordan combined a
direct-mail service, a graphic
art and an ad agency into the
present company. The work of
two artists, Pat Schell and Paul
Jordan , are represented in this
exhibit.
The second exhibit will be of
interest to local river buffs. A
of
private
collection
photographs and riverboat
memorabilia , loaned by Mr.
Douglas
Wetherholt,
Gallipolis, can be seen
throughout the month. The
beautiful photographs taken by
Mr. Wetherholt feature many
familiar river scenes, both past
and present. Also on display
are steamboat whistles and
lights, each with their own
story to tell of bygone days.

Hal lht o.ld stylt Unted or palntefl

• SElECTION OF PROOFS

e

Blat~ &amp; Whlh

l!holoJ.

4·6 Pom lo choo" t.om.

FOit ALL AGES Jab1t1. chlldrtn, adulb.
Groups photoanphed at an addlllwl 1111111 dllrtt.

• mE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS
F'rn BxlO U'itiD tolor J*trall 111111 cu1lomt11 mr 60 run of llf,
o,. "'oub)ocl, ont I* r10 u1•

• LIMITED OFFER I

e

Ad'":llsld

S~~tCial

Htad • Sftovlders Ontr

TILL YOUR 1'11111101 AIOUT THIS IPICIAL OI'PIII

Rutland ·Dept. Store,
RUT~Af:fD, OHIO

Wed., Sept. 6

WESTERVILLE - The 25th
Wooten reunion was held at
Sharon
Woods
Park,
Westerville, Sunday, Aug . 6,
with 70 members present. The
oldest person was Orpha
Wooten wh~eed thanks
for the mea .
her children
were present ut Raymond
who lives in California. Paula
Jean Wooten was the youngest
presentandO. K. Kim of Korea
traveled the farthest.
Next y~ar's reunion .will be
held the first Sunday in August
In Dayton. This year's officers
were Lucille · Thivener,
·president, and Billy Woolen,
vice-president. Ned year's
officers are .Billy Wooten,
president, and Goldie Hasz,
secretary.

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FOR YOUR

DIAMOND

Christopher Is
New Son 's Name

GALUPOLIS - Christopher
Matthew Witham, an Aug . 31
baby, was born in the Kettering
Memorial Hospital, Kettering,
to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Witham
(the former Margaret Ann
Brewer), Dayton. He weighed
eight pounds, 9'k ounces and is
welcomed by his sister,
Stephana and brother Steven.
Maternal grandparents are
REUNION SINGERS
Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Brewer ,
RIO GRANDE - The
Lemley Quartet sang for the Gallipolis. Paternal grandBlazer Reunion Aug. 13 held at parents a,re Mr. and Mrs.
William Wilham, Dayton.
Rio Grande Campus.

MD ·etl' IUNQ lETTING

A dramatic new setting will bring
out all the fire and brilliance of your
diamond. We have everything lrom
pins to rings to pendants ... each
designed to maka any diamond took

larger, lovelier, more stylish.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

*"== = =====f*

..

LoRRAINE

iwRRAINE, PACKABLE,
WASHABLE, COMFORTABLE ·
GOWNS AND PAJAMAS
All these benfits and pretty, too! This
nylon tricot sleepwear comes in
feminine colors of pink, blue and
lavender with floral applique accents
and nylon tricot satin piping. You can
choose pajamas or a non-cling gown and there's a matching coat, too! Put all
the pieces together for a great travel
group!

Colols: Rose • Mint • Violet
SHORT GOWN ......~ ....... S.M.L '6 XL $7
PAJAMA ...............................32-40 sg
SHORT COAT.............S.M.L '9 XL $10
saJFFS ......... -•........~ ...... S.~.LXL $4

cur thlnkl for .,our pttraniOt.

• GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS

NEW LIFE

..!""'!'..,. ,__""" Jlll!l~:"""-----------------..,~·lillil•.--"""!l"'ffl."""'ll!l!l""'.----------'
"

At Get-together

Mflted II 1ft t•Pr'IIIIOn ol

with Cadet Troop 48 from
Williamsburg, W. Va., with
Four-River CounciL
The three troops held innercouncil activities as a campfire, singing and skits. The
girls also went swimming, took
nature hikes, cooked outdoors,
and watched a snake show
given by the Park Naturalist.

is the friendship and
stimulalion of college educated
women almost anywhere.
The Gallipolis branch of
AAUW has planned its annual
membership buffet dinner
meeting Monday, Sept. II , at
6:30p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Ri chard G. Patterson
. ' 47
Holcom b Hill, Gallipolis, and
will include a review of the
programs lor this coming year.
Prospective members are
cordially invited to attend.
Reser vations are requested
and can be made from now
lhrough Sept. 5 by calling Mrs .
Paul Stewart, 446-4793; Mrs.
James Yocum, 446-1250or Mrs .
Stephen Carter , 446-2497.

·· IM"""'""'!'"""""'"""'""-~•""'I'Ifl!ll

70 Persons Meet
Thlt wry tpeclal offer 11 Prt·

Jackson High School and is
employed at Buckeye Mart in
Jackson. Her fiance is a 1969
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and is employed at
Lynch Sohio in Rio Grande.
. Wedding plans are in complete.

GALLIPOLIS
The
American Association of
University Women (AAUW)
invites all university women to
consider membership in the
Gallipolis branch of AAUW.
The only requirement for
membership is a baccalaureate degree from an
accredited institution of higher
education .
Through membership in
AAUW, members will hear
stimulating and challenging
programs which arouse
curiosity and enlarge un·
derstanding of major issues
and can conlinue intellectual
and cultural growth with vigor
and focused purpose. Members
can support the cause of
Alternatives for Women, the
right to choose from a variety
of life styles and work to
provide lellowships for women
scholars and other educational
opportunities for the people of
the community .
They also can enjoy such
opportunities and services as
hospital and life insurance
plans at reduced rates, book
discounts, group travel abroad
and access to resourceful kits
and guides on legislative
matters and community ac·
lions. Perhaps the greatest
benefit of AAUW membership

•

MONDAY and' FRIDAY OPEN
•

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~TIL

8 P~M.·

�9- Ti.1 Sullday Timel· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 3, 1972

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PICNIC AT PARK
POMEROY - Tbe golden
weddlag anniversary of Mr,
'. and Mrs. Allen Taylor,
Racine Route 1, Aug. 31, was
ebserved with a picnic
Sullday at Forked Run Slate
Park.
•·
All live of the Taylor
clllldren were present lor the
observance. Attending were
Mrs. Warrea (Pauline)
Rose, Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Bickers
and children, Mr.
•
aDd
Mrs.
Chester Rose and
.
Paul, Mr. and Mn. Leo
•
Taylor and cblldrtn, Mr. and
,
Mrs. 'Frank (Blondena)
. . · Hudson and daughter, Mr.
' ___
ud Mrs. Gene Hudson, aU of
'' ' '
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs.
.
Jtlbuon (Doris) Wllson and
'
cblldren, Mr. and Mrs .
George Sprouse and son, all
of Columbus, and Mr. and
Mrs. Shelby (Ruby) Pickens
and c.1lldren of Syracuse.

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Mr. afl{j Mrs. Robert D. Ashley
RACINE- Recently, Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Ashley of
Route 2, Racine, were pleasantly surprised on their 25th
wedding anniversary by their children and the Racine
Grange. The observance was held at the home of Mrs.
Ashley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cilfford Holter of Route 1,
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley received several nice gifts of silver
and a four-tiered wedding cake baked by Mrs. Curtis
Johnaon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Morris, Mrs .
Emn)a Adams, Miss Mary Virginia Easterday, Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cross, Donna
Cr~, Del&gt;Qrah Cross, Denise Cross, Della Cross, Jeff
Harns, Bill Beegle, Clifford Ashley, Keith Ashley, Heidi
Ashley, and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Holter.
Sedning gifts were Mrs. Lela Easterday and Diana Cross
of Cohunbus.
Assisting with the serving of refreslunents were Mrs.
Cross and daugh!Alrs. Also celebrating the same anniversary
date, their 23rd, were Mr.and Mrs. Earl Cross.

Dinner Given
Pastoral Couple
POMEROY - A turkey
dinner was served recently at
the Minersville United
Methodist Church under
sponsorship of the Women's
Society of Christian Service to
welcome the new pastor, the
Rev. Merrill Floyd, and his
wile.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Bradford Maag, Mr. and Mrs.
Hosmer Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Russell, Sherrie and
Mark, Mrs. Elsie Forbes, Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, Mrs . Sadie
Brown, Mrs. Stella Grueser,
Mrs. Herbert Pugh, Mrs. Lillie
Starcher, Mrs. Fannie Phillips,
Mrs. Adolph Grueser, Mrs.
Clara Frances McMaster,
Clifford Philips, Mrs. Charles
Grueser and son, Jon, Mrs.
Margarette Roush and son,
Jerry, Mrs. Karl Grueser.

September, or any Month,
Is No Time to KiJI a Kid
COLUMBUS - Eugene P.
O'Grady, Ohio Highway Safety
Director, Saturday announced
that Governor John J . Gilligan
has. proclaimed September, as
"Don't Kiil A Kid Month" in
Ohio. In 1971 alone, 548 schoolage youngsters were· killed in
traffic-related accidents, anrl
through June, 1972, there have
been 264 fatalities in this age
group. O'Grady said last year's
figures include 94 children between the ages of five and nine.
A massive volunteer campaign has been lal!Dched to
reduce school area accidents
through the cooperation of the
Department of Highway
Safety, the Ohio Depariment of
Education, the Governor's
Traffic Safety Committee, the
State Highway Patrol, the Ohio
Broadcasters Public Service
Foundation and the Ohio
Association of Insurance
Agents.
Nationally, approximately
4,000 children five through 14
years old died in 1971 traffic

accidents. These tragedies
accounted for nearly 25 per
cent of the entire death toll in
this age group. ·
The most accident-prone
scboolagers are
klndegarten pupUs, whose rate
Is twice that of all pupils.
Children In grades fowr
through 6 bad fewest accidents, substantially outshining their high school
counterparts as well as
youngsters.
With school bells ringing
again, O'Grady asks motorists
to be particularly careful near
schools and playgrounds,
particularly during inclement
weather when youths are inclined to skip normal safety
precautions.
Achild is more likely to dart
between cars in the rain to
escape discomfort, and his
footing is reduced as well.
When a motorist observes an
active group of youngsters, he
should be anticipating that one
child might suddenly enter the

Apple Grove

street. A stray ball or pet often
is followed by small children.
In conj unction with the
campaign, O'Grady stated, the
Ohio AssOciation of Insurance
Agents, who originated the
campaign under the direction
of Joe R. Roby, Mansfield,
President,
have
made
available public service
newspapers advertisements,
radio and television announcements,
bumper
stickers, window posters and
other related promotional
materials.

3 Participate
In Electric Day
POMEROY - Three Meigs .
County 4-H club members
participated in 4-H Electri~
Day on Friday, Sept. I at the
Ohio State Junior Fair .
Participating in Electric I
was Brenda Bishop, daugh!J!r
of Mr . and Mrs. Allen Bishop.
Glenn and Eddie Kennedy, ·
sons of Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Kennedy, participated in
Electric II and Electric Ill. ·
These young people had their
electric projects on display and
were with the projects for one
hour explaining them to fair
visitors. Taking the group to
Columbus was Mrs . Allen
Bishop.

NAME OMITIED
SYRACUSE - The name of
Darlene Duncan was unintentionally omitted from the
list of names attending the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
birthday dinner for Mr.
Arthur Hill, son of Mr. and Malcolm Guinther.
Mrs . Dallas Hill, entered
school
at
agriculture
Morehead State University at
RUMMAGE SALE
Morehead, Ky., last week.
POMEROY - The Sew-RiteTommy Roseberry of Old
Sewing
Club will stage a
Town Flats spent Saturday
rummage
sale Tuesday and
night wilh Dean HilL
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 3
children returned home p.m. in the Coats Building ,
Sunday from a week's vacation North Second Ave ., Midat Dearborn, Mich., and Cedar dleport.
Point, Ohio. Enroute home
PEACH FORK - Recent
they spent Saturday night with
guests of Sallie Byers, Peach
Mrs. Ables' brother, Mr. and
Fork Road, have been Paul
Mrs. Carroll Balser at MansGUESTS OF GRUESERS
Toops, Mabel Grimmette,
field. Mrs. Alice Balser stayed
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Bonnie Chavis, Columbus,
RIO GRANDE - The fifth Meadows, Randy Jr. and
RIDE TO PARK
at the Abies home during their Jack McDowell and Mr. and Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Gains
annual reunion of the late Richard, Akron; Mr. and Mrs.
REEDSVILLE _ Members absence.
Mrs. Steven McDowell and Strouse and children, Gains
.Willie and Ada Meadows was Fred Smith and James, Gail of Riverview Girl Scout Troop
Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence daughter of Brookline, N. Y. Jr., Trina, West Jefferson,
held Sunday, Aug . '1:1, at Bob Shaffer and Donald Shaffer, all
recently
rode
their
bicycles
Balser
and children of Tuppers were recent visitors of Mr. and Ohio; Mr . and Mrs. Arvin J .
67
Evans shelter house at Rio of Racine; Mr. and Mrs . to Forked Run State Park. A Plains and Mrs. Alice Balser Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Whilt and son, Bruce,
Grande.
•
Wesley Houck, Mrs. Maxine hike was conducted by the spent Wednesday at Camden
Columbus, all overn ight
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Houck, Vernon, Charles and Park Naturalist, Rick Quam Park .
guests; Mrs. Ezalea Odister,
~
Joe Clagg, Tony, Marty, Troy Usa, Crown City ; Mr. and Mrs. for the girls. A lunch of sweet
Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell and
KEISER RETURNS .
Pomeroy' who spent several
and Jody, Mrs. Bill White and Dwayne Clark and Galen , corn, hot dogs, tomatoes, and daughter' Lorna , returned
POMEROY - Harry Keiser days with Mrs. Byers while her
Louanne White, Susan Mc- Goodletsville, Tenn., and Miss
d k d &lt;· orlo rr
r . has returned to hiS Minersville SISter, Mrs. Zueielia Smith,
t &lt;Olllooht all of Columbus; Mrs. Debliie-Bldley"O'allljloffs,.."~·"" ,,......,.,w~eP!I!)'" W coo ~ -~ "'\!"~Z Oil!,.,~. Y~~ - 19~· 1~,, hoffie'·a!fet·'vi!lttnrtn"'MenJ!lo ""''lisW!SI!IIrg"'if''I''~"'
by the scouts
and their
Mrs.· James Hunt, field
· Garney Elliott, Janet and
The oldest ' attending was Girls
attending
were leaders.
Debra CaMnradaa.nd
.
· with Mr. and Mrs . Bill church work, and Mr. and Mrs.·
Keith, Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Ruby Meadows; traveling Lewis, Sheila Buchanan, Susan Mrs. Betty Wickline and son, Dillard.
John Hess and . family, John
~ Francis Elliotl, Robbie, Johny the greatest distance was Hannum, Kay Balderson, Judy Scottie, spent a week with Mrs.
Jr., James, Davrd, Kathy and
• and Gina, Morehead, Ky., Mr. Howard Meadows, and the Holter , leaders Marilyn Hunt's sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Ada, and brother, Ernest Hess,
and Mrs. Wayne Elliott and yowrgest present was Jody Hannum, Orva Jean Holter, Pete Bearhs at Portsmouth,
The Almanac
all of Logan , W. Va.
Dwayne, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Lynn Clagg, eight months.
and Ruth Anne Balderson. Va.
By United Press International
On Tuesday, guests were
( James, Terry and Kelly, Mr.
Officers are Kenneth Guests included Teresa
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson Today is Sunday, Sept. 3, the Paul Toops, and Mabel
• and Mrs . Doug Meadows, Meadows, president; Richard Chichester and Mark Holter. and children visited Mrs . 247th day of 1972 with 119 ·to Grmunette, Columbus.
•• Nancy and Tim, all of
Erma Wilson Sunday. Chester follow .
..• Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs . Meadows, vice president; Ruth
AnnSmith, secrelary, andMae
VanMeterofMorningStarwas
The moon is between its last
'T'
Richard Meadows, Janice,· Thivener, treasurer.
a recent guest of Mrs. Wilson. quarter and new phase .
tO
.l
Carol and Dick, Mrs. Ruby
DINNER GIVEN
Mrs . Herbert Roush called
The morning stars are
Meadows, all of Crown City;
CHESTER_ Mr. and Mrs. on Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eich Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
POMEROY - The Rev. and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Robert
Wood
and
children,
Friday
afternoon.
Mr.
and
The
evening
stars
are
M
ars
Mrs.
Paul Daggett and
Meadows, Uniontown, Ohio;
daughter, Sarah, returned this
Bob, Debbie and Sandy, held a Mrs . Eich left Saturday and Jupiter.
Mrs.
Cora
Strickland,
week to Center, Texas, after
dinner
at
their
Chester
home
morning
to
make
their
home
in
Those
born
on
this
date
are
Columbus; Mr . Howard
TO ENTER HOSPITAL
visiting here with Mrs. Velma
Sunday, Aug . 'll, honoring Mr. Tripoli, Libya , where Mr. Eich under the sign of Virgo.
Meadows, Kim and Lynn ,
MIDDLEPORT - Keith and Mrs. Virgil M. Wood, is associated with Esso
American
engineer
Louis
Douglas
and in Massachusetts
, Goodletsville, Tenn.; Mrs. Mae Black of Middleport will be
with
the
Rev. Mr. Daggett's
Springfield,
on
their
25th
Standard
Ubya.
They
will
be
Henri
Sullivan
was
born
Sept.
3,
; Thlvener and Mr. and Mrs. admitted to Children's Hospital
relatives.
: Luke Settle, Lynn and Jeff, all Tuesday for medical treat· wedding anniversary . Others there for six months. When Mr. 1850.
Mrs. Douglas flew to Texas
attending were Mrs. Letha Eich retires in two years they
On !his day in history:
of Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Joe men!. He will be accompanied
plan
to
build
a
new
home
at
In
1783,
the
signing
of
the
on
June 28 for a visit with her
od Mr . an d Mr s. Roy
Mellon and Michael Milton and to Col umbus by his grand- Wo,
Treaty of Paris officially ended daughter and family, and
Mark Leppert, all of Wor- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Christy, Chester, and Mr. and Letart Falls.
Mrs
.
Harold
Hawk,
Mark,
Mrs
.
George
(Hamona)
the Revolutionary War. Ameri- returned here with them in
thington, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Francis.
Dean and Kristi, Hockingport. Yonker fe ll down stairs at her ca had won its independence early August. During the
Daggetts' visit they spent some
A decorated cake was served home Saturday morning and is from Great Britain.
time with Mrs. Euda Hamrick,
following the dinner.
a patient at Veterans Memorial
made ice cream were enjoyed grandmother, of Mrs. Daggett,
HospitaL
By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm at the home of Mr. and Mrs. at Ivydale, W. Va.
attended a bsseball game In Jack Sargent at Racine
Buffet ...
Wednesday evening by Mr. and
Cincinnati on Sunday.
PICNIC ENJOYED
Mrs.
Raymond Robinson and
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman spent
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and a weekend with Mrs. Iva Robin of New Bern, N. C., Mr.
Mrs. Denver Rice entertained Alexander at Westerville and and Mrs . Herbert Sayre, Mr.
VISITORS COME
with a picnic Thursday night at also visited Mrs. Emily Stock- and Mrs. Herbert Shields, Mrs.
LONG BOTTOM - Recent
' the Cherry Ridge farm the dale at Westerville.
Marlene Fisher and children, guests of Mrs. Edna Sumchildren of the Primary 3 Class
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Davis of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson and merfield were Mr. and Mrs.
of the Middleport Church of Parkersburg and Mr. and Mrs . children and Mrs. Bertha Charles Summerfield and
Christ. Mrs. Raymond Baker Jim Roush were Sunday gues~ Robinson.
Ricky, of Savannah, Ga. ; Miss
surprised her daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Harry Hill and nephews, Martha Summerfield, Los
Angela, and Mrs. Rice with a Gloeckner and Mrs. Ada Frank and Tim lhle, of Racine An geles, Calif.; Mr. Buel
.sto 9:Jo-S2.50all you can eat, (or AI a Carte).
birthday cake. Others at- Norris.
enjoyed a week's vacatlon Summerfield and Ronnie, of
tending were Billy Rice,
Jacksonvwe, Fla.; Mr. and
Dale Donohew of Logan, who fishing in West Virginia.
Minday Long, Becky Long, has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. The Letart Falls ball team Mrs. Cecil Caldwell, Mr. and
Tammi Slobart, Barbie Moyer, Roy Donohew, has returned to enjoyed a party at the Com- Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell and
Bobby Fox, Kathy Hess , and Oklahoma City, Okla., where munity1Iall Thursday evening. Kenny, Mr. and Mrs. Rexal·
'
Robin Herald.
he is enrolled in college.
Hosts were Mr. and Mrs. Summerfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs, Randall Randall Roberts. Attending Bob Murphey, of Reedsville
Roberts and children, Mrs. were Chris Wolfe, James and RD: Mr. and Mrs . Gerald Lee
Edna Roush and Mrs. Gladys David Foreman, Chuck and Summerfield and Amber, of
Shields of Racine were shop- Robin Fortune, Rick Miller, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs.
ping in Parkersburg Sunday. Steve Riffle, Todd Roberts, Roger Adams and Lori of
IN SPRINGFIELD
Mrs. Emma Yokley of Kenny Parsons, Jimmy Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
RACINE - ~r. and Mrs. Columbiana and sister, Mrs. Powell, Rex and Jeff Thornton Parker, Bobby and Lori of
Robert D. Ashley and Keith Iva Orr called on Mrs. Herbert and the hosts.
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Wide Menu
· Drinks and
and
Heidi
recently
visited
with
Mrs.
Florence
Adams
visited
Herbert
Parker, Syracuse, and
Roush
Sunday
evening.
Choice
Dessert Extra .
Mr. and Mrs. Murl Ashley at.
DCFN Carl Lee Robinson of Mrs. Clara Adams at Racine Sherman Summerfield, l.llng
Oider our regular menu every nights to 10.
the Ohio Masonic Home in Norfolk, Va., spent a weekend Monday .
Bottom, RD.
Springfield.
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields and visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chrissie
GUEST COMES
Powell at Racine. Miss Millie
RACINE - Mrs. Lillian Ripley of Charleston spent the
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
Henderson, of Athens, was a weekend wi lh the Shields also.
weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher held a
Relax •..
in for a Delicious
Robert Ashley and family of picnic at Forked Run Lake
Racine.
Sunday honoring her daughter
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
MON.-FRI.. 4 TO 6 PM
Amy's birthday. Attending
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
PRETZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
were Amy's grandparents, Mr.
malt, shake, cone or s11ndae.
You'll bt happy when you come here.
and Mrs. Herbert Shields, Mr.
SALE PLANNED
and Mrs. Bill Robinson and
POMEROY - A rummage family, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
sale will be held ·from 9 a.m. to Sargent, Millie Ripley, John
I
4 p.m. Thursday and Friday at Fisher, Stephanie Radford and
At Forked Run Lake Entrance
t
PH. 992-3629.
POMEROY
the Pomeroy First Baptist Sharon Lessle.
Long Bottom. 0.
A steak barbecue ' and home
~ ~~~~~~~~~~ Church.

Meadows Family Reunited

h·-

News, Events

AA UW Invites
New Members

Visitors Come

To Peach Fork

..

R
etUffl

exas

i

'
SAFETY CONCERNED lndlvlduala repreaenlu.l Jill'•
ticlpatlngorganizatlons In the September, "Don't KiD AKid·
Month", proclaimed by Governor John J. Gilligan, pose In
front of a billboard located at the Ohio Stste Fairgrounds In
Columbus. Left to right : Hanford L. Combs, representing
Martin W. Essex, head of the Ohio Department of EducaUon ;
Col. Robert M. Chiaramonte, Superintendent, Ohio state
Highway Patrol; Ms. Jean Werts, chalrmsn, Women's
Division, Governor's Traffic Safety Committee; Douglas N.
Avery, Executive Vice-President, Ohio Association of Insurance Agents, Inc. and Eugene P. O'Grady, Director, Ohio
Department of Highway Safety.

MARlETT A - The new 20percent increase in social
security benefits will begin
with regular checks for the
mon lh of September to be
delivered in early October,
according to Eugene Ermatinger, social security
district manager in Marietta.
"No application is needed for
the 20 percent increase," he
said. "The Social Security
Administration will rertgure
payments for everyone getting
social security benefits and
pay the increased benefits in
the October checks."
Social security pays monthly
cash benefits to 28 miiJion
people - retirement and
disability benefits to eligibleworkers and their families ;
survivors benefits to the

f

The MEIGS INN

Dri~e

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

I

Lakin-Elliott Plan
Susan Warner's December Marriage

t'l\1ll~ii~iMO~rs

who were insured under social
security.
Under the new law, the
average social security
payment to retired workers
will increase from $134 to $162 a
month. The average payment
to a disabled worker with a
wife and children will increase
from $295 to $354 a month. The
average payment to a widowed
mother with two young
children will increase from
$322 to $386 a month.
The new law will also tie
futur e social security benefit
increases to the cost of living,
Mr. Ermatinger said .
"If the cost of living increases 3 or more percent in a
year," he said, "monthly social
security payments will also
increase, starting the following
January - unless a general

SUSAN BETH WARNER

,prior year."

The cost of living will be
measured by the U. S.
Department of Labor's
monthly Consumer Price Index. "Tying benefits to the cost
of living will help protect the
purchasing power of people
getting social security
payments," Mr. Ermatlnger
said. This provision was
reco mmended by President
Nixon in 1969.
Both the social security
co ntributions rate and the
contribution and benefit base
(the earnings on which contributions are paid) will increase under the new law. The
present rate for both em.
ployees and employers is 5.2
J)etcent 'Of annual earnliigSup
to $9,000. Under the new law,
lhe rate will increase next year
to 5.5 per cent and the bsse wiD
increase to $10,800 for 1973. In
1974, the base will increase to
$12,000.
" After 1974," Mr. Ermatinger said, "the social
security contri bution and
benefit base will he adjusted
automatically to keep pace
with rising wages whenever
benefits
are
adjusted
automatically to take accoUnt
of increases In the cost or
living. Workers whose earnings equal or exceed the prior
base will contribute more to
social security when the base
increases - but they can ex,
peel higher social security
benefits in the future. Benefit
amounts are bssed on average
earnings."

A
SPECIAL
FOR EVERYONE

RAY - Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond S. Wright, Rt. I,
Ray, Ohio, wish to announce
the engagement of their
daughter, Sandie, to William
(Bill) Myers, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Myers , Rio
Grande.
Sandie is a 1968 graduate of

Rebecca Sue Lakin

'

benefit increase was enacted
or became effective during the

I

Have You Heard?
HAPPY HOUR

Sandie Wright-Bill
Myers Are Engaged

I

Begin in October

BUFFET

r--------------lillliiiiiii!!!!!ll•
..
MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

I

Fatter Otecks to

AN EVENING

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

Sandie Wright

8etrothal Told

r

PT. PLEASANT - Mr . and
Mrs. Ralph E. Warner of Sandy
Heights
announce
the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their only
daughter, Susan Beth, to Curtis
Ray Newsome Jr., formerly of
Point Pleasant and now of
Newport News, Va.
He is the son of Mrs. Jean
Newsome of 821 30th
Street,and Curtis R. Newsome
also of Point Pleasant.
The Rev. Charles S.
Thompson will officiate for the
double ring ceremony at seven
thirty in the evening,

"'.S!lll~Riber ..,/!Q,~ iq

1

r,lnj}Y

United Methodist Church.
Miss Warner, a graduate of
Wahama High School and the
Gallipolis Business College, is
employed by the West
Virginia Department of
Employment Security at its
Point Pleasant office on Sixth
Street.
Mr. Newsome is a graduate
of Point Pleasant High School
and is an employee of the
Newport News Shipbuilding
and Dry Dock company,
Newport News, Va.
The custom of open church

GALUPOL!S - Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Lakin, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter
Rebecca Sue to Mike E. Elliott,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Elliott, Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a graduate
of Gallia Academy High School

and Preston Beauty College .
She is employed at Juanita's
Beauty Shoppe. ·Her fiance, a
graduate of Gal!ia Academy
High School, is presently a
geology major at Morehead
State University.
A December wedding is
being planned.
.: I

Three Troops Camp
GALLIPOLIS - Girl Scout
Cadet Troop 1111 led by Mrs.
Bill Shaffer, and Senior Troop
1181 Jed by Mrs. John Groth,
have returned from a camping
trip to Forked State Park Aug.
21-23. While there, they mel

Cora Dunsmore Chosen As RA
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Cora Dunsmore, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dunsmore, 848 Fourth Ave .,
Gallipolis, has been selected as
a resident advisor at Wittenberg University for the 1972-

resident counselors on every
73 school year.
Miss Dunsmore is a floor or section of each
sophomore majoring in in- residence haiL These student
staff members aid in the
ternational studies.
operation of the hall, as well as
Wittenberg resident advisors serve the residents as peer
are students who represent the counselors.

FA C Features
Two Exhibits
GALLIPOLIS
Two
exhibits will he featured in the
French Art Colony galleries at
Riverby the .month of September .
From the Dupont-Crummett
Graphic Art Center in
Charleston, W. Va ., a display of
drawing layouts, color panei
overlays and final products
demonstrates the processes
!hat are used in advertising
art. In 1963 Phil Dupont and
Paul Jordan combined a
direct-mail service, a graphic
art and an ad agency into the
present company. The work of
two artists, Pat Schell and Paul
Jordan , are represented in this
exhibit.
The second exhibit will be of
interest to local river buffs. A
of
private
collection
photographs and riverboat
memorabilia , loaned by Mr.
Douglas
Wetherholt,
Gallipolis, can be seen
throughout the month. The
beautiful photographs taken by
Mr. Wetherholt feature many
familiar river scenes, both past
and present. Also on display
are steamboat whistles and
lights, each with their own
story to tell of bygone days.

Hal lht o.ld stylt Unted or palntefl

• SElECTION OF PROOFS

e

Blat~ &amp; Whlh

l!holoJ.

4·6 Pom lo choo" t.om.

FOit ALL AGES Jab1t1. chlldrtn, adulb.
Groups photoanphed at an addlllwl 1111111 dllrtt.

• mE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS
F'rn BxlO U'itiD tolor J*trall 111111 cu1lomt11 mr 60 run of llf,
o,. "'oub)ocl, ont I* r10 u1•

• LIMITED OFFER I

e

Ad'":llsld

S~~tCial

Htad • Sftovlders Ontr

TILL YOUR 1'11111101 AIOUT THIS IPICIAL OI'PIII

Rutland ·Dept. Store,
RUT~Af:fD, OHIO

Wed., Sept. 6

WESTERVILLE - The 25th
Wooten reunion was held at
Sharon
Woods
Park,
Westerville, Sunday, Aug . 6,
with 70 members present. The
oldest person was Orpha
Wooten wh~eed thanks
for the mea .
her children
were present ut Raymond
who lives in California. Paula
Jean Wooten was the youngest
presentandO. K. Kim of Korea
traveled the farthest.
Next y~ar's reunion .will be
held the first Sunday in August
In Dayton. This year's officers
were Lucille · Thivener,
·president, and Billy Woolen,
vice-president. Ned year's
officers are .Billy Wooten,
president, and Goldie Hasz,
secretary.

)

•

'

'

FOR YOUR

DIAMOND

Christopher Is
New Son 's Name

GALUPOLIS - Christopher
Matthew Witham, an Aug . 31
baby, was born in the Kettering
Memorial Hospital, Kettering,
to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Witham
(the former Margaret Ann
Brewer), Dayton. He weighed
eight pounds, 9'k ounces and is
welcomed by his sister,
Stephana and brother Steven.
Maternal grandparents are
REUNION SINGERS
Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Brewer ,
RIO GRANDE - The
Lemley Quartet sang for the Gallipolis. Paternal grandBlazer Reunion Aug. 13 held at parents a,re Mr. and Mrs.
William Wilham, Dayton.
Rio Grande Campus.

MD ·etl' IUNQ lETTING

A dramatic new setting will bring
out all the fire and brilliance of your
diamond. We have everything lrom
pins to rings to pendants ... each
designed to maka any diamond took

larger, lovelier, more stylish.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

*"== = =====f*

..

LoRRAINE

iwRRAINE, PACKABLE,
WASHABLE, COMFORTABLE ·
GOWNS AND PAJAMAS
All these benfits and pretty, too! This
nylon tricot sleepwear comes in
feminine colors of pink, blue and
lavender with floral applique accents
and nylon tricot satin piping. You can
choose pajamas or a non-cling gown and there's a matching coat, too! Put all
the pieces together for a great travel
group!

Colols: Rose • Mint • Violet
SHORT GOWN ......~ ....... S.M.L '6 XL $7
PAJAMA ...............................32-40 sg
SHORT COAT.............S.M.L '9 XL $10
saJFFS ......... -•........~ ...... S.~.LXL $4

cur thlnkl for .,our pttraniOt.

• GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS

NEW LIFE

..!""'!'..,. ,__""" Jlll!l~:"""-----------------..,~·lillil•.--"""!l"'ffl."""'ll!l!l""'.----------'
"

At Get-together

Mflted II 1ft t•Pr'IIIIOn ol

with Cadet Troop 48 from
Williamsburg, W. Va., with
Four-River CounciL
The three troops held innercouncil activities as a campfire, singing and skits. The
girls also went swimming, took
nature hikes, cooked outdoors,
and watched a snake show
given by the Park Naturalist.

is the friendship and
stimulalion of college educated
women almost anywhere.
The Gallipolis branch of
AAUW has planned its annual
membership buffet dinner
meeting Monday, Sept. II , at
6:30p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Ri chard G. Patterson
. ' 47
Holcom b Hill, Gallipolis, and
will include a review of the
programs lor this coming year.
Prospective members are
cordially invited to attend.
Reser vations are requested
and can be made from now
lhrough Sept. 5 by calling Mrs .
Paul Stewart, 446-4793; Mrs.
James Yocum, 446-1250or Mrs .
Stephen Carter , 446-2497.

·· IM"""'""'!'"""""'"""'""-~•""'I'Ifl!ll

70 Persons Meet
Thlt wry tpeclal offer 11 Prt·

Jackson High School and is
employed at Buckeye Mart in
Jackson. Her fiance is a 1969
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and is employed at
Lynch Sohio in Rio Grande.
. Wedding plans are in complete.

GALLIPOLIS
The
American Association of
University Women (AAUW)
invites all university women to
consider membership in the
Gallipolis branch of AAUW.
The only requirement for
membership is a baccalaureate degree from an
accredited institution of higher
education .
Through membership in
AAUW, members will hear
stimulating and challenging
programs which arouse
curiosity and enlarge un·
derstanding of major issues
and can conlinue intellectual
and cultural growth with vigor
and focused purpose. Members
can support the cause of
Alternatives for Women, the
right to choose from a variety
of life styles and work to
provide lellowships for women
scholars and other educational
opportunities for the people of
the community .
They also can enjoy such
opportunities and services as
hospital and life insurance
plans at reduced rates, book
discounts, group travel abroad
and access to resourceful kits
and guides on legislative
matters and community ac·
lions. Perhaps the greatest
benefit of AAUW membership

•

MONDAY and' FRIDAY OPEN
•

I

\

,

~TIL

8 P~M.·

�f

Families Attend
Anttu(ll Reunion
.

..

CAROLYN LUMAN

CHARLOTTE MILLER

SARAH OWENS

. Three Teachers Chosen
: . As Outstanding Teachers
•'

•

GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of the late Mr. and
Mrs . Homer Holley met
Sunday, Aug . 20, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Holley,
· Gallipolis, for the Holley
family reunion.
At noon, picnic baskets were
shared by Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Holley, Rev. and Mrs. Alfred
Holley, Sally, Diane and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Holley and
Kathy Daniels, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs . Eugene Holley,
Cindy, Debbie; and Connie,
Vinton; Mrs. Clyde (Pauline)
Elliott and Curt, Mark
Newberry and Mrs. James
Greenup, Northup: Mr. and

:·

CADMUS- Carolyn Lwnan,
tbarlotte Miller and Sarah
, Owens have been selected as
:: Outstanding · Elementary
• Teachers of America for 1972,
~ according to William Sheets,
-: Principal' of Cadmus Schools.
' Nominated by the school
principal earlier this year,
these teachers are selected for
this national honor on the basis
· of their professional and civic
' achievements.
· Outstanding Elementary
, Teachers of America is an
: annual program honoring the
: men and women who have
• distinguished themselves by
' their service and leadership in
: the field ·· of elementary
education. Each year, the

biographies of those honored'
are featured in the awards
volume, Outstanding
Elementary Teachers of
America.
In announcing the award
winners to lhe school principal,
Dr . V. Gilbert Beers, director
of the OutsUlnding Elementary
Teachers of America program,
cited them for their exceptional service.
"The men and women chosen
for the high honor," Dr. Beers

said, "have explored new
paths, developed new insights
and efrectively communicated
their knowledge to their

students and colleagues, They
are the exceptional teachers."
Guidelines for selection
include a teacher's talent in the
classroom, civic service and
professional recognition.
Dr. Beers, in addition to
directin&amp;
the
national
education awards program, is
a noted teacher, writer and
editor
of
educa ti onal
publications. He holds a Ph.D.
from Northwestern University
·and additional degrees from
Wheaton College and Northern
Baptist Theological Seminary.

5on Born In
Bay Village
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. George Christ (Betty
: Clendenin) are announcing the
: birth of a seven pound, four
, · ounce son at the Fair View
. Park Hospital in Bay Village. ·
. Because Ryan Edward's father
· is a track coach, the parents
:hope their new son Ryan will be
:a runner or a high jumper.
. Mrs. Varney Faye Clen,den in, 96 Court St., is the happy
:grandmother. She now has six
,grandsons and one granddaughter.
SPECIAL SERVICES
LECTA - The Lecta tburch
of God Holiness Tabernacle
'will have its homecoming with
a dinner at noon Sunday, Sept.
JO, Special singing and
preaching will be featured.
Everyone is welcome to attend.

SPECIAL
BAND
INSTRUMENT

TRIAL
PLAN
for beginners

Krodel Park Is
Site Of Reunion
POINT PLEASANT - The
John G. Hudson family met at
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va., Sunday, Aug. 27, for their
family reunion. A dinner was
enjoyed at noon and the af.
ternoon was spent in visiting
and fellowship.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Bordman, Stan and
Vana and Mrs. Woodrow
Hudson and Mark, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. Edith Bordman
and Charles, Patriot ; Mr, and
Mrs. Ray Woods, Athens
Stergi, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Hudson and son Clay, Joe,
Scotty and Victor Van Sickle
and Eddie Flowers, Gallipolis;
Mrs . Alberta Parker and
Sheila, MI. Gilead; Mr. and
Mrs. J.D. Long, Henderson, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs. J. S.
Dunlavy, Chauncey; and Mrs.
Wanda Bailey, Teresa, Terry,
Tina and Kelly, and Mr. and
Mrs. Chesler Edwards, Connie
and Cheryl, Nitro, W. Va .

Newcomers Plan.

To Attend Race
GALLIPOLIS
The
Newcomers Club is beginning
its new year with a trip to
Scioto Downs Tuesday, Sept,
12. The bus will leavethe public
boating dock at 5 p.m. It is
Ladies Night at the race track
and the last evening of trotting
for this season.
Reservations have been
made for dinner in the Club
!louse. The cost will be $5 per
couple or $2.50 per individual
round trip plus cost of the
meal.
YOU COULDN'T BELIEVE this waste receptacle
Reservations may be made
penguin couldn't swallow the whole thing, but the arm
by calling Mrs. Herman Koby,
of u munnequln Is still slicking out In Largo. Flu,
446·9356 ;
Mrs .
Arthur
Espenscheid, 245-51151, or Mrs.
CLASS OF '38
r-'~:::::::::1... ::-::::ooo:, Cornell. 446-3915. Because
GALLIPOLIS - Blain Mohr,
there will be no telephoning
chainnan of the GAHS Class of
this month and there is only
1938, has announced plans for a
room for 40 persons, reser·
meeting to be held Thursday,
vations
should be made early
Sept. 14, at 7:30p.m., at the
with the deadline Sept. 8. It is
home of Lt. Col. I Ret. ) and
hoped that many new and old
Mrs. George Grace, 334 Third
comers
will attend.
Ave . This meeting, during
which plans will be made for
the 35th reunion iri 1973, is open SUNDAY
GARDEN CLUB
to anyone wishing to help with ANNUAL German Ridge
GALLIPOLIS
The
the plans. Information on class homecoming with a basket Wayside Garden Club will hold
members should be given to dinner at noon. Rev. Gomer a meeting at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
Willene Edwards, 446-1459; Jenkins is the speaker. at the home of Mrs. Emerson
Bess Grace, 44&amp;-0953, or Blain Everyone is welcome to attend. Reese . A home flower show,
Mohr, 675-1426.
ANNUAL NEAL reunion at . installation of officers and
Vinton Park with basket dinner payment of dues will be on the
DIES IN CRASH
at
noon .
agenda ,
GEORGETOWN, Ohio (UP!)
- William·R. Griego, 25, Lodi, SPEARS reunion at Lake
N.J., was killed late Friday in Jackson, basket dinner at
a three-car crash three miles noon .
north of here in Brown County. TUESDAY
Two other p')I:S..ons were in· ENGLISH Club, hostess
jured in the collisibn on Ohio 68. Rosebud Baker, co-hostess
Elizabeth Evans, 7 p.m., Mrs.
Larry Owens to speak on folk
music.
WAYSIDE Garden Club, 7:30
p.m ., home of Mrs. Emerson
Reese , home flower show,
installation of officers and
payment of dues,
RUMMAGE SALE , Cedar St.
Market
building, corner of
•v~rvth•ng
Cedar and Third, Tuesday,
from 9 a.m. • 4 p.m. and
·Wednesday from 9 a.m .. sold,
out.
WEDNESDAY
GIRL SCOUT Service Unit
meeting for all leaders,
Pirouette
assistants, co-leaders and
Service Team members to be
Catch a sparkle
held in
basement of
trom
rhe morning sun.
Presbyterian Church. Piease
Hold the magic
bring all individual girl forms.
ol a audden brHze.
Keep those momenta alive.
They're your&amp; lor a lllet/me
with e diamond
engagement ring lrom
AT HOME
Orang• Biofeom.
TALLAHASSEE - Mrs.
Betty McBride of Tallahassee,
Fla. is now at home recovering
.
.. ' .
from major surgery, Anyone
wishing to send a card may
address it to Mrs. Betty Me·
404 Second Ave.
Bride, 4002B Apalachee Pky.,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Tallahassee, Fla., 32301.

'

Miss ·Gardner(Given
Pre-Nuptial Sho
...

Mrs. David Ray Holley and
Michelle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Paul Holley and ·Edward
Donna Reynolds, Mrs. Doris
CHESHIRE ~ Miss Linda Edith Gardner.
Holley, Rodney; Mr. and Mrs. Gardner, bri~lect of Larry
Mrs . Margaret
Sending gifts were Mrs. Roush,
Kenneth Holley, Kenny and Cox, was honQred with a bridal Mildred. Scott, Mrs. Estelle Cbughenour, Mrs. Leona
Angela, Westville ; Velma
shower Friliay evening, Aug. Ralph, Mollie Johnson, Mrs. Spire&amp; and Mrs. Mary Darst.
Holley, Mr. and Mrs. tbarles
'
25, at het home in tbeshire'
Marion, Mr. and Mrs·. tbarles
Hostesses for the evening were
Walter, Scott, tberyl and Jan
Mrs. Lucille. Rupe, Mrs. Letha
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Davis and Mrs. Edith Gardner.
Ray, Catherine, Clarence Jr.
Games· were played with
and Mary Beth; Mrs. Frank ' prizes . won by. Mrs. Louise
Haynes, Jackie Harris and Mr.
Gihnore, Mrs. 'Pal Rickman,
and Mrs. Julius Hatcher, Joey,
Vera Thomas and Mrs .
Theresa
and
Eugene,
Roberta Kail. The door prize
tbarleston, W. Va., and Mr. was won by Mrs. Roberta Kail.
and Mrs . Edwar&lt;t Welsh,
. Many lovely and useful gifts
Stephanie Mcinerney, Mr . and
were
opened
and
Mrs. Homer Marion, Marty
acknowledged after which
and Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.
refreshments of cake, ice
Tony Marion, Mr. and Mrs.
cream, potato chips, mints and
Berkley Marion, Julia, Alan
lemonade were served.
and JiU, Rod Neil, Greg •Alban
Attending ;.... Mrs. Dorothy
and Mr, and Mrs. Eddie
Roush, Kathleen Noble, Mrs.
Harris.
Lucille Mulford, Mrs. Louise
The afternoon and evening
Gilman; Robin Sheline, Mrs.
were spent visiting with one
Kathy . Cox, Mrs. Gail Sisson,
another and the children enMrs. Ann Schukert, Mrs.
joyed a hay ride. Everyone left
' . . only
50·
Thelma Rupe, Mrs. Rita
hoping to meet again in
Buckley, Mrs. Helen Spears,
August, 1973.
Mrs. Garnett Rupe, Sandra
and Nancy Cox, Mrs. Mary
Cox, Mrs . Katherine Yeauger,
Virginia Ralph, Mrs. Louise
Roush, Mrs. Lucille Rupe, Mrs.
Roberta Kail, Mrs. Ada Ward,
Mrs. Helen Carpenter, Mrs.
Martha Fry, Mrs. Annabelle
Sisson, Mrs. Letha Davis, Mrs.
Darlene Price, Vera Thomas,
Mrs . Tanna Swindell, Mrs.
Katherine Gardner, Mrs. Mary
Beebee and Tara, Mrs.
Marguerite Kail, Mrs. Sandra
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and Neal, Mrs. Katie Shoemaker,
Mrs. Ray Redman, 322 Mrs. Jewell Martin, Mrs. Jay
LaGrange, Dr., Gallipolis, are Hall, Sr., Cathy Hall, Mrs. Pat
announcing the birth of their Rickman, Pam North and Mrs.
second child, a daughter, on
Morning, noon or ni~hl a wonde rful way tu feel jJ.IIIllJ&gt;ul't!d and
Aug. 30. She weighed six
look chlc. This garland embroidered f~sh. ion i ~ lwke :1s l'umfut·i ·
able when you sink Into it s foam cush ion and t&gt;uunq· .~ ull•
pounds, 15'k ounces and was
twice as attractive when you know It's machln«! w;1Sh.dlh·
20" long . Lori Renee is
Avocado, black, blue, cerise
5(4-5 1 ~J . \l 1 G-7 1 ~L
L(8-9 1/ 2), XL{l&lt;' - 11 1/2)
welcomed home by her
VISITS PARENTS
brother, Ray Thomas, age 3.
BIDWELL - Mrs. Marie
Maternal grandparents are Voreh and "her two youngest
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long and children of Tallahassee, Fla.,
paternal grandparents are Mr. were recent guests of her
and Mrs. Thomas Redman. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Great-grandmothers are Mrs. Phillips, BidwelL Mrs. Voreh
Mary Clatworthy,Mrs. Mrytle spent two weeks visiting
Long, Mrs. Sue Johnson and friends and family in the area
Mrs. Clara Redman .
and in West Virginia.
412-414 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.

LuBn
PIusn
V~our

·~ s~uff
3

Redmans
Have Baby
Daughter

BIIIIY

Band Instruments designed
especially for students.

322

Second Ave.

54 State St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0687

Canvas coat with Imported fake opossum
trim, Pile and quilt
lined. Boot length, tie
belt.

Your headquarter• for
SELMER/BUNDY
Band Instrulllents

wood.'''
Ther~ is even a room re·
served for a ghost. ll 's a
small bedroom , tucked away
on an upper floor. Rod's lour
English sheepdogs refuse to

money .

"They somehow like lo
equate quality with so me-body starving in a garret.
I've always fel l that any body who starves in a garret prouably belonged there .
None of us have had thin gs
handed to us- ! had to go out
and work for what I've got. "
And he still works and
works hard. There is so mething driving him , perhaps
the memory of the poverty
he knew as a boy . He turns
out poems , publishes his line
of gift books, produces rec·
ords, gives concerts. He has
a new album of his own
songs, cal led "Odyssey,"
which he thinks is his best
yet. He's lately embarked on
a sched ule or lectures .
But he doesn't feel thai
he's over-fragmented , !hal
he's going in too many different directions.
"When I was a cowboy,"
he says, " I had to do everything, from milking to branding lo mending fences . And
when I worked as a lumberjack, f had to do everyt.hing
from lopping trees lo loading
lumber
·• r think that people in the
art s should be able to do
many things, too. I like do ing everything I do."
He wants lo branch out
even branchier- he 'd like to
write a novel , perhaps an
opera, an oratorio, a mass.
"But the mass would have
to be nonsec tarian," he says.
.. It would be a mass for people who believe in God but
also for people who believe

ROD McKUEN, facing that ·traumatic 40th birthday ,
says it's "time lo rea,ssess m~ life."
go into it. ll e says he believes the original owner, an
opera singer named Gertrude, died there.
"I've seen her," he says .
"She wears a nightgown,
either white or very pale
blue . She isn 't frightening ,"
Besides his four dogs, llod
also owns seven cats. Somebody once suggested that he
ought to marry Doris Day,
Hollywood's premiere ar,imaleuse.
" Why not'" Rod answered.
"I'm getting close to her
age."
He says he 'II be 40 soon
and that's always a traumatic birthday for a man .
Especially so for Rod. He
used to say he doubted if
he'd reach that milestone.
For some reason he · expected to die early.
"It's time for me lo re assess my life," he says .
"f've been spending too
much time away from home ,
too many days and months
on the road. Now that I've
found this house I want to do
less traveling."
Contributing to his need to

POLLY'S POINTERS
Sweaters Come Through
In the Stretch
POLLY CRAMER

reevaluate his life was the
death, about a year ago, of
his mother . That hit him
· hard , because

they

were

close.
" Now l have to figure out
who I'm doing it all lor ,"
he says. " I think maybe it's
time I got married . Tha t
might be nice. I came close
twice but never quite made
it . Maybe a houseful of chi I·
dren. instead of English
sheepdogs, would be a good
idea."
He does think that the
marriage vow is wrong, thai
the wordin g shouldn't be
"'Til death do us pari ," but,
ra ther, '"Til we beco me in·
compatible and can't take
each other any more ."
He'd be a good catch for
any girl. From a humble and
unhappy beginning, he's become a phenomenon . He's

sold more books of poetry
than any poet. Almost single·
handedly , he's made poetry
big business.
He's happiest about the
fact that " the establishment"
IS taking his work seriously in Man ."
He says at first the poetry
Knee to Floor
Fuzzy mohair and wool
jumpers are going to new
lengths tbla fall. Ranging
from above the lrnee down
to the floor, the jumpers
come in pastels and ean be
worn with print blouses. For
evening wear, the mohair
Jumper ellli be worn alone.

Blazer Interest
Cotton blazers in bright
summery prints add a bit of
interest to plain sleeveless
dresses. The suppressed
waist looks best on women
with trim waistlines. Puff
sleeves and shoulders should
only be worn by smaller
women .

There Are
Weddings
And Then
More Weddings

,

Jl"'P

'*

i

SIZES 8 TO 16

2 lb. pkg.

COLORS: OYSTER, RUST
Store Hours
Monday &amp; Friday
9:30AMio8 PM
Tues .• Wed., Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30AMio5 PM

"$6500

Jacket Excitement with summer. The new flowpalazzo pants look great
Late summer and right ing
topped with halters and bare
Into fall, there's lots of ex- tops.
citement ln the coat and
jacket department. Short
warm-up jackets, the varsity
kind, are made In lively
plaids of brushed wool. The
younger set will latch on to
Oil Vs. Crow's Feet
the new woodsman's shirts,
Occasional f a c l a I masso popular with jeans and
sages
baby oil, or the
overalls.
· naturalwith
oils from nuts, vegetables, seeds and fruits will
help eliminate little craw's
Hold Onto Halters
feet at the outer edges of
Don't peek away those the eyes. Daily use will prehalter lop1 _too 1000. The vent drying and Oaldng.
~~~re · midriff won't leave

OLUMBI
Solitaire! ·

minister Rev. C. Mason Harvey,
above, administers the marital rites

to 7 S couples at once in o corral at
Synonon Ranch in California, a center for recovered drug addicts. Be-

'h ct

'295 set

1 ct

1

low. Princess Chantal and her
father, Prince Henri, the Count of
Paris, arrive at the Royal Chapel of
Dreu•, France, for the princess'
marriage to Boron Francois Xavier
de Sombucy de Sargue.

Crowd Expected For Sunday Meet
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
Emancipation celebration will
be held at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds Sunday,
Sept. 17. This year will mark
the 109th continuous ob·

CANASTA CLUB
GALLIPOLIS - The J.J.F.
Canasta Club met recently at
the home of Mrs. John Kennedy . Mrs . Pearl Board won
the high prize , Mrs. Julius
Pasquale won the low prize and
the prize of the month .
Refreshments were served
afterwards with a social hour
following. The next meeting
will be al the home of Mrs.
Delmer

servance in this area.
Principle speakers for this
occasion will be the Rev . Henry
Fletcher, Moderator of the
Providence
Baptist
Association, and the Rev. P. C.

495

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Smith, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Other dignitaries bringing
greetings will be present.
A well-planned program as
well as the customary large
crowd is anticipated. Mrs.
Dorothy Lewis Thomas is the
chairman .

422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

STIIIUTS
on the fiLL
. ''

•

~,

You will fl~d your entire wardrobe In the ... "TRADITIONAL SHOP" at
the Haskins-Tanner Co. The 72 season's handsome new colors and styles. .
, All you guys will be the headofthe class with the newest classics from our
complete collection!

0

0

I

*H.I.S.

*McGREGOR
*ARROW

SHOES

\

*PEDWIN
*FREEMAN

,.
II
I

I

SWEATERS

I
I

0

0

SHIRTS

*ARROW
McGREGOR

I

0

I

ARROW
ENRO

FOR SMLKING F€€T
... THE: )OFT N\OC
•

ss

onderful

T.M.

YOUNG SHO! ~AGHIONS

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem·or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Is "Yes" To Get A...

SPORT SHIRTS

il8'Ji"t1'Wi'WJ~'\itli1~,

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with manufacturers
and dressmakers who put tiny fasteners at the back neck·
line of dresses instead of having the zippers go all the
way to the top. Those who live alone and have no one to
fasten them often have to change to another dress when
they cannot reac h the fastener. It is either that or go
out feeling half-dressed and having to 'remember to ask
a friend to do it before making an entrance at a party or
some other place.-FLOSSIE
DEAR POLLY-I have (ound that it is possible to re.
move water marks from wood furniture by rubbing the
spot with a piece of felt
that has b e e n dipped in
dark staining furniture pol·
ish. (Polly's nete-The kind
I use Is labeled "Scratch
removing polish" and looks
almost like Iodine.) If the
whiteness does not disap·
pear after several minutes
of firm rubbing with this,
apply the polish with the
finest steel wool. Rub very
..
gently and with the grain
of the wood. Our mahogany plano had such a spot and
this ts what the piano tuner recommended for it. I hope
you like my hint as much as I liked so many of yours
that have benefited me so frequently .-SANDRA
DEAR POLLY-When making some long play pants I
had no elastic for the waist on hand so I used the elastic
lop from an old pair of panty hose. This band was already
the correct size and worked perfectly. As this elastic is
not so strong it is more comfortable and stretchable than
what I would have bought. Also a good idea when sewing
for chlldren .-ZULA

All You Have To Say

But the means vary. Presbyterian

DEAR POLLY-I have a "mother-in-law tongue" t;
plant that blooms. My mother-in-law has one but
hers has never bloomed nor has any other I have
seen . I wish someone would enlighten me as to
whether or not this is a usual thing or if I have a r
freak or extraordinary plant. Hope someone can
satisfy my curiosity.-MRS. P. R. H.
~
" 'l'J

Was hington Irving wrote
under lhe pen names of Jon .
athan Oldstyle and Diedricl1
Knickerbocker.

The end is the some: a morrioge,

~

(NfWSPAPU ENTflPRIS! ASSN. )

Cookies

'

By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD- tNEA) In his time, Rod McKuen has
been a drifter, a roamer
footloose and fancy free . No
more, He's come home.
Th~ poet-songwriter·singerpubhsher-and so forth has
found his place. It's a big
house in a beautiful part of
Beverly Hills. It isn't exactly a mansion but It's no
hovel, either.
"This is where I want to
live the rest of my days "
he says . "! don't care where
it is, it's home. It doesn 't
matter if it's Timbuktu or
Los Angeles .
"I walked in and said this
is it. I'm home."
He showed me around
room after beautiful room:
He doesn't know how many
rooms there are-"somebody says 30, but I don't
know. Someday I'll have to
count them ."
There are rooms for his
staff-people who help him
With his many enterprisesto work in. There is his own
living quarters. There are
servants' rooms. There is the
I i bra r y, wood-paneled and
lovely.
" I call this the Diana Ross
room," he said. " I heard
that she was shown the
house before I was, and
when she reached this room
and saw the wood paneling.
she said, 'Well, we could
always p a p e r over the

DEAR POLL¥-To be sure that Orion sweaters do not
stretch, Mrs. H. G. F. should always be sure they are
THOROUGHLY dry. Wash in the machine, toss in the
dryer but do make sure they are absolutely dry before
removing . I find they stretch if just a wee bit dam~ .
Above aU wash and dry according to the manufacturers
Instructions but always make sure a sweater is bone dry
before wearing it - LAVERNE

Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

~

r•le, hack sl ulf.
" Th••y Jell," he says, " lhnl
anybody who sold a lot ol
books of poems couldn't be
very good. They kept referring to me as 't he millionaire poe! .' They fo rgot, or
never knew, that T. S. Eliot
was a millionaire. that W. H.
Auden does alright. that
Robe r I Browning wasn't
hurling. a lot or poets made

-~- Polly's Problem •kl&lt;~lf&gt;''&lt;tmon•*''";

Events i

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

Poet Happy
People Take
His Work
Seriously

Gallipolis, o.

Royal Crest

' BRUNICARDI
HOUSE
QF .MUSIC

cntks looked on hi s &lt;.:ontr·i·
butiom; as purely lH~con4l ·

'· '

Since 1859

School bands are starting
now·- oo have your child
ask his school band director
which instrument he
should play, Theri bring
him In to choose-from our
complete sloe~ of famous

Mi II ionai re

• DEAR POLLY-Mrs. H. G. F. who has trouble with
her Orton ski sweaters stretching should put them ln a
bag (a pillowcase will do) and wash in the washing machine in cool water and !hen dry in a cool dryer. r take
them out while still damp, pat into shape and let them
dry flat.- MRS. R. B.

Q(AO.OU\Q~

RETURN ROME
GALl.IPOLJS - Mr . and
Mrs . Richard Mahan have
returned to their home in
Oceanside, Calif. , after a
week 's vacation with his ·
pare11ts, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Mahan , Gallipolis, and other
relatives and friends. He will
enter his junior year at 1\1 'ra
Costa College in Oceam.. de
where he is a member of the
Alpha G•mma Sigma honor
society.

Says He's 'Home' to Stay

McKuen

By

I: : Coming li
f~

'

,.

11- 1'IR &amp;nlay Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 3, 1972

Be

BELTS •••

Indian princess ... or casual type . , .

*PARIS
•SWANK

or simply now girl. Glove-soft
leathers, roomy moe toes, hearty heels,
more sole. Scene-stealers for
all your goings-on. ·

arl'!S
t1lt . .u, """' .......
3ll Soe..,. AH.
Golll101ts, o.

Monday &amp; Friday
9:30tol P.M.
Thursday
9:30 toll Noon

Tues. Wed. &amp; Sol.
':301o5 P.M.

jACKETS •••
* H.I.S.
*MCGREGOR
*CRESCO

SLACKS.

*H.LS.
* FARitAH

••

�f

Families Attend
Anttu(ll Reunion
.

..

CAROLYN LUMAN

CHARLOTTE MILLER

SARAH OWENS

. Three Teachers Chosen
: . As Outstanding Teachers
•'

•

GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of the late Mr. and
Mrs . Homer Holley met
Sunday, Aug . 20, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Holley,
· Gallipolis, for the Holley
family reunion.
At noon, picnic baskets were
shared by Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Holley, Rev. and Mrs. Alfred
Holley, Sally, Diane and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Holley and
Kathy Daniels, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs . Eugene Holley,
Cindy, Debbie; and Connie,
Vinton; Mrs. Clyde (Pauline)
Elliott and Curt, Mark
Newberry and Mrs. James
Greenup, Northup: Mr. and

:·

CADMUS- Carolyn Lwnan,
tbarlotte Miller and Sarah
, Owens have been selected as
:: Outstanding · Elementary
• Teachers of America for 1972,
~ according to William Sheets,
-: Principal' of Cadmus Schools.
' Nominated by the school
principal earlier this year,
these teachers are selected for
this national honor on the basis
· of their professional and civic
' achievements.
· Outstanding Elementary
, Teachers of America is an
: annual program honoring the
: men and women who have
• distinguished themselves by
' their service and leadership in
: the field ·· of elementary
education. Each year, the

biographies of those honored'
are featured in the awards
volume, Outstanding
Elementary Teachers of
America.
In announcing the award
winners to lhe school principal,
Dr . V. Gilbert Beers, director
of the OutsUlnding Elementary
Teachers of America program,
cited them for their exceptional service.
"The men and women chosen
for the high honor," Dr. Beers

said, "have explored new
paths, developed new insights
and efrectively communicated
their knowledge to their

students and colleagues, They
are the exceptional teachers."
Guidelines for selection
include a teacher's talent in the
classroom, civic service and
professional recognition.
Dr. Beers, in addition to
directin&amp;
the
national
education awards program, is
a noted teacher, writer and
editor
of
educa ti onal
publications. He holds a Ph.D.
from Northwestern University
·and additional degrees from
Wheaton College and Northern
Baptist Theological Seminary.

5on Born In
Bay Village
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. George Christ (Betty
: Clendenin) are announcing the
: birth of a seven pound, four
, · ounce son at the Fair View
. Park Hospital in Bay Village. ·
. Because Ryan Edward's father
· is a track coach, the parents
:hope their new son Ryan will be
:a runner or a high jumper.
. Mrs. Varney Faye Clen,den in, 96 Court St., is the happy
:grandmother. She now has six
,grandsons and one granddaughter.
SPECIAL SERVICES
LECTA - The Lecta tburch
of God Holiness Tabernacle
'will have its homecoming with
a dinner at noon Sunday, Sept.
JO, Special singing and
preaching will be featured.
Everyone is welcome to attend.

SPECIAL
BAND
INSTRUMENT

TRIAL
PLAN
for beginners

Krodel Park Is
Site Of Reunion
POINT PLEASANT - The
John G. Hudson family met at
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va., Sunday, Aug. 27, for their
family reunion. A dinner was
enjoyed at noon and the af.
ternoon was spent in visiting
and fellowship.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Bordman, Stan and
Vana and Mrs. Woodrow
Hudson and Mark, Pt.
Pleasant; Mrs. Edith Bordman
and Charles, Patriot ; Mr, and
Mrs. Ray Woods, Athens
Stergi, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Hudson and son Clay, Joe,
Scotty and Victor Van Sickle
and Eddie Flowers, Gallipolis;
Mrs . Alberta Parker and
Sheila, MI. Gilead; Mr. and
Mrs. J.D. Long, Henderson, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs. J. S.
Dunlavy, Chauncey; and Mrs.
Wanda Bailey, Teresa, Terry,
Tina and Kelly, and Mr. and
Mrs. Chesler Edwards, Connie
and Cheryl, Nitro, W. Va .

Newcomers Plan.

To Attend Race
GALLIPOLIS
The
Newcomers Club is beginning
its new year with a trip to
Scioto Downs Tuesday, Sept,
12. The bus will leavethe public
boating dock at 5 p.m. It is
Ladies Night at the race track
and the last evening of trotting
for this season.
Reservations have been
made for dinner in the Club
!louse. The cost will be $5 per
couple or $2.50 per individual
round trip plus cost of the
meal.
YOU COULDN'T BELIEVE this waste receptacle
Reservations may be made
penguin couldn't swallow the whole thing, but the arm
by calling Mrs. Herman Koby,
of u munnequln Is still slicking out In Largo. Flu,
446·9356 ;
Mrs .
Arthur
Espenscheid, 245-51151, or Mrs.
CLASS OF '38
r-'~:::::::::1... ::-::::ooo:, Cornell. 446-3915. Because
GALLIPOLIS - Blain Mohr,
there will be no telephoning
chainnan of the GAHS Class of
this month and there is only
1938, has announced plans for a
room for 40 persons, reser·
meeting to be held Thursday,
vations
should be made early
Sept. 14, at 7:30p.m., at the
with the deadline Sept. 8. It is
home of Lt. Col. I Ret. ) and
hoped that many new and old
Mrs. George Grace, 334 Third
comers
will attend.
Ave . This meeting, during
which plans will be made for
the 35th reunion iri 1973, is open SUNDAY
GARDEN CLUB
to anyone wishing to help with ANNUAL German Ridge
GALLIPOLIS
The
the plans. Information on class homecoming with a basket Wayside Garden Club will hold
members should be given to dinner at noon. Rev. Gomer a meeting at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
Willene Edwards, 446-1459; Jenkins is the speaker. at the home of Mrs. Emerson
Bess Grace, 44&amp;-0953, or Blain Everyone is welcome to attend. Reese . A home flower show,
Mohr, 675-1426.
ANNUAL NEAL reunion at . installation of officers and
Vinton Park with basket dinner payment of dues will be on the
DIES IN CRASH
at
noon .
agenda ,
GEORGETOWN, Ohio (UP!)
- William·R. Griego, 25, Lodi, SPEARS reunion at Lake
N.J., was killed late Friday in Jackson, basket dinner at
a three-car crash three miles noon .
north of here in Brown County. TUESDAY
Two other p')I:S..ons were in· ENGLISH Club, hostess
jured in the collisibn on Ohio 68. Rosebud Baker, co-hostess
Elizabeth Evans, 7 p.m., Mrs.
Larry Owens to speak on folk
music.
WAYSIDE Garden Club, 7:30
p.m ., home of Mrs. Emerson
Reese , home flower show,
installation of officers and
payment of dues,
RUMMAGE SALE , Cedar St.
Market
building, corner of
•v~rvth•ng
Cedar and Third, Tuesday,
from 9 a.m. • 4 p.m. and
·Wednesday from 9 a.m .. sold,
out.
WEDNESDAY
GIRL SCOUT Service Unit
meeting for all leaders,
Pirouette
assistants, co-leaders and
Service Team members to be
Catch a sparkle
held in
basement of
trom
rhe morning sun.
Presbyterian Church. Piease
Hold the magic
bring all individual girl forms.
ol a audden brHze.
Keep those momenta alive.
They're your&amp; lor a lllet/me
with e diamond
engagement ring lrom
AT HOME
Orang• Biofeom.
TALLAHASSEE - Mrs.
Betty McBride of Tallahassee,
Fla. is now at home recovering
.
.. ' .
from major surgery, Anyone
wishing to send a card may
address it to Mrs. Betty Me·
404 Second Ave.
Bride, 4002B Apalachee Pky.,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Tallahassee, Fla., 32301.

'

Miss ·Gardner(Given
Pre-Nuptial Sho
...

Mrs. David Ray Holley and
Michelle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Paul Holley and ·Edward
Donna Reynolds, Mrs. Doris
CHESHIRE ~ Miss Linda Edith Gardner.
Holley, Rodney; Mr. and Mrs. Gardner, bri~lect of Larry
Mrs . Margaret
Sending gifts were Mrs. Roush,
Kenneth Holley, Kenny and Cox, was honQred with a bridal Mildred. Scott, Mrs. Estelle Cbughenour, Mrs. Leona
Angela, Westville ; Velma
shower Friliay evening, Aug. Ralph, Mollie Johnson, Mrs. Spire&amp; and Mrs. Mary Darst.
Holley, Mr. and Mrs. tbarles
'
25, at het home in tbeshire'
Marion, Mr. and Mrs·. tbarles
Hostesses for the evening were
Walter, Scott, tberyl and Jan
Mrs. Lucille. Rupe, Mrs. Letha
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Davis and Mrs. Edith Gardner.
Ray, Catherine, Clarence Jr.
Games· were played with
and Mary Beth; Mrs. Frank ' prizes . won by. Mrs. Louise
Haynes, Jackie Harris and Mr.
Gihnore, Mrs. 'Pal Rickman,
and Mrs. Julius Hatcher, Joey,
Vera Thomas and Mrs .
Theresa
and
Eugene,
Roberta Kail. The door prize
tbarleston, W. Va., and Mr. was won by Mrs. Roberta Kail.
and Mrs . Edwar&lt;t Welsh,
. Many lovely and useful gifts
Stephanie Mcinerney, Mr . and
were
opened
and
Mrs. Homer Marion, Marty
acknowledged after which
and Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.
refreshments of cake, ice
Tony Marion, Mr. and Mrs.
cream, potato chips, mints and
Berkley Marion, Julia, Alan
lemonade were served.
and JiU, Rod Neil, Greg •Alban
Attending ;.... Mrs. Dorothy
and Mr, and Mrs. Eddie
Roush, Kathleen Noble, Mrs.
Harris.
Lucille Mulford, Mrs. Louise
The afternoon and evening
Gilman; Robin Sheline, Mrs.
were spent visiting with one
Kathy . Cox, Mrs. Gail Sisson,
another and the children enMrs. Ann Schukert, Mrs.
joyed a hay ride. Everyone left
' . . only
50·
Thelma Rupe, Mrs. Rita
hoping to meet again in
Buckley, Mrs. Helen Spears,
August, 1973.
Mrs. Garnett Rupe, Sandra
and Nancy Cox, Mrs. Mary
Cox, Mrs . Katherine Yeauger,
Virginia Ralph, Mrs. Louise
Roush, Mrs. Lucille Rupe, Mrs.
Roberta Kail, Mrs. Ada Ward,
Mrs. Helen Carpenter, Mrs.
Martha Fry, Mrs. Annabelle
Sisson, Mrs. Letha Davis, Mrs.
Darlene Price, Vera Thomas,
Mrs . Tanna Swindell, Mrs.
Katherine Gardner, Mrs. Mary
Beebee and Tara, Mrs.
Marguerite Kail, Mrs. Sandra
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . and Neal, Mrs. Katie Shoemaker,
Mrs. Ray Redman, 322 Mrs. Jewell Martin, Mrs. Jay
LaGrange, Dr., Gallipolis, are Hall, Sr., Cathy Hall, Mrs. Pat
announcing the birth of their Rickman, Pam North and Mrs.
second child, a daughter, on
Morning, noon or ni~hl a wonde rful way tu feel jJ.IIIllJ&gt;ul't!d and
Aug. 30. She weighed six
look chlc. This garland embroidered f~sh. ion i ~ lwke :1s l'umfut·i ·
able when you sink Into it s foam cush ion and t&gt;uunq· .~ ull•
pounds, 15'k ounces and was
twice as attractive when you know It's machln«! w;1Sh.dlh·
20" long . Lori Renee is
Avocado, black, blue, cerise
5(4-5 1 ~J . \l 1 G-7 1 ~L
L(8-9 1/ 2), XL{l&lt;' - 11 1/2)
welcomed home by her
VISITS PARENTS
brother, Ray Thomas, age 3.
BIDWELL - Mrs. Marie
Maternal grandparents are Voreh and "her two youngest
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long and children of Tallahassee, Fla.,
paternal grandparents are Mr. were recent guests of her
and Mrs. Thomas Redman. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Great-grandmothers are Mrs. Phillips, BidwelL Mrs. Voreh
Mary Clatworthy,Mrs. Mrytle spent two weeks visiting
Long, Mrs. Sue Johnson and friends and family in the area
Mrs. Clara Redman .
and in West Virginia.
412-414 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0.

LuBn
PIusn
V~our

·~ s~uff
3

Redmans
Have Baby
Daughter

BIIIIY

Band Instruments designed
especially for students.

322

Second Ave.

54 State St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0687

Canvas coat with Imported fake opossum
trim, Pile and quilt
lined. Boot length, tie
belt.

Your headquarter• for
SELMER/BUNDY
Band Instrulllents

wood.'''
Ther~ is even a room re·
served for a ghost. ll 's a
small bedroom , tucked away
on an upper floor. Rod's lour
English sheepdogs refuse to

money .

"They somehow like lo
equate quality with so me-body starving in a garret.
I've always fel l that any body who starves in a garret prouably belonged there .
None of us have had thin gs
handed to us- ! had to go out
and work for what I've got. "
And he still works and
works hard. There is so mething driving him , perhaps
the memory of the poverty
he knew as a boy . He turns
out poems , publishes his line
of gift books, produces rec·
ords, gives concerts. He has
a new album of his own
songs, cal led "Odyssey,"
which he thinks is his best
yet. He's lately embarked on
a sched ule or lectures .
But he doesn't feel thai
he's over-fragmented , !hal
he's going in too many different directions.
"When I was a cowboy,"
he says, " I had to do everything, from milking to branding lo mending fences . And
when I worked as a lumberjack, f had to do everyt.hing
from lopping trees lo loading
lumber
·• r think that people in the
art s should be able to do
many things, too. I like do ing everything I do."
He wants lo branch out
even branchier- he 'd like to
write a novel , perhaps an
opera, an oratorio, a mass.
"But the mass would have
to be nonsec tarian," he says.
.. It would be a mass for people who believe in God but
also for people who believe

ROD McKUEN, facing that ·traumatic 40th birthday ,
says it's "time lo rea,ssess m~ life."
go into it. ll e says he believes the original owner, an
opera singer named Gertrude, died there.
"I've seen her," he says .
"She wears a nightgown,
either white or very pale
blue . She isn 't frightening ,"
Besides his four dogs, llod
also owns seven cats. Somebody once suggested that he
ought to marry Doris Day,
Hollywood's premiere ar,imaleuse.
" Why not'" Rod answered.
"I'm getting close to her
age."
He says he 'II be 40 soon
and that's always a traumatic birthday for a man .
Especially so for Rod. He
used to say he doubted if
he'd reach that milestone.
For some reason he · expected to die early.
"It's time for me lo re assess my life," he says .
"f've been spending too
much time away from home ,
too many days and months
on the road. Now that I've
found this house I want to do
less traveling."
Contributing to his need to

POLLY'S POINTERS
Sweaters Come Through
In the Stretch
POLLY CRAMER

reevaluate his life was the
death, about a year ago, of
his mother . That hit him
· hard , because

they

were

close.
" Now l have to figure out
who I'm doing it all lor ,"
he says. " I think maybe it's
time I got married . Tha t
might be nice. I came close
twice but never quite made
it . Maybe a houseful of chi I·
dren. instead of English
sheepdogs, would be a good
idea."
He does think that the
marriage vow is wrong, thai
the wordin g shouldn't be
"'Til death do us pari ," but,
ra ther, '"Til we beco me in·
compatible and can't take
each other any more ."
He'd be a good catch for
any girl. From a humble and
unhappy beginning, he's become a phenomenon . He's

sold more books of poetry
than any poet. Almost single·
handedly , he's made poetry
big business.
He's happiest about the
fact that " the establishment"
IS taking his work seriously in Man ."
He says at first the poetry
Knee to Floor
Fuzzy mohair and wool
jumpers are going to new
lengths tbla fall. Ranging
from above the lrnee down
to the floor, the jumpers
come in pastels and ean be
worn with print blouses. For
evening wear, the mohair
Jumper ellli be worn alone.

Blazer Interest
Cotton blazers in bright
summery prints add a bit of
interest to plain sleeveless
dresses. The suppressed
waist looks best on women
with trim waistlines. Puff
sleeves and shoulders should
only be worn by smaller
women .

There Are
Weddings
And Then
More Weddings

,

Jl"'P

'*

i

SIZES 8 TO 16

2 lb. pkg.

COLORS: OYSTER, RUST
Store Hours
Monday &amp; Friday
9:30AMio8 PM
Tues .• Wed., Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30AMio5 PM

"$6500

Jacket Excitement with summer. The new flowpalazzo pants look great
Late summer and right ing
topped with halters and bare
Into fall, there's lots of ex- tops.
citement ln the coat and
jacket department. Short
warm-up jackets, the varsity
kind, are made In lively
plaids of brushed wool. The
younger set will latch on to
Oil Vs. Crow's Feet
the new woodsman's shirts,
Occasional f a c l a I masso popular with jeans and
sages
baby oil, or the
overalls.
· naturalwith
oils from nuts, vegetables, seeds and fruits will
help eliminate little craw's
Hold Onto Halters
feet at the outer edges of
Don't peek away those the eyes. Daily use will prehalter lop1 _too 1000. The vent drying and Oaldng.
~~~re · midriff won't leave

OLUMBI
Solitaire! ·

minister Rev. C. Mason Harvey,
above, administers the marital rites

to 7 S couples at once in o corral at
Synonon Ranch in California, a center for recovered drug addicts. Be-

'h ct

'295 set

1 ct

1

low. Princess Chantal and her
father, Prince Henri, the Count of
Paris, arrive at the Royal Chapel of
Dreu•, France, for the princess'
marriage to Boron Francois Xavier
de Sombucy de Sargue.

Crowd Expected For Sunday Meet
GALLIPOLIS - The annual
Emancipation celebration will
be held at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds Sunday,
Sept. 17. This year will mark
the 109th continuous ob·

CANASTA CLUB
GALLIPOLIS - The J.J.F.
Canasta Club met recently at
the home of Mrs. John Kennedy . Mrs . Pearl Board won
the high prize , Mrs. Julius
Pasquale won the low prize and
the prize of the month .
Refreshments were served
afterwards with a social hour
following. The next meeting
will be al the home of Mrs.
Delmer

servance in this area.
Principle speakers for this
occasion will be the Rev . Henry
Fletcher, Moderator of the
Providence
Baptist
Association, and the Rev. P. C.

495

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Smith, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Other dignitaries bringing
greetings will be present.
A well-planned program as
well as the customary large
crowd is anticipated. Mrs.
Dorothy Lewis Thomas is the
chairman .

422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

STIIIUTS
on the fiLL
. ''

•

~,

You will fl~d your entire wardrobe In the ... "TRADITIONAL SHOP" at
the Haskins-Tanner Co. The 72 season's handsome new colors and styles. .
, All you guys will be the headofthe class with the newest classics from our
complete collection!

0

0

I

*H.I.S.

*McGREGOR
*ARROW

SHOES

\

*PEDWIN
*FREEMAN

,.
II
I

I

SWEATERS

I
I

0

0

SHIRTS

*ARROW
McGREGOR

I

0

I

ARROW
ENRO

FOR SMLKING F€€T
... THE: )OFT N\OC
•

ss

onderful

T.M.

YOUNG SHO! ~AGHIONS

You will receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem·or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this newspaper.

Is "Yes" To Get A...

SPORT SHIRTS

il8'Ji"t1'Wi'WJ~'\itli1~,

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with manufacturers
and dressmakers who put tiny fasteners at the back neck·
line of dresses instead of having the zippers go all the
way to the top. Those who live alone and have no one to
fasten them often have to change to another dress when
they cannot reac h the fastener. It is either that or go
out feeling half-dressed and having to 'remember to ask
a friend to do it before making an entrance at a party or
some other place.-FLOSSIE
DEAR POLLY-I have (ound that it is possible to re.
move water marks from wood furniture by rubbing the
spot with a piece of felt
that has b e e n dipped in
dark staining furniture pol·
ish. (Polly's nete-The kind
I use Is labeled "Scratch
removing polish" and looks
almost like Iodine.) If the
whiteness does not disap·
pear after several minutes
of firm rubbing with this,
apply the polish with the
finest steel wool. Rub very
..
gently and with the grain
of the wood. Our mahogany plano had such a spot and
this ts what the piano tuner recommended for it. I hope
you like my hint as much as I liked so many of yours
that have benefited me so frequently .-SANDRA
DEAR POLLY-When making some long play pants I
had no elastic for the waist on hand so I used the elastic
lop from an old pair of panty hose. This band was already
the correct size and worked perfectly. As this elastic is
not so strong it is more comfortable and stretchable than
what I would have bought. Also a good idea when sewing
for chlldren .-ZULA

All You Have To Say

But the means vary. Presbyterian

DEAR POLLY-I have a "mother-in-law tongue" t;
plant that blooms. My mother-in-law has one but
hers has never bloomed nor has any other I have
seen . I wish someone would enlighten me as to
whether or not this is a usual thing or if I have a r
freak or extraordinary plant. Hope someone can
satisfy my curiosity.-MRS. P. R. H.
~
" 'l'J

Was hington Irving wrote
under lhe pen names of Jon .
athan Oldstyle and Diedricl1
Knickerbocker.

The end is the some: a morrioge,

~

(NfWSPAPU ENTflPRIS! ASSN. )

Cookies

'

By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD- tNEA) In his time, Rod McKuen has
been a drifter, a roamer
footloose and fancy free . No
more, He's come home.
Th~ poet-songwriter·singerpubhsher-and so forth has
found his place. It's a big
house in a beautiful part of
Beverly Hills. It isn't exactly a mansion but It's no
hovel, either.
"This is where I want to
live the rest of my days "
he says . "! don't care where
it is, it's home. It doesn 't
matter if it's Timbuktu or
Los Angeles .
"I walked in and said this
is it. I'm home."
He showed me around
room after beautiful room:
He doesn't know how many
rooms there are-"somebody says 30, but I don't
know. Someday I'll have to
count them ."
There are rooms for his
staff-people who help him
With his many enterprisesto work in. There is his own
living quarters. There are
servants' rooms. There is the
I i bra r y, wood-paneled and
lovely.
" I call this the Diana Ross
room," he said. " I heard
that she was shown the
house before I was, and
when she reached this room
and saw the wood paneling.
she said, 'Well, we could
always p a p e r over the

DEAR POLL¥-To be sure that Orion sweaters do not
stretch, Mrs. H. G. F. should always be sure they are
THOROUGHLY dry. Wash in the machine, toss in the
dryer but do make sure they are absolutely dry before
removing . I find they stretch if just a wee bit dam~ .
Above aU wash and dry according to the manufacturers
Instructions but always make sure a sweater is bone dry
before wearing it - LAVERNE

Is
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Money Back

~

r•le, hack sl ulf.
" Th••y Jell," he says, " lhnl
anybody who sold a lot ol
books of poems couldn't be
very good. They kept referring to me as 't he millionaire poe! .' They fo rgot, or
never knew, that T. S. Eliot
was a millionaire. that W. H.
Auden does alright. that
Robe r I Browning wasn't
hurling. a lot or poets made

-~- Polly's Problem •kl&lt;~lf&gt;''&lt;tmon•*''";

Events i

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS

Poet Happy
People Take
His Work
Seriously

Gallipolis, o.

Royal Crest

' BRUNICARDI
HOUSE
QF .MUSIC

cntks looked on hi s &lt;.:ontr·i·
butiom; as purely lH~con4l ·

'· '

Since 1859

School bands are starting
now·- oo have your child
ask his school band director
which instrument he
should play, Theri bring
him In to choose-from our
complete sloe~ of famous

Mi II ionai re

• DEAR POLLY-Mrs. H. G. F. who has trouble with
her Orton ski sweaters stretching should put them ln a
bag (a pillowcase will do) and wash in the washing machine in cool water and !hen dry in a cool dryer. r take
them out while still damp, pat into shape and let them
dry flat.- MRS. R. B.

Q(AO.OU\Q~

RETURN ROME
GALl.IPOLJS - Mr . and
Mrs . Richard Mahan have
returned to their home in
Oceanside, Calif. , after a
week 's vacation with his ·
pare11ts, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Mahan , Gallipolis, and other
relatives and friends. He will
enter his junior year at 1\1 'ra
Costa College in Oceam.. de
where he is a member of the
Alpha G•mma Sigma honor
society.

Says He's 'Home' to Stay

McKuen

By

I: : Coming li
f~

'

,.

11- 1'IR &amp;nlay Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 3, 1972

Be

BELTS •••

Indian princess ... or casual type . , .

*PARIS
•SWANK

or simply now girl. Glove-soft
leathers, roomy moe toes, hearty heels,
more sole. Scene-stealers for
all your goings-on. ·

arl'!S
t1lt . .u, """' .......
3ll Soe..,. AH.
Golll101ts, o.

Monday &amp; Friday
9:30tol P.M.
Thursday
9:30 toll Noon

Tues. Wed. &amp; Sol.
':301o5 P.M.

jACKETS •••
* H.I.S.
*MCGREGOR
*CRESCO

SLACKS.

*H.LS.
* FARitAH

••

�surveys have shOwn .,ihe

12 - The Sunday Ttmes·Sent.inel, Sunday, Sept. 3,1972

~:Mason

County News
~jMason Man Critically Injured
••
:· MASON - A 19 year-old Mason
~7nan was critically injured and his
~,:ompanion, who also sustained in·
: juries, were two of three persons taken
:,o area hospitals Friday evening after
:; ,.ing involve&lt;! in county roadway
J)!ushaps.
.
t• Marvin Newell, son of Mr . and Mrs .
:t'~nsil Newell of Fourth Street in
• ason • was listed in critical condition
turday in Holzer Medical Center
~;after receiving multiple fractures and
i;extensive head mjur1es m a smgle car
~!mishap near New Haven at 4:30 p.m.
"lFrlday evening. At midmorning today
~e had not regained clinsciou:mess.
•• Newell was a passenger 1n a car
tbeing driven byJames E. Roush, 18,
~tar Route, West Columbia. Roush was
::admitted to Veterans Memorial
{Hospital where attendants said today
"•he is In Satisfactory condition . .•~Attendants declined to release
~lnfonnation concerning his injuries.
! The two young men were taken to
~eterans Memorial In a New Haven
..!Emergency Squad ambulance, but then
~Newell ivas transported on to
;Gallipolis.

Sheriff Huffman a)SQ reports a third
roadway mishap which occurred
Friday night at 10:15 p.m. on State
Route 62 at West Columbia.

Sheriff Troy Huffman explained the
accident by saying that Roush lost
control of the car on a Secondary
roadway near the top of the hill after
passing the Union Campgrounds going
from New Haven out through the
country. The car went over the top of
the grade, into a ditch, up an
embankment, rolled back down the
roadway and finally came to a halt on
its wheels. Sheriff Huffman said. The
vehicle was totaled.
_
Newell, a graduate of Wahama High
School, is a part time employee of the
Jones' Boys in Gallipolis, 0.
A Huntin~on woman, Mary Ann

According to Sheriff Huffman, Bobt.y
Chapman, 42, of Canton, 0. said
another vehicle had forced his cat off
the roadway and that it had struck the
B &amp;S 0 Railroad switchbox before
finally coming to a stop.

Judgment

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•
c
I
Court A t 0 n
Judgment was granted In one action,
another was dismissesd from the court
docket and a hearing date was set,
which were among actions taken in
Mason County Circuit Court Friday
through orders signed by Judge James
Lee Thompson.
Mason County Hospital Inc. doing
business as Pleasant Valley Hospital
against Roy Smith and Hazel R. Smith
was compromised, settled and agreed
as was stricken from the court docket.
A land condemnation suit by
Appalachian Power Company against
Cecij A. Smith and Hazel R. Smith was
compromised, settled and agreed and
was stricken from the court docket.
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company, The Point Pleasant
Chemical plant through its attorney
Samuel D. Littlepage presented a
petition to the court, a Court order
disclosed, showing that Glenn E. Ellis,
a member of Local 644, The Rubber,
Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of
America AFL-CIO Union, has violated
a lawful order of the Court.
Glenn E. Ellis is to appear before the
Court at 9:30 a.m. September 8 and
show cause why he should not be held In
contempt for violating the lawful order
of this Court it was stipulated In the
'
or der.

-

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jCounty Man Named
:Senatorial Candidate
•

''

.
.
Another Point Pleasant businessmar.
has been named as a Fourth Senatorial
District candidate on the Democratic
.ticket to fill a vacancy recently created
by the resignation of Paul Crabtree.
Dave O'Neal was appointed by the
Fourth District Senatorial Executive
Conunittee to fill this vacancy on the
Democratic ballot In the November 7
General Election. ·
O'Neal's selection for this post came
about through a unanimous vote Friday
evening at a Conunittee meeting held at
the Village Restaurant in Ripley.

During the same meeting, Bob Reed,
member of the House of Delegates from
Clay County was elected chairman and
Mrs. Phyllis McCarty, Mason County
Executive Committeewoman was
elected to serve as Secretary.
Fourth
District
Senatorial
Executive Conunittee is made up of one
male and one female from each county
of the Fourth District which is
comprised of Mason, Clay, Roane,
Jackson and Putnam Counties.
Robert F. Hatfield of Putnam County,
a member of the House of Delegates,
was elected to fill the short term (two
year) for Senate created bythe
resignation of M. V. K. Knapp.
In a brief statement to the
Committee, O'Neal expressed His
aooreciation and gratitude for the
r:onfidence they have placed In him.He
pledges to campaign vigorously to be a
winner for the people of the Fourth
District, as he seeks this four year
term.

~

PV. Hospital
.
Gets Maximum
Accreditation
The Joint Commission 01.
Accreditation of Hospitals, composed of
the American Medical Association, the
American Hospital Association, the
Afuerican College of Physicians antrthe
American College of Surgeons has
officially accredited Pleasant Valley
Hospital for the maximwn accrediting
period of two years.
This noUfication followed a hospital
survey visit by two Joint Commission
Representatives on May 18, 1972
utilizing the recently revised and more
stringent survey regulations.
The communication from John D.
·Porterfield, M.D., Director to James L.
Farley, Administrator stated The
Board of the Joint Collll!"ssion on
Accceditation of Hospitals has
approved the reconunendation that
your hospital be fully accredited for a
period of two years, the maximum
accreditation possible. Your hospital is
therefore entitled to proudly display the
certificate of accrediation . The
commission wishes to commend you,
the Board of Trustees, Medical Staff

Canadians Called to Polls

of the strength it earned In the
1988 elections when Trudeau
attracted a tremendous
elections every four years.
SP.ats . The Progressive Con· amount of support' on the basis
Trudeau said he looked 11ervatives have 73, the New of his free -swinging perforward with "zest and en- Democratic party 25 and the
sonality.
thusiasm" to the campaign and Social Credit party has !3.
brushed
aside
as
"hypothetical" a question as to
whether he would return to
Parliament as opposition
leader if his Liberal party was
defeated in the general election.
" ...1 ~ll you right now that
we could lose this election," the
prime minister said. "We don 't
intend to, and though we can
lose, I'm trying to say we will

O'rfAWA (UPI ) - Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau dissolved Parliament
Friday and ordered • general
election Oct. 30. Trudeau, 32,
who was elected June 25, 1968,
made the announcement at a
news conference and expressed confidence he will not
looo any support to the opposition parties or separatist
forces within the c~untry.
He was elected to a five-year
term and could have served
without new elections until
July. However it has become
traditional in the Canadian not.' '
The Liberals now hold 148 of
government, which is modeled
the
264 House of Commons
on the British system, to call

Given In

Covington, was sent to Pleasant Valley Hospital following another single car
accident at the same time on State
Route 2 near Salt Creek.
She
apparently was checked and released.
The
Sheriff's
Department
investigated and said Ms. Covington
lost control afterdropping off the benn
with her car going across the road, over
an embankment and coming to a halt
near the edge of the Ohio River-

Luck Ended at 95 in Lottery
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Selective Service System said
Friday the highest draft lottery
number to be called in 1972
would be 95, apparently
meaning that about three
quarters of the young men
vulnerable to induction this
year would escape being
called .
In perhaps the final callup
announced before the draft
expires, Selective Service
officials said approximately
13,900 men with lottery num·
bers between 76 and 93 would
be called during October ,

To Hospital

The Stevens Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant was one of 24 business
concerns recei vlng loans from the
Small Business Administration,
Clarksburg District office, during the
months of August. The Stevens loan
was for $63,000 and they have five
employes, according to a release from
the SBA Clarksburg office.

Daniel Egbert, 13,of Palestine, W.Va.
was rushed to Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, 0 . by the Mason
Emergency Squad .Friday night' after
becoming ill while attending the
Wahama. Wirt County game at Bachtel
"'ield.
Squad Chief James Lavender said the
youth was a member of the visiting
team's band and because of not feeling
well earlier had not taken the bus but
carne to Mason with his parents for the
game. Later, Lavender said, he
developed a high fever and the
emergency unit was summoned.

and Hospital
Personnel for
maintaining stanaaras aeservmg or
accredliatlon and for your efforts to
improve the quality of patient care.
We are obviously pleased to have
received such an excellent report from
the Joint Commission, commented
Farley. "The outstanding c~peration
of the medical staff, adminiStrative
staff, hospital personnel and the ~oard
of Trustees made thiS max1mum
accrediatitation possible," Farley
concluded .

SHRIVER VISITING
CHARLESTON, W. VA. (UPI)-A
second campaign visit was scheduled in
the Mountain State beginning Sunday
night by Democratic vice presidential
hopeful Sargent Shriver.

ntlque Organs
On Display at
EvanS F.anns
RIO

STARTING YOUNG
LAS PALMAS, Canary
Islands, gpain (UP! ) - Dario
Rodriguez Diez Is a four-a-day
man - not excessive perhaps
· - but then he's only 2 years
old. He's been asking his
mother for cigarettes for
several months. "At first we
just gave him them for fun,"
said his mother, "but now he
in hales and blows out the
smoke through his nose like a
-grown man . He prefers them to

GRANDE _ Antique

.
grmd and paper roll organs are
on display this weekend at Bob
Evans Fan!'s, Route 35, Rio
Grande, Ohio.
.
Kyle Day of Mt. Vernon IS at
the . Farm Center today
exhibiting . a 100-year-old
Amarola grmd organ, aRagma
organ w1th metal d1scs, a
concert roller organ, paper roll
organs and a Wilcox symphonia organ . All are in
working condition .
Day has been restoring old
organs and player pianos for 2:i
years. His hobby has grown
into a full-time blllliness In his
home town of Mt. Vernon .
In addition to the Farm
Center activities, other free
attractions at the Bob Evans
Farm include a band of
gpanish Barb Mustangs, the
Homestead, the old Welsh
Windmill, log cabins and
friendly farm animals and
wildlife. All are welcome_

Thorough Cleansing
Cold cream doesn't give
the s k I o the deeP-down
cleansing It needs. For a
really thorough cleansing,
try washing with a pure soap
and a apeelal natural brlatle
complexion brush.

I

Business Administration
18 months
Jr. A~countlng

12 months

General Office

9months

Cia••• ~In S.pt.l4
Make -thing -1 of your future this Fall. Give
, youmH the skills which bring In a worthwhile pay·
check. And give you a cha11.ce to advance! Attend
a schooi whlf1l the sole purpaM is oolld buolnep
training and .;.,,..r placement. Fret Bulletin.

GallipoliS Business College

36 Lowst Str..t
St. Reg. No. 71-02-00328

Gallipolis. O.

..,"=~::=·::"::··=·=·:··,
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ctn. ITAll. Zl".

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liiU~ .. . ·UitlltiUIUlllllll

i

UIIUIIIU . . . . . . . . . . .

Sunday - Monday • Tuesday - Wednesday·
and Thursday Only!.

TWO WHOLE CHICKENS
55
16 PIECES

'

FOR EASY PICKUP CALL
Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad, Cole
446-2682
Slaw. Baked Beans, Rolls.
YOUR ORDER WILL
NO COUPONS TO CUP
BE READY

Try Our Specialties

1

UITTINGB

LABOR DAY
POMEROY - The home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
daughter, Vicki, has been "bl181ln'" with.actlvlty!
Arriving practical!y at the 11811le lime for v1a1ta were Mr. and
Mrs. Vlc!Dr E. Gaul, Victor, Jr., and Usa, ot 6175 Gilman,
Gil-den City, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. (Pat Gaul) Clay of
2'154 Golf!lde Rolld, apt. 715, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Mrs. J. B.
(Donna Gaul) QoockareU, Denise, Jfm and Jeff of Alexandria,
Va.
VICtor Is presently employed by the Evans Producll Co. ot
Plymouth, Mich. He and bls wife, Darlene, are both taking adlve
·roles In community affairs and VIc only recently was elected
trealltlrel' of the Garden City Jaycees.
Pat graduated from Eastern Michigan Unlveralt:y 1s11 ·
Decenlber with a bachelor of science degree In elemeotar1 ·
education and has accepted her first teaching poaition with tbe
Van Bll'ean Public Schools at Belleville, Mlcb., wllere lbe wUJ be
. teacblng &amp;eallld grade. Pat will be teaching In the same school
where llhe substltuted !tom JIIIIU8ry through June following her
graduation.
Her husband, Larry, also a graduate of E.M.U.In August
with a bechelor of business adminllltratlon, baa accepted the
position of staff &amp;CCOWitant with tbe CPA linn of Lybrand, Ross
Brothers and Montgomery of Detroit.
How about DoMa Gaul IXocklreU. Sbe, her huaband and
cbllcnn just recently returned to the United States having spent
three yellrll in Yokohoma, Japan, where they were sent by the
Navy Department of the U. S. government. Mr. Ctocklrell was a.
civilian employe working in budgeting and finance with 11M! Navy
Department.
Joining the enUre group for a dinner at tbe Gaul home on
Saturday were Mrs. Gaul's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Morgan,
Pomeroy Route 3.

MR. AND MRS. WAYNE CHASE were more than pleased
with the oboervance of their 50th wedding anniveraary recently.
Among the congratulatory notea was one from Congressman
aarence E. Mlller wblcb stated:
"ltl.s indeed a happy oceasllm when a couple has the d!Btlnct
privilege of celebrating 50 years of marriage together.
"May I commend you lor the fine job you have done In
raising a family? I hope you lind the years ahead joyfully
rewarding."
MRS. CXJNNIE NELSON of Columbua graduated with the
highest honors from Nationwide Beauty Academy in Columbus.
The coveted "cerUilcate of merit" was Jll1!sented to Connie
during the graduation luncbeoo. It reads:
"Granted to Qmnle Nelson who has been an outstanding
student at the Academy, haa always performed In \be most
e&gt;:emplll'}' manner, and has at all times upheld the highest
traditions of the Academy."
Coonlelsthedaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Haley of Rutland.

mE POPULAR NEW KINGS ISLAND, near Cincinnati, will
be open only on Saturdays and &amp;uldays loUowq Labor Day.
However, don't try to visit the amusement center oo Saturday,
Sept. 23, or Saturday, Sept. 30, bec11111e the center haa been
rented by large companies lor the exclusive use of employes on
thole dates.

No Substitutes

NEW SYSTEM
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Anew
fi t categories, rather than computerized method of
said.
select
by experience or party processing Medicaid claims
"We do want more people
service,,
, sa id King . 'For and bills went into operation
involved in politics, bul we
hope enough attention can be example , I got one of my today at the Ohio Department
called to this quota system so daughters to be an alternate. of Welfare. Acting State
that it can be turned around in She's a woman and she's under Welfare Director Robert C.
30. She didn't go. We didn 't Canary said the new computer
some way," said King.
King said although he didn't need her."
based system will " insure
like the quota system he tried
additional safeguards are built
to abide by the new rules.
into the expenditure of state
HAS HIGH RECORD
"We had to find the people to
and federal tax funds."
RACINE - Locust Grove
Twinklestar, a Sr _ 4-year old,
re gistered Guernsey cow
MarrlageLicenses
owned by Edson Roush,
POMEROY - Randall Ray Racin e, has completed an
Proflitt, 21, Portland, and official
_DHIR
actual
Candy Carol Hoback, 18, production record of 13,24()
Racine ; Steven Howard · pounds of milk and &gt;82 pounds
Runyon, 19, U.S. Army, and of butlerfat, in 291 days, two
Patsy K. Greer, 16, Pomeroy, times a day milking, according
RD; Dennis Eduard Dudding, to The American Guernsey
20, U.S. Army, and Alice Cattle Club. The testing was
Elizabeth Brown, 18, New supervised by Ohio State
Haven.
University.

tlyakf

~~JIPJII

..........

"THAT OLD-.FASHJONID COODfllll"

2nd &amp;.elM sr.

'lliESQUIRRELSEW!NwUiopen $ept.l. Followlns Is the
!l'()jecled outlook for the hunting oe1110n In Melp CoiDlty 81seen
by game protectors:
"Squlrre) good; lD8BI aop better than lilt year; hunting
lbould be good ac:ross entire co111ty. Habblt good over enlire
COWity, best In IOUtheut llectlollll of county. Groule population
good; buntinB llbould be 81 good aslsll year. Deer good; should
be better than laat year. QuaU population up from last year; best
In fann ll'ellll In IIOutheaat 118ctiolll-of county."
JHONDA PARKER, DAUGJn'ER of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Parker of Coal Grove, and a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
ArbaUjlb, 'l'uAlfll1l Plalnl, and Ralph Parter of Cl!ester, Is a
member of the Starliners Baton Corp1 of Lawrence County.
The corp1 returned from Buffalo, N. Y., wllere they won
national honors In the United Statell Twlrlins Aslloclatlon
110111petltlon. The color guard of the corpe won the first place
Grand National Color GuMd Award and tbe baton corps and the
color guard placed lleCOIId in the junior twlrUng corps contest
110111petlng qalnst alx other corps in their dlvlsltm.
The color guard and beton corpe 'll'()ft \be Ohio State
Cl!amplonlhlp prev!Dlllly and have won IIIIIIY other Rrst place
awards. They take place in numero1111 evenbl In the Lawrence
County area.

NEFFS, Ohio ( UPI) Ronald Porter, 22, his wife
Nancy, 20,andsons Ronald Jr.,
4, and Vernon, 3, died Saturday
In a fire at thetr home In lhlll
Ohio Valley conummlty of 800.
The Belmont County sheriff's
office aaid the family was
apparently · killed by smoke
ct

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n

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-h!w

ENROLL NOWI

Classes Start Sept. 12th
Write or Call

BJock,Jo4Pomeroy,Main
st. I
Tuesdays Only
0. 45761
I -.,;;:;;;;;;;--H&amp;R
•,,.... '*"'
c.w.
.
I .......
1
0
CJ
I
•II •• f,.. llf.,..t1.. u.wt Hit H&amp;.lll' , ... 1..... Tn
fw llll'.,.•tltl " ' ' IN , .... •• ...., 110 tllll•tl•

CIIICK Dllll :

IAIIC COUIII

.NAME

1
•

ADYANCID CIUitlt

CITY'- - - - - -

•

CERTIACATES .*
•GOLDEN PASSBOOK
SAVINGS*

SAVINGS
INSURED

-

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-----PHONF.~--__;_

CLIP AND MAIL IPCVOETODAY

•

•

I

UP TO

20,000

1

•l·YEAR
CERTIFICATES*

-. Valley Bank

-

ADDAES&gt;L - - - - - - - - --

Park.
Three state conservation
officers said the pollution was
traced to the Owens-illinois
Glass Container Dtvlsion plant,
and officials there were told to
"cease
pollution
immediately_" Plant officials
said they could not imLOVEMAKING BANNED
WELLINGTON, England
(UP!) - Town authorities
have banned lovemaking in a
churchyard following com·
plaints from nearby-residents.
Mrs. Joan Jones, one of those
who compalined to local
authorities said : "Many
elderly people use the grounds
to sit and relax and they don't
want to see a teen-age love-in ."

-YIAII

"the now bank that apprcciatn your bu1ine11s"
Mtriler: Fc:dcr.! Drposit lrwrance ~tiOn

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

420 THIRD AVENUE

•2·YEAR
CERTIFICATES*
*MINIMUM INITIAL
DEPOSIT OF
1
1,000.00

OR MORt

~~~--~------------------------------~
It

PM ONLY

During This
5 Hr. Sale
YOU CAN TAKE

NEW HOMES FOR SALE

scum" in the city's Ritter ,

% -More Off
Our Close-Out
Price

SPLIT LEVEL
4 BR , 2 baths, Fa mi ly room , total electri c: w ith Wi ll iamson

Heat ing and Cent ra l ai r cond it ioning, Gene,·al Electric
applian ces. full y carpeted. landsca ped, condete dr ive &amp;
streets, 2 1h car garag e, din ing bal con y, lot 75)175, cou nty

water, Tara sewer system.

SOUTHERN COLONIAL
3 BR, 21f2 baths , family room , basement, total el ectric
, 1 w!tt'l .W\1\Iamson heat ing and central
air conditioning ,
General Electri c appli ances , fully carpeted, landscaped,
concret e .d riv e &amp; s t r~ ts, 21f? ca r garage, din ing balcony,
lot 9Sx l75, county ~ater , Ta ra se wer sys tem.

CONTEMPORARY

3 BR. 1'12 baths, family room. base ment, 1 car garage,

total el ectri c with Wi lliamson hea ting and central air
condi tioning, General El ectr ic appliances. f ully car peted.
landscaped, con crete dri ve &amp; streets, dining balcony . lot
9Sx175, county wat er, Tara sewe r system.

DUTCH
COLONIAL BI-LEVEL
3 BR , 2 baths, la rge fam ily room, basement, 2 car garage,
total electr ic with Will iamson heat ing and central air
con di tioning, General Elect ri c appl iances, ful ly carpeted,
landsca ped, concret e dr i ve &amp; streets, di ning balcony, lot
9S xl75, county wa ter! Tara sewer system .

A record low temperature
of minus 126.9 d e g r e e s
Fahrenheit was recorded at
the Soviet Antarctic station
Vostok on Aug. 24, 1960.

BRING YOUR CAR,
TRUCK OR STATION WAGON

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENTS

DON'T
MISS

367-7250

ADDISON, OHIO

t]t
;·.,

Visit

the

=

Colopel

'.

e90 DAY

PM TO

DEVELOPMENT CORP.

coll446-

•PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

MONDAY, SEPT. 4th

indicated it occurred during
the draining of a glass tank as
water
was sprayed onto molten
mediately
determine
the
cause
HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
at
3,800 degrees.
glass
(UP!)- Ahot water leak from of the hot water escape, but
an industrial plant turned a
creek in West Virginia 's
largest city Friday night into a
"steam cooker," killing off all
aquatic life.
Temperatures In the Four
Pole Creek running the length
of the city's south side shot up to 200 degrees. At least 400
dead fish and an unestimated
number of hard-shell turtles
floated dead atop an "oily

America Loves What The Col. Cooks

COURSE

upon Pl~ntlon.

Reese Furniture Is Going Out Of Business. Urgent • Must
Vacate Building. Save As Never Before or Ever Again

Stream Cooked Aquatic Life

... for My Occasion ... or-justony time
you want .Gaod Food. And to complete
yow mtnu, ordtr laked hans, Cote
Slaw, 1'111110 S.lacl, Mlcoronl S.lad, ·
and Any· Flavor ol our Home Style
Pies. We Cln lltlp you with yollr· menu
lor.any number of guests. Just
1•11r ~-t4t3.

• lneludtl CUMnl tlx ltwt, tntory, 1nd
lfiP'bHon " pr.ctkltd In Block of.
fteft from eMit to COIIt.
• Cholet Df basic or ldnnced courH.
• Chok:• of diJt end &lt;:liM limN.

Tlllll• 11 •

FIRS1' RIDE - !b: Ohio State Fair C~oners, the fair manager and his wife took
lbelr
Initial
rides
In
tbe
new
electric bus
now
on
display
at the ·Electrlc Building just north of 17t Avenue at the State Fairgrounds. The 13
passenger, battery-powered transit bus can travel a total of 40 miles with a full load of
passengers before recharge. Maximum speed is 2:i miles per hour, or wlth an electronic
program change, 40 miles per hour may be attained. Ideal for quiet, pollution-free urban and
auburban travel the busses are available in 15 and 2&gt; passenger units. The bus above is used by
The Cleveland Electric ffiurnlnating Company, Cleveland, Ohio .
The Electric Building presentations are sponsored by Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, along wilh the seven other investor-owned electric companies in Ohio . Left
to right are E. W. Schmidt, North Canton ; Mrs. Victor Lucas and Victor Lucas General
.
'
Manager, Oh1o state Fair ; G. R. Abercrombie, Cincinnati; R. E. Troup, Lancaster ; J. F.
Evans, Mechanicsburg; E. C. Scheid, Sandusky and A. H. Milner, Leesburg.

inhalation as all of the bodies
were found near window&amp;.
The lberiff'a office said the
fire could _ have been
smolderln&amp; all nlsht but the
entire two story house blnt
Into f11111es at about 7 a.m. The
cauae of the fire -was not Jm.
mediately determined.

INCOME TAX

• c.mtktte ...,.._

5HOUR

Family of Four Perish in Fire

YOUR SAVINGS EARN MORE AT

sweets."
COUPLE KILLED
PHILUPSBURG, Pa . (UP!)
- A Columbus, Ohio couple
died early Saturday from injuries suffered when their auto
ran off lnterstale 80 near here
and rolled over several times.
Police said Oleryl Mlller, 34,
was dead on arriv_al at Pllillipsburg State General Hospital.
Her husband, Alonzo, 38, driver
or the car, died .everal hours
taler.

Secretarial
.12months
Executive secretarial
18months

BARN BURNING
LAGE, Gennany (UPI) When the farmer's gay and
noisy wedding party was In full
swing Thursday, a neighboring
farmhouse and bam suddenly
caught fire and burned down to
the ground. Pollee said one of
the rockets or firecrackers
launched at the party apparently strayed from its
cOurse and struck the building,
causing an estimated $61,112
damage.

King Certain Democrats in Wrong Set-up
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
AFL-CIO chief Frank King
says the Democratic party Is
wrong
in
determining
delegation make up by quotas
of age, sex and race.
King, who led the Ohio
delegation to the Democratic
convention in Miami , said
when someone attacks the
quota system he is immediately labeled a racist.
The labor leader told a
Rotary Club luncheon in
suburban Whitehall the Ohio
AFL-CIO is "100 per cent in
order " on all civil rights
legislation.
The quota system sent many
inexperienced politicians to
Miami Beach in July, King

CAREER TRAINING
FOR AREWARDED FUTURE

November and December.
Those inductions will push
the 1972 draft total to about
50,000 - lowest since 76,&gt;00
were called .up in 1962 and the
second lowest in the 23 years
since the Korean War began_
Presiden.t Nixon said
Monday he planned to stop the
draft next July and officials
said there may be no need to
draft any more men after
December. Selective Service
officials said 6,400 youths
would be called In October,
7,000 In November, and 2,&gt;00 in
December.

Phone 446-4367 -

A •

Youth Taken_

GETSSBALOAN

Uberel party maintains much

9 Piece Box

15 Piece Bucket
21 Piece Barrel

'

'

5 COLORS

OOVERED IN

TO CHOOSE FROM

SLEEPER SOFAH VINYL
Special For
This 5 Hour Sale!_

•4725

MONDAY • 1 PM to 5 PM Only
BUY NOW AND SAVE 10%

OFF OUR CLOSE-OUT PRICE

-DEALERS WELCOME-

tu

'
fOB ' BIG DISCOuNT SAVINGS!

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REESE'S
AND

101 EVANS DRIVE·IN

WHGi.~SALE

Olmer of Third &amp; Syta~~~ore

�surveys have shOwn .,ihe

12 - The Sunday Ttmes·Sent.inel, Sunday, Sept. 3,1972

~:Mason

County News
~jMason Man Critically Injured
••
:· MASON - A 19 year-old Mason
~7nan was critically injured and his
~,:ompanion, who also sustained in·
: juries, were two of three persons taken
:,o area hospitals Friday evening after
:; ,.ing involve&lt;! in county roadway
J)!ushaps.
.
t• Marvin Newell, son of Mr . and Mrs .
:t'~nsil Newell of Fourth Street in
• ason • was listed in critical condition
turday in Holzer Medical Center
~;after receiving multiple fractures and
i;extensive head mjur1es m a smgle car
~!mishap near New Haven at 4:30 p.m.
"lFrlday evening. At midmorning today
~e had not regained clinsciou:mess.
•• Newell was a passenger 1n a car
tbeing driven byJames E. Roush, 18,
~tar Route, West Columbia. Roush was
::admitted to Veterans Memorial
{Hospital where attendants said today
"•he is In Satisfactory condition . .•~Attendants declined to release
~lnfonnation concerning his injuries.
! The two young men were taken to
~eterans Memorial In a New Haven
..!Emergency Squad ambulance, but then
~Newell ivas transported on to
;Gallipolis.

Sheriff Huffman a)SQ reports a third
roadway mishap which occurred
Friday night at 10:15 p.m. on State
Route 62 at West Columbia.

Sheriff Troy Huffman explained the
accident by saying that Roush lost
control of the car on a Secondary
roadway near the top of the hill after
passing the Union Campgrounds going
from New Haven out through the
country. The car went over the top of
the grade, into a ditch, up an
embankment, rolled back down the
roadway and finally came to a halt on
its wheels. Sheriff Huffman said. The
vehicle was totaled.
_
Newell, a graduate of Wahama High
School, is a part time employee of the
Jones' Boys in Gallipolis, 0.
A Huntin~on woman, Mary Ann

According to Sheriff Huffman, Bobt.y
Chapman, 42, of Canton, 0. said
another vehicle had forced his cat off
the roadway and that it had struck the
B &amp;S 0 Railroad switchbox before
finally coming to a stop.

Judgment

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Court A t 0 n
Judgment was granted In one action,
another was dismissesd from the court
docket and a hearing date was set,
which were among actions taken in
Mason County Circuit Court Friday
through orders signed by Judge James
Lee Thompson.
Mason County Hospital Inc. doing
business as Pleasant Valley Hospital
against Roy Smith and Hazel R. Smith
was compromised, settled and agreed
as was stricken from the court docket.
A land condemnation suit by
Appalachian Power Company against
Cecij A. Smith and Hazel R. Smith was
compromised, settled and agreed and
was stricken from the court docket.
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company, The Point Pleasant
Chemical plant through its attorney
Samuel D. Littlepage presented a
petition to the court, a Court order
disclosed, showing that Glenn E. Ellis,
a member of Local 644, The Rubber,
Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of
America AFL-CIO Union, has violated
a lawful order of the Court.
Glenn E. Ellis is to appear before the
Court at 9:30 a.m. September 8 and
show cause why he should not be held In
contempt for violating the lawful order
of this Court it was stipulated In the
'
or der.

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jCounty Man Named
:Senatorial Candidate
•

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.
.
Another Point Pleasant businessmar.
has been named as a Fourth Senatorial
District candidate on the Democratic
.ticket to fill a vacancy recently created
by the resignation of Paul Crabtree.
Dave O'Neal was appointed by the
Fourth District Senatorial Executive
Conunittee to fill this vacancy on the
Democratic ballot In the November 7
General Election. ·
O'Neal's selection for this post came
about through a unanimous vote Friday
evening at a Conunittee meeting held at
the Village Restaurant in Ripley.

During the same meeting, Bob Reed,
member of the House of Delegates from
Clay County was elected chairman and
Mrs. Phyllis McCarty, Mason County
Executive Committeewoman was
elected to serve as Secretary.
Fourth
District
Senatorial
Executive Conunittee is made up of one
male and one female from each county
of the Fourth District which is
comprised of Mason, Clay, Roane,
Jackson and Putnam Counties.
Robert F. Hatfield of Putnam County,
a member of the House of Delegates,
was elected to fill the short term (two
year) for Senate created bythe
resignation of M. V. K. Knapp.
In a brief statement to the
Committee, O'Neal expressed His
aooreciation and gratitude for the
r:onfidence they have placed In him.He
pledges to campaign vigorously to be a
winner for the people of the Fourth
District, as he seeks this four year
term.

~

PV. Hospital
.
Gets Maximum
Accreditation
The Joint Commission 01.
Accreditation of Hospitals, composed of
the American Medical Association, the
American Hospital Association, the
Afuerican College of Physicians antrthe
American College of Surgeons has
officially accredited Pleasant Valley
Hospital for the maximwn accrediting
period of two years.
This noUfication followed a hospital
survey visit by two Joint Commission
Representatives on May 18, 1972
utilizing the recently revised and more
stringent survey regulations.
The communication from John D.
·Porterfield, M.D., Director to James L.
Farley, Administrator stated The
Board of the Joint Collll!"ssion on
Accceditation of Hospitals has
approved the reconunendation that
your hospital be fully accredited for a
period of two years, the maximum
accreditation possible. Your hospital is
therefore entitled to proudly display the
certificate of accrediation . The
commission wishes to commend you,
the Board of Trustees, Medical Staff

Canadians Called to Polls

of the strength it earned In the
1988 elections when Trudeau
attracted a tremendous
elections every four years.
SP.ats . The Progressive Con· amount of support' on the basis
Trudeau said he looked 11ervatives have 73, the New of his free -swinging perforward with "zest and en- Democratic party 25 and the
sonality.
thusiasm" to the campaign and Social Credit party has !3.
brushed
aside
as
"hypothetical" a question as to
whether he would return to
Parliament as opposition
leader if his Liberal party was
defeated in the general election.
" ...1 ~ll you right now that
we could lose this election," the
prime minister said. "We don 't
intend to, and though we can
lose, I'm trying to say we will

O'rfAWA (UPI ) - Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau dissolved Parliament
Friday and ordered • general
election Oct. 30. Trudeau, 32,
who was elected June 25, 1968,
made the announcement at a
news conference and expressed confidence he will not
looo any support to the opposition parties or separatist
forces within the c~untry.
He was elected to a five-year
term and could have served
without new elections until
July. However it has become
traditional in the Canadian not.' '
The Liberals now hold 148 of
government, which is modeled
the
264 House of Commons
on the British system, to call

Given In

Covington, was sent to Pleasant Valley Hospital following another single car
accident at the same time on State
Route 2 near Salt Creek.
She
apparently was checked and released.
The
Sheriff's
Department
investigated and said Ms. Covington
lost control afterdropping off the benn
with her car going across the road, over
an embankment and coming to a halt
near the edge of the Ohio River-

Luck Ended at 95 in Lottery
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
Selective Service System said
Friday the highest draft lottery
number to be called in 1972
would be 95, apparently
meaning that about three
quarters of the young men
vulnerable to induction this
year would escape being
called .
In perhaps the final callup
announced before the draft
expires, Selective Service
officials said approximately
13,900 men with lottery num·
bers between 76 and 93 would
be called during October ,

To Hospital

The Stevens Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant was one of 24 business
concerns recei vlng loans from the
Small Business Administration,
Clarksburg District office, during the
months of August. The Stevens loan
was for $63,000 and they have five
employes, according to a release from
the SBA Clarksburg office.

Daniel Egbert, 13,of Palestine, W.Va.
was rushed to Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, 0 . by the Mason
Emergency Squad .Friday night' after
becoming ill while attending the
Wahama. Wirt County game at Bachtel
"'ield.
Squad Chief James Lavender said the
youth was a member of the visiting
team's band and because of not feeling
well earlier had not taken the bus but
carne to Mason with his parents for the
game. Later, Lavender said, he
developed a high fever and the
emergency unit was summoned.

and Hospital
Personnel for
maintaining stanaaras aeservmg or
accredliatlon and for your efforts to
improve the quality of patient care.
We are obviously pleased to have
received such an excellent report from
the Joint Commission, commented
Farley. "The outstanding c~peration
of the medical staff, adminiStrative
staff, hospital personnel and the ~oard
of Trustees made thiS max1mum
accrediatitation possible," Farley
concluded .

SHRIVER VISITING
CHARLESTON, W. VA. (UPI)-A
second campaign visit was scheduled in
the Mountain State beginning Sunday
night by Democratic vice presidential
hopeful Sargent Shriver.

ntlque Organs
On Display at
EvanS F.anns
RIO

STARTING YOUNG
LAS PALMAS, Canary
Islands, gpain (UP! ) - Dario
Rodriguez Diez Is a four-a-day
man - not excessive perhaps
· - but then he's only 2 years
old. He's been asking his
mother for cigarettes for
several months. "At first we
just gave him them for fun,"
said his mother, "but now he
in hales and blows out the
smoke through his nose like a
-grown man . He prefers them to

GRANDE _ Antique

.
grmd and paper roll organs are
on display this weekend at Bob
Evans Fan!'s, Route 35, Rio
Grande, Ohio.
.
Kyle Day of Mt. Vernon IS at
the . Farm Center today
exhibiting . a 100-year-old
Amarola grmd organ, aRagma
organ w1th metal d1scs, a
concert roller organ, paper roll
organs and a Wilcox symphonia organ . All are in
working condition .
Day has been restoring old
organs and player pianos for 2:i
years. His hobby has grown
into a full-time blllliness In his
home town of Mt. Vernon .
In addition to the Farm
Center activities, other free
attractions at the Bob Evans
Farm include a band of
gpanish Barb Mustangs, the
Homestead, the old Welsh
Windmill, log cabins and
friendly farm animals and
wildlife. All are welcome_

Thorough Cleansing
Cold cream doesn't give
the s k I o the deeP-down
cleansing It needs. For a
really thorough cleansing,
try washing with a pure soap
and a apeelal natural brlatle
complexion brush.

I

Business Administration
18 months
Jr. A~countlng

12 months

General Office

9months

Cia••• ~In S.pt.l4
Make -thing -1 of your future this Fall. Give
, youmH the skills which bring In a worthwhile pay·
check. And give you a cha11.ce to advance! Attend
a schooi whlf1l the sole purpaM is oolld buolnep
training and .;.,,..r placement. Fret Bulletin.

GallipoliS Business College

36 Lowst Str..t
St. Reg. No. 71-02-00328

Gallipolis. O.

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liiU~ .. . ·UitlltiUIUlllllll

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UIIUIIIU . . . . . . . . . . .

Sunday - Monday • Tuesday - Wednesday·
and Thursday Only!.

TWO WHOLE CHICKENS
55
16 PIECES

'

FOR EASY PICKUP CALL
Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad, Cole
446-2682
Slaw. Baked Beans, Rolls.
YOUR ORDER WILL
NO COUPONS TO CUP
BE READY

Try Our Specialties

1

UITTINGB

LABOR DAY
POMEROY - The home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul and
daughter, Vicki, has been "bl181ln'" with.actlvlty!
Arriving practical!y at the 11811le lime for v1a1ta were Mr. and
Mrs. Vlc!Dr E. Gaul, Victor, Jr., and Usa, ot 6175 Gilman,
Gil-den City, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. (Pat Gaul) Clay of
2'154 Golf!lde Rolld, apt. 715, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Mrs. J. B.
(Donna Gaul) QoockareU, Denise, Jfm and Jeff of Alexandria,
Va.
VICtor Is presently employed by the Evans Producll Co. ot
Plymouth, Mich. He and bls wife, Darlene, are both taking adlve
·roles In community affairs and VIc only recently was elected
trealltlrel' of the Garden City Jaycees.
Pat graduated from Eastern Michigan Unlveralt:y 1s11 ·
Decenlber with a bachelor of science degree In elemeotar1 ·
education and has accepted her first teaching poaition with tbe
Van Bll'ean Public Schools at Belleville, Mlcb., wllere lbe wUJ be
. teacblng &amp;eallld grade. Pat will be teaching In the same school
where llhe substltuted !tom JIIIIU8ry through June following her
graduation.
Her husband, Larry, also a graduate of E.M.U.In August
with a bechelor of business adminllltratlon, baa accepted the
position of staff &amp;CCOWitant with tbe CPA linn of Lybrand, Ross
Brothers and Montgomery of Detroit.
How about DoMa Gaul IXocklreU. Sbe, her huaband and
cbllcnn just recently returned to the United States having spent
three yellrll in Yokohoma, Japan, where they were sent by the
Navy Department of the U. S. government. Mr. Ctocklrell was a.
civilian employe working in budgeting and finance with 11M! Navy
Department.
Joining the enUre group for a dinner at tbe Gaul home on
Saturday were Mrs. Gaul's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Morgan,
Pomeroy Route 3.

MR. AND MRS. WAYNE CHASE were more than pleased
with the oboervance of their 50th wedding anniveraary recently.
Among the congratulatory notea was one from Congressman
aarence E. Mlller wblcb stated:
"ltl.s indeed a happy oceasllm when a couple has the d!Btlnct
privilege of celebrating 50 years of marriage together.
"May I commend you lor the fine job you have done In
raising a family? I hope you lind the years ahead joyfully
rewarding."
MRS. CXJNNIE NELSON of Columbua graduated with the
highest honors from Nationwide Beauty Academy in Columbus.
The coveted "cerUilcate of merit" was Jll1!sented to Connie
during the graduation luncbeoo. It reads:
"Granted to Qmnle Nelson who has been an outstanding
student at the Academy, haa always performed In \be most
e&gt;:emplll'}' manner, and has at all times upheld the highest
traditions of the Academy."
Coonlelsthedaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Haley of Rutland.

mE POPULAR NEW KINGS ISLAND, near Cincinnati, will
be open only on Saturdays and &amp;uldays loUowq Labor Day.
However, don't try to visit the amusement center oo Saturday,
Sept. 23, or Saturday, Sept. 30, bec11111e the center haa been
rented by large companies lor the exclusive use of employes on
thole dates.

No Substitutes

NEW SYSTEM
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Anew
fi t categories, rather than computerized method of
said.
select
by experience or party processing Medicaid claims
"We do want more people
service,,
, sa id King . 'For and bills went into operation
involved in politics, bul we
hope enough attention can be example , I got one of my today at the Ohio Department
called to this quota system so daughters to be an alternate. of Welfare. Acting State
that it can be turned around in She's a woman and she's under Welfare Director Robert C.
30. She didn't go. We didn 't Canary said the new computer
some way," said King.
King said although he didn't need her."
based system will " insure
like the quota system he tried
additional safeguards are built
to abide by the new rules.
into the expenditure of state
HAS HIGH RECORD
"We had to find the people to
and federal tax funds."
RACINE - Locust Grove
Twinklestar, a Sr _ 4-year old,
re gistered Guernsey cow
MarrlageLicenses
owned by Edson Roush,
POMEROY - Randall Ray Racin e, has completed an
Proflitt, 21, Portland, and official
_DHIR
actual
Candy Carol Hoback, 18, production record of 13,24()
Racine ; Steven Howard · pounds of milk and &gt;82 pounds
Runyon, 19, U.S. Army, and of butlerfat, in 291 days, two
Patsy K. Greer, 16, Pomeroy, times a day milking, according
RD; Dennis Eduard Dudding, to The American Guernsey
20, U.S. Army, and Alice Cattle Club. The testing was
Elizabeth Brown, 18, New supervised by Ohio State
Haven.
University.

tlyakf

~~JIPJII

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"THAT OLD-.FASHJONID COODfllll"

2nd &amp;.elM sr.

'lliESQUIRRELSEW!NwUiopen $ept.l. Followlns Is the
!l'()jecled outlook for the hunting oe1110n In Melp CoiDlty 81seen
by game protectors:
"Squlrre) good; lD8BI aop better than lilt year; hunting
lbould be good ac:ross entire co111ty. Habblt good over enlire
COWity, best In IOUtheut llectlollll of county. Groule population
good; buntinB llbould be 81 good aslsll year. Deer good; should
be better than laat year. QuaU population up from last year; best
In fann ll'ellll In IIOutheaat 118ctiolll-of county."
JHONDA PARKER, DAUGJn'ER of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Parker of Coal Grove, and a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
ArbaUjlb, 'l'uAlfll1l Plalnl, and Ralph Parter of Cl!ester, Is a
member of the Starliners Baton Corp1 of Lawrence County.
The corp1 returned from Buffalo, N. Y., wllere they won
national honors In the United Statell Twlrlins Aslloclatlon
110111petltlon. The color guard of the corpe won the first place
Grand National Color GuMd Award and tbe baton corps and the
color guard placed lleCOIId in the junior twlrUng corps contest
110111petlng qalnst alx other corps in their dlvlsltm.
The color guard and beton corpe 'll'()ft \be Ohio State
Cl!amplonlhlp prev!Dlllly and have won IIIIIIY other Rrst place
awards. They take place in numero1111 evenbl In the Lawrence
County area.

NEFFS, Ohio ( UPI) Ronald Porter, 22, his wife
Nancy, 20,andsons Ronald Jr.,
4, and Vernon, 3, died Saturday
In a fire at thetr home In lhlll
Ohio Valley conummlty of 800.
The Belmont County sheriff's
office aaid the family was
apparently · killed by smoke
ct

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ENROLL NOWI

Classes Start Sept. 12th
Write or Call

BJock,Jo4Pomeroy,Main
st. I
Tuesdays Only
0. 45761
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c.w.
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fw llll'.,.•tltl " ' ' IN , .... •• ...., 110 tllll•tl•

CIIICK Dllll :

IAIIC COUIII

.NAME

1
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ADYANCID CIUitlt

CITY'- - - - - -

•

CERTIACATES .*
•GOLDEN PASSBOOK
SAVINGS*

SAVINGS
INSURED

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CLIP AND MAIL IPCVOETODAY

•

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UP TO

20,000

1

•l·YEAR
CERTIFICATES*

-. Valley Bank

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ADDAES&gt;L - - - - - - - - --

Park.
Three state conservation
officers said the pollution was
traced to the Owens-illinois
Glass Container Dtvlsion plant,
and officials there were told to
"cease
pollution
immediately_" Plant officials
said they could not imLOVEMAKING BANNED
WELLINGTON, England
(UP!) - Town authorities
have banned lovemaking in a
churchyard following com·
plaints from nearby-residents.
Mrs. Joan Jones, one of those
who compalined to local
authorities said : "Many
elderly people use the grounds
to sit and relax and they don't
want to see a teen-age love-in ."

-YIAII

"the now bank that apprcciatn your bu1ine11s"
Mtriler: Fc:dcr.! Drposit lrwrance ~tiOn

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

420 THIRD AVENUE

•2·YEAR
CERTIFICATES*
*MINIMUM INITIAL
DEPOSIT OF
1
1,000.00

OR MORt

~~~--~------------------------------~
It

PM ONLY

During This
5 Hr. Sale
YOU CAN TAKE

NEW HOMES FOR SALE

scum" in the city's Ritter ,

% -More Off
Our Close-Out
Price

SPLIT LEVEL
4 BR , 2 baths, Fa mi ly room , total electri c: w ith Wi ll iamson

Heat ing and Cent ra l ai r cond it ioning, Gene,·al Electric
applian ces. full y carpeted. landsca ped, condete dr ive &amp;
streets, 2 1h car garag e, din ing bal con y, lot 75)175, cou nty

water, Tara sewer system.

SOUTHERN COLONIAL
3 BR, 21f2 baths , family room , basement, total el ectric
, 1 w!tt'l .W\1\Iamson heat ing and central
air conditioning ,
General Electri c appli ances , fully carpeted, landscaped,
concret e .d riv e &amp; s t r~ ts, 21f? ca r garage, din ing balcony,
lot 9Sx l75, county ~ater , Ta ra se wer sys tem.

CONTEMPORARY

3 BR. 1'12 baths, family room. base ment, 1 car garage,

total el ectri c with Wi lliamson hea ting and central air
condi tioning, General El ectr ic appliances. f ully car peted.
landscaped, con crete dri ve &amp; streets, dining balcony . lot
9Sx175, county wat er, Tara sewe r system.

DUTCH
COLONIAL BI-LEVEL
3 BR , 2 baths, la rge fam ily room, basement, 2 car garage,
total electr ic with Will iamson heat ing and central air
con di tioning, General Elect ri c appl iances, ful ly carpeted,
landsca ped, concret e dr i ve &amp; streets, di ning balcony, lot
9S xl75, county wa ter! Tara sewer system .

A record low temperature
of minus 126.9 d e g r e e s
Fahrenheit was recorded at
the Soviet Antarctic station
Vostok on Aug. 24, 1960.

BRING YOUR CAR,
TRUCK OR STATION WAGON

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENTS

DON'T
MISS

367-7250

ADDISON, OHIO

t]t
;·.,

Visit

the

=

Colopel

'.

e90 DAY

PM TO

DEVELOPMENT CORP.

coll446-

•PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

MONDAY, SEPT. 4th

indicated it occurred during
the draining of a glass tank as
water
was sprayed onto molten
mediately
determine
the
cause
HUNTINGTON, W. Va .
at
3,800 degrees.
glass
(UP!)- Ahot water leak from of the hot water escape, but
an industrial plant turned a
creek in West Virginia 's
largest city Friday night into a
"steam cooker," killing off all
aquatic life.
Temperatures In the Four
Pole Creek running the length
of the city's south side shot up to 200 degrees. At least 400
dead fish and an unestimated
number of hard-shell turtles
floated dead atop an "oily

America Loves What The Col. Cooks

COURSE

upon Pl~ntlon.

Reese Furniture Is Going Out Of Business. Urgent • Must
Vacate Building. Save As Never Before or Ever Again

Stream Cooked Aquatic Life

... for My Occasion ... or-justony time
you want .Gaod Food. And to complete
yow mtnu, ordtr laked hans, Cote
Slaw, 1'111110 S.lacl, Mlcoronl S.lad, ·
and Any· Flavor ol our Home Style
Pies. We Cln lltlp you with yollr· menu
lor.any number of guests. Just
1•11r ~-t4t3.

• lneludtl CUMnl tlx ltwt, tntory, 1nd
lfiP'bHon " pr.ctkltd In Block of.
fteft from eMit to COIIt.
• Cholet Df basic or ldnnced courH.
• Chok:• of diJt end &lt;:liM limN.

Tlllll• 11 •

FIRS1' RIDE - !b: Ohio State Fair C~oners, the fair manager and his wife took
lbelr
Initial
rides
In
tbe
new
electric bus
now
on
display
at the ·Electrlc Building just north of 17t Avenue at the State Fairgrounds. The 13
passenger, battery-powered transit bus can travel a total of 40 miles with a full load of
passengers before recharge. Maximum speed is 2:i miles per hour, or wlth an electronic
program change, 40 miles per hour may be attained. Ideal for quiet, pollution-free urban and
auburban travel the busses are available in 15 and 2&gt; passenger units. The bus above is used by
The Cleveland Electric ffiurnlnating Company, Cleveland, Ohio .
The Electric Building presentations are sponsored by Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, along wilh the seven other investor-owned electric companies in Ohio . Left
to right are E. W. Schmidt, North Canton ; Mrs. Victor Lucas and Victor Lucas General
.
'
Manager, Oh1o state Fair ; G. R. Abercrombie, Cincinnati; R. E. Troup, Lancaster ; J. F.
Evans, Mechanicsburg; E. C. Scheid, Sandusky and A. H. Milner, Leesburg.

inhalation as all of the bodies
were found near window&amp;.
The lberiff'a office said the
fire could _ have been
smolderln&amp; all nlsht but the
entire two story house blnt
Into f11111es at about 7 a.m. The
cauae of the fire -was not Jm.
mediately determined.

INCOME TAX

• c.mtktte ...,.._

5HOUR

Family of Four Perish in Fire

YOUR SAVINGS EARN MORE AT

sweets."
COUPLE KILLED
PHILUPSBURG, Pa . (UP!)
- A Columbus, Ohio couple
died early Saturday from injuries suffered when their auto
ran off lnterstale 80 near here
and rolled over several times.
Police said Oleryl Mlller, 34,
was dead on arriv_al at Pllillipsburg State General Hospital.
Her husband, Alonzo, 38, driver
or the car, died .everal hours
taler.

Secretarial
.12months
Executive secretarial
18months

BARN BURNING
LAGE, Gennany (UPI) When the farmer's gay and
noisy wedding party was In full
swing Thursday, a neighboring
farmhouse and bam suddenly
caught fire and burned down to
the ground. Pollee said one of
the rockets or firecrackers
launched at the party apparently strayed from its
cOurse and struck the building,
causing an estimated $61,112
damage.

King Certain Democrats in Wrong Set-up
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
AFL-CIO chief Frank King
says the Democratic party Is
wrong
in
determining
delegation make up by quotas
of age, sex and race.
King, who led the Ohio
delegation to the Democratic
convention in Miami , said
when someone attacks the
quota system he is immediately labeled a racist.
The labor leader told a
Rotary Club luncheon in
suburban Whitehall the Ohio
AFL-CIO is "100 per cent in
order " on all civil rights
legislation.
The quota system sent many
inexperienced politicians to
Miami Beach in July, King

CAREER TRAINING
FOR AREWARDED FUTURE

November and December.
Those inductions will push
the 1972 draft total to about
50,000 - lowest since 76,&gt;00
were called .up in 1962 and the
second lowest in the 23 years
since the Korean War began_
Presiden.t Nixon said
Monday he planned to stop the
draft next July and officials
said there may be no need to
draft any more men after
December. Selective Service
officials said 6,400 youths
would be called In October,
7,000 In November, and 2,&gt;00 in
December.

Phone 446-4367 -

A •

Youth Taken_

GETSSBALOAN

Uberel party maintains much

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21 Piece Barrel

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SUNDAY AND MONDAY
SEPTEMBER.3 AND 4

LABOR DAY

OPEN DAILY 10 to. 9
SUNDAY 1 to 7

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

1() A.M. TO 7 P.M.

10W40

VALVO LINE MOTOR OIL
1200 ONLY PER STORE .

UMITSIITS.

37(

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AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

COLEMAN 2-MANTLE
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MODEl228 F195. The key feature to

s 99

sell or. this one -ol ·o-ltind lante rn is the
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under ih own ba!e to lerve Oi o sh ield
against up-glare.

$1399

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PICTURED

Heck's Reg.

'8.88

HECK'S REG. $18.99

SPOITS DEPT.

ONE BUSHEL

LAUNDRY BASKET

10 POUND

HECK'S
REG.

CHARCOAL

69¢

2roR

.48'

KENT
2" PLASTIC

GOLF TEES
HECK'S REG. 29'

7 OZ. CREST TOOTHPASTE
HECK'S REG. 99'

REGULAR
OR MINT

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79 1

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50

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BELL &amp;' HOWELL

Mode of 1turdy Alu·
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SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA
I Electric ~ye shuller for
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I Fa st, fixed -focu s lens
I Cartridge load ingfast and foolproof
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pocke t

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On Ool • ••

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on

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$1.48
HARDWARE DEPT.

I

ssaa

S]988

HECK'S REG.

$8.99
SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $49.96
it :-:'~

COLEMAN JUG

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Heck's Reg.
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KODAK
INSTAMATIC

HECK'S REG. $1.79

SLIDE FILM

KODAK
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$2ll

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99~

SPORTS DEPT.

70Z.
J&amp;J

HECK'S REG. $1.08

MINI MAG 22 LONG

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100 ROUNDS PER lOX

SPORTS
DEPT.

$159 lOX

SYLVANIA
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s 100
SYLVANIA

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FLASH CUBES

88(

sac

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Con you clo it . . . O..lr I lllem , • , 1111 con )'011 _ ,.
ble ~~o,, inlt} o ,..rttd c~k• • bovrct in til. hondr u or

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84 1
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COSMETIC DEPT.

oz.
LISTERINE
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99 1

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GILLETTE

88 1

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11.48

rival of unprecedented proportions.
The U.S. trade deficit with
Japan-floW running at about
$3.8 billion aMUally- is by fllr
:~o~.rgest with any single
White House press setretary
Ronald Ziegler, meantime,
said NIJ:on was pleased with
North VIetnam's decision to
release three American
prisoners of war but pointed
out that this was only an "in-

Come to Trial
ASUNCION, Paraguay
(UP! ) - Loudly protesting his
innocence, alleged narcotics
·overlord Auguste Joseph
Rlcord was extradited
Saturday for trial in New York
City as a master heroin
smuggler responsible for
!ringing two tons of heroin,
worth S2.5 billion, into the
United Slates. ·
.,.
A:f"U!~, authorities took
cu!~Gdy of the 61-year old
French-Argentine at President
Stroessner Airport and put him
on a specially-chartered Pan
American jetliner with two
doctors aboard, he said :
"I never was a drug traf·
Iicker. I never shipped drugs to
the United States. I never was
in that country. I don't know
how they can condemn me."
But the U.S. governmentwhich fought a 17-rnonth legal
battle to get him extradited
from Paraguay-has fingered
Rlcord as a key figure in a vast
network that has been In
operation for the past five
year&amp; .
An alrUne spokesman said
the big Boeing 707 was char·
tered by the U.S. government
and that It had the ''fuel
capsclty" for a non-stop flight
to New York.
The charge under which
Rlcord will be tried in New
York district court covers only
a small part of his aneged

Unification
Expedited

KODAK
NEW LOW LIGHT
SUPER 8
MOVIE FILM

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPl) - President Nixon
has taped a Labor Day
statement which will be
avaDable for radio broadcast
at 6 p.m. EDT today on
request, the Western White
House said Saturday.
Nixon last year made a
nationwide radio Labor Day
addreu but this year's
statement, recorded from
hls offlee overlooking the
Pacific Ocean, was for use
on an optional basts.
Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said that the address
would run about IS minutes.
Other aides said It was
geared to the role of Labor In
relation to technological
advances.

Alleged Heroin
Smuggler Will

KRAZVS

'

BABY SHAMPOO

68&lt;

39~

4-PARTY

HOSE
N'OZZLE

'.

'

49(

HECK'S
REG.

PKG. OF

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif .
(UPI )- President .Nixon began
a quiet Laboc Day weekeixl at
· vacation home here Satllr·
day following a Japanese
SWIUilit which 'officials said
defined rather than solved
trade and other problems
between th~ two allies.
The President SIJ'lnt most of
the day preparing a Labor Day
addreaa he will tape for radio
throughout the
· nation Sunday.
He returned here Friday
night from Hawaii following
two days of talks with
·Japanese Prime Minister
Kakuel Tanaka which focused
primarily on ways of
ellmlnating the chronic trade
Imbalance between the two
nations, Japan's moves to
establish diplomatic relations
with Peking and the role Japan
should play as a new economic
superpower.
The meeting, symbolically
held in mid-Pacific where
World War U began, signified
the end of any remaining
traces of American paternalisn\ toward Japan. It was
tacit recognition by the Nixon
administration that the nation
which the United States nursed
back. to health after the war
was now a dominant political
Ioree in Asia and an economic

activity--the smuggling of 97
pounds of heroin into the
United States in October, 1970.
Ricord, under death sentence
in Franee as a convicted Nazi
collaborator in World War II,
was turned over to a U.S. agent
who Identified himself only as
"David Smith."
He was preswned to be a
fPirai.P~~rcotica aael)l. Other
ll:s. authori'iles-also
presumed to be narcotics
agents-were present.
Rlcord's departure put an
end to lengthy efforts by the
United State to lay hands on
Ricord, now an Argentine
citizen. It began two weeks
after Rlcord's March 15, 1971,
New York Indictment when
Paraguayan police arrested
him just as he was preparing to
go to Argentina by car.
After six-month delay, a
lower court judge ruled that he
could not be extradited from
this country. Then a higher
court overruled that decision
and said be should be extradlted. ·
In Washington, Secretary of
State WUllani P. Rogers, who
Is chairman of President
Nixon's Cabinet Committee on
International Narcotics
Control, said, "the extradiction
... Is a major step forward in
the Administration's fight
against illicit drug. trafficking.

flniteamal " portion of the more
than I ,500 Americans captured
or missing In Indochina .
"We will not rest until there .
is a complete accounting for all
missing in action and release of
all prisoners throughout Indochina," he said.
Officials in the President's
party conceded that the trade
problems had not been solved
during the more than seven
hours of talks between Nixon
and Tanaka at a plush resort
hotel situated on a lava
promontory on the northern tip
of the main island of Oahu. But
they said the two leaders
developed remarkable rapport

Democrats
en Drive
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sen. George S. McGovern,
preparing for his first campaign tour as Democratic presidential
nominee, changed Saturday thai President Nixon and Vice
President SPiro T. Agnew are "systematically eroding" civil
liberties in areas ranging from court appointments to wireta)&gt;ping .
McGovern leaves Sunday for a two-week trip, beginning with
a visit to the Southern Governor's Conference in Hilum Head, S.
C. He views the trip as the formal kickoff of his campaign to
unseat Nixon in the Nov. 7 election.
McGovern 's
vice
presidential running mate unannounced. It has refused to
promise a total end to needless
Sargent Shriver, who also
military spying on American
begins a campaign swing
citizens.
It has filled computer
Sunday that includes visits to
data banks with personal in·
at least six states, charged
formation about thousaods of
Nixon was preparing a
proposal for a value added tax Americans - information that
may be used by inquirers who
amounting to a national sales
have no legitimate governmentax "that will cost the average
American family another $200 tal purpose."
a year."
A statement issued from
SUSPECT HELD
Shriver's headquarters did not
TWINSBURG,
Ohio (UP!)say when Nixon would reveal
James
Lee
Williams,
20,
his proposal, nor did it detail
Warrensville
Heights,
was
the alleged plan other than to
say it was designed to raise an arrested and charged Saturday
in connection with the Thursadditional $18 billion.
day
robbery of the Twinsburg
On the eve of his departure,
McGovern 's campaign head- Bank. Two other men also were
quarters Issued a "campaign involved in the robbery during .
white paper on civil liberties" which an undetermined
charging that "the Nixon amount of money was taken,
adnlinjltration's syatematic
erosion 'of basic rights presents
the American people with the
... spectre of big government
peering into the corner of every
person's life, stifling dissent
and diminishing individual
liberties."
In a statement issued with
PARIS (UPI)- A U.S.
the white paper, McGovern
assailed "the shrill attacks by civilian contact with Hanoi
Spiro Agnewn on the news said Saturday three captured
media and asserted that Nixon American pilots to be released
"has sought to weaken the from North Vietnamese
judiciary
by
wilfully prisons "in a matter of weeks"
nominating mediocrities to the hold the key to future releases.
Anti-war activist David Deihigh bench (Supreme Court)."
The paper itself also accused · Unger said the three could be
the administration of "a the last POWs freed before the
continuoos and disturbing at- end of the war if the U.S.
tack on the Individual rights military "brainwashed and
pressured (them) to make
guaranteed all citizens .
"The Nixon administration scandals and to tell lies about
has authorized governmental their condition."
At a news conference caned
invasions of privacy-or stood
by while such invasions OC· to detail plans of the release,
DeiUnger said he and another
cur," the paper said.
"It has. proposed no-knock American peace activisl, Mrs.
legislation which allows state Cora Weiss, will fly to Hanoi to
agents to burst into homes escort the three POWs back

I'

.. ...
Cri.~is
TOLEDO, Spain (UP!) The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Toledo and
Primate of Spain, Gonzalez
Martin, said Saturday Spain
is undergoing a grave moral
and religious crisis.
Symptoms Included "the
systematic .assault on
marriage through discussion
ol premarital relations,

Spain in

separation and divorce" ,

-·

lack of posl-confesslonal
penitence, lack of respect lor

. . . -..

the communion service, and

many

emply

-~

......

~ ~~-...: ,

..

_., ~ ~

Spanish

SHARING SHELTER. a South Vietnamese soldier and a woman caught In the
battle zone keep low as lire from Communist forces sweeps an area ncar Lal Khe.

VO~L._V_
_
II ___
N0_._31________~S_
UN__D_
AY~
,S_E_PT_EM_B_ER_3~,_
19_
72____________~
PAGE)i_

Moon Rockets on Block
the bill for keeping the two
Saturn 5 rockets in a flightready condition will climb to
between $1.5 million to $2
million annually. Officials see
little chance of using the
Saturn !is before 1982.
" We're spending money
today maintaining this hard·
ware and if the decision is
made not to use it, then we've
wasted it," said Philip E.
Culbertson, director of advanced missions for NASA in
Washington.
The Saturn 5s are the
greatest resource. Each cost
$182million to build. They were
onee assigned Apollo moon
flights, but three Apollo missions were canceled because of
budget cutbacks. One Saturn 5
will be used to launch the
Skylab, leaving two without
jobs.
The Saturn 5 is the world's
most powerful rocket. It can

CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)The space agency is consider·
ing scrapping more than a hall
billion dollars worth of Apollo
rockets and spaceships
because it can't afford to fly
them.
·
Adecision on the fate of two
surplus Saturn 5 moon rockets,
three Apollo command ships
and three Saturn IB rockets is
expected to be made within
several weeks.
The problem is that the
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
is now spending ~,1100 a year
to maintain the equipment
under carefully controlled
conditions. Yet the agency has
no funded jobs for the rockets
and spacecraft, and oificials
said the outlook is very dim for
extra money to carry out a
number of proposed missions.
After the Skylab space
station is launched next spring,

. Hanoi warn~ u.s. -Future'
POW Releases is on Trial

GOP Election Managers to
Tell All about Wat~rgate

WASHINGTON (UPI)- questions . MacGregor's
Nixon's reelection deposition is scheduled to be
President
SEOUL (UPI)-The opening
of Red Cross talks between campaign managers-past and taken Sept. 8.
Mitchell also told newsmen
South and North Korea will present-,-were told Saturday
by
a
federal
judge
to
make
he
had known nothing in adspeed up the unification of the
two nations, the chief South . sworn statements telling vance about the breakin.
Richey interrupted his vaca·
Korean delegate said Saturday. . anything they may know aboot
the
bugging
of
Democratic
lion
to hold a rare Saturday
lee Bun..SUk made the
remarks during a nationally party headquarters last June. court session to hear
At the same time, U.S. argumenUI on a motion filed
televised news conference held
District
Court Judge Charles Friday by the five suspects'
soon after he and 33 other
South Korean Red Cross R. Richey blocked the taking of lawyer, Henry B. Rothblatt of
,officials returned to Seoul from formal depositions "at this New York . The motion asked
a four-day visit to North Korea. time" from the five men ac- Richey to order the Democrats
"The Red Cross meeting laid cused of breaking Into to stop taking routine pre-trial
sworn
down a stepping stone for Democratic national , depositions headquarters.
Electronic
statements
,of
fact.:..On
the
better relations between South
and North' Korea and thus eavesdropping devices were grounds that his clients'
saved our efforts and time found the night of the breakln. chances for a fair trial have
The decillon means that been hurt by widespread
needed for ow: national unifica·
John
N. Mi~ell, former at- publicity in the caSJl.
lion," he said.
torney
general and former
The five suspects had been
"I can dare say our trip to
the North was successful. We Nixon~ manager, and slated to make their
have succeeded In creating an Clark MacGregor, who sue- depositions next week, but
atm011phere in which both tildes · ceeded Mitchell as campaign Richey's action halted their
manager, lllllit tell oppoeition . appearances. Six depositions
can trust each other."
lawyers
under oath wblt they · from other persons believed .to
The chlet delesate cOnceded
know
about
the case prior to have knowledge of the case
that South and North Korea
still differ in their approach to trial of a mllllon civil suit were taken earlier.
The judge said, "this court
the ·CIITent Red Crollll talks lrought by the DeuiOCfats
egalnlt
tile
Cpmml""
to
Rewill
, give this case priority
dealgned !o Hell: 'waya for
. Insofar as its calendar permits
reW~Itins 10. mllllonatP,ataled elect PlUident NIJ:on.
Mitchell'adePoeillon
waacut
beca1111e of Its obviOIIIimpor·
family memben.
llhort
Friday
when
R
motion
to
tance."
· ·
''South Korealntenda the Red
O'ou'talb as,. bumanltarlu halt the tali:lng of . such The Democratic party filed
projectcruy, while Norlh Korea depolitlonl wu Wed. He told file mlllloo-dollar invasion of
attempta to tum the meetingl ne'llllllell aflenlard be had privacy suit 011 the bugging
Into the fvrm of I political nolhlng to do with the motion, suspects after they were
and was om:IOIJI to ...... artestedat2:30a.m.Junel71n
nature,"he said.

-

•

'.-•
•'

and a genuine affection ·for
each other .
A general atmosphere of
cooperation was generated,
they said, and a framework
established for continuing
negotiations.
At the .end of the conference,
the two leaders announced that
Japan would pur.chase an
additional $1.1 billion in U.S.
goods - agricultural products ,
air buses and uranium enrichment services--mtd the Japanese said they would take
other, unspecified steps to
reduce the trade deficit to
more manageable portions
within three to five years.

seminaries, Marttn said.

'I

I

....

.. .. .-.' ·"

'[

the offices of the Democratic
National Committee at the
plush Watergate complex on
the Potomac River. Pollee said
they had electronic eavesdro)&gt;ping equipment with them.
A federal grand jury is Investigating and criminal indiclments are expected this
month .
Democrats predict--and Republicans deny-that top 1lOP
leaders will he among those
charged.

Four Men Held
In Firebombing
MONTREAL ( UPI)
Authorities weighed possible
charges of "murder, arson,
and complicity" Saturday
against four, men held in the
firebombing of a crowded
nightclub In which 36 persons
burned to death and 54 were
Injured .
Police said the bombs were
thrown into )he stairway en·
·trance - 61 the second floor
Wagon Wheel Cafe late Friday
night, sending 350 patrons into
panic. Most of those injured
· were hurt In falls from a single
fire escape or as they jumped
to safety through windows.

home. "Judging from previous
releases, they will be released
to a hotel some days before
they actually leave Hanoi," he
said. "But it will probably be a
matter of weeks.
In Vientiane, U!os, U. S.
officials unaware of the Paris
announcement which said the
men would not be inunediately
released, met a Russian Aercr
not flight from Hanoi in case
the three· airmen might be
aboard. They were not on the
plane.
The POWs were identified as
Navy Lt.(j.g. ) Markham Ligon
Gartley, Lt .(jg) Norris
Alphonso Charles, and Air
Force Maj. Edward Knight
Elias.
Dellinger said North Vietnam has not released more
prisoners since 1969 because
the u.s. military interfered
with the trips home of the men,
delriefed them lor long periods
afterwards and used them to
train more pilots for the war.
Dellinger said he "worked on
all three previous releases" in
February 1968, August 1968,
and August 1969. Three men
were freed on each occasion.
"It is our belief that If these
men are similarly debriefed
and
brainwashed
and
pressured to make scandals
and to tell lies about their
\COndition that this will
automatically seal off all
future releases," Dellinger told
the news conference.
"In July or August of 1969 the
last release, pressure was
lrought, threats were made,
and the prisoners who had
testified independently not only
in North VIetnam but who
testified independenUy to the
press on their way home and at
Kennedy Airport on their
arrival to the humane treat-

ment they had received, after
disappearing for a couple of
months into the military, they
began to talk about the
inhumane treatment they had
received," Dellinger said.
Dellinger, who is appealing a
conviction In the "Chicago
Seven" conspiracy trial, and
Mrs. Weiss, CD-&lt;!hairmen of the
Committee of Laison with
Families of Servicemen Detained in North Vietnam, said
the North VIetnam government
WBll releasing the pilots to the
anti-war group.

send 5().ton ships to the moon or
125-ton pay loads into earth
orbit. If the two Saturn !is are
scrapped, America's earth
orbit weight lifting capability
will drop to 32 tons, which the
space shuttle is being designed
to launch when it flies late this
decade .
The Apollo project will end
with Apollo 17 in December.
The Skylab program will end
late next year. The next

manned spaceflight will be a
joint rendezvous and docking
mission involving an American
Apollo command ship and a
Russian Soyuz spacecraft in
1975.
Just what would ~orne of
the excess rockets and spacecraft is uncertain, If they are to
be scrapped, although some
parts probably would be used
as spares for other rockets and
spacecraft.

8 Died Saturday
By Uolted Press International
Eight persons were reported
killed in U!bor Day Holiday
Weekend traffic mishaps In
Ohio during the first 24 hours of
the period, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported.
A total 14 accidental deaths
were reported during the same
-24'hli\U'" pmc&gt;d;-tncludlng five
VlcllmB of fires and one mlscel·
laneous death.
Four of the five victims died
in a blaze Saturday in Neffs,
Ohio, in Belmont County. The
victims were identified as Ron·
aid Porter, his wife, and their
two young children.
The miscellaneous death oc·
curred in North Ridgeville Fri·
day night when John May, 21,
an exterminating company
worker, died while using
deadly cyanide gas to fumigate
an attic.
·
Ohio Highway Safety

Department officials have
estimated 28 persons wUI be
killed in traffic-related accitlents in the state during the
holiday weekend which of·
ficlally ends at midnight
Monday.
Ohio Highway Patrolmen urged motorists to use cau,tion
since rainy w~ther was,oredieted 'lor mOlt 'at 'lt.o~r .bh.
Sunda')' and Sunday olghl.
Offlclers were al8o warning
of possible massive traffic
backup in Columbus Sunday
afternoon where the Cleveland
Browns-Cincinnati Bengals
football game was to be played.
Traffic en route to the football
game was expected to tangle
with Ohio Slate Fair traffic.
Last year 28 persons died In
Ohio traffic accidents during
the 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Monday holiday weekend.

Governors Settle
In for Meetings

R e[ease 0 f HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
('UPI )-Southern and border land use , regional environmen'state governors begin gathering tal programs, educational prob·
POw 1U8
lll k
es Sunday at this resort for their !ems and welfare reform. Last

Bull lslat!d Has
Crowding Problem
CARMI, Ill. (UPI) Thousands of rock fans
gathered In ever-Increasing
numbers on Bull Islanilln the'
Wabash River Satw:day for a ·
Labor Day weekend · rock
festival while ofllclala continued court actions to ban It
The 500-acre Island Ia accessible by road only through a
bridge from Griffin, Ind., and
authorities said traffic ·was
backed up for six miles.

formal business sessions on

Wife Pray
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Mrs.
Olga Charles said Saturday she
celebrated and prayed when
she learned her prisoner-ofwar husband would be released
by the North VIetnamese.
"I drink very little, but !feel
I'm high, high, high," she said
after learning Friday night
from a newsman her husband,
Navy Lt . Norris Charles, '!1, a
San I)iego resident from
Florida, was one of three
airmen to be released.
Mter the initial excitement,
however, she said she calmed
down and prayed for the
speedy return of her husband.
"I just couldn't believe It,"
Mrs. Charles said. "I just
couldn't believe it I ran outside and yelled, 'Norris is
coming home.'"
Charles, a radar interceptor
officer, was shot down with U.
·Cmdr. David Hoffman, the
pilot of their F-4 Phantom
fighter, while on a sortie f~ a
carrier last Dec. 28:
Friends and nelghbocs gathered at the Charles home after
Mrs. Charles shouted the news.
Among the guests were Navy
Lt. Ira Carter, a pUot and
friend of Charles, and Mrs.
Louise Connolly, wife of a Navy

mer.

Mrs. Charles abo said that

she baa 'fecelved five !etten

from her husband since he wu
shot down by a surfac..W-air
mlsslle.

annual conference, which this year they approved an antibusyear will be spiced with ing measure, but there has
presidential politics.
been no indication another will
The Demo'cratic nominee, he offered during this confen~­
Sen . GeorgeS. McGovern, will ce.
fly in Sunday evening for a
Reserves Called
dinner ~aucus with the chief
REDDING, Calif. (UP!)
executives before beginning a
weeklong western campaign Forestry offi cials called up
tour, and Vice President Spiro men and equipment reserves
Agnew, President Nixon 's run- Saturday to fight an outbreak
ning mate, will a&lt;ldress the of hundreds of lightning~aused
fires posing a grave threat to
governors Wednesday.
The three-day session of the the tinder-dry Northern
I
38th Southern Governors' Con· California forests.
Some
of
the
blazes,
touched
ference officially opens Mon·
day. It is being hosted this year off Friday night, were in
rugged, inaccessible canyons,
by the two Carolinas.
With Alabama Gov. George where smoke-jumping fire
C. Wallace out of the presiden- fighters were parachuted to
.tial race, mos( Southern gover- quench them .
nors, openly or otherwise, are
AUTOS DAMAGED
expected to line up with
POMEROY
cars had
President Nixon in the presimedium
damage
in
an
accident
dential race.
on
Union
Ave.
at·
9:41
p. m.
The governors will hold
Friday, Pomeroy Police
reported. One driveh by Steven
Craig, 18, Middleport, backed
Dellinger, Weiss
from a driveway and struck the
left side of a parked car owned
Will Meet POW's
by Nan Davis, Syracuse . Craig
NEW YORK (UPI) - An· wlli be chlirged with Improper
tiwar activist David Dellinger hacking, pollee said. There
said Saturday he and another were no injuries.
activist, Mrs . Cora Weiss,
FOUR WOONDED
would fly to Hanoi to escort
BELFAST (UPI) - Two
three American POWs back to snipers and two Brltlah
the United States, probably "in &amp;Oldlera were wounded In tluW
a matter of weeks."
separate .Incidents In J!e!ftot .
But Dellinger, who has been
and bombers struck aevenl
instrumental In previous
points acrot111 Northern Inland
.prisoner releases, warned the Saturday lell than 12 boln
r~lease by North Vietnam of
after the governmtDt Wlmed It
three American fliers could be
will ~unt down lrlab
·the last such release ~mtlllhe
Republican Arn111RA a••rH
end of the Vietnam War.
~mtil peace Is iellbed.

- Two

�.

•

res I ent
.

PRICES IN EFFECT

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SEPTEMBER.3 AND 4

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10W40

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SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA
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pocke t

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99~

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70Z.
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rival of unprecedented proportions.
The U.S. trade deficit with
Japan-floW running at about
$3.8 billion aMUally- is by fllr
:~o~.rgest with any single
White House press setretary
Ronald Ziegler, meantime,
said NIJ:on was pleased with
North VIetnam's decision to
release three American
prisoners of war but pointed
out that this was only an "in-

Come to Trial
ASUNCION, Paraguay
(UP! ) - Loudly protesting his
innocence, alleged narcotics
·overlord Auguste Joseph
Rlcord was extradited
Saturday for trial in New York
City as a master heroin
smuggler responsible for
!ringing two tons of heroin,
worth S2.5 billion, into the
United Slates. ·
.,.
A:f"U!~, authorities took
cu!~Gdy of the 61-year old
French-Argentine at President
Stroessner Airport and put him
on a specially-chartered Pan
American jetliner with two
doctors aboard, he said :
"I never was a drug traf·
Iicker. I never shipped drugs to
the United States. I never was
in that country. I don't know
how they can condemn me."
But the U.S. governmentwhich fought a 17-rnonth legal
battle to get him extradited
from Paraguay-has fingered
Rlcord as a key figure in a vast
network that has been In
operation for the past five
year&amp; .
An alrUne spokesman said
the big Boeing 707 was char·
tered by the U.S. government
and that It had the ''fuel
capsclty" for a non-stop flight
to New York.
The charge under which
Rlcord will be tried in New
York district court covers only
a small part of his aneged

Unification
Expedited

KODAK
NEW LOW LIGHT
SUPER 8
MOVIE FILM

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPl) - President Nixon
has taped a Labor Day
statement which will be
avaDable for radio broadcast
at 6 p.m. EDT today on
request, the Western White
House said Saturday.
Nixon last year made a
nationwide radio Labor Day
addreu but this year's
statement, recorded from
hls offlee overlooking the
Pacific Ocean, was for use
on an optional basts.
Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said that the address
would run about IS minutes.
Other aides said It was
geared to the role of Labor In
relation to technological
advances.

Alleged Heroin
Smuggler Will

KRAZVS

'

BABY SHAMPOO

68&lt;

39~

4-PARTY

HOSE
N'OZZLE

'.

'

49(

HECK'S
REG.

PKG. OF

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif .
(UPI )- President .Nixon began
a quiet Laboc Day weekeixl at
· vacation home here Satllr·
day following a Japanese
SWIUilit which 'officials said
defined rather than solved
trade and other problems
between th~ two allies.
The President SIJ'lnt most of
the day preparing a Labor Day
addreaa he will tape for radio
throughout the
· nation Sunday.
He returned here Friday
night from Hawaii following
two days of talks with
·Japanese Prime Minister
Kakuel Tanaka which focused
primarily on ways of
ellmlnating the chronic trade
Imbalance between the two
nations, Japan's moves to
establish diplomatic relations
with Peking and the role Japan
should play as a new economic
superpower.
The meeting, symbolically
held in mid-Pacific where
World War U began, signified
the end of any remaining
traces of American paternalisn\ toward Japan. It was
tacit recognition by the Nixon
administration that the nation
which the United States nursed
back. to health after the war
was now a dominant political
Ioree in Asia and an economic

activity--the smuggling of 97
pounds of heroin into the
United States in October, 1970.
Ricord, under death sentence
in Franee as a convicted Nazi
collaborator in World War II,
was turned over to a U.S. agent
who Identified himself only as
"David Smith."
He was preswned to be a
fPirai.P~~rcotica aael)l. Other
ll:s. authori'iles-also
presumed to be narcotics
agents-were present.
Rlcord's departure put an
end to lengthy efforts by the
United State to lay hands on
Ricord, now an Argentine
citizen. It began two weeks
after Rlcord's March 15, 1971,
New York Indictment when
Paraguayan police arrested
him just as he was preparing to
go to Argentina by car.
After six-month delay, a
lower court judge ruled that he
could not be extradited from
this country. Then a higher
court overruled that decision
and said be should be extradlted. ·
In Washington, Secretary of
State WUllani P. Rogers, who
Is chairman of President
Nixon's Cabinet Committee on
International Narcotics
Control, said, "the extradiction
... Is a major step forward in
the Administration's fight
against illicit drug. trafficking.

flniteamal " portion of the more
than I ,500 Americans captured
or missing In Indochina .
"We will not rest until there .
is a complete accounting for all
missing in action and release of
all prisoners throughout Indochina," he said.
Officials in the President's
party conceded that the trade
problems had not been solved
during the more than seven
hours of talks between Nixon
and Tanaka at a plush resort
hotel situated on a lava
promontory on the northern tip
of the main island of Oahu. But
they said the two leaders
developed remarkable rapport

Democrats
en Drive
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Sen. George S. McGovern,
preparing for his first campaign tour as Democratic presidential
nominee, changed Saturday thai President Nixon and Vice
President SPiro T. Agnew are "systematically eroding" civil
liberties in areas ranging from court appointments to wireta)&gt;ping .
McGovern leaves Sunday for a two-week trip, beginning with
a visit to the Southern Governor's Conference in Hilum Head, S.
C. He views the trip as the formal kickoff of his campaign to
unseat Nixon in the Nov. 7 election.
McGovern 's
vice
presidential running mate unannounced. It has refused to
promise a total end to needless
Sargent Shriver, who also
military spying on American
begins a campaign swing
citizens.
It has filled computer
Sunday that includes visits to
data banks with personal in·
at least six states, charged
formation about thousaods of
Nixon was preparing a
proposal for a value added tax Americans - information that
may be used by inquirers who
amounting to a national sales
have no legitimate governmentax "that will cost the average
American family another $200 tal purpose."
a year."
A statement issued from
SUSPECT HELD
Shriver's headquarters did not
TWINSBURG,
Ohio (UP!)say when Nixon would reveal
James
Lee
Williams,
20,
his proposal, nor did it detail
Warrensville
Heights,
was
the alleged plan other than to
say it was designed to raise an arrested and charged Saturday
in connection with the Thursadditional $18 billion.
day
robbery of the Twinsburg
On the eve of his departure,
McGovern 's campaign head- Bank. Two other men also were
quarters Issued a "campaign involved in the robbery during .
white paper on civil liberties" which an undetermined
charging that "the Nixon amount of money was taken,
adnlinjltration's syatematic
erosion 'of basic rights presents
the American people with the
... spectre of big government
peering into the corner of every
person's life, stifling dissent
and diminishing individual
liberties."
In a statement issued with
PARIS (UPI)- A U.S.
the white paper, McGovern
assailed "the shrill attacks by civilian contact with Hanoi
Spiro Agnewn on the news said Saturday three captured
media and asserted that Nixon American pilots to be released
"has sought to weaken the from North Vietnamese
judiciary
by
wilfully prisons "in a matter of weeks"
nominating mediocrities to the hold the key to future releases.
Anti-war activist David Deihigh bench (Supreme Court)."
The paper itself also accused · Unger said the three could be
the administration of "a the last POWs freed before the
continuoos and disturbing at- end of the war if the U.S.
tack on the Individual rights military "brainwashed and
pressured (them) to make
guaranteed all citizens .
"The Nixon administration scandals and to tell lies about
has authorized governmental their condition."
At a news conference caned
invasions of privacy-or stood
by while such invasions OC· to detail plans of the release,
DeiUnger said he and another
cur," the paper said.
"It has. proposed no-knock American peace activisl, Mrs.
legislation which allows state Cora Weiss, will fly to Hanoi to
agents to burst into homes escort the three POWs back

I'

.. ...
Cri.~is
TOLEDO, Spain (UP!) The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Toledo and
Primate of Spain, Gonzalez
Martin, said Saturday Spain
is undergoing a grave moral
and religious crisis.
Symptoms Included "the
systematic .assault on
marriage through discussion
ol premarital relations,

Spain in

separation and divorce" ,

-·

lack of posl-confesslonal
penitence, lack of respect lor

. . . -..

the communion service, and

many

emply

-~

......

~ ~~-...: ,

..

_., ~ ~

Spanish

SHARING SHELTER. a South Vietnamese soldier and a woman caught In the
battle zone keep low as lire from Communist forces sweeps an area ncar Lal Khe.

VO~L._V_
_
II ___
N0_._31________~S_
UN__D_
AY~
,S_E_PT_EM_B_ER_3~,_
19_
72____________~
PAGE)i_

Moon Rockets on Block
the bill for keeping the two
Saturn 5 rockets in a flightready condition will climb to
between $1.5 million to $2
million annually. Officials see
little chance of using the
Saturn !is before 1982.
" We're spending money
today maintaining this hard·
ware and if the decision is
made not to use it, then we've
wasted it," said Philip E.
Culbertson, director of advanced missions for NASA in
Washington.
The Saturn 5s are the
greatest resource. Each cost
$182million to build. They were
onee assigned Apollo moon
flights, but three Apollo missions were canceled because of
budget cutbacks. One Saturn 5
will be used to launch the
Skylab, leaving two without
jobs.
The Saturn 5 is the world's
most powerful rocket. It can

CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)The space agency is consider·
ing scrapping more than a hall
billion dollars worth of Apollo
rockets and spaceships
because it can't afford to fly
them.
·
Adecision on the fate of two
surplus Saturn 5 moon rockets,
three Apollo command ships
and three Saturn IB rockets is
expected to be made within
several weeks.
The problem is that the
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
is now spending ~,1100 a year
to maintain the equipment
under carefully controlled
conditions. Yet the agency has
no funded jobs for the rockets
and spacecraft, and oificials
said the outlook is very dim for
extra money to carry out a
number of proposed missions.
After the Skylab space
station is launched next spring,

. Hanoi warn~ u.s. -Future'
POW Releases is on Trial

GOP Election Managers to
Tell All about Wat~rgate

WASHINGTON (UPI)- questions . MacGregor's
Nixon's reelection deposition is scheduled to be
President
SEOUL (UPI)-The opening
of Red Cross talks between campaign managers-past and taken Sept. 8.
Mitchell also told newsmen
South and North Korea will present-,-were told Saturday
by
a
federal
judge
to
make
he
had known nothing in adspeed up the unification of the
two nations, the chief South . sworn statements telling vance about the breakin.
Richey interrupted his vaca·
Korean delegate said Saturday. . anything they may know aboot
the
bugging
of
Democratic
lion
to hold a rare Saturday
lee Bun..SUk made the
remarks during a nationally party headquarters last June. court session to hear
At the same time, U.S. argumenUI on a motion filed
televised news conference held
District
Court Judge Charles Friday by the five suspects'
soon after he and 33 other
South Korean Red Cross R. Richey blocked the taking of lawyer, Henry B. Rothblatt of
,officials returned to Seoul from formal depositions "at this New York . The motion asked
a four-day visit to North Korea. time" from the five men ac- Richey to order the Democrats
"The Red Cross meeting laid cused of breaking Into to stop taking routine pre-trial
sworn
down a stepping stone for Democratic national , depositions headquarters.
Electronic
statements
,of
fact.:..On
the
better relations between South
and North' Korea and thus eavesdropping devices were grounds that his clients'
saved our efforts and time found the night of the breakln. chances for a fair trial have
The decillon means that been hurt by widespread
needed for ow: national unifica·
John
N. Mi~ell, former at- publicity in the caSJl.
lion," he said.
torney
general and former
The five suspects had been
"I can dare say our trip to
the North was successful. We Nixon~ manager, and slated to make their
have succeeded In creating an Clark MacGregor, who sue- depositions next week, but
atm011phere in which both tildes · ceeded Mitchell as campaign Richey's action halted their
manager, lllllit tell oppoeition . appearances. Six depositions
can trust each other."
lawyers
under oath wblt they · from other persons believed .to
The chlet delesate cOnceded
know
about
the case prior to have knowledge of the case
that South and North Korea
still differ in their approach to trial of a mllllon civil suit were taken earlier.
The judge said, "this court
the ·CIITent Red Crollll talks lrought by the DeuiOCfats
egalnlt
tile
Cpmml""
to
Rewill
, give this case priority
dealgned !o Hell: 'waya for
. Insofar as its calendar permits
reW~Itins 10. mllllonatP,ataled elect PlUident NIJ:on.
Mitchell'adePoeillon
waacut
beca1111e of Its obviOIIIimpor·
family memben.
llhort
Friday
when
R
motion
to
tance."
· ·
''South Korealntenda the Red
O'ou'talb as,. bumanltarlu halt the tali:lng of . such The Democratic party filed
projectcruy, while Norlh Korea depolitlonl wu Wed. He told file mlllloo-dollar invasion of
attempta to tum the meetingl ne'llllllell aflenlard be had privacy suit 011 the bugging
Into the fvrm of I political nolhlng to do with the motion, suspects after they were
and was om:IOIJI to ...... artestedat2:30a.m.Junel71n
nature,"he said.

-

•

'.-•
•'

and a genuine affection ·for
each other .
A general atmosphere of
cooperation was generated,
they said, and a framework
established for continuing
negotiations.
At the .end of the conference,
the two leaders announced that
Japan would pur.chase an
additional $1.1 billion in U.S.
goods - agricultural products ,
air buses and uranium enrichment services--mtd the Japanese said they would take
other, unspecified steps to
reduce the trade deficit to
more manageable portions
within three to five years.

seminaries, Marttn said.

'I

I

....

.. .. .-.' ·"

'[

the offices of the Democratic
National Committee at the
plush Watergate complex on
the Potomac River. Pollee said
they had electronic eavesdro)&gt;ping equipment with them.
A federal grand jury is Investigating and criminal indiclments are expected this
month .
Democrats predict--and Republicans deny-that top 1lOP
leaders will he among those
charged.

Four Men Held
In Firebombing
MONTREAL ( UPI)
Authorities weighed possible
charges of "murder, arson,
and complicity" Saturday
against four, men held in the
firebombing of a crowded
nightclub In which 36 persons
burned to death and 54 were
Injured .
Police said the bombs were
thrown into )he stairway en·
·trance - 61 the second floor
Wagon Wheel Cafe late Friday
night, sending 350 patrons into
panic. Most of those injured
· were hurt In falls from a single
fire escape or as they jumped
to safety through windows.

home. "Judging from previous
releases, they will be released
to a hotel some days before
they actually leave Hanoi," he
said. "But it will probably be a
matter of weeks.
In Vientiane, U!os, U. S.
officials unaware of the Paris
announcement which said the
men would not be inunediately
released, met a Russian Aercr
not flight from Hanoi in case
the three· airmen might be
aboard. They were not on the
plane.
The POWs were identified as
Navy Lt.(j.g. ) Markham Ligon
Gartley, Lt .(jg) Norris
Alphonso Charles, and Air
Force Maj. Edward Knight
Elias.
Dellinger said North Vietnam has not released more
prisoners since 1969 because
the u.s. military interfered
with the trips home of the men,
delriefed them lor long periods
afterwards and used them to
train more pilots for the war.
Dellinger said he "worked on
all three previous releases" in
February 1968, August 1968,
and August 1969. Three men
were freed on each occasion.
"It is our belief that If these
men are similarly debriefed
and
brainwashed
and
pressured to make scandals
and to tell lies about their
\COndition that this will
automatically seal off all
future releases," Dellinger told
the news conference.
"In July or August of 1969 the
last release, pressure was
lrought, threats were made,
and the prisoners who had
testified independently not only
in North VIetnam but who
testified independenUy to the
press on their way home and at
Kennedy Airport on their
arrival to the humane treat-

ment they had received, after
disappearing for a couple of
months into the military, they
began to talk about the
inhumane treatment they had
received," Dellinger said.
Dellinger, who is appealing a
conviction In the "Chicago
Seven" conspiracy trial, and
Mrs. Weiss, CD-&lt;!hairmen of the
Committee of Laison with
Families of Servicemen Detained in North Vietnam, said
the North VIetnam government
WBll releasing the pilots to the
anti-war group.

send 5().ton ships to the moon or
125-ton pay loads into earth
orbit. If the two Saturn !is are
scrapped, America's earth
orbit weight lifting capability
will drop to 32 tons, which the
space shuttle is being designed
to launch when it flies late this
decade .
The Apollo project will end
with Apollo 17 in December.
The Skylab program will end
late next year. The next

manned spaceflight will be a
joint rendezvous and docking
mission involving an American
Apollo command ship and a
Russian Soyuz spacecraft in
1975.
Just what would ~orne of
the excess rockets and spacecraft is uncertain, If they are to
be scrapped, although some
parts probably would be used
as spares for other rockets and
spacecraft.

8 Died Saturday
By Uolted Press International
Eight persons were reported
killed in U!bor Day Holiday
Weekend traffic mishaps In
Ohio during the first 24 hours of
the period, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported.
A total 14 accidental deaths
were reported during the same
-24'hli\U'" pmc&gt;d;-tncludlng five
VlcllmB of fires and one mlscel·
laneous death.
Four of the five victims died
in a blaze Saturday in Neffs,
Ohio, in Belmont County. The
victims were identified as Ron·
aid Porter, his wife, and their
two young children.
The miscellaneous death oc·
curred in North Ridgeville Fri·
day night when John May, 21,
an exterminating company
worker, died while using
deadly cyanide gas to fumigate
an attic.
·
Ohio Highway Safety

Department officials have
estimated 28 persons wUI be
killed in traffic-related accitlents in the state during the
holiday weekend which of·
ficlally ends at midnight
Monday.
Ohio Highway Patrolmen urged motorists to use cau,tion
since rainy w~ther was,oredieted 'lor mOlt 'at 'lt.o~r .bh.
Sunda')' and Sunday olghl.
Offlclers were al8o warning
of possible massive traffic
backup in Columbus Sunday
afternoon where the Cleveland
Browns-Cincinnati Bengals
football game was to be played.
Traffic en route to the football
game was expected to tangle
with Ohio Slate Fair traffic.
Last year 28 persons died In
Ohio traffic accidents during
the 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Monday holiday weekend.

Governors Settle
In for Meetings

R e[ease 0 f HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
('UPI )-Southern and border land use , regional environmen'state governors begin gathering tal programs, educational prob·
POw 1U8
lll k
es Sunday at this resort for their !ems and welfare reform. Last

Bull lslat!d Has
Crowding Problem
CARMI, Ill. (UPI) Thousands of rock fans
gathered In ever-Increasing
numbers on Bull Islanilln the'
Wabash River Satw:day for a ·
Labor Day weekend · rock
festival while ofllclala continued court actions to ban It
The 500-acre Island Ia accessible by road only through a
bridge from Griffin, Ind., and
authorities said traffic ·was
backed up for six miles.

formal business sessions on

Wife Pray
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Mrs.
Olga Charles said Saturday she
celebrated and prayed when
she learned her prisoner-ofwar husband would be released
by the North VIetnamese.
"I drink very little, but !feel
I'm high, high, high," she said
after learning Friday night
from a newsman her husband,
Navy Lt . Norris Charles, '!1, a
San I)iego resident from
Florida, was one of three
airmen to be released.
Mter the initial excitement,
however, she said she calmed
down and prayed for the
speedy return of her husband.
"I just couldn't believe It,"
Mrs. Charles said. "I just
couldn't believe it I ran outside and yelled, 'Norris is
coming home.'"
Charles, a radar interceptor
officer, was shot down with U.
·Cmdr. David Hoffman, the
pilot of their F-4 Phantom
fighter, while on a sortie f~ a
carrier last Dec. 28:
Friends and nelghbocs gathered at the Charles home after
Mrs. Charles shouted the news.
Among the guests were Navy
Lt. Ira Carter, a pUot and
friend of Charles, and Mrs.
Louise Connolly, wife of a Navy

mer.

Mrs. Charles abo said that

she baa 'fecelved five !etten

from her husband since he wu
shot down by a surfac..W-air
mlsslle.

annual conference, which this year they approved an antibusyear will be spiced with ing measure, but there has
presidential politics.
been no indication another will
The Demo'cratic nominee, he offered during this confen~­
Sen . GeorgeS. McGovern, will ce.
fly in Sunday evening for a
Reserves Called
dinner ~aucus with the chief
REDDING, Calif. (UP!)
executives before beginning a
weeklong western campaign Forestry offi cials called up
tour, and Vice President Spiro men and equipment reserves
Agnew, President Nixon 's run- Saturday to fight an outbreak
ning mate, will a&lt;ldress the of hundreds of lightning~aused
fires posing a grave threat to
governors Wednesday.
The three-day session of the the tinder-dry Northern
I
38th Southern Governors' Con· California forests.
Some
of
the
blazes,
touched
ference officially opens Mon·
day. It is being hosted this year off Friday night, were in
rugged, inaccessible canyons,
by the two Carolinas.
With Alabama Gov. George where smoke-jumping fire
C. Wallace out of the presiden- fighters were parachuted to
.tial race, mos( Southern gover- quench them .
nors, openly or otherwise, are
AUTOS DAMAGED
expected to line up with
POMEROY
cars had
President Nixon in the presimedium
damage
in
an
accident
dential race.
on
Union
Ave.
at·
9:41
p. m.
The governors will hold
Friday, Pomeroy Police
reported. One driveh by Steven
Craig, 18, Middleport, backed
Dellinger, Weiss
from a driveway and struck the
left side of a parked car owned
Will Meet POW's
by Nan Davis, Syracuse . Craig
NEW YORK (UPI) - An· wlli be chlirged with Improper
tiwar activist David Dellinger hacking, pollee said. There
said Saturday he and another were no injuries.
activist, Mrs . Cora Weiss,
FOUR WOONDED
would fly to Hanoi to escort
BELFAST (UPI) - Two
three American POWs back to snipers and two Brltlah
the United States, probably "in &amp;Oldlera were wounded In tluW
a matter of weeks."
separate .Incidents In J!e!ftot .
But Dellinger, who has been
and bombers struck aevenl
instrumental In previous
points acrot111 Northern Inland
.prisoner releases, warned the Saturday lell than 12 boln
r~lease by North Vietnam of
after the governmtDt Wlmed It
three American fliers could be
will ~unt down lrlab
·the last such release ~mtlllhe
Republican Arn111RA a••rH
end of the Vietnam War.
~mtil peace Is iellbed.

- Two

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Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Tbose Trying Gll)'ll !

Dear Helen and Sue:

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Yau IIJI&amp;esled that "Ann" who constantly gels unwelcome
..-l'nm fellows may be lhrowlng out the wrong signals.
Peclple ll'e too quick to blame the girl. I am 31 and have had
Ann's probbm ever since I was seven or eight. People wal'lllld
me aboai IIIICOIIICIOIIIIy leading men on, so I spent years
carefully curbing mySelf, repressing the sllghtest exuberance.
But htUlhad trooble. l could feel men eyeing me as if I were a
1hce ol meat on a rack.
Ann: yau are NO'l' ~!ending atgllals. Men are often AFRAID of
glrla who ~cast. Rather, they can be turned on fantastically
bY lhe alght o1 a ~Y, frightened, vulnerable-looking girl who
obvloualy doesn't .want anything to do with them. What you
llhould do, Ann, Is cultivate an atiitude of confidence and
eopbl.ltlcallon. Be aggressive. Don't be afraid to get nasty snarl at them, tlreaten to tell their wives -bit them if you wish
-but don't ahow fear! Dogs bite when they smell fear. Men are
no different. If lhey think you are able to take care of yourself,
11ley'llleave you alone.
In the bargain, you wUl develop knowledge of males and
maybe you wUl not lose your "Mr. Right" as I did years ago.MISS J.T.

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It's ·a Sin not to Vote
By I.,OUIS CASSELS
United Press International
If you find yoursell feeling
apathetic about the election
campaign now moving Into
high gear, consider this:
Voting is not merely a civic
duty. It also Is a religious
obligation.
In
a
democratically
governed country such as the
United State•, every citizen
shares moral responsibility for
what his government does, as
well as lor what it leaves undone.
This Is not just a theory

of God and man

simple task, easily performed,
and the book• will oo open. !n
most states for at least anotho:r
month.
U you're going to vote, you
owe it to your fellow man to
vote as wisely as possible. And
that means taking the time and
trouble to keep ilp with the
campaign for the next couple of
months. Read your newspaper,
listen to the candidates on TV,
think about the issues, weigh

both sides. (leclde wbat you
believe-and who you trust.
It lakes some effort. The
best-written political story
may not be as lnterestlng ·to
you as the sports page or the
feature section.
But keeping up with cam·
paign developments Is certainly not as heavy a burden as
taking up arms to defend your
coWJtry. Yet the fonner Is just
as truly a citizen's duty as the
latter.

Bald Knobs News Notes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel Mission on
August Tl was 28. Offering was
$5.97.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dailey
and friends, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Allen and grandsons,
Jamie and Shawn, all of
Newark, Ohio, Mrs. Helen
Augustine and friends of
Akron, Mr. Marion Sloter of
Racine, Mrs. Elva. Dailey and
granddaughter, Kristin, of
Syracuse, visited Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Autherson.
Clint Birch and daughter,
Leota visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
LippsandlamUy,Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Enlow, at Vincent.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Van Meter
and family of'Sandy Lake, Pa.,
visited Mrs. May Van Meter
and Ruby and Mr. Robert
Ours.
Mrs. Dorsa Deal, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Shoemaker of MI.
Vernon, · Mr. and Mrs. Oris
Frederick of Chester, Mr.
Maywood Johnston, local,
visited Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs . George
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Deeter, Mrs. Roger Bissell, all
of Bashan, Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
local, attended homecoming at
F1at Rock, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Van
Meter and sons of Reedsville
and Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van

Meter and Missy of MinersvUle
Route, Mrs. Betty Ward &amp;lld
family and Mrs. Maxine
Haines, local, visited Mr. and
Mrs . Michael Evans and
family .
Mrs. Bernice Evans of
Pomeroy spent a week with
Mrs. Michael Evans and
family.
Missy Van Meter of
MinersvUle spent ..a weekend
with her grandmother, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans
and family visited Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Hunnel and son at
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. John ·Owens of
Flint, Mich., Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Abels of Beaver Falls,'
Pa ., Mrs. Jean Byers, Leota
Birch visited Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Abels.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James Hupp and family of
Letart Falls, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Bass and family of
Mt. Vernon, Mr. and Mrs.
Hayes McMurray of PorUand
visited Mr . and Mrs. George
Hupp.
Mrs. Hazel Shuck of Miami,
Fla ., Mrs. Augusta Powell of ·
Torch, Mrs. Ellen Lipps and
daughter, Mrs. Pamela Enlow,
Vincent; Lawrence Lipps,
Littl Hocking, visited Clint
Birch and daugh~r, Leota.
Mrs. Naomi Autherson and
Leota Birch visited Mr. and
Mrs. James Autherson at
Syracuse.

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Rock Springs
News Notes
By Mrs. Opba Offutt

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris
and son vacationed recently In
Delaware. They viSited with
Mr. and Mrs. James Alexander
of Hockessin, Del. Mrs.
Alexander Is a sister of Mrs.
Harris. .

Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston have returned from
a vacation at VIrginia Beach
and other points of interest.
Bruce Blackston, Tom Ball
and Eugene Brundige attended
a llall game at Cincinnati over
the weekend. They also
stopped at Kings Island.
Mr. and Mrs. James Weber
of Middleport visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Opha Offutt on
Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
atteilded a birthday dinner for
their grandsons, David and
Doug, SOlis of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hines of Belpre. Others
present were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Woode, Chester; MrS.
Edith Hines and Mrs. Marie
Chapman, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger mnes and
daughterS, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Salnaker of GallipoUs.
Weekend guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs . William
Radford were Miss Mary
Radford of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Glaze of Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Glaze and
family of Akron, George Glaze
and family of Columbus, Mrs.
Frank O!eatam, Columbus,
Mrs. Donald Glaze, Mrs. John
Garsteck and daughters, Mrs.
Byron Cunningham and son of
Cleveland, Mrs. Grace Glaze,
Middleport, and Mrs. Bessie
Byers and family of Columbus.
Mark Byers returned to his
home after spending two
months with the Radford&amp;.
Margaret Taylor Is visiting
at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Michael
Brothers.
Amy Brothers, Infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Brothers, Is reported
doing fine after stay In the
hospital.
Miss
Kathy
Matson,

taught in civics classes, but a
practlcalfact of life. If we have
the opportunity to affect the
composition and coriduct of our
government, and fail to make
intelligent use of that op.
portunity, we are expressing
Indifference to the welfare ot
millions of human beings
Dear Miss T.:
whose lives will be better or
I suspect you developed from a man.fearer to a man.hater,
worse because of what the
never 011ce considering males anything but "the enemy." Really,
government does or fails to do .
they aren't all potential rapists, even though most have a "try in
in the future.
their eye." -Helen
We Can't Duck
Dear Miss T.:
We can't duck our moral
I think you're too quick to blame the GUY! How would YOU duty to vote by claiming that
Ub lobe ticked In the shins (figuratively) every time you did a
"my one litUe vote won't
doubletate?
matter." In a close election,
We si:Ulaay the wrong signals enL'OUI'age a man to beat the
every vote counts. In the 1960
IJ)etlll Umlt ... 'lbe RIGHT signals slow him down but don't stop
presidential election, for
blm cold. - SUE
example, a shift of just one
vote per precinct would have
given the victory to Richard M.
Nixon Instead of John F.
RAP:
Kennedy. The 1968 contest
Can I add my say In response to "Former Prom Queen"?
between Nixon and Hubert
Schoohplrlt Is just as much presen.t now as It was In her day,
Humphrey was almost as
but It's packaged differenUy.
close.
Much more emphasis Is pisced on social problems today.
Nor can we opt out by saying
Kldls ann't happy.gcHucky high school nuts any more. They that we don't care much lor ·
realize that getting to know your world gels you "somewhere" a either candidate or either
lot faller than being a football hero or Prom ~een.
party. SOMEBODY Is going to
&amp;In, i!pClrts are great. I am big "rah-rah" too. Kids still be elected, and even if we feel
IICI'elllland yeU and pull together when the Doals are made, and it's a choice between two evils,
hOld their breath for the winning field goal. The team still prays we have a duty to decide which
lillnllyaathefourthdownattemptat !Oyardsfails and the coach is the lesser evil-and cast our
stUl wipes hla eyes and hugs team members when a crucial game vote accordingly.
If failing to vote is a sin (I
" loll.
We bave rallles and blike sales and spirit contests, and most think it Is), It's one that
everyone participates. Car washes bring In more dollars lor millions of otherwise decent,
Tuppers Plains
IIChool eventa; baJIIIY, laughing kids, throwing rags and God-fearing Americans are
guilty
of
committing.
In
the
,iplaahlng llllds.lfthat's not spirit, what Is? This:
Kldl out at 8'a. m. collecting garbage from a scenic area. last presidential election, the
GIIJI driving trucks carrying thousands of cans and bottles to number of potential voters who
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
tum In for IDO!JeY which Is then donated to the poor. Girls failed to go to the polls was
greater
than
the
number
of
Mr. and Mrs . Victor Barr of
collecllng toya for needy children. Kids out with petitions to
ballots
cast
for
the
winning
Joppa
were Sunday guests of
IDIIlate pollution controls and others working In the Head Start
candidate.
Mrs
.
Ellie
Pyles.
ptoCram. 'lbouaanda marching to raise funds for every thing
Mast Register Now
Teddie Conley is a medical
tram POW auppllea to cancer research. Others ringjniJ doorbells
Programs for Tonight
If you've never voted belore, patient at Holzer Medical
to get out the Yote. Blacks, browns and whites pulling for better or haven't voted in a good
Cen ter, Gallipolis.
I'ICial Wldentandlng. That's spirit!
wbUe, you cannot wait until
Mrs . Leone Babcock and
and Tomorrow
·Maybe lt'a a dillerent kind than "Former Prom ~een's," election day,Nov. 7, to do your Mrs. Eulah Swan were Friday
but we bave her spirit too. - CLASS PRINCESS AND duty. To vote then, you must evening dinner guests of Mrs.
POLLUTION PETITION CHAIRMAN WHO LOVES BOTH
register now. Registration is a Leota Massar of Eastern and
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER3
also overnight guests. The 6:0o-Film 4.
6: 3o-Day of Discovery 4; Newsmaker '72 13;
dinner was in honor of Mrs. 7:0Q-Oid Time Gosepl Hour 13 ; Societies in Transition ,. ;
Eulah Swan 's birthday.
Chaplain on Bourbon Street 6.
nntcvr:·o:r " r:U:rr;;;·::: .. :cr. ·t.m r, eta
iiii
Charles Carr is recuperating 7: 3o-Time for Timothy 4; Treehouse Club 10; Faith for Today
8; Revival Fires 6.
now at his home after un - 8:!)0-Herald
of Truth 3; Davey &amp; Goliath 4; Leonard Repass 8;
dergoing surgery at Pleasant
Gospel Caravan 6 ; Church Service 13; Lamp Unto My Feet
10.
Valley Hospital.
8:
Is-Morning
Report 4.
Mrs. Edith Bet•ing was a 8:3o-OraJ Roberts
3; Your Health 4; Day of Discovery 8; Rex
SWlday guest of Mrs. Lena
Hum bard 13; Revival Fires 15; Kathryn Kuhlman 6 ; Look Up
and Live 10.
By JACK O'BRIAN
80 Maori perfonners (there's a smart yoWlg Pooler and daughter, Sally, 9:0o-Singing
Jubilee 3; Cadle Chape l 4; Rex Humbard 15. 6;
Kl!l81NGER'SGai'TOBEKIDDING
group which has played around here and the Chester .
Tom &amp; Jerry 8; Camera Three 10.
Mrs. Leone Babcock at- 9:3o-Church by Side of Road 4; Grovle Goodies 8, 10; Dr. Paul
NEW YORK (KFS) - NBC Today-girl Bahamas called Mary and the Maoris, a
Warren 13.
tended·
the Keno Christian
llcbara Walters minded Henry Kissinger's strange, exciting combination of rock and
IO:OD-Church
Service4; Faith for Today IS; This We Believe 13;
ldda (with ber own- tlny doll) during a con- Maori1ll'imitive) ... But such as the foregoing Church picnic at Forked RWl
This is the Life 3; Reluctant Dragon 13; Oral Roberts 6; Kid
Talk 8; Movie, Young Mr. Lincoln, 10.
ventlOII lull ... How's this for a dinner trio (at really Isn't vaudeville; In the old days it would Lake Sunday. There were
10:
3o-This
Is the lite 15; Insight 4; Captain Noah 3; Facing Lite
several
in
attendance
but
also
C!aaen'a): Sinatra, Circuit Court Judge Irving be more the sort of offbeat programming at the
8;
Doubiedeckers
13; Christopher Closeup 6.
Ka!!fnwn and Ambasaador Walter Annenberg Hammerstein Theater, where the unusual and a few were Wlabie to attend. II :DO-TV Chapel 3; Bullwinkle 13; Focus on Columbus 4;
Camera ThreeS; Consumer Report 1S; Point of Vlew6 .
... JudgeK. wlllbeChle!CircultJudge in Jan.- sensational, not the precisely · routined Those coming from a distance
were Faith and Amber McCain 11:3o-This Is the Answer 3; Insight 15; Make A Wish 6, 13; Face
vta -lorlty ... We had the AU MacGraw.Steve vaudevUle of The Palace, was tbe odd rule ...
the Nation 8.
of Marietta and Rev. and Mrs.
McQueen thing weeks ago. Now they're so open The last several Palsce offerings were musical Clifford Smith and daughter of 12:DO-Morman Choir 3; Rex Humbard 8; To Be Announced 15;
Friendly Junction 10; Summer Olymplcs6, 13; Film 4.
ablllt It, even their klda plsy together. At comedies (Sweet Charity, Applause); it's a Bradbury .
12:3o-At lssue3; Open Bible IS; TheTemptalion of Reb Ylsroel
Sltve's plsce ... Shirley MacLatne and Team- great theatre for audiences - great sightlines
4.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watson
12: 4s-Sacred Heart IS.
Iller veep Harold Gibbons dined laat week at and acoustics.
and son, Gene, of Dayton spent
the Press 3, IS ; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Urban
Dlnny'a mdeaway and shared things, such as . "Sex and the Teenage Girl" author Carol a recent weekend here with his I:OD-Meet
League Presents 10.
both being for McGovern; took their political Botwln was off on a promotional tour, and at mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
1: 3o-Face the Nation tO; Gospel Talent Time 15; Roller Derby
3; Sporls Challenge 4.
te!H-Iele to Jimmy Weston 'a for nightcaps ... JFK Airport ber luggage was opened by skyjack
Mrs. Elizabeth Lyons and 2:0QIssues and Asnwers 6; Movies: War Drums 4; Port
C. lha earle, we thought we heard Harold searchers -who gave her some strange looks son, Lamar, visited Mr . and
Afrique 10; The Comedians 13; Death Valley Days IS.
lllllllicll be'd been wed 30 years and was ez. when one bag turned up full of that X-rated tome Mrs. Marion Riggs and family 2:3o-CBPA Bowling 6; Wrestling 8; Movie: Bullet for a Bad.
man 3; To Be Announced IS.
tremely pnJUd of his wife who just earned a ... Rudy Vallee had a dead end street named for of Logan and attended the 3:DO-Film
13; Western Theatre 15.
llllller'a degree -and bad been asked to apply him; shouldn't Tiny Tim get at least aU-turn? State Fair at Columbus.
3: Is-Commercial Film 13.
for a Fullbrlgbt Scholarahip? Sounds smashing ... "Follies" opened in L.A.,s new Shubert
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle, J:Jo-Movle: Fury al Showdown 4; Virginian 8: Issues &amp; An.
swers 13.
... Cynics auggeat Gibbons' political heresy tn Theater wraves. Deservedly ... That musical's Mrs. Bill Ritchie and daughter, 4:DO-Saint
IS; Summer Olympics 6, 13; Movie: Red River 10.
not following the Hoffa-Teamsters Union top male star, John McMartin's, leaving it to Cinda, attended a family picnic S:OD-To Be Announced 15: Primus 4; Film 8.
l World 8; To Be Announced 15; Juvenile Jury 4;
~or N1J;011 as a shrewd fut;ure face-saver
play Bdwy. for a season In repertory ... John at the home of Mr . and Mrs. S: 3o-Anlma
National
Automotive
TrOll pie Test 3.
Bob Burk at Alfred Sunday.
-llbould McGovern magically win, at least one misses P. J .'s
6:0D-News, Weather, Sports 4; Comment! 15; Survlval6; Wild
Mr . and Mrs. Thurman
IGp Telllllller would be there to accept the
Kingdom 13; Campaign '72. e. 10.
.
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar (Lew Alcindor) is at
News
3,
4,1S;
News.
Weather.
S"'rls6.
6:3o-NBC
Babcock
and
Mrs.
Bessie
fawn.
Harvard sopping up Arabic courses working
7:DO-Primus 3; Magic Circus 6; Lassie 8; Gilligan's Island 4;
Barbra Strelsand may play the late toward a masters In Near Eastern studies ... Webster went to Levett's
The Golden Years 10; Lawrence Wetk 13.
COIIIIetica tycoon Helena Rubenstein when the Commie Russia now advertises In the Funeral Home at Parkersburg 7:3Q-Worldof Disney 3, 4, 15; Movie: Enter Laughing, 8, 10.
Sunday to see Mrs. Clara 8:0D-FBt 6, 13.
wa:onlm Patrick O'Higgins' biography gels capitallstic Wall Street Journal ... We were on
8:3Q-Father on Trial 3, 4, 1S.
fllme4 ... The new Playboy mag elpallSion into wrong when we wrote John Paul Getty did the Adams who passed away at 9:DO-Bonanza 3, 4, 15 &lt;Summer Olympics 6. 13.
9:3o-Life of Leonardo Da Vinci 8, 10.
a ~ montbly titled "Oul" is just a filthier E. F. Hutton Wall Street-broker..:ommercial for C&lt;&gt;lwnbus Friday. '
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and 10:110-'Bold Ones. 3, 4, IS.
venloa of the stodgy pruriencles of the original nothing: he was paid $1 - and a box of candy ...
family of Fairborn spent a 10: 3o-Death volley Days 8; High Road to Adventure 10.
... Nearly all the late Uince (Barbara Hutton's NeUe Adams, Steve McQueen's soon-ex, isn't
ll :oo-News Weather Sports 3~ •, 8, 10, 15.
couple of days here last week II : Is-CBS News e, 10; Jerry Lewis Telethon 6.
Dl) ReveDtlow's ~mUllon fortune went to his
sobbing over their split - her beau is Oscar with his parents, Mr. and Mrs . 11 :30-Johnny Carson 4, IS; Jerry Lewis Telethon 3; Movies:
widow, Cheryl Lothrldge, a penniless starlet winner producer Frank McCarthy. Lovely girl; Veri Tuttle. Mr. and Mrs.
Decision at Sundown 8; The Comedy of Terrors 10; Operation
White Shark 13.
when 1lley wed.
, knew her when she was a chorus kid.
William Tuttle and family of
Mlnhattan's faU fun parade starts right
The Peerless Hotel bad a pressurized Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs.
lfta' lAbor Illy: La Foret In the Pierre Hotel, closing (because of pimpg.prostles-dope ad- Tom Mulch o! Delaware and
MONDAY, SEPT. 4
6:0o-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
tile tuwn'a Cli~ hotel cafe, reUghts Sept. 14 ... dicts) but it lost its linal ·respectable tenant a granddaughter, visited Mr . 6:
1s-Farmtime 10; Farm Report 13.
lbtll: Mante's mualc which lifted the Persian year ago when the late Dr. Ben Gilbert, "Dr. and Mrs . Veri Tuttle on 6:2o-Paul Harvey 13; 6:2s-Word of Life 13.
Ralim'upiritafor generations has been lured to
6: 3o-Columbus Toda{4; Bible Answers8; School Scene 10.
Broadway" to all theaters, the Metopera, Saturday evening.
' 4s-Corncob Repor 3·
Llfor'el where the suave Sirlo wUI be back hotels, aU RockefeUer Centre construction etc., Mrs. Tressie Stethem of 66:Ss-FIIntstones
13.
~ d'lng , ... Deah Lennie Bernstein's
retired, suffering from cancer ... Dr. Ben had Long Bottom visited Mrs. 7:0D-News. Weather, Sports 6. 8, 10; Today 4; Telethon con.
tinues 3. 6.
'V." at Wllhlngton's J. F. Kennedy Center lsrge offices there (In what ·once had been a Leone Babcock Monday .
2s-Sports
13.
7:
Rev. and Mrs. Earl Nichols 7:3o-Underdog
~ flftN!Ciall&gt;' (Jolt $348,000, the Gena-a!
ballroom when BUI'Ill &amp; Allen and Clark Gable
13; Sleepy Jeffers 8.
Accaantinl OOiee burled deep In the fine print). Uved there decades belore this switchblade era) of Athens called on his parents, &amp;:DO-Sesame St. 33; Friendly Junction 10.
Lalanne 13; Romper Room 8.
llottelt new young American designer on
and ministered to ahowlolk more than 45 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols 8:30-Jack
8: Ss-Locat News 13.
7111 Ave: -carol Horn ... Hated to see this but
dedicated years ... When Ben graduated in Tuesday morning.
9:0D-What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon 4; Ben
Casey 13; Phil Donahue 15; Mr. Rogers 33; Captain Kangaroo
timea do cbange: Variety dropped ita
medicine and Interned, he thought he'd pracUce · Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Brickles
recently
called
on
Mr.
10,
e.
"Vaudeville" aectlon heading and subbed
in an affluent suburb, but Jimmy Durante
9:3o-Hazel 8; Elec. Co. 33.
and
M
Ch
I
ff
Ch
f
''l'lnaaal Appearances" (Vaudevllle's flnaUy
rs. ares a ee o IO:Oo-Dinah Shorel5; Dick Van Dykel3 ; Telethon 3, 6; Joker's
talked him out of it -and l'l8ned him the money
Silver
Ridge.
.
Wild e. tO ; Hathayoga 33.
dtld w1111 Eel Sullivan otr the aJr &gt; :.. But the
to open on Broadway, evenas he did earning his
Mrs.
Ruth
Ann
Golden
and
10:3o-Concentrallon
3, 15; Phil Donahue4; Price Is Rlgl;t e. 10;
Plllce 'l'lleldlr M lldwy. (top vaude booking
way through medical school playing trumpet
.
ln.School Instruction 33; Spilt Second 13;
daug hteran dMr s. ConmeRoss
li :OD-Sale of Century 3, 15; Communique 6; ' Gamblt 8, 10;
t.lm • laic u •arlety lhon luted) wiU with bands, including Whiteman's ... It seemed
of Athens and Mrs. Linda
Password 13.
lr)' apln, a flwNiy run wttll a Joee FeUdano
the crowning Bdwy. Indignity to see W. 45th St. Kaylor and two chlldren,local, 11 : 3o-Holtywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewltched.6, 13; Love of Life
VIIIIINIIIII&amp;t; ''Prom lliael 'lfitll Love" Oct. 2Identified In headlines and 'IV news as the spent Sunday with their ·
8, 10; Sesame Slreet 33.
12:0D-Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 6: Bob Braun's so.so Club 4;
1 "&lt; i""m t'4111ln Israel Army unlforllll);
absolute dregs.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Way
Contact 8; News 10, 13.
.
t.lla wed by 1 New Z.Janct apectacular 11arr1ng
Clark.
12: 2s-CBS Now• I .

Society News

Television Log

Voice along Br'Way

c•

I

.

.

Wallacites Urged

McGovern Wishful
Thinker on Tc(Jxes

for selection of delegatea to the
convention that wUl pick the
1978 nominee,· France aald in
an Interview.
"We're looking at 1976 for
Governor Wallace," be explsined, "provided the rulea
can be changed to prevent
cau~us packing."
This .Is one argument
· Fran&lt;;&lt;, who quarterbacked
Wallace's succeuful drive for
Florida delegates In the pre- ·
convention prlmary,ls Uling to
persuade Wallace Democralll
to work and vote for the
Homespun Look
Republican president on Nov.
The newest thing done to 7.
plaid is giving it a coarse
"Democrats and their nomihomespun look. The homenee,
McGovern, Ignored our
spun took is being made into
shoulder bags, jackets and message, but the Republicans
didn't."
skirts.
France said he Is also
Luminous Glow
working 011 Hubert Humphrey
A little baby powder mixed supporters.
with regular everyday eye
He predicts that nearly all of
shadow will give a luminous Gov. Wallace's supporters In
glow to convert the same the country and a majority of
shadow for evening wear.
the Humpllrey people In the
South . will vote for President
Nixon. "The big job," he said,
Athought for the day: British "is keeping NIJ;onltes from
wartime Prime Min·ister Win- going to sleep" because of
ston Churchill told the House of over-confidence.
Commons "... ! have nothing to France, who owns the Dayto.
offer but blood, toil, sweat and na Beach Speedway and was
president of NASCAR, was In
tea~. "
California last week organl2lng
an office, and In Washington
the previous week.
In California, he attended the
Langsville, and Donald Dailey,
RD, Middleport, were united in San Clemente White House
martiage on Sunday, Aug. 'J:/, party the President gave for.
at the United Faith Church, Hollywood celebrities support.
Route 7. Mr. Daily Is the ing his reelection.
Although Wallace Is staying
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
neutral in the campaign,
WUliam Folmer.
Weekend guests or Mr. and France said he consulted blm
Mrs. WUliam Folmer were Mr. before taking on the assignand Mrs. Robert Johnson and ment lor Nixon.
family of Columbus, Mrs. Jean
"Gov. ·wallace said he
Wllklns and son, J. P., of thought It was fine if that was
Toledo, and Mr . and Mrs. what I wanted to do," France
Jeffrey Folmer of Portland. said.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
-H. G. Bill France, former
state campaign manager for
George Wallace and now a
national vice chairman of
"I;Iemoerals for Nixon," Saturday called on Wallace supporters to help defeat George
McGovern if they want their
man to have a chance In 1976.
"If 1\fcGovem Is elected,
there is no chance of changing
the Democratic party's rules"

12:3D-Split Secood 6; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Etec. Co. 33 ;
News 3; 3 W's 11 . IS.
1: DO-All My Children 6, 13; News, Weather Sports 3; Flippo At
the Fair 10; To Be Announced 15; It's Your Bet 8; tn.
terMIIonal Cookbook 33.
1:30-3 On A Match 3, 4, IS ; Lets Make A Deal 6, 13 ; As The
World Turns 8, 10; Designing Women 33.
2: DO-Days of OJr Lives 3. 4, IS; Newlywed Game 13; Love
'
Spendored Thing 8. 10; Folk Gullar 33.
2;3D-Datlng Game 13; Guiding Llght8, 10; Doctors 3, •· 15; Toy
That Grew Up 33.
3: DO-Another World 3, 4, IS ; General Hospital 6, 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10.

3: 3Q-Return to Peyton Place3, 4. IS ; One Life to Live 6; Edge
of NightS, 10: Jell's Colt le13 ; Sporl$cope33.
4:DO-Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, IS ; Huckleberry Hound 6:
Sesame St. 33 ; Batman e; Summer Olympics 13; Movie
"Until The Sail" 10.
4: 3o-Green Acres 3; Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy 6; Death
Valley Days 8; Password 13 ; Andy Griffith 15.
5:DO-Wagon Train 3; Big Valley 6; Mr. Rogers 33; Dick Van
Dyke 15; To Be Announced 4; Merv Griffin 8; Tarzan 13.
S:3o-Eiec. Co. 33 ; Marshall Dillon 15.
6:0G-News 3, 4, 8, lO i Truth or Conseq . 6; I Dream of Jeannie

13; News IS; Hathayoga 33.
6:3o-NBC News3, 4, IS; ABC News6,13 ; CBS News8, 10; Folk
Gu llar 33 ; I Dream of Jeanie 13.
7:DO-It Takes A Thief 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6, 10; Circus!
13: Whafs My Line 8; Saint IS; Oft the Record 33 .
7:3o-Trafflc Court 10; Episode: Acllon33 ; To Telllhe Truth6 ;
Farmer's Daughter 13 ; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Dragnel8.
8:DO-Gunsmoke e, 10; Baseball 3, 4, 15; Summer Olympics 6,
13; Journey fo Eldorado 33.
9: DO-Here's Lucy 8, 10.
9:3o-DorlsDay8. 10 ; ToyThatGrewUp33.
10:oo-Cade's County 8. 10; Societies In Transition 33.
10: 3o-Human Dimensions 33.
11 : DO-News 3. 4,' 6 ; News 8, 10, 15.
11 : 3o-Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Summer Olympics 6 ; Movies
"Lers Do It Again" 8; "Doctor In Love" 10; "Red Mountain"
13.
on Columbus 4.

1: 3o-News 13.

TUESDAY, SEPT.5,1972
6:DO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: Is-Farm R~port 13; Farmtlme 10; 6: 2o-Paul Harvey 13.
6: Jo-Columbl)s Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concern &amp; Com.
ment 10.
6: •s-Corn cob Report 3; 6:S5-FIIntstones 13.
7: DO-Today 3. 4. 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6.
7:3o-Romper Room 6 ; Underdog 13; Sleepy Jeffers 8.
8:DO-Capt. Kangaroo 10, 8; SeS&lt;lme St. 33 ; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6;
New Zoo Revue 13.

e:JO-Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue6 ; Romper Room B.
9:0D- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Romper Room 8; Mr.
Rogers 33; What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Friendly
Junction 10: Cuncentration 6 ; Ben Casey 13.
9:3o-Truth or Conseq. 3; One Life to Live 13: Etec . Co. 33;
Jeopardy 6 ; Hazel s.
IO:OD-Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dvke 13: Hathayoga 33; F·
Troop 6 ; Joker's Wild 8, 10.
10: 30-Concentiatrcin 3, IS; Phil Donahue 4; Communique 6 ;
Price ts Right e, 10; Spilt Socond 13; In School Instruction 33.
ll :OD-Sale of Century 3, 15; Love. American Style; Gambit 8,
10; Password 13.
11 : Jo-Holtywood Squares 3, 4. 15; Love of Life 8, 10; Se.. me St.
33 ; Bewitched 6.. 13.
12: DO-Jeopardy 3, 15: Password 6 ; News 10; Jackie Oblinger 8;
News 13; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4.
12: 311-Spllt Second 6; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10; Etec. Co. 33;
Who, What or Where 3, 15.
1:DO-All My Children 6, 13; Joyce Chen Cooks 33 ; News 3; trs
· Your Bet 8: Green Acres 10.
I: Jo-Lets Make A Deal6, 13; Designing Women 33; Three()&gt; A
Match 3, 4, 15; As the World Turns8, 10 .
2: DO-Newlywed Game 13; Days of OJr Lives 3, 4, 15; Mike
Douglass 6.
2: 30-Dattng Game 13; Library 33 ; Doctors 3, 4, 15: Guiding
Light 8, 10.
.
3:0D-General Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 151 Secret
Storm 8, 10; Growing Him Up 33.
3:30-0ne Life To Live 6, 13: Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15·
Edge of Night e. 10.
·
' ' '
4:0D-Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15; S.same St. 33; Love,
American Style13 ; FllntstonH 6; Batman 1: Movie "Caplaln
Llghtfoor• 10..
·
4:30-GrHnAcresJ ; DesthValtey Days&amp;; Password 13; 1Love
Lucy 6; Andy Griffith IS; Merv Griffin 4; Daniel Boone 13.
5:DO-Dtck Van Dyke15; Wagon Train 3; Maverick 13; Dante!
Boone 6; Merv Griffin 81 Mister Rogers 33.
5: 30-Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; GOmer Pylt13.
6:DO-News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, 13; Truth or Conseq. 6; Hathayoga 33.
6: l0-News3, 4,6, 8, 10, 15; CBS News 8, 10; f Dream of Jaannle
13; Love Tennis 33.
7:DO-Colfege FootbaiiJ; News 6, 10; Whafs My Line 8· Andy
Griffith IS; Course of .~r Times 33.
'
· 7:3o-Howdy Doody&amp; FrlendsJ.~. 15; To Tell the Truth6; Billy
Graham 8, 10; Best the Clock 13.
8: 30-Evenlng at Pops 33; NBC Action Playhouse 3 4 15 ·
Hawatt Flve·O 8,. 10.
·
' ' '
9: 3o-Ftrst Tuesday 3, 4; Cannon 8, 10; Bttty Graham 15;
Tomorrow's Yesterday 33.
10: DO-Firing Line 33.
10:3o-WSAZ.TV Comment 3; Probe . ·4; Arthur Smith 8;
American Lifestyle 10; Fttm 15.
H:OD-Nows 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13. 15.
11 ::10--Dtck Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movlos "The
Sandpiper" 8; "Action of the Tiger" 10; "Hurricane Smith"
13.
1:00-Your Heath 4; News. Weather 4; Local No&gt;~,, 13.

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON tNEAl
Sen. Geo rge . McGovern, in his second try of the year
at an economic plan, correctly sensed that Americans
want a fairer tax system. But he is no more candid than
President Nixon about the real prospect of high er taxes
m the years ahead.
Mr. Nixon and top administration officials have been
saymg smce spnng that a heavier tax burden is not in
Sl~t.

cGov~rn .~n New York said, and repeated lor strong
effect, that No Amencan whose income comes from
wages and salaries would pay one penny more in federal
taxes (under McGovern tax reforms ) that he does now."
That sounds h ke an open-ended promise not to instltut~ a general mcome tax increase, even though McGovern s reform s are designed to pick up an extra $22 bilhon by closmg many tax loopholes.
These buttery assura nces from the two major party
presidential nommees don't register well when set beside
the budget outlook for the next four years. As noted in
a recent column , lhe prospect is that by fiscal 1977 the
federal budge t will have been enlarged by another $100
b1thon- to the VICinity of $350 billion annually.
Mr. N1xon and his people want us to believe that econom•es In g?vemment, and prudence in adopting new programs. Will keep tax rates steady.
McGovern wants us to think that soaking the rich and
choppmg at the b1g defense budget will avoid the pain
or higher general tax burdens .
But the hard judgments of many economists and tax
experts suggest that neither candidate is really leveling
With us . There are enormous built-in escalators in the
budget. . Programs grow as population rises. Automatic
cost·of·liVIng mcreases are already prescribed by law.
A good part of the budget is, in a sense, un ~overnable .
. Mr .. Nixon was probably chided for distortmg the tax
Sltuatwn as recently as . in his acceptance speech at
M1am1 Beach. Right now 11 is McGoverns' turn, since he
has put himself on the firing line.
In h1s New York speech , he quickly left candor be~ind
when he complained of the revenue·draining effect of
tax cuts put through under Mr. Nixon in !969 and 1971.
That left out one of the big~est cuts of ail, under Lyndon
Johnson m 1964. The Brookmgs Institution estimates that
without tho se three cuts the federal treasu ry today would
be gettin g $35 billion more a year in income tax collection s.
McGovern faults Mr. Nixon for allegedly having a
"secret plan" fo r property tax relief. If he is elected,
McGovern says, he will propose allotting $15 billion in .
federal monies to local school systems , to " assure substantial property tax relief."
The fa ct is that the federa l government can't offer such
assurances. Even if the dispensing of U.S. funds to
schools should be tied to cutbacks in use of the property
tax lor schools, counties and other loca l taxing units may
simply appl y heavy and rising levies to other purposes.
McGovem flatly asserts that his reforms a1med at
raising $22 billion by wiping out or reducing tax preferences affecting capital gains, oil depletion . deP.recia·
lion allowance. etc .. would not decrease "the incentives
lor growth and initiative" in the economy . He says "that
is the McGove rn position," but in fact it's only a hope .
The full consequences of such changes can't really be
firmly foreca st.
McGovern, then, is telling the average taxpayer that
he has no thing to fear from him, that only the corpora·
lions and th e rich will be hit by his reforms, and that
even they won 't lose their spirit. But against the hard
rock of soaring budgets to come, his promise to spare
Americans new tax burdens breaks like a fragile wave.
, 1.. T

&gt;o

•

•v•!..,,(~./'1(

II

,o,.l

•

~···

'f

•

Trevino, goU;s ·•super·Mex,"
said he "met di•aster" on the
first hole but managed to drive
"longer and straighter" as the
day prog re'!5'!d.
"My drive was 55 yards short
of the first green and I threeputted," Trevino said. He also
three-putted the 14th hole and
said later the two incidents
might have cost him a twostroke lead.
"I don't like to make ex ·
cuses," Trevino sald. "But I
putt better when th• sun is
shining. I don't know what is is,
but I can read the greens
better. On a cloudy day like
this, I can't read the greens as
well."
~
Trevino said he felt the
pressure was ''on me as much

as anyone else. I haven't won in
the U. S. since the Memphis
Tournament in May. I played
in six tournaments since then."
Beman, gaining stature as a
late starter on the professional

tour, hadn 't placed high in a
tournament until the 20th,
again over Labor Day
weekend, last year. He tied for
fourth in that event and went
on to win two other tournaments.
"I'm driving the ball well
and putting well now, so maybe
we're on lhe way again/'

Beman said. "My irons had
deserted me for awhile."
Beman said his bogey concerned him because "This is
not a course where you can
play foolishly. Every time you
make a bogey everybody
whizzes past you so fast."
Elder, who was tied lor
second with Trevino with a 64
Friday, said he "Got a little too
relaxed" in the second round.
" I was all over the lot today.
I dido 't drive or putt as well as
yesterday. But as long as I can
stay within a shot or two of the
leader, I'm not worried,"
Elder said.

REHEARSAL for the nag raising on the moon durin~ the Apollo 17 mission In
December bas a particularly Interested audience. MissiOn commander Eugene A.
Cernan plants the Stars and Stripes in simulated lunar soil with his wife Barbara
and daughter Teresa, 9, looking on.

OPEN ALL
DAY
9:30 TILL 9 P.M.
MONDAY!
SUNDAY

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTME.NT STOitl

Point Pleasant or Mason

1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

"BEACON" BLANKET

2

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REG. 99c PAIR

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tackle from the one-yard line.
Eagle rookie Pat Gibbs
fumbled a 5fryard punt by the
Giants' Tom Blanchard on the
Eagle 14-yard tine, and Giant
rookie
Charlie
Christ
recovered. Johnson carried the
ball three straight times,
scoring from the two-yard line
with 3 : ~ left in the first half.
Liske then drove the Eagles
81 yards in 11 plays for their
only touchdown on the pasa to
Hawkins with 44 seconds
remaining In the half. Uake
completed five passes during
the drive and connected on 10
of 20 for 133 yards In the first
half belore the Eagles' passing
game crumbled Wlder a stiff
defensive effort by the Giants'
secondary in the second half.

today· s FUNNY

CHESS turns out to be
oolhbtg but a skin game lor
Roman m o d e 1 LUiana
Chiara, who served as the
llvbtg canva&amp; lor an artistic
tribute to the Bobby
F I a c h e r • Boris Spassky
championship match.

WORLD ALMANAC .
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PRICES IN EFFECT TWO DAYS-- SUNDAY and MONDAY!
MENS CRUSHABLE

Melamine Dinnerware

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34

HATS
SOLIDS
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PIECE5-SERVICE FOR 8

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7

Patterns - will enhance

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ROOM SIZE

RUG
A $25.00 VALUE!

REGULAR49c VALUE

Vermont's name came
from the French · words
vert, green, and mont,
mountain. The Green Moun·
talns of Vermont were said
to have been named by the
French explorer, Samuel de
Champlain. The World AI·
manac notes that when the
state was formed in 17TI,
Dr. Thomas Young suggested combining vert and
mont into Vermont.

In 1939, Great Britain declsred war on Germany, with
France following ault six hours
later. They were quickly joined
by ' A111tralla, New Zealand,
South Africa, and Canada.

PACKAGE OF 9
WOOD PENCILS
Yellow
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22~
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PRICES ARE IN EFFECT
SUNDAY l p.m. to 6 p.m.
MONDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

WOMENS VINYL

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10 FEET UNDER HONG KONG'S harbor ru11 thla llllmel J,IDkln&amp; VIctoria IG
the Kowlooa PeiiiDIU.. It coli 1 tidy ~ mlllloD, ... • · • can rolled lllrou«ll
on Ill flrat dly lit earlY Aup1t.

..

I
'

WETHERSFIEW, Conn.
(UPI) - Lee Trevino sank a
four-foot birdie putt on the 18th
green Saturday to tie early
finishmg Deane Beman at the
hallway point of the $125,000
Greater Hartford Open .
Both men were 10 under par
at 132 for 36 holes .
Ben\an came from three
strokes off the first round pace ·
set by Bert Yancey with his
second straight 66 while
Trevino had a 68 for the day
after a 64 on Friday.
Trailing the pair by a single
stroke at nine under par were
Rick Rhoads of Palm Springs,
Calif., Lee Elder
of
Washington, Tom Shaw of
Inverrary, Fla., Dave Stockton
of Westlake Village, Calif. and
Paul Moran of C&lt;&gt;iton, Calif.
Yancey, who fired a 6J in the
opening roWld, remained at 8
under par Saturday while
finishing in a light rain.
Beman carded six birdies
and a bogey on the 6,583-yard
par-71 course and ran into
serious trouble only on the 193yard par-3 third hole . " I shot ·
out of a trap to about four feet
from the cup and missed the
putt for my only bogey," he
said.
Beman went to the clubhouse
expectlng to be surpassed by
several players, but only
Trevino was able to catch him.

"' 1

Snead Paces NY
PRINCETON, N. J. (UP!) The New York Giants converted a fumble recovery and a
pass iniA!rception into two short
.touchdown rushes by Charlie
Evans and Ron Johnson in the
first hall Saturday and held on
to defeat the Philadelphia
Eagles, 27-12 in an exhibition
game.
Giant quarterback Norm
Snead completed 17 of 23
passes for 176 yards and
directed the Giants on a 71).
yard drive for their other
touchdown on a two-yard
plunge by rookie Vince
Clements with I :16 left In the
game.
Eagle quarterback Pete
Liske, who threw a 14-yard
touchdown pass to Ben
Hawkins in the second quarter,
did not complete a single pass
in eight attempts in the second
half.
Pete Gogalak kicked
field goals of 23 and 22 yards
for the Giants, and Tom
Dempsey booted a 4Z.yarder
for Philadelphia.
The Eagles' first points came
on a ·safety when the· Giants'
Johnson fumbled a lateral pass
from Snead at the !~yard line
and the ball roUed out of the
end zone.
Defensive end Henry R8!ld
picked off Uske's first pill 011
the Eagles' 1S.yard line afllr II
was batted into the air Ia I
heavy paiS rush. Three plaJa
later, Evans bolted over Jell

.

'

Trevino, Beman Tied

BRUC·f BIOSSAT

To Back Nixon

1: oo-Focus

.

17 - TheSunda
YT'unes ·Sentinel, SUnday, Sept. 3, 1972
.

WHILE
THEY
LAST

A huge selection of
very different center
pitctl·· All orglnolly
sold lor 11.00.

�..

'

'

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Tbose Trying Gll)'ll !

Dear Helen and Sue:

•

. .... . .

• •

Yau IIJI&amp;esled that "Ann" who constantly gels unwelcome
..-l'nm fellows may be lhrowlng out the wrong signals.
Peclple ll'e too quick to blame the girl. I am 31 and have had
Ann's probbm ever since I was seven or eight. People wal'lllld
me aboai IIIICOIIICIOIIIIy leading men on, so I spent years
carefully curbing mySelf, repressing the sllghtest exuberance.
But htUlhad trooble. l could feel men eyeing me as if I were a
1hce ol meat on a rack.
Ann: yau are NO'l' ~!ending atgllals. Men are often AFRAID of
glrla who ~cast. Rather, they can be turned on fantastically
bY lhe alght o1 a ~Y, frightened, vulnerable-looking girl who
obvloualy doesn't .want anything to do with them. What you
llhould do, Ann, Is cultivate an atiitude of confidence and
eopbl.ltlcallon. Be aggressive. Don't be afraid to get nasty snarl at them, tlreaten to tell their wives -bit them if you wish
-but don't ahow fear! Dogs bite when they smell fear. Men are
no different. If lhey think you are able to take care of yourself,
11ley'llleave you alone.
In the bargain, you wUl develop knowledge of males and
maybe you wUl not lose your "Mr. Right" as I did years ago.MISS J.T.

'

.

...

It's ·a Sin not to Vote
By I.,OUIS CASSELS
United Press International
If you find yoursell feeling
apathetic about the election
campaign now moving Into
high gear, consider this:
Voting is not merely a civic
duty. It also Is a religious
obligation.
In
a
democratically
governed country such as the
United State•, every citizen
shares moral responsibility for
what his government does, as
well as lor what it leaves undone.
This Is not just a theory

of God and man

simple task, easily performed,
and the book• will oo open. !n
most states for at least anotho:r
month.
U you're going to vote, you
owe it to your fellow man to
vote as wisely as possible. And
that means taking the time and
trouble to keep ilp with the
campaign for the next couple of
months. Read your newspaper,
listen to the candidates on TV,
think about the issues, weigh

both sides. (leclde wbat you
believe-and who you trust.
It lakes some effort. The
best-written political story
may not be as lnterestlng ·to
you as the sports page or the
feature section.
But keeping up with cam·
paign developments Is certainly not as heavy a burden as
taking up arms to defend your
coWJtry. Yet the fonner Is just
as truly a citizen's duty as the
latter.

Bald Knobs News Notes
Sunday School attendance at
Freedom Gospel Mission on
August Tl was 28. Offering was
$5.97.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Dailey
and friends, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Allen and grandsons,
Jamie and Shawn, all of
Newark, Ohio, Mrs. Helen
Augustine and friends of
Akron, Mr. Marion Sloter of
Racine, Mrs. Elva. Dailey and
granddaughter, Kristin, of
Syracuse, visited Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Autherson.
Clint Birch and daughter,
Leota visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe
LippsandlamUy,Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Enlow, at Vincent.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Van Meter
and family of'Sandy Lake, Pa.,
visited Mrs. May Van Meter
and Ruby and Mr. Robert
Ours.
Mrs. Dorsa Deal, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Shoemaker of MI.
Vernon, · Mr. and Mrs. Oris
Frederick of Chester, Mr.
Maywood Johnston, local,
visited Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter.
Mr. and Mrs . George
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Deeter, Mrs. Roger Bissell, all
of Bashan, Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
local, attended homecoming at
F1at Rock, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Van
Meter and sons of Reedsville
and Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van

Meter and Missy of MinersvUle
Route, Mrs. Betty Ward &amp;lld
family and Mrs. Maxine
Haines, local, visited Mr. and
Mrs . Michael Evans and
family .
Mrs. Bernice Evans of
Pomeroy spent a week with
Mrs. Michael Evans and
family.
Missy Van Meter of
MinersvUle spent ..a weekend
with her grandmother, Mrs.
Ada Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans
and family visited Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Hunnel and son at
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. John ·Owens of
Flint, Mich., Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Abels of Beaver Falls,'
Pa ., Mrs. Jean Byers, Leota
Birch visited Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Abels.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James Hupp and family of
Letart Falls, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Bass and family of
Mt. Vernon, Mr. and Mrs.
Hayes McMurray of PorUand
visited Mr . and Mrs. George
Hupp.
Mrs. Hazel Shuck of Miami,
Fla ., Mrs. Augusta Powell of ·
Torch, Mrs. Ellen Lipps and
daughter, Mrs. Pamela Enlow,
Vincent; Lawrence Lipps,
Littl Hocking, visited Clint
Birch and daugh~r, Leota.
Mrs. Naomi Autherson and
Leota Birch visited Mr. and
Mrs. James Autherson at
Syracuse.

..

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Rock Springs
News Notes
By Mrs. Opba Offutt

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris
and son vacationed recently In
Delaware. They viSited with
Mr. and Mrs. James Alexander
of Hockessin, Del. Mrs.
Alexander Is a sister of Mrs.
Harris. .

Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston have returned from
a vacation at VIrginia Beach
and other points of interest.
Bruce Blackston, Tom Ball
and Eugene Brundige attended
a llall game at Cincinnati over
the weekend. They also
stopped at Kings Island.
Mr. and Mrs. James Weber
of Middleport visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Opha Offutt on
Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
atteilded a birthday dinner for
their grandsons, David and
Doug, SOlis of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hines of Belpre. Others
present were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Woode, Chester; MrS.
Edith Hines and Mrs. Marie
Chapman, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger mnes and
daughterS, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Salnaker of GallipoUs.
Weekend guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs . William
Radford were Miss Mary
Radford of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Glaze of Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Glaze and
family of Akron, George Glaze
and family of Columbus, Mrs.
Frank O!eatam, Columbus,
Mrs. Donald Glaze, Mrs. John
Garsteck and daughters, Mrs.
Byron Cunningham and son of
Cleveland, Mrs. Grace Glaze,
Middleport, and Mrs. Bessie
Byers and family of Columbus.
Mark Byers returned to his
home after spending two
months with the Radford&amp;.
Margaret Taylor Is visiting
at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Michael
Brothers.
Amy Brothers, Infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Brothers, Is reported
doing fine after stay In the
hospital.
Miss
Kathy
Matson,

taught in civics classes, but a
practlcalfact of life. If we have
the opportunity to affect the
composition and coriduct of our
government, and fail to make
intelligent use of that op.
portunity, we are expressing
Indifference to the welfare ot
millions of human beings
Dear Miss T.:
whose lives will be better or
I suspect you developed from a man.fearer to a man.hater,
worse because of what the
never 011ce considering males anything but "the enemy." Really,
government does or fails to do .
they aren't all potential rapists, even though most have a "try in
in the future.
their eye." -Helen
We Can't Duck
Dear Miss T.:
We can't duck our moral
I think you're too quick to blame the GUY! How would YOU duty to vote by claiming that
Ub lobe ticked In the shins (figuratively) every time you did a
"my one litUe vote won't
doubletate?
matter." In a close election,
We si:Ulaay the wrong signals enL'OUI'age a man to beat the
every vote counts. In the 1960
IJ)etlll Umlt ... 'lbe RIGHT signals slow him down but don't stop
presidential election, for
blm cold. - SUE
example, a shift of just one
vote per precinct would have
given the victory to Richard M.
Nixon Instead of John F.
RAP:
Kennedy. The 1968 contest
Can I add my say In response to "Former Prom Queen"?
between Nixon and Hubert
Schoohplrlt Is just as much presen.t now as It was In her day,
Humphrey was almost as
but It's packaged differenUy.
close.
Much more emphasis Is pisced on social problems today.
Nor can we opt out by saying
Kldls ann't happy.gcHucky high school nuts any more. They that we don't care much lor ·
realize that getting to know your world gels you "somewhere" a either candidate or either
lot faller than being a football hero or Prom ~een.
party. SOMEBODY Is going to
&amp;In, i!pClrts are great. I am big "rah-rah" too. Kids still be elected, and even if we feel
IICI'elllland yeU and pull together when the Doals are made, and it's a choice between two evils,
hOld their breath for the winning field goal. The team still prays we have a duty to decide which
lillnllyaathefourthdownattemptat !Oyardsfails and the coach is the lesser evil-and cast our
stUl wipes hla eyes and hugs team members when a crucial game vote accordingly.
If failing to vote is a sin (I
" loll.
We bave rallles and blike sales and spirit contests, and most think it Is), It's one that
everyone participates. Car washes bring In more dollars lor millions of otherwise decent,
Tuppers Plains
IIChool eventa; baJIIIY, laughing kids, throwing rags and God-fearing Americans are
guilty
of
committing.
In
the
,iplaahlng llllds.lfthat's not spirit, what Is? This:
Kldl out at 8'a. m. collecting garbage from a scenic area. last presidential election, the
GIIJI driving trucks carrying thousands of cans and bottles to number of potential voters who
By Mrs. Evelyn Brickles
tum In for IDO!JeY which Is then donated to the poor. Girls failed to go to the polls was
greater
than
the
number
of
Mr. and Mrs . Victor Barr of
collecllng toya for needy children. Kids out with petitions to
ballots
cast
for
the
winning
Joppa
were Sunday guests of
IDIIlate pollution controls and others working In the Head Start
candidate.
Mrs
.
Ellie
Pyles.
ptoCram. 'lbouaanda marching to raise funds for every thing
Mast Register Now
Teddie Conley is a medical
tram POW auppllea to cancer research. Others ringjniJ doorbells
Programs for Tonight
If you've never voted belore, patient at Holzer Medical
to get out the Yote. Blacks, browns and whites pulling for better or haven't voted in a good
Cen ter, Gallipolis.
I'ICial Wldentandlng. That's spirit!
wbUe, you cannot wait until
Mrs . Leone Babcock and
and Tomorrow
·Maybe lt'a a dillerent kind than "Former Prom ~een's," election day,Nov. 7, to do your Mrs. Eulah Swan were Friday
but we bave her spirit too. - CLASS PRINCESS AND duty. To vote then, you must evening dinner guests of Mrs.
POLLUTION PETITION CHAIRMAN WHO LOVES BOTH
register now. Registration is a Leota Massar of Eastern and
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER3
also overnight guests. The 6:0o-Film 4.
6: 3o-Day of Discovery 4; Newsmaker '72 13;
dinner was in honor of Mrs. 7:0Q-Oid Time Gosepl Hour 13 ; Societies in Transition ,. ;
Eulah Swan 's birthday.
Chaplain on Bourbon Street 6.
nntcvr:·o:r " r:U:rr;;;·::: .. :cr. ·t.m r, eta
iiii
Charles Carr is recuperating 7: 3o-Time for Timothy 4; Treehouse Club 10; Faith for Today
8; Revival Fires 6.
now at his home after un - 8:!)0-Herald
of Truth 3; Davey &amp; Goliath 4; Leonard Repass 8;
dergoing surgery at Pleasant
Gospel Caravan 6 ; Church Service 13; Lamp Unto My Feet
10.
Valley Hospital.
8:
Is-Morning
Report 4.
Mrs. Edith Bet•ing was a 8:3o-OraJ Roberts
3; Your Health 4; Day of Discovery 8; Rex
SWlday guest of Mrs. Lena
Hum bard 13; Revival Fires 15; Kathryn Kuhlman 6 ; Look Up
and Live 10.
By JACK O'BRIAN
80 Maori perfonners (there's a smart yoWlg Pooler and daughter, Sally, 9:0o-Singing
Jubilee 3; Cadle Chape l 4; Rex Humbard 15. 6;
Kl!l81NGER'SGai'TOBEKIDDING
group which has played around here and the Chester .
Tom &amp; Jerry 8; Camera Three 10.
Mrs. Leone Babcock at- 9:3o-Church by Side of Road 4; Grovle Goodies 8, 10; Dr. Paul
NEW YORK (KFS) - NBC Today-girl Bahamas called Mary and the Maoris, a
Warren 13.
tended·
the Keno Christian
llcbara Walters minded Henry Kissinger's strange, exciting combination of rock and
IO:OD-Church
Service4; Faith for Today IS; This We Believe 13;
ldda (with ber own- tlny doll) during a con- Maori1ll'imitive) ... But such as the foregoing Church picnic at Forked RWl
This is the Life 3; Reluctant Dragon 13; Oral Roberts 6; Kid
Talk 8; Movie, Young Mr. Lincoln, 10.
ventlOII lull ... How's this for a dinner trio (at really Isn't vaudeville; In the old days it would Lake Sunday. There were
10:
3o-This
Is the lite 15; Insight 4; Captain Noah 3; Facing Lite
several
in
attendance
but
also
C!aaen'a): Sinatra, Circuit Court Judge Irving be more the sort of offbeat programming at the
8;
Doubiedeckers
13; Christopher Closeup 6.
Ka!!fnwn and Ambasaador Walter Annenberg Hammerstein Theater, where the unusual and a few were Wlabie to attend. II :DO-TV Chapel 3; Bullwinkle 13; Focus on Columbus 4;
Camera ThreeS; Consumer Report 1S; Point of Vlew6 .
... JudgeK. wlllbeChle!CircultJudge in Jan.- sensational, not the precisely · routined Those coming from a distance
were Faith and Amber McCain 11:3o-This Is the Answer 3; Insight 15; Make A Wish 6, 13; Face
vta -lorlty ... We had the AU MacGraw.Steve vaudevUle of The Palace, was tbe odd rule ...
the Nation 8.
of Marietta and Rev. and Mrs.
McQueen thing weeks ago. Now they're so open The last several Palsce offerings were musical Clifford Smith and daughter of 12:DO-Morman Choir 3; Rex Humbard 8; To Be Announced 15;
Friendly Junction 10; Summer Olymplcs6, 13; Film 4.
ablllt It, even their klda plsy together. At comedies (Sweet Charity, Applause); it's a Bradbury .
12:3o-At lssue3; Open Bible IS; TheTemptalion of Reb Ylsroel
Sltve's plsce ... Shirley MacLatne and Team- great theatre for audiences - great sightlines
4.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watson
12: 4s-Sacred Heart IS.
Iller veep Harold Gibbons dined laat week at and acoustics.
and son, Gene, of Dayton spent
the Press 3, IS ; Old Time Gospel Hour 8; Urban
Dlnny'a mdeaway and shared things, such as . "Sex and the Teenage Girl" author Carol a recent weekend here with his I:OD-Meet
League Presents 10.
both being for McGovern; took their political Botwln was off on a promotional tour, and at mother, Mrs. Effie Watson.
1: 3o-Face the Nation tO; Gospel Talent Time 15; Roller Derby
3; Sporls Challenge 4.
te!H-Iele to Jimmy Weston 'a for nightcaps ... JFK Airport ber luggage was opened by skyjack
Mrs. Elizabeth Lyons and 2:0QIssues and Asnwers 6; Movies: War Drums 4; Port
C. lha earle, we thought we heard Harold searchers -who gave her some strange looks son, Lamar, visited Mr . and
Afrique 10; The Comedians 13; Death Valley Days IS.
lllllllicll be'd been wed 30 years and was ez. when one bag turned up full of that X-rated tome Mrs. Marion Riggs and family 2:3o-CBPA Bowling 6; Wrestling 8; Movie: Bullet for a Bad.
man 3; To Be Announced IS.
tremely pnJUd of his wife who just earned a ... Rudy Vallee had a dead end street named for of Logan and attended the 3:DO-Film
13; Western Theatre 15.
llllller'a degree -and bad been asked to apply him; shouldn't Tiny Tim get at least aU-turn? State Fair at Columbus.
3: Is-Commercial Film 13.
for a Fullbrlgbt Scholarahip? Sounds smashing ... "Follies" opened in L.A.,s new Shubert
Mr. and Mrs. Veri Tuttle, J:Jo-Movle: Fury al Showdown 4; Virginian 8: Issues &amp; An.
swers 13.
... Cynics auggeat Gibbons' political heresy tn Theater wraves. Deservedly ... That musical's Mrs. Bill Ritchie and daughter, 4:DO-Saint
IS; Summer Olympics 6, 13; Movie: Red River 10.
not following the Hoffa-Teamsters Union top male star, John McMartin's, leaving it to Cinda, attended a family picnic S:OD-To Be Announced 15: Primus 4; Film 8.
l World 8; To Be Announced 15; Juvenile Jury 4;
~or N1J;011 as a shrewd fut;ure face-saver
play Bdwy. for a season In repertory ... John at the home of Mr . and Mrs. S: 3o-Anlma
National
Automotive
TrOll pie Test 3.
Bob Burk at Alfred Sunday.
-llbould McGovern magically win, at least one misses P. J .'s
6:0D-News, Weather, Sports 4; Comment! 15; Survlval6; Wild
Mr . and Mrs. Thurman
IGp Telllllller would be there to accept the
Kingdom 13; Campaign '72. e. 10.
.
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar (Lew Alcindor) is at
News
3,
4,1S;
News.
Weather.
S"'rls6.
6:3o-NBC
Babcock
and
Mrs.
Bessie
fawn.
Harvard sopping up Arabic courses working
7:DO-Primus 3; Magic Circus 6; Lassie 8; Gilligan's Island 4;
Barbra Strelsand may play the late toward a masters In Near Eastern studies ... Webster went to Levett's
The Golden Years 10; Lawrence Wetk 13.
COIIIIetica tycoon Helena Rubenstein when the Commie Russia now advertises In the Funeral Home at Parkersburg 7:3Q-Worldof Disney 3, 4, 15; Movie: Enter Laughing, 8, 10.
Sunday to see Mrs. Clara 8:0D-FBt 6, 13.
wa:onlm Patrick O'Higgins' biography gels capitallstic Wall Street Journal ... We were on
8:3Q-Father on Trial 3, 4, 1S.
fllme4 ... The new Playboy mag elpallSion into wrong when we wrote John Paul Getty did the Adams who passed away at 9:DO-Bonanza 3, 4, 15 &lt;Summer Olympics 6. 13.
9:3o-Life of Leonardo Da Vinci 8, 10.
a ~ montbly titled "Oul" is just a filthier E. F. Hutton Wall Street-broker..:ommercial for C&lt;&gt;lwnbus Friday. '
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuttle and 10:110-'Bold Ones. 3, 4, IS.
venloa of the stodgy pruriencles of the original nothing: he was paid $1 - and a box of candy ...
family of Fairborn spent a 10: 3o-Death volley Days 8; High Road to Adventure 10.
... Nearly all the late Uince (Barbara Hutton's NeUe Adams, Steve McQueen's soon-ex, isn't
ll :oo-News Weather Sports 3~ •, 8, 10, 15.
couple of days here last week II : Is-CBS News e, 10; Jerry Lewis Telethon 6.
Dl) ReveDtlow's ~mUllon fortune went to his
sobbing over their split - her beau is Oscar with his parents, Mr. and Mrs . 11 :30-Johnny Carson 4, IS; Jerry Lewis Telethon 3; Movies:
widow, Cheryl Lothrldge, a penniless starlet winner producer Frank McCarthy. Lovely girl; Veri Tuttle. Mr. and Mrs.
Decision at Sundown 8; The Comedy of Terrors 10; Operation
White Shark 13.
when 1lley wed.
, knew her when she was a chorus kid.
William Tuttle and family of
Mlnhattan's faU fun parade starts right
The Peerless Hotel bad a pressurized Colwnbus and Mr. and Mrs.
lfta' lAbor Illy: La Foret In the Pierre Hotel, closing (because of pimpg.prostles-dope ad- Tom Mulch o! Delaware and
MONDAY, SEPT. 4
6:0o-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
tile tuwn'a Cli~ hotel cafe, reUghts Sept. 14 ... dicts) but it lost its linal ·respectable tenant a granddaughter, visited Mr . 6:
1s-Farmtime 10; Farm Report 13.
lbtll: Mante's mualc which lifted the Persian year ago when the late Dr. Ben Gilbert, "Dr. and Mrs . Veri Tuttle on 6:2o-Paul Harvey 13; 6:2s-Word of Life 13.
Ralim'upiritafor generations has been lured to
6: 3o-Columbus Toda{4; Bible Answers8; School Scene 10.
Broadway" to all theaters, the Metopera, Saturday evening.
' 4s-Corncob Repor 3·
Llfor'el where the suave Sirlo wUI be back hotels, aU RockefeUer Centre construction etc., Mrs. Tressie Stethem of 66:Ss-FIIntstones
13.
~ d'lng , ... Deah Lennie Bernstein's
retired, suffering from cancer ... Dr. Ben had Long Bottom visited Mrs. 7:0D-News. Weather, Sports 6. 8, 10; Today 4; Telethon con.
tinues 3. 6.
'V." at Wllhlngton's J. F. Kennedy Center lsrge offices there (In what ·once had been a Leone Babcock Monday .
2s-Sports
13.
7:
Rev. and Mrs. Earl Nichols 7:3o-Underdog
~ flftN!Ciall&gt;' (Jolt $348,000, the Gena-a!
ballroom when BUI'Ill &amp; Allen and Clark Gable
13; Sleepy Jeffers 8.
Accaantinl OOiee burled deep In the fine print). Uved there decades belore this switchblade era) of Athens called on his parents, &amp;:DO-Sesame St. 33; Friendly Junction 10.
Lalanne 13; Romper Room 8.
llottelt new young American designer on
and ministered to ahowlolk more than 45 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nichols 8:30-Jack
8: Ss-Locat News 13.
7111 Ave: -carol Horn ... Hated to see this but
dedicated years ... When Ben graduated in Tuesday morning.
9:0D-What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon 4; Ben
Casey 13; Phil Donahue 15; Mr. Rogers 33; Captain Kangaroo
timea do cbange: Variety dropped ita
medicine and Interned, he thought he'd pracUce · Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
Brickles
recently
called
on
Mr.
10,
e.
"Vaudeville" aectlon heading and subbed
in an affluent suburb, but Jimmy Durante
9:3o-Hazel 8; Elec. Co. 33.
and
M
Ch
I
ff
Ch
f
''l'lnaaal Appearances" (Vaudevllle's flnaUy
rs. ares a ee o IO:Oo-Dinah Shorel5; Dick Van Dykel3 ; Telethon 3, 6; Joker's
talked him out of it -and l'l8ned him the money
Silver
Ridge.
.
Wild e. tO ; Hathayoga 33.
dtld w1111 Eel Sullivan otr the aJr &gt; :.. But the
to open on Broadway, evenas he did earning his
Mrs.
Ruth
Ann
Golden
and
10:3o-Concentrallon
3, 15; Phil Donahue4; Price Is Rlgl;t e. 10;
Plllce 'l'lleldlr M lldwy. (top vaude booking
way through medical school playing trumpet
.
ln.School Instruction 33; Spilt Second 13;
daug hteran dMr s. ConmeRoss
li :OD-Sale of Century 3, 15; Communique 6; ' Gamblt 8, 10;
t.lm • laic u •arlety lhon luted) wiU with bands, including Whiteman's ... It seemed
of Athens and Mrs. Linda
Password 13.
lr)' apln, a flwNiy run wttll a Joee FeUdano
the crowning Bdwy. Indignity to see W. 45th St. Kaylor and two chlldren,local, 11 : 3o-Holtywood Squares 3, 4, 15; Bewltched.6, 13; Love of Life
VIIIIINIIIII&amp;t; ''Prom lliael 'lfitll Love" Oct. 2Identified In headlines and 'IV news as the spent Sunday with their ·
8, 10; Sesame Slreet 33.
12:0D-Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 6: Bob Braun's so.so Club 4;
1 "&lt; i""m t'4111ln Israel Army unlforllll);
absolute dregs.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Way
Contact 8; News 10, 13.
.
t.lla wed by 1 New Z.Janct apectacular 11arr1ng
Clark.
12: 2s-CBS Now• I .

Society News

Television Log

Voice along Br'Way

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Wallacites Urged

McGovern Wishful
Thinker on Tc(Jxes

for selection of delegatea to the
convention that wUl pick the
1978 nominee,· France aald in
an Interview.
"We're looking at 1976 for
Governor Wallace," be explsined, "provided the rulea
can be changed to prevent
cau~us packing."
This .Is one argument
· Fran&lt;;&lt;, who quarterbacked
Wallace's succeuful drive for
Florida delegates In the pre- ·
convention prlmary,ls Uling to
persuade Wallace Democralll
to work and vote for the
Homespun Look
Republican president on Nov.
The newest thing done to 7.
plaid is giving it a coarse
"Democrats and their nomihomespun look. The homenee,
McGovern, Ignored our
spun took is being made into
shoulder bags, jackets and message, but the Republicans
didn't."
skirts.
France said he Is also
Luminous Glow
working 011 Hubert Humphrey
A little baby powder mixed supporters.
with regular everyday eye
He predicts that nearly all of
shadow will give a luminous Gov. Wallace's supporters In
glow to convert the same the country and a majority of
shadow for evening wear.
the Humpllrey people In the
South . will vote for President
Nixon. "The big job," he said,
Athought for the day: British "is keeping NIJ;onltes from
wartime Prime Min·ister Win- going to sleep" because of
ston Churchill told the House of over-confidence.
Commons "... ! have nothing to France, who owns the Dayto.
offer but blood, toil, sweat and na Beach Speedway and was
president of NASCAR, was In
tea~. "
California last week organl2lng
an office, and In Washington
the previous week.
In California, he attended the
Langsville, and Donald Dailey,
RD, Middleport, were united in San Clemente White House
martiage on Sunday, Aug. 'J:/, party the President gave for.
at the United Faith Church, Hollywood celebrities support.
Route 7. Mr. Daily Is the ing his reelection.
Although Wallace Is staying
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
neutral in the campaign,
WUliam Folmer.
Weekend guests or Mr. and France said he consulted blm
Mrs. WUliam Folmer were Mr. before taking on the assignand Mrs. Robert Johnson and ment lor Nixon.
family of Columbus, Mrs. Jean
"Gov. ·wallace said he
Wllklns and son, J. P., of thought It was fine if that was
Toledo, and Mr . and Mrs. what I wanted to do," France
Jeffrey Folmer of Portland. said.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
-H. G. Bill France, former
state campaign manager for
George Wallace and now a
national vice chairman of
"I;Iemoerals for Nixon," Saturday called on Wallace supporters to help defeat George
McGovern if they want their
man to have a chance In 1976.
"If 1\fcGovem Is elected,
there is no chance of changing
the Democratic party's rules"

12:3D-Split Secood 6; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Etec. Co. 33 ;
News 3; 3 W's 11 . IS.
1: DO-All My Children 6, 13; News, Weather Sports 3; Flippo At
the Fair 10; To Be Announced 15; It's Your Bet 8; tn.
terMIIonal Cookbook 33.
1:30-3 On A Match 3, 4, IS ; Lets Make A Deal 6, 13 ; As The
World Turns 8, 10; Designing Women 33.
2: DO-Days of OJr Lives 3. 4, IS; Newlywed Game 13; Love
'
Spendored Thing 8. 10; Folk Gullar 33.
2;3D-Datlng Game 13; Guiding Llght8, 10; Doctors 3, •· 15; Toy
That Grew Up 33.
3: DO-Another World 3, 4, IS ; General Hospital 6, 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10.

3: 3Q-Return to Peyton Place3, 4. IS ; One Life to Live 6; Edge
of NightS, 10: Jell's Colt le13 ; Sporl$cope33.
4:DO-Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, IS ; Huckleberry Hound 6:
Sesame St. 33 ; Batman e; Summer Olympics 13; Movie
"Until The Sail" 10.
4: 3o-Green Acres 3; Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy 6; Death
Valley Days 8; Password 13 ; Andy Griffith 15.
5:DO-Wagon Train 3; Big Valley 6; Mr. Rogers 33; Dick Van
Dyke 15; To Be Announced 4; Merv Griffin 8; Tarzan 13.
S:3o-Eiec. Co. 33 ; Marshall Dillon 15.
6:0G-News 3, 4, 8, lO i Truth or Conseq . 6; I Dream of Jeannie

13; News IS; Hathayoga 33.
6:3o-NBC News3, 4, IS; ABC News6,13 ; CBS News8, 10; Folk
Gu llar 33 ; I Dream of Jeanie 13.
7:DO-It Takes A Thief 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; News 6, 10; Circus!
13: Whafs My Line 8; Saint IS; Oft the Record 33 .
7:3o-Trafflc Court 10; Episode: Acllon33 ; To Telllhe Truth6 ;
Farmer's Daughter 13 ; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Dragnel8.
8:DO-Gunsmoke e, 10; Baseball 3, 4, 15; Summer Olympics 6,
13; Journey fo Eldorado 33.
9: DO-Here's Lucy 8, 10.
9:3o-DorlsDay8. 10 ; ToyThatGrewUp33.
10:oo-Cade's County 8. 10; Societies In Transition 33.
10: 3o-Human Dimensions 33.
11 : DO-News 3. 4,' 6 ; News 8, 10, 15.
11 : 3o-Johnny Carson 3, 4, IS; Summer Olympics 6 ; Movies
"Lers Do It Again" 8; "Doctor In Love" 10; "Red Mountain"
13.
on Columbus 4.

1: 3o-News 13.

TUESDAY, SEPT.5,1972
6:DO-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: Is-Farm R~port 13; Farmtlme 10; 6: 2o-Paul Harvey 13.
6: Jo-Columbl)s Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Concern &amp; Com.
ment 10.
6: •s-Corn cob Report 3; 6:S5-FIIntstones 13.
7: DO-Today 3. 4. 15; CBS News 8, 10; News 6.
7:3o-Romper Room 6 ; Underdog 13; Sleepy Jeffers 8.
8:DO-Capt. Kangaroo 10, 8; SeS&lt;lme St. 33 ; Timmy &amp; Lassie 6;
New Zoo Revue 13.

e:JO-Jack LaLanne 13; New Zoo Revue6 ; Romper Room B.
9:0D- Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15; Romper Room 8; Mr.
Rogers 33; What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Friendly
Junction 10: Cuncentration 6 ; Ben Casey 13.
9:3o-Truth or Conseq. 3; One Life to Live 13: Etec . Co. 33;
Jeopardy 6 ; Hazel s.
IO:OD-Dinah Shore 3, 15; Dick Van Dvke 13: Hathayoga 33; F·
Troop 6 ; Joker's Wild 8, 10.
10: 30-Concentiatrcin 3, IS; Phil Donahue 4; Communique 6 ;
Price ts Right e, 10; Spilt Socond 13; In School Instruction 33.
ll :OD-Sale of Century 3, 15; Love. American Style; Gambit 8,
10; Password 13.
11 : Jo-Holtywood Squares 3, 4. 15; Love of Life 8, 10; Se.. me St.
33 ; Bewitched 6.. 13.
12: DO-Jeopardy 3, 15: Password 6 ; News 10; Jackie Oblinger 8;
News 13; Bob Braun's 50·50 Club 4.
12: 311-Spllt Second 6; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10; Etec. Co. 33;
Who, What or Where 3, 15.
1:DO-All My Children 6, 13; Joyce Chen Cooks 33 ; News 3; trs
· Your Bet 8: Green Acres 10.
I: Jo-Lets Make A Deal6, 13; Designing Women 33; Three()&gt; A
Match 3, 4, 15; As the World Turns8, 10 .
2: DO-Newlywed Game 13; Days of OJr Lives 3, 4, 15; Mike
Douglass 6.
2: 30-Dattng Game 13; Library 33 ; Doctors 3, 4, 15: Guiding
Light 8, 10.
.
3:0D-General Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3, 4, 151 Secret
Storm 8, 10; Growing Him Up 33.
3:30-0ne Life To Live 6, 13: Return to Peyton Place 3 4 15·
Edge of Night e. 10.
·
' ' '
4:0D-Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15; S.same St. 33; Love,
American Style13 ; FllntstonH 6; Batman 1: Movie "Caplaln
Llghtfoor• 10..
·
4:30-GrHnAcresJ ; DesthValtey Days&amp;; Password 13; 1Love
Lucy 6; Andy Griffith IS; Merv Griffin 4; Daniel Boone 13.
5:DO-Dtck Van Dyke15; Wagon Train 3; Maverick 13; Dante!
Boone 6; Merv Griffin 81 Mister Rogers 33.
5: 30-Marshall Dillon 15; Elec. Co. 33; GOmer Pylt13.
6:DO-News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, 13; Truth or Conseq. 6; Hathayoga 33.
6: l0-News3, 4,6, 8, 10, 15; CBS News 8, 10; f Dream of Jaannle
13; Love Tennis 33.
7:DO-Colfege FootbaiiJ; News 6, 10; Whafs My Line 8· Andy
Griffith IS; Course of .~r Times 33.
'
· 7:3o-Howdy Doody&amp; FrlendsJ.~. 15; To Tell the Truth6; Billy
Graham 8, 10; Best the Clock 13.
8: 30-Evenlng at Pops 33; NBC Action Playhouse 3 4 15 ·
Hawatt Flve·O 8,. 10.
·
' ' '
9: 3o-Ftrst Tuesday 3, 4; Cannon 8, 10; Bttty Graham 15;
Tomorrow's Yesterday 33.
10: DO-Firing Line 33.
10:3o-WSAZ.TV Comment 3; Probe . ·4; Arthur Smith 8;
American Lifestyle 10; Fttm 15.
H:OD-Nows 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13. 15.
11 ::10--Dtck Cavett 6; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movlos "The
Sandpiper" 8; "Action of the Tiger" 10; "Hurricane Smith"
13.
1:00-Your Heath 4; News. Weather 4; Local No&gt;~,, 13.

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON tNEAl
Sen. Geo rge . McGovern, in his second try of the year
at an economic plan, correctly sensed that Americans
want a fairer tax system. But he is no more candid than
President Nixon about the real prospect of high er taxes
m the years ahead.
Mr. Nixon and top administration officials have been
saymg smce spnng that a heavier tax burden is not in
Sl~t.

cGov~rn .~n New York said, and repeated lor strong
effect, that No Amencan whose income comes from
wages and salaries would pay one penny more in federal
taxes (under McGovern tax reforms ) that he does now."
That sounds h ke an open-ended promise not to instltut~ a general mcome tax increase, even though McGovern s reform s are designed to pick up an extra $22 bilhon by closmg many tax loopholes.
These buttery assura nces from the two major party
presidential nommees don't register well when set beside
the budget outlook for the next four years. As noted in
a recent column , lhe prospect is that by fiscal 1977 the
federal budge t will have been enlarged by another $100
b1thon- to the VICinity of $350 billion annually.
Mr. N1xon and his people want us to believe that econom•es In g?vemment, and prudence in adopting new programs. Will keep tax rates steady.
McGovern wants us to think that soaking the rich and
choppmg at the b1g defense budget will avoid the pain
or higher general tax burdens .
But the hard judgments of many economists and tax
experts suggest that neither candidate is really leveling
With us . There are enormous built-in escalators in the
budget. . Programs grow as population rises. Automatic
cost·of·liVIng mcreases are already prescribed by law.
A good part of the budget is, in a sense, un ~overnable .
. Mr .. Nixon was probably chided for distortmg the tax
Sltuatwn as recently as . in his acceptance speech at
M1am1 Beach. Right now 11 is McGoverns' turn, since he
has put himself on the firing line.
In h1s New York speech , he quickly left candor be~ind
when he complained of the revenue·draining effect of
tax cuts put through under Mr. Nixon in !969 and 1971.
That left out one of the big~est cuts of ail, under Lyndon
Johnson m 1964. The Brookmgs Institution estimates that
without tho se three cuts the federal treasu ry today would
be gettin g $35 billion more a year in income tax collection s.
McGovern faults Mr. Nixon for allegedly having a
"secret plan" fo r property tax relief. If he is elected,
McGovern says, he will propose allotting $15 billion in .
federal monies to local school systems , to " assure substantial property tax relief."
The fa ct is that the federa l government can't offer such
assurances. Even if the dispensing of U.S. funds to
schools should be tied to cutbacks in use of the property
tax lor schools, counties and other loca l taxing units may
simply appl y heavy and rising levies to other purposes.
McGovem flatly asserts that his reforms a1med at
raising $22 billion by wiping out or reducing tax preferences affecting capital gains, oil depletion . deP.recia·
lion allowance. etc .. would not decrease "the incentives
lor growth and initiative" in the economy . He says "that
is the McGove rn position," but in fact it's only a hope .
The full consequences of such changes can't really be
firmly foreca st.
McGovern, then, is telling the average taxpayer that
he has no thing to fear from him, that only the corpora·
lions and th e rich will be hit by his reforms, and that
even they won 't lose their spirit. But against the hard
rock of soaring budgets to come, his promise to spare
Americans new tax burdens breaks like a fragile wave.
, 1.. T

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•

Trevino, goU;s ·•super·Mex,"
said he "met di•aster" on the
first hole but managed to drive
"longer and straighter" as the
day prog re'!5'!d.
"My drive was 55 yards short
of the first green and I threeputted," Trevino said. He also
three-putted the 14th hole and
said later the two incidents
might have cost him a twostroke lead.
"I don't like to make ex ·
cuses," Trevino sald. "But I
putt better when th• sun is
shining. I don't know what is is,
but I can read the greens
better. On a cloudy day like
this, I can't read the greens as
well."
~
Trevino said he felt the
pressure was ''on me as much

as anyone else. I haven't won in
the U. S. since the Memphis
Tournament in May. I played
in six tournaments since then."
Beman, gaining stature as a
late starter on the professional

tour, hadn 't placed high in a
tournament until the 20th,
again over Labor Day
weekend, last year. He tied for
fourth in that event and went
on to win two other tournaments.
"I'm driving the ball well
and putting well now, so maybe
we're on lhe way again/'

Beman said. "My irons had
deserted me for awhile."
Beman said his bogey concerned him because "This is
not a course where you can
play foolishly. Every time you
make a bogey everybody
whizzes past you so fast."
Elder, who was tied lor
second with Trevino with a 64
Friday, said he "Got a little too
relaxed" in the second round.
" I was all over the lot today.
I dido 't drive or putt as well as
yesterday. But as long as I can
stay within a shot or two of the
leader, I'm not worried,"
Elder said.

REHEARSAL for the nag raising on the moon durin~ the Apollo 17 mission In
December bas a particularly Interested audience. MissiOn commander Eugene A.
Cernan plants the Stars and Stripes in simulated lunar soil with his wife Barbara
and daughter Teresa, 9, looking on.

OPEN ALL
DAY
9:30 TILL 9 P.M.
MONDAY!
SUNDAY

A DISCOUNT
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tackle from the one-yard line.
Eagle rookie Pat Gibbs
fumbled a 5fryard punt by the
Giants' Tom Blanchard on the
Eagle 14-yard tine, and Giant
rookie
Charlie
Christ
recovered. Johnson carried the
ball three straight times,
scoring from the two-yard line
with 3 : ~ left in the first half.
Liske then drove the Eagles
81 yards in 11 plays for their
only touchdown on the pasa to
Hawkins with 44 seconds
remaining In the half. Uake
completed five passes during
the drive and connected on 10
of 20 for 133 yards In the first
half belore the Eagles' passing
game crumbled Wlder a stiff
defensive effort by the Giants'
secondary in the second half.

today· s FUNNY

CHESS turns out to be
oolhbtg but a skin game lor
Roman m o d e 1 LUiana
Chiara, who served as the
llvbtg canva&amp; lor an artistic
tribute to the Bobby
F I a c h e r • Boris Spassky
championship match.

WORLD ALMANAC .
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PRICES IN EFFECT TWO DAYS-- SUNDAY and MONDAY!
MENS CRUSHABLE

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ROOM SIZE

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A $25.00 VALUE!

REGULAR49c VALUE

Vermont's name came
from the French · words
vert, green, and mont,
mountain. The Green Moun·
talns of Vermont were said
to have been named by the
French explorer, Samuel de
Champlain. The World AI·
manac notes that when the
state was formed in 17TI,
Dr. Thomas Young suggested combining vert and
mont into Vermont.

In 1939, Great Britain declsred war on Germany, with
France following ault six hours
later. They were quickly joined
by ' A111tralla, New Zealand,
South Africa, and Canada.

PACKAGE OF 9
WOOD PENCILS
Yellow
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All Nylon. with non skid
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22~
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PRICES ARE IN EFFECT
SUNDAY l p.m. to 6 p.m.
MONDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

WOMENS VINYL

EVERYbAY$3.87STOCK

FLARE LEG
BOYS DRESS

70Z.

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10 FEET UNDER HONG KONG'S harbor ru11 thla llllmel J,IDkln&amp; VIctoria IG
the Kowlooa PeiiiDIU.. It coli 1 tidy ~ mlllloD, ... • · • can rolled lllrou«ll
on Ill flrat dly lit earlY Aup1t.

..

I
'

WETHERSFIEW, Conn.
(UPI) - Lee Trevino sank a
four-foot birdie putt on the 18th
green Saturday to tie early
finishmg Deane Beman at the
hallway point of the $125,000
Greater Hartford Open .
Both men were 10 under par
at 132 for 36 holes .
Ben\an came from three
strokes off the first round pace ·
set by Bert Yancey with his
second straight 66 while
Trevino had a 68 for the day
after a 64 on Friday.
Trailing the pair by a single
stroke at nine under par were
Rick Rhoads of Palm Springs,
Calif., Lee Elder
of
Washington, Tom Shaw of
Inverrary, Fla., Dave Stockton
of Westlake Village, Calif. and
Paul Moran of C&lt;&gt;iton, Calif.
Yancey, who fired a 6J in the
opening roWld, remained at 8
under par Saturday while
finishing in a light rain.
Beman carded six birdies
and a bogey on the 6,583-yard
par-71 course and ran into
serious trouble only on the 193yard par-3 third hole . " I shot ·
out of a trap to about four feet
from the cup and missed the
putt for my only bogey," he
said.
Beman went to the clubhouse
expectlng to be surpassed by
several players, but only
Trevino was able to catch him.

"' 1

Snead Paces NY
PRINCETON, N. J. (UP!) The New York Giants converted a fumble recovery and a
pass iniA!rception into two short
.touchdown rushes by Charlie
Evans and Ron Johnson in the
first hall Saturday and held on
to defeat the Philadelphia
Eagles, 27-12 in an exhibition
game.
Giant quarterback Norm
Snead completed 17 of 23
passes for 176 yards and
directed the Giants on a 71).
yard drive for their other
touchdown on a two-yard
plunge by rookie Vince
Clements with I :16 left In the
game.
Eagle quarterback Pete
Liske, who threw a 14-yard
touchdown pass to Ben
Hawkins in the second quarter,
did not complete a single pass
in eight attempts in the second
half.
Pete Gogalak kicked
field goals of 23 and 22 yards
for the Giants, and Tom
Dempsey booted a 4Z.yarder
for Philadelphia.
The Eagles' first points came
on a ·safety when the· Giants'
Johnson fumbled a lateral pass
from Snead at the !~yard line
and the ball roUed out of the
end zone.
Defensive end Henry R8!ld
picked off Uske's first pill 011
the Eagles' 1S.yard line afllr II
was batted into the air Ia I
heavy paiS rush. Three plaJa
later, Evans bolted over Jell

.

'

Trevino, Beman Tied

BRUC·f BIOSSAT

To Back Nixon

1: oo-Focus

.

17 - TheSunda
YT'unes ·Sentinel, SUnday, Sept. 3, 1972
.

WHILE
THEY
LAST

A huge selection of
very different center
pitctl·· All orglnolly
sold lor 11.00.

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Cubs' Pappas No-Hits Padres

Task .Force to Charl Advance In Clean Coal

FARM PLAN - Ernest Kay, left, and his lrother,
Henry, discuss their soli conservation district fsrm plan with
their mother, Mrs. Clara Y. Kay. (USDA.SCS phoiG)

TALK lJVESTOCK- Ernest and Henry Kay discuss livestock feeding problems with
Charles Sperow of West Virginia University. Carl Cook, County Agent Soil Conservation
Service and Mr. Sperow are working with these boys on forage producti~n 'in pasture to see
about the effect of this production on li ves!Gck growth. ( USDA·ACS photo)

Southside Farm .

SOUTHSIDE - Ernest Kay
and his brother, Henry ,
operate one of the largest
catUe and hog farms in the
County. Together they farm
and manage 703 acres of hmd
owned by the Kay family. They
jointly own 92 acres, their
.mother,.Ciara Y.Kay,owns 152
acres, and their uncle, Robert
H. C. Kay, owns 459 acres.
Besides that, they cut 35 acres
of hayland on an adjoining
farm .
They have been cooperators
:Pf the Western Soil Conservation District ever since
they have been farming. Their
father, John Kay , was a
supervisor of the District for
many years before his death
and was very active in the
District program. The:.; and

their father before them have
carried out many conservation
practices: These include 27,606
feet of tile for drainage, conservation cropping system on
146
acres,
pasture
management on 196 acres,
brush control on 118 acres,
pasture planting on 30 acres
wildlife management on zO
acres, wildlife wetland
management on 5 acres, 1070
feet of stream channel im·
provement, and 2,140 feet of
streambank stabilization. In
addition to all this they have
built two ponda, made two
spring developments, and built
three livestock watering
troughs.
These young farmers have
lived on the present family
farm all their lives. Henry's
wife, Wanda, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Bowcott, lived
at Southside all of her life.
Ernest's wife, Pauline, was
born and reared at Ironton
Ohio.
'
She was graduated from
Ironton High School and
Holzer Hospital School of Nursing. Ernest, Henry and Wanda
are all graduates of Pt.
Pleasant High School. Each ·
family ha,s two children. Er·
nest and Pauline '!lave a son, c.
R., 4years old, and a son, Wall,
I year old. Henry and Wanda
have a son, John 4 years old,
and a daughter, Lisa, 1 year
old.
Henry and Ernest were in the
Army two years, Ernest in a

CHICAGO (UP!) - Milt
Pappas hurled the second no-·
hitwr by a Cub pitcher this
year and lost his bid for a
perfect game with two out In
the ninth Inning when he
walked pinch-hitter Larry
Stahl as the veteran Chicago
righthander blanked San '
Diego, 8-0.
Pappas, 33, recorded his 12th
win of the year and sixth in a
row.
Baseball's last perfect game
was notched by Oakland's Jim
Hunter against Minnesota on
May 8th, 1968.
Pappas did not come close to
Issuing a walk until the ninth
and struck out six while
permitting only three balls hit
to the outfield.
The closest San Diego player .

This Is Our Fastbuck Model

Brothers Operate
BY JOHN COOPER
Soli ConservaUon Service
(Tbls Is another In a series of
articles In which we are
honoring young people wbo
have chosen farming as their
career and
who
are
cooperators of tbe Western Soli
Conservation District.
Fullllme Ianners up to age 36,
who own or share in the farm
business were chosen. Young
farmers whom we are
featuring this week are Ernest
and Henry Kay. Ernest Is 35,
Henry is 38. Ernest's age
makes these boys eligible
beeause no story on the Kay
farm would be complete
without Including both.

•

According to D. E. American Electric Power
NEW YORK - The Electric
Research Council Saturday . Wooldrldge, .Vlce President of Service Corporation. .
The Co111cil Ill compriied of
announced formation of a Task Ohio Edison Company, who Is
Force on the Utilization of Coal serving as chairman, "The 12 representative• . fr~m
which will report to the Council Task Force will also recom· various segments of the
periodically on prooesses being mend revisions to the research electl"ic power Industry, In·
Investor-owned
developed to meet the need for program as ·technological eluding
power plant fuel essenUaily development$ occur." Based companies through Edison
free from sulfur and mineral on its appraisals of the needs of Electric Institute, federal,
the electl"ic utility Industry, the state and locill electric power
matter.
The Task Force will evaluate Task Foree will recommend agencies and cooperatives.
the various methods for near-term as well as long- Financing of reaearch of In·
meeting
power
plant range research programs IG be dustry-wlde importance Is
requirements for a 'clean' fuel, undertaken by the electric made possible through the
Council.
and recommend an effective utility industry.
Other members of the Task
R&amp;D program that will allow
the electric utility industry to Force include F. J. McAiary,
Caroline Is a German
continue to use the nation's Allegheny Power System, Inc., name m e a n i n g noblevast coal reserves.
and
John
Tillinghast, spirited.

paratrooper group at Fort
Campbell, Ky., and Henry at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. and at
Ft. Eustis, Virginia.
They were active in FFA at
Pt. Pleasant High School
where they took Vocational
Agriculture from Clifford
Dunn. Both were awarded the
State Farmer Degree and
American Farmer Degree in
FFA. Ernest played football.
They go to separate neigh·
· borhood churches. Ernest 's
family attends Beech Hill
United Methodist Church and
Henry's family attends Harmony Baptist Church.
The livestock herd consists of
133 brood cows, some of which
are purebred Angus. Others
are Charolais cross.
There are five bulls and
about 140 steers, heifers and
calves. They regularly fatten
and sell about 35 steers
weighing 800 .• 1,000 lb. each
year.
The hog operation consists of
30 brood sows. They fatten the
pigs from these sows and
generally sell about 500 fat
hogs weighing about 225
pounds each year.
Henry said, "Hogs keep us
going. There 's more money in
hogs than there is in cattle ."
They raise each year 150
acres of corn, 75 of whi ch is
made into ensilage, while 75
acres are picked from grain .
About one-half of the corn
planted for grain was sod
planted - this means that
conventional plowing and

disking was not used for
seedbed preparation, but that a
·herbicide was used to kill
existing plants growing in the
field . The corn was planted
without plowing following the
use of the herbicide.
Last year one 32-acre field of
corn which.was sod planted on
June 18 produced 450 tons of
ensilate. This production from
that acreage is in addition to a
crop of hay that was taken off
earlier.
Other crops include 20 acres
of barley which yielded 93
bushels per acre last year and
60 acres of wheat which yielded
a total of 353 bushels last year .
In addition to these grain crops
they raise 193 acres of clover
and timothy which is cut for
hay.
Ernest and Henry both take·
their work seriously. They
disdain a person who is not
willing to work . They each
work I 0 hours or more each
day every day in the year

except Sunday and m tne
summertime their work day is
more like 12 to 14 hours.
When we asked them about
recreation both said they had
ta keQ vacations when they got
married but . that they hadn't
been off more than a day at a
time since.
They have some very
definite ideas about farming.
Henry said. "Farming is
contin ually getting rougher.
Labor is very hard to get. Some
farmers are going to be forced
out." He continued, "It is
almost impossible for a young
man to get started into farming
without some help. It takes too
much capital to gel started on
your own without some .
backing. "
We recall talkin g with
Robert H. C. Kay, Henry's and
Ernest's uncle, three or four
years ago about these boys. His
comment about them was,
"There's none superior, and
damn few equal to Henry and
Ernest. "

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MY NAME

SKIRTING END-Waharna Senior ROO Lambert
( 33) skirted the end on a razzle-dazzle play and raced for the

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11

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COLUMBUS - A new
publication listing the dates
and locations of 93 festivals and
events in Ohio from September
through December has been
released by Dr. David c.
Sweet, director of the Ohio
Department of Economic and
CommWlily Development.
The publication, entitled
"Ohio Calendar of Events
Sept.-Dec. 1972," lists arts and

..
....

IS ...................................................................... .

I AM BUYING A ....................

"1111111

//m:!:

FIRST

crafts shows , festivals
featuring food, history, flowers
and other themes, fall foliage
events and festivals saluting
the holiday season .
Copies of the calendar of
events are available free of
charge by writing to:
Publications Cen ter , O~io
Department of Economic and
Community Development, Box
1001, Columbus, Ohio 43216.

"109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

Phlllies 4~ for the Cubs on
April 16 while Don Larsen of
the New York Yankees,
Harvey Haddix of the Pitts·
burg Pirates, Jim Bunning of

the Philadelphia Phillies,
Sandy K0 ufax of the Los
Angeles D:&gt;dgers and Hunter of
the Oakland A's hurled perfect
games.

tlig.
Cubs' shortstop Don Kenninger saved a possible hit in
the fifth Inning when he went
deep in the hole on the outfield
grass to throw out Nate
Colbert.
The Cubs got two unearned
runs in the opening Inning off
loser Mike Caldwell. Burt
Hooton no-hit the Philadelphia

Redman hm

----Wins Second

---·····AUT~O~~
APPLICATION

IG get a hit came in the fourth
Inning when · shortstop Enzo
Hernandez laid down a perfec1
bunt down the third base line
but Ron Santo elected to let the
ball roll and it crossed over iniG
fqul terri!Gry just ahead of the

Saturday Garnes
RAU 3-HITS CARDS
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Doug
Rau pitched a three-hitter
. against St. Louis in hls first
; ·Major League start Saturday
· and catcher Steve Yeager
drove In three runs as the Los
' Angeles Dodgers defeated the
. Carda, 5-J.
;, , Rau allowed doubles by Ted
~. Simmons and Skip Jutze and
: Jutze's run-scoring single in
~ the seventh . Rau had a 14-.1
: record for Albuquerque in the
~' Pacific Coast League this
} season before being purchased
; by the Dodgers.

•

Tommie Harper doubled,
moved to . third on Luis
Aparicio's sacrifice bunt and
scored on Carl Yastrzemski's
fly to left. Smith followed with
his line shot into the Red Sox
bullpen.
Boston added three more in
the second when Cari!Gn Fisk
singled, went to third on Andy
Kosco's double and scored on
Doug Griffin's single up the
middle. Kosco scored on Sonny
Siebert's single.
The Royals got a run·in the
fourth on Lou Pineilla's lith
homer and added single runs in
the sixth aod seventh.

;
:

YANKEES WIN
INDIANS WIN
NEW YORK !UP!)- Bernie
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
~ Allen's sixth home run of the
(U
P!)
Pitcher
Steve
Dun~ season broke up a 1-1 tie in the
~ fifth Inning Saturday and ning drove in two runs with his
;~ delivered a 2-1 victory for the first homer of the season and
:: New York Yankees over the John Lowenstein added three
:, Chicago White Sox behind RB!'s on his sixth homer IG
~ Steve Kline's eight-hit pil- give the Cleveland Indians a 5-3
victory over the Minnesota
l: chlng.
Twins
Saturday. ~ Of Allen's six homers, four
:; have been game-winners and a
~ fifth tied a game In the ninth il"• DETROI'J1 ~ ~TREAK~ Inning of a game won by New
OAKLAND (UPI) - BUI
•J York 1n the loth.
Freehan and Mickey Stanley
~
cracked solo homers in the lith
BOSOX BEAT ROYALS
inning Saturday to snap a fourBOSTON (U P! ) - ~he game Detroit losing streak in a
, Boston Red Sox scored fiVe 3-1 win over Oakland that
runs In the first two Innings, clipped the A's five-game win
with the help of Reggie Smith's skein .
16th homer, and hung on IG
take a f&gt;.3 win Saturday over
ROSEWALLOUT
the Kansas City Royals.
The Sox got two runs off loser
FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
Mike Hedlund in the first. (UP! ) - Second-seeded Ken

l

HARDING SHOT
DETROIT (UP!) - Onetime basketball star Reggie
Harding, who had been In and
out of trouble ever since high
school days, died Saturday in a
White Falcons l~ TD agalnat the IIO'I'erful Wlrt Tigers.
Detroit hospital after being
PHOTO BY SAM NICHOLS, lli shot in the head following an
argument.
A spokesman for Detroit
General Hospital said Harding,
30,diedat I :30p. m. EST, some
16 hours after he was shot twice
through the head.
Police were searching for
Phila.
at
Atlanta
2
(twi-nighll
Carl
Scott, 26, who left the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
By United Press International San Francisco at Pitts. 1Nl
scene of the shooting following
Montreal at Cincinnati ( Nl
1Night games not included)
the argument with Harding In
New York at Houston ( Nl
EAST
SUNDAY'S
GAMES
an
East Side residential area.
W L Pet GB
(All
Times
EDT)
Pitlsburgh
78 46 .62'1
Chicago
69 58 .543 10112 San Fran. at PIHs (UO pm.)
San Diego at Chicago (2 : 15
New York
63 59 .516 ,,
p.m.)
St . Lou is
61 65 .•8• 18
GRID SCORES
Montreal
57 66 .463 20112 Los Ang. at St . Louis (2: 15
By United Press International
Philadelphia
4S 80 .360 lPh p.m.)
Fairmont W. 42 Lew is Countv 0
Phil. at Atlanta (2 : 15 p.m.)
WEST
W L Pet GB Montreal at Cinci. (2 : 15 p.m.) Fairyiew 19 Riverside 0
New York at Houston (3 p.m .) Grafton 8 Phillip Barbour 6
Cincinnati
79 &lt;16 .632
Clarksburg Wash . Irving 20
MONDAY'S GAMES
Houston
73 5' .575 7
Phlla
.
at
PiHsburgh
(21
Clarksburg Roos. Wilson 8
Los Angeles
68 58 .5.W 11 '12
Br idgeport 20 Shinnston 0
Atlanta
58 70 ,,53 22'12 Chicago at New York (2)
Mountaineer 53 Circlesvllle 0
Montreal at St. Louis (2)
San Francisco 56 71 .441 2'
San Diego
46 80 .365 33'12 Cine. at Los Ang. 121 (twi. Buck. Upshur 21 Morgant'n 0
night)
Rideley 50 Terra Alta 6
Safurday 1 s Resulfs
Park'g S. 16 Pt. Pleasant 12
San Fran. at San Diego (NI
Chicago 8 San Diego 0
Atlanta at Houston (N1
Beckley 12 Dunbar 6
Los Angeles 5 St. Louis 1
Hunt'gton 39 Boyd Cy (Kyl 0
Fairmont E. 6 Monongah 6

Clarks VIc. 27 Clarks. N.D. 18
Scott 33 Chapmanville ,,
Duvall 16 Guyan Valley 0

Jets Beat Falcons
ATLANTA (UP!) - Soccerrstyle kicker Bobby Howfield
booted three field goals
Saturday afternoon IG give the
New York Jets a 9-3 victory
over the Atlanta Falcons in a
pre-season game at Georgia
Tech's Grant Field.
Neither team could generate
any ollense in a game marked
by penalties.
Howfield put the Jets in front
3-0 in the second quarter with a
12-yard kick: AUanta tied the
Rosewall was knocked out of
the U. S. Open Tennis Championships Saturday after losing
two tie-break sets to Britain's
Mark Cox, 1-6, 6-3, 7-6, 7-6.

Mannington 16 Pine Grove V. 8
Wheeling 7 Warwood 7

Half Title
The Redman Inn won iIs fifth
consecutive match to become
winners of the second half of
the Men's Wednesday Nite Golf
League.
The Redman Inn will now
meet Cox's Dept. Store in an 18
hole playoff to determine the
Wednesday Nite League
champion. George Pope, Dick
Roderick Sr ., James Walker
Sr. and Harland Martin are
the members of the Redman
Inn.
Bill Thomas fired a 3-under
par 31 to win medalist honors.
Paul Fraley had an even par 34
and Chuck Collier a 36. Davies
Jewelers won the week)y team
low net score with a 126.
RESULTS:
QSSC 16, C&amp;S Bank 0
Redman Inn 81&gt;, lsi Nat'!
Bank 7'k
O'Dell Lumher 121&gt;, Cox
Dept. Store 31&gt;
Davies Jewelers ll'h,
Marchi 41&gt;
Collier's 8, Willi~ Tire Co. 8
STANDINGS
Redman Inn

W L T Pis

5 0
Davies Jewelers
3 1
Magnolia
27
John
Marshall
6
game in the third quarter when
O'DeiiLumber
3
1
Brooke 32 Oak Glen 13
Bill Bell hooted through a field Hundred
Marchi
Dist.
3
2
22 Cameron \4
1st National Bank 3 2
goal from 20 yards.
Kingwood 22 Petersburg 8
QSSC
2 2 1
In the fo•rlh quarter, Moorefield 16 Hedgesville 0
Willis
Tire
2 2 1
Howfield kickea field goals of Harrisville 16 Lumberport 2 Cox Dept . Store
1 4
Calhoun 39 Gilmer 0
.Colller Serv. Store 0 3 2
29 and 32 yards to give New Cowen 20 Nuttall 6
C&amp;S Bank
0 5
York its second pre-season Welch 28 Logan 0
Sept.
6 Schedule
win . The Jets have lost two and Oceana 8 Stoco 6
I End of Second Halt)
Princeton 48 HintOn 7
C&amp;
S
VS 0 ' Dell
tied one.
Winfield 28 · Hamlin 0
Redman Inn vs CoiUer's
Heismann Trophy winner Hurricane 27 Buffalo Put. 0
Davies
vs QSSC
Pat Sullivan played the entire Man 12 Qak Hill 0
Cox
vs
lsi
National
Ansted 1&lt; Gauley Bridge 8
Marchi
vs
Willis
game at quarterback for St
. Albans ,, Barboursville 20
Atlanta and had a miserable M ilton 14 Ceredo-Kenova 14
afternoon . He completed six of Parsons 8 Franklin 6
Doddridge 21 Braxton 20
24 passes for 85 yards and had Ravenswood
31 St. Marys 6
four throws intercepted.
Wirt 34 Wahama 6
A J&amp;.yard touchdown pass in Pineville 52 Baileysville 0
Hope 2• Sophia 0
the third quarter by Sullivan Mt.
Peterstown 3' Shady Spg 8
was called back on a holding
penalty and Atlanta penalties
SUNDAY'S PROBABLE
caused several other comPITCHERS
pletions to be wiped out.
By
United
Press International
Joe Namath played the first
AMERICAN LEAGUE
half for New York but was
Chicago (Wood22·12J at New
unable to move the Jets with York (Kekich 10·121 .
Detroit (Seelbach 8·81 at
consistency. He completed five Qakland
(Hunter 17-7J.
of 14 passes for 58 yards.
Baltimore !Cuellar 14·10) at
AI Woodall played the second California i Messersm lth 5-8) .
Cleveland (Tidrow 12- t2 ) at
half at quarterback for the Jets Minnesota
(Perry 11 ·13).
and guided them to their only
Kansas City (Nelson a.,) at
successful drive. He started on Boslon (Tiant 9 - ~).
Milwaukee I Ryerson 3-71 at
the 19 and moved the Jets to Texas
1Bosman 7-8).
Atlanta's 15, where the Falcons
NATIONAL LEAGUE
San Francisco (Marlchal 5stiffened and forced a field goal
15)
at Pittsburgh (Moose 10·81 .
attempt which Howfield
San Diego (Corkins •·8l at
converted from the 29.
Chicago !Jenkins 18·101 .
The brightest star for
Los Angeles (John 11 -SJ at St.
Louis
(Cleveland 13-111 .
AUanta offensively was run·
Philadelphia (Carlton 21-8)
ning back Joe Profitt, who at Allanta (Niekro 12-111.
gained 82 yarda. Atlanta was
Montreal (Moore 6· 6 or
penalized 10 times for 85 yards Morton 5·12) at Cincinnati
10·111 .
and the Jets five times for 45 (Billingham
New York (McAndrew 10·5)
yards.
at Houston (Reuss 9·10) .

10
7

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6

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5

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•

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Things A UHie
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POINT PLEASANT

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312 6th SI'REET

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Cubs' Pappas No-Hits Padres

Task .Force to Charl Advance In Clean Coal

FARM PLAN - Ernest Kay, left, and his lrother,
Henry, discuss their soli conservation district fsrm plan with
their mother, Mrs. Clara Y. Kay. (USDA.SCS phoiG)

TALK lJVESTOCK- Ernest and Henry Kay discuss livestock feeding problems with
Charles Sperow of West Virginia University. Carl Cook, County Agent Soil Conservation
Service and Mr. Sperow are working with these boys on forage producti~n 'in pasture to see
about the effect of this production on li ves!Gck growth. ( USDA·ACS photo)

Southside Farm .

SOUTHSIDE - Ernest Kay
and his brother, Henry ,
operate one of the largest
catUe and hog farms in the
County. Together they farm
and manage 703 acres of hmd
owned by the Kay family. They
jointly own 92 acres, their
.mother,.Ciara Y.Kay,owns 152
acres, and their uncle, Robert
H. C. Kay, owns 459 acres.
Besides that, they cut 35 acres
of hayland on an adjoining
farm .
They have been cooperators
:Pf the Western Soil Conservation District ever since
they have been farming. Their
father, John Kay , was a
supervisor of the District for
many years before his death
and was very active in the
District program. The:.; and

their father before them have
carried out many conservation
practices: These include 27,606
feet of tile for drainage, conservation cropping system on
146
acres,
pasture
management on 196 acres,
brush control on 118 acres,
pasture planting on 30 acres
wildlife management on zO
acres, wildlife wetland
management on 5 acres, 1070
feet of stream channel im·
provement, and 2,140 feet of
streambank stabilization. In
addition to all this they have
built two ponda, made two
spring developments, and built
three livestock watering
troughs.
These young farmers have
lived on the present family
farm all their lives. Henry's
wife, Wanda, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Bowcott, lived
at Southside all of her life.
Ernest's wife, Pauline, was
born and reared at Ironton
Ohio.
'
She was graduated from
Ironton High School and
Holzer Hospital School of Nursing. Ernest, Henry and Wanda
are all graduates of Pt.
Pleasant High School. Each ·
family ha,s two children. Er·
nest and Pauline '!lave a son, c.
R., 4years old, and a son, Wall,
I year old. Henry and Wanda
have a son, John 4 years old,
and a daughter, Lisa, 1 year
old.
Henry and Ernest were in the
Army two years, Ernest in a

CHICAGO (UP!) - Milt
Pappas hurled the second no-·
hitwr by a Cub pitcher this
year and lost his bid for a
perfect game with two out In
the ninth Inning when he
walked pinch-hitter Larry
Stahl as the veteran Chicago
righthander blanked San '
Diego, 8-0.
Pappas, 33, recorded his 12th
win of the year and sixth in a
row.
Baseball's last perfect game
was notched by Oakland's Jim
Hunter against Minnesota on
May 8th, 1968.
Pappas did not come close to
Issuing a walk until the ninth
and struck out six while
permitting only three balls hit
to the outfield.
The closest San Diego player .

This Is Our Fastbuck Model

Brothers Operate
BY JOHN COOPER
Soli ConservaUon Service
(Tbls Is another In a series of
articles In which we are
honoring young people wbo
have chosen farming as their
career and
who
are
cooperators of tbe Western Soli
Conservation District.
Fullllme Ianners up to age 36,
who own or share in the farm
business were chosen. Young
farmers whom we are
featuring this week are Ernest
and Henry Kay. Ernest Is 35,
Henry is 38. Ernest's age
makes these boys eligible
beeause no story on the Kay
farm would be complete
without Including both.

•

According to D. E. American Electric Power
NEW YORK - The Electric
Research Council Saturday . Wooldrldge, .Vlce President of Service Corporation. .
The Co111cil Ill compriied of
announced formation of a Task Ohio Edison Company, who Is
Force on the Utilization of Coal serving as chairman, "The 12 representative• . fr~m
which will report to the Council Task Force will also recom· various segments of the
periodically on prooesses being mend revisions to the research electl"ic power Industry, In·
Investor-owned
developed to meet the need for program as ·technological eluding
power plant fuel essenUaily development$ occur." Based companies through Edison
free from sulfur and mineral on its appraisals of the needs of Electric Institute, federal,
the electl"ic utility Industry, the state and locill electric power
matter.
The Task Force will evaluate Task Foree will recommend agencies and cooperatives.
the various methods for near-term as well as long- Financing of reaearch of In·
meeting
power
plant range research programs IG be dustry-wlde importance Is
requirements for a 'clean' fuel, undertaken by the electric made possible through the
Council.
and recommend an effective utility industry.
Other members of the Task
R&amp;D program that will allow
the electric utility industry to Force include F. J. McAiary,
Caroline Is a German
continue to use the nation's Allegheny Power System, Inc., name m e a n i n g noblevast coal reserves.
and
John
Tillinghast, spirited.

paratrooper group at Fort
Campbell, Ky., and Henry at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. and at
Ft. Eustis, Virginia.
They were active in FFA at
Pt. Pleasant High School
where they took Vocational
Agriculture from Clifford
Dunn. Both were awarded the
State Farmer Degree and
American Farmer Degree in
FFA. Ernest played football.
They go to separate neigh·
· borhood churches. Ernest 's
family attends Beech Hill
United Methodist Church and
Henry's family attends Harmony Baptist Church.
The livestock herd consists of
133 brood cows, some of which
are purebred Angus. Others
are Charolais cross.
There are five bulls and
about 140 steers, heifers and
calves. They regularly fatten
and sell about 35 steers
weighing 800 .• 1,000 lb. each
year.
The hog operation consists of
30 brood sows. They fatten the
pigs from these sows and
generally sell about 500 fat
hogs weighing about 225
pounds each year.
Henry said, "Hogs keep us
going. There 's more money in
hogs than there is in cattle ."
They raise each year 150
acres of corn, 75 of whi ch is
made into ensilage, while 75
acres are picked from grain .
About one-half of the corn
planted for grain was sod
planted - this means that
conventional plowing and

disking was not used for
seedbed preparation, but that a
·herbicide was used to kill
existing plants growing in the
field . The corn was planted
without plowing following the
use of the herbicide.
Last year one 32-acre field of
corn which.was sod planted on
June 18 produced 450 tons of
ensilate. This production from
that acreage is in addition to a
crop of hay that was taken off
earlier.
Other crops include 20 acres
of barley which yielded 93
bushels per acre last year and
60 acres of wheat which yielded
a total of 353 bushels last year .
In addition to these grain crops
they raise 193 acres of clover
and timothy which is cut for
hay.
Ernest and Henry both take·
their work seriously. They
disdain a person who is not
willing to work . They each
work I 0 hours or more each
day every day in the year

except Sunday and m tne
summertime their work day is
more like 12 to 14 hours.
When we asked them about
recreation both said they had
ta keQ vacations when they got
married but . that they hadn't
been off more than a day at a
time since.
They have some very
definite ideas about farming.
Henry said. "Farming is
contin ually getting rougher.
Labor is very hard to get. Some
farmers are going to be forced
out." He continued, "It is
almost impossible for a young
man to get started into farming
without some help. It takes too
much capital to gel started on
your own without some .
backing. "
We recall talkin g with
Robert H. C. Kay, Henry's and
Ernest's uncle, three or four
years ago about these boys. His
comment about them was,
"There's none superior, and
damn few equal to Henry and
Ernest. "

~

#

##

~--

MY NAME

SKIRTING END-Waharna Senior ROO Lambert
( 33) skirted the end on a razzle-dazzle play and raced for the

IUVEA_T......•.....•.. .•••. ....... ....•.........•.. ....•... ., ........ .. ........................ ... .... .

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AND IN A SHORT TIME YOU WILL BE
HEARING FROM US ABOUT YOUR DREAM

HAPPINESS
IS ....
HAVING YOUR DREAM CAR FINANCED BY THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

"THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"
11

Festivals Calendar Offered
COLUMBUS - A new
publication listing the dates
and locations of 93 festivals and
events in Ohio from September
through December has been
released by Dr. David c.
Sweet, director of the Ohio
Department of Economic and
CommWlily Development.
The publication, entitled
"Ohio Calendar of Events
Sept.-Dec. 1972," lists arts and

..
....

IS ...................................................................... .

I AM BUYING A ....................

"1111111

//m:!:

FIRST

crafts shows , festivals
featuring food, history, flowers
and other themes, fall foliage
events and festivals saluting
the holiday season .
Copies of the calendar of
events are available free of
charge by writing to:
Publications Cen ter , O~io
Department of Economic and
Community Development, Box
1001, Columbus, Ohio 43216.

"109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

Phlllies 4~ for the Cubs on
April 16 while Don Larsen of
the New York Yankees,
Harvey Haddix of the Pitts·
burg Pirates, Jim Bunning of

the Philadelphia Phillies,
Sandy K0 ufax of the Los
Angeles D:&gt;dgers and Hunter of
the Oakland A's hurled perfect
games.

tlig.
Cubs' shortstop Don Kenninger saved a possible hit in
the fifth Inning when he went
deep in the hole on the outfield
grass to throw out Nate
Colbert.
The Cubs got two unearned
runs in the opening Inning off
loser Mike Caldwell. Burt
Hooton no-hit the Philadelphia

Redman hm

----Wins Second

---·····AUT~O~~
APPLICATION

IG get a hit came in the fourth
Inning when · shortstop Enzo
Hernandez laid down a perfec1
bunt down the third base line
but Ron Santo elected to let the
ball roll and it crossed over iniG
fqul terri!Gry just ahead of the

Saturday Garnes
RAU 3-HITS CARDS
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Doug
Rau pitched a three-hitter
. against St. Louis in hls first
; ·Major League start Saturday
· and catcher Steve Yeager
drove In three runs as the Los
' Angeles Dodgers defeated the
. Carda, 5-J.
;, , Rau allowed doubles by Ted
~. Simmons and Skip Jutze and
: Jutze's run-scoring single in
~ the seventh . Rau had a 14-.1
: record for Albuquerque in the
~' Pacific Coast League this
} season before being purchased
; by the Dodgers.

•

Tommie Harper doubled,
moved to . third on Luis
Aparicio's sacrifice bunt and
scored on Carl Yastrzemski's
fly to left. Smith followed with
his line shot into the Red Sox
bullpen.
Boston added three more in
the second when Cari!Gn Fisk
singled, went to third on Andy
Kosco's double and scored on
Doug Griffin's single up the
middle. Kosco scored on Sonny
Siebert's single.
The Royals got a run·in the
fourth on Lou Pineilla's lith
homer and added single runs in
the sixth aod seventh.

;
:

YANKEES WIN
INDIANS WIN
NEW YORK !UP!)- Bernie
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
~ Allen's sixth home run of the
(U
P!)
Pitcher
Steve
Dun~ season broke up a 1-1 tie in the
~ fifth Inning Saturday and ning drove in two runs with his
;~ delivered a 2-1 victory for the first homer of the season and
:: New York Yankees over the John Lowenstein added three
:, Chicago White Sox behind RB!'s on his sixth homer IG
~ Steve Kline's eight-hit pil- give the Cleveland Indians a 5-3
victory over the Minnesota
l: chlng.
Twins
Saturday. ~ Of Allen's six homers, four
:; have been game-winners and a
~ fifth tied a game In the ninth il"• DETROI'J1 ~ ~TREAK~ Inning of a game won by New
OAKLAND (UPI) - BUI
•J York 1n the loth.
Freehan and Mickey Stanley
~
cracked solo homers in the lith
BOSOX BEAT ROYALS
inning Saturday to snap a fourBOSTON (U P! ) - ~he game Detroit losing streak in a
, Boston Red Sox scored fiVe 3-1 win over Oakland that
runs In the first two Innings, clipped the A's five-game win
with the help of Reggie Smith's skein .
16th homer, and hung on IG
take a f&gt;.3 win Saturday over
ROSEWALLOUT
the Kansas City Royals.
The Sox got two runs off loser
FOREST HILLS, N. Y.
Mike Hedlund in the first. (UP! ) - Second-seeded Ken

l

HARDING SHOT
DETROIT (UP!) - Onetime basketball star Reggie
Harding, who had been In and
out of trouble ever since high
school days, died Saturday in a
White Falcons l~ TD agalnat the IIO'I'erful Wlrt Tigers.
Detroit hospital after being
PHOTO BY SAM NICHOLS, lli shot in the head following an
argument.
A spokesman for Detroit
General Hospital said Harding,
30,diedat I :30p. m. EST, some
16 hours after he was shot twice
through the head.
Police were searching for
Phila.
at
Atlanta
2
(twi-nighll
Carl
Scott, 26, who left the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
By United Press International San Francisco at Pitts. 1Nl
scene of the shooting following
Montreal at Cincinnati ( Nl
1Night games not included)
the argument with Harding In
New York at Houston ( Nl
EAST
SUNDAY'S
GAMES
an
East Side residential area.
W L Pet GB
(All
Times
EDT)
Pitlsburgh
78 46 .62'1
Chicago
69 58 .543 10112 San Fran. at PIHs (UO pm.)
San Diego at Chicago (2 : 15
New York
63 59 .516 ,,
p.m.)
St . Lou is
61 65 .•8• 18
GRID SCORES
Montreal
57 66 .463 20112 Los Ang. at St . Louis (2: 15
By United Press International
Philadelphia
4S 80 .360 lPh p.m.)
Fairmont W. 42 Lew is Countv 0
Phil. at Atlanta (2 : 15 p.m.)
WEST
W L Pet GB Montreal at Cinci. (2 : 15 p.m.) Fairyiew 19 Riverside 0
New York at Houston (3 p.m .) Grafton 8 Phillip Barbour 6
Cincinnati
79 &lt;16 .632
Clarksburg Wash . Irving 20
MONDAY'S GAMES
Houston
73 5' .575 7
Phlla
.
at
PiHsburgh
(21
Clarksburg Roos. Wilson 8
Los Angeles
68 58 .5.W 11 '12
Br idgeport 20 Shinnston 0
Atlanta
58 70 ,,53 22'12 Chicago at New York (2)
Mountaineer 53 Circlesvllle 0
Montreal at St. Louis (2)
San Francisco 56 71 .441 2'
San Diego
46 80 .365 33'12 Cine. at Los Ang. 121 (twi. Buck. Upshur 21 Morgant'n 0
night)
Rideley 50 Terra Alta 6
Safurday 1 s Resulfs
Park'g S. 16 Pt. Pleasant 12
San Fran. at San Diego (NI
Chicago 8 San Diego 0
Atlanta at Houston (N1
Beckley 12 Dunbar 6
Los Angeles 5 St. Louis 1
Hunt'gton 39 Boyd Cy (Kyl 0
Fairmont E. 6 Monongah 6

Clarks VIc. 27 Clarks. N.D. 18
Scott 33 Chapmanville ,,
Duvall 16 Guyan Valley 0

Jets Beat Falcons
ATLANTA (UP!) - Soccerrstyle kicker Bobby Howfield
booted three field goals
Saturday afternoon IG give the
New York Jets a 9-3 victory
over the Atlanta Falcons in a
pre-season game at Georgia
Tech's Grant Field.
Neither team could generate
any ollense in a game marked
by penalties.
Howfield put the Jets in front
3-0 in the second quarter with a
12-yard kick: AUanta tied the
Rosewall was knocked out of
the U. S. Open Tennis Championships Saturday after losing
two tie-break sets to Britain's
Mark Cox, 1-6, 6-3, 7-6, 7-6.

Mannington 16 Pine Grove V. 8
Wheeling 7 Warwood 7

Half Title
The Redman Inn won iIs fifth
consecutive match to become
winners of the second half of
the Men's Wednesday Nite Golf
League.
The Redman Inn will now
meet Cox's Dept. Store in an 18
hole playoff to determine the
Wednesday Nite League
champion. George Pope, Dick
Roderick Sr ., James Walker
Sr. and Harland Martin are
the members of the Redman
Inn.
Bill Thomas fired a 3-under
par 31 to win medalist honors.
Paul Fraley had an even par 34
and Chuck Collier a 36. Davies
Jewelers won the week)y team
low net score with a 126.
RESULTS:
QSSC 16, C&amp;S Bank 0
Redman Inn 81&gt;, lsi Nat'!
Bank 7'k
O'Dell Lumher 121&gt;, Cox
Dept. Store 31&gt;
Davies Jewelers ll'h,
Marchi 41&gt;
Collier's 8, Willi~ Tire Co. 8
STANDINGS
Redman Inn

W L T Pis

5 0
Davies Jewelers
3 1
Magnolia
27
John
Marshall
6
game in the third quarter when
O'DeiiLumber
3
1
Brooke 32 Oak Glen 13
Bill Bell hooted through a field Hundred
Marchi
Dist.
3
2
22 Cameron \4
1st National Bank 3 2
goal from 20 yards.
Kingwood 22 Petersburg 8
QSSC
2 2 1
In the fo•rlh quarter, Moorefield 16 Hedgesville 0
Willis
Tire
2 2 1
Howfield kickea field goals of Harrisville 16 Lumberport 2 Cox Dept . Store
1 4
Calhoun 39 Gilmer 0
.Colller Serv. Store 0 3 2
29 and 32 yards to give New Cowen 20 Nuttall 6
C&amp;S Bank
0 5
York its second pre-season Welch 28 Logan 0
Sept.
6 Schedule
win . The Jets have lost two and Oceana 8 Stoco 6
I End of Second Halt)
Princeton 48 HintOn 7
C&amp;
S
VS 0 ' Dell
tied one.
Winfield 28 · Hamlin 0
Redman Inn vs CoiUer's
Heismann Trophy winner Hurricane 27 Buffalo Put. 0
Davies
vs QSSC
Pat Sullivan played the entire Man 12 Qak Hill 0
Cox
vs
lsi
National
Ansted 1&lt; Gauley Bridge 8
Marchi
vs
Willis
game at quarterback for St
. Albans ,, Barboursville 20
Atlanta and had a miserable M ilton 14 Ceredo-Kenova 14
afternoon . He completed six of Parsons 8 Franklin 6
Doddridge 21 Braxton 20
24 passes for 85 yards and had Ravenswood
31 St. Marys 6
four throws intercepted.
Wirt 34 Wahama 6
A J&amp;.yard touchdown pass in Pineville 52 Baileysville 0
Hope 2• Sophia 0
the third quarter by Sullivan Mt.
Peterstown 3' Shady Spg 8
was called back on a holding
penalty and Atlanta penalties
SUNDAY'S PROBABLE
caused several other comPITCHERS
pletions to be wiped out.
By
United
Press International
Joe Namath played the first
AMERICAN LEAGUE
half for New York but was
Chicago (Wood22·12J at New
unable to move the Jets with York (Kekich 10·121 .
Detroit (Seelbach 8·81 at
consistency. He completed five Qakland
(Hunter 17-7J.
of 14 passes for 58 yards.
Baltimore !Cuellar 14·10) at
AI Woodall played the second California i Messersm lth 5-8) .
Cleveland (Tidrow 12- t2 ) at
half at quarterback for the Jets Minnesota
(Perry 11 ·13).
and guided them to their only
Kansas City (Nelson a.,) at
successful drive. He started on Boslon (Tiant 9 - ~).
Milwaukee I Ryerson 3-71 at
the 19 and moved the Jets to Texas
1Bosman 7-8).
Atlanta's 15, where the Falcons
NATIONAL LEAGUE
San Francisco (Marlchal 5stiffened and forced a field goal
15)
at Pittsburgh (Moose 10·81 .
attempt which Howfield
San Diego (Corkins •·8l at
converted from the 29.
Chicago !Jenkins 18·101 .
The brightest star for
Los Angeles (John 11 -SJ at St.
Louis
(Cleveland 13-111 .
AUanta offensively was run·
Philadelphia (Carlton 21-8)
ning back Joe Profitt, who at Allanta (Niekro 12-111.
gained 82 yarda. Atlanta was
Montreal (Moore 6· 6 or
penalized 10 times for 85 yards Morton 5·12) at Cincinnati
10·111 .
and the Jets five times for 45 (Billingham
New York (McAndrew 10·5)
yards.
at Houston (Reuss 9·10) .

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20 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, sept. 3, 1n2

I

'

Bench's Single Sinks Expos
CINCINNATI (UPI) Johnny Bench peered at his
still swolen left little finger and
smiled.
"The fmger hurt like hell
when I hit the ball," said
Bench, "but it still fell good."
To some, Bench's . remark
might sound contradictory. But
not to the 13,500 fans who saw
Johnny. lasb a tw(Joo()ul line
drive bases-loaded single to·
left-center in a 12th inning
Friday night to give the Reds a
1.0 victory over the Montreal
ElpOS.

Minutes ·earlier Bench had
tried to catch the Expos by
surprise with a bunt down the
third base line, but the ball
rolled foul by inches.
"What gave me the idea?,'.'
Bench grinned a,; he repeated
the question and then an-

swered, "lack of base hits."
The Reds catcher, who has
been manning right field since
fracturing his little finger some
two weeks ago, rapped his
game-winning hit after fouling
off four 3-2pitches served up by
Bill Stoneman, the hardluck

loser.
"That victory has to hurt
Houston psychologically," said
Reds manager Sparky Anderson. "it is pretty tough on
them to beat a guy like Tom
Seaver and then look up and
see where )Ve win a game 1.0 in
12 innings."
"Johnny's coming out of his
slump," said Pete Rose. "That
was the big thing tonight."
A siogle by Cesar Geronimo
touched off the Reds' 12th inn·
ing. After a sacrifice failed,
Rose doubled Geronimo to
third. It was Rose's fourth hit

of the night, giving hbn a
career total of 1,8115, a new club
record.
An intentional pass to Joe
Morgan filling the bas~s and
Montreal · manager Gene
Mauch went to a five-man
infield, putting three players
on the right side of second
base. The strategy worked
when Bobby Tolan hounccJ to
third baseman John Boccabella, who threw IQ home to
force Geronimo.
Bocabella, at the time, was
playing between first baseman

Sellout Crowd Expected
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio's owner Art Modell.
Current Cleveland coach is
Nick Skorich, who, strangely
Browns - tangle in neutral enough, is a graduate of the
territory here this af· University of Cincinnati.
ternoon.
The rivalry between Brown
The exhibition· game marks and Skorich deepened this
the first pro contest ever In week with moves and counterOhio stadium - the home of moves from a waiver attempt
the Ohio State University by the Browns.
Bur;keyes. A sellout crowd of
Cleveland wanted to put
about 85,000 is expected.
tackle Bob McKay on the inThe ganie will be a home- jured waiver list, but Brown
coming of sorts for Bengals placed a claim on him. The
coach Paul Brown, who was an move forced Cleveland to put
Ohio State coach several years McKay back on the active rosbefore the era of Woody Hayes ter even though he can't play.
began.
Brown also tried lo pickup
Bubba
Smith of the Baltimore
Brown coached the Buckeyes
for three seasons, beginning in Colts the same way.
"Lot Of Heat"
1941, and wound up with an 188-1 record. Brown also headed
"I've been getting a lot of
the Cleveland Browns, only to heat for doing something to try
be fired In 1962 by Browns to help my team," Brown
pro football rivals - the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland

answered his critics . "But it's
within the rule. It's just a matter of trying to help my team."
Today's 2 p.m. game is the
next-to-last preseason game
for both Ohio clubs. Neither
team has had much of an
exhibition season so far, but
hoth clubs say they have been
concentrating on getting ready
for the regular campaign, not
winning the exhibitioners.
In fact, Cleveland hasn't won
any of its four preseason
games, but appeared to be
gaining momentum in last Sal·
urday night's narrow 21J.l7 loss
to the Minnesota Vikings.
Cincinnati, with a 2-2 exhibition slate, went undefeated in
last year's preseason games
only to wind up with a disma1410 regular record. The Bengals
ha ve been building· more

slowly this year.
The teams have met in four
regular season games, with
Cleveland winning three.
Second-year quarterback
Ken Anderson is expected to
start for the Bengals. Two
Cincinnati regulars - safety
Sandy Durko and runnilig back
Fred Willis - will miss the
game because of injuries.
Cincinnati opens its regular
season at'New England Sept. 17
while Cleveland begins the
regular campaign that day at
home against Green Bay.
Highway officials here are
hoping to avoid a major traffic
jam Sunday, hut fear there will
be snarls because up to 250,1100
persons are expected at the
Ohio Stale Fair, just a few
blocks from the stadium.

Reynolds Snaps Sparky Granted
Losing Streak
·''

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Ken Reynolds, a victim of
non-support throughout most of
the season, earned hlJ first win
of the year as the Philadelphia
Phlllies routed the Atlanta
Braves, ll-1, in fhe first game
of a twl-nlght doubleheader.
The Braves stormed back to
win· lb~: nightcap, 11-5.

Ueynolds, who entered
Friday night's contest with a ().
12 record, was bolstered by a
seven-run Phillie rally in the
fourth inning. He limll!!d the
Braves to just seven hits with
Rico Carty's leadoff homer in
the second inning spoiling
Reynolds' bid for a shutout.
"I hadn't really been pit.
cbing that badly but I was
beginning to fee! I wasn't ever
going to win this year," the 2!'&gt;year old lefthander said. "I
hadn't been knocked out much
but It seemed like I kept losing
the close ones."
But things were different in
the Phillles' first game victory
and Reynolds found little
reason to complain. Tommy
Hutton and Larry Bowa paced
the attack with four hits apiece
and Joe Lis added a three-run
homer.
The Other Games
In other National League
games Chicago bombed San
Diego, 14-3, Pittsburgh ripped
San Francisco, 10-6, Cincinnati
blanked Montreal, 1.0, in t2
lnnings, Houston topped New

York, IHJ, and St. Louis and Los
Angeles
divided
a
doubleh ea der , the Cards
winning the opener, !i-1, and the
Dodgers salvaging
the
nightcap, 2-\.
In th e American league
Oakland beat Detroi t, 4-1,
Baltimore edged California, 32, New York shut out Chicago,
4.0, Boston nipped Kansas City,
1-0, Minnesota defeated
Cleveland, !i-4, in 10 innings,
and Milwaukee blanked Texas,
3.0.
Willie Stargell drove in two
runs to raise his major leagueleauing total to IO!i as the
Pirates ran their winning
streak to four straight. ')'he
Pirates battered five San
Francisco pitchers for 12 hits
as they maintained their
comfortable 11-game lead over
Chicago in the National League
East.
Elrod Hendricks' second
hom e run of the game, a threerun blast, ignited a nine-run
seventh inning as tl1e Cobs
ripped San Diego in a game
marred by a fourth-inning fight
featuring Rick Monday and
Pat Corrales.
They Argue
Monday, the Chicago centerfielder, and Corrales, the San
Diego catcher, argued at home
plate after Monday was
knocked down in the fourth
inning, following homers by
Hendricks and carmen Fanwne on consecutive pitches.

Ohio Native Wins
Track Gold Medal
MUNICH (UP!) - Dave
Wattle won the first gold medal
for the United States in the
Olympic track and field
competition by charging down
the stretch and lunging at th·e
finish line to nip Evgeni Ar·
zhanov of the Soviet Union
Saturday in the 800 meter run.
Wattle, who came to Munich
with tendonitis and was less
\ than confident going into the
early heats, was timed in 1:45.9
the same time turned in by the
Russian.
The bronze medal winner
was not immediately determined because of an apparent
complaint filed against one of
the runners.
Wottle, of Canton, Ohio, who
wears 1 gray baseball cap to
bep hla hair out of his eyes,
lralled.the other seven runners
through thefirllt400meters. He
becan to move up on the
bllekstretch of the second lap
but aWl was running fifth as
the field entered the last turn.
Wottle charged to the outside
1t the top of the homestretch
. and quickly passed everyone

11c:ept Anhanov.
WotUe moved In front by

inches in the last five meters
and the Ru ssian made a
desperate lunge at the tape
only to sprawl onto the tartan
track just past the finish line.
Wottle waited until the of·
ficial results were flashed onto
the board before taking a
victory lap around the track.
The photographers quickly
gathered around the Russian
after the race thinking he had

Two Year Pact
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds an nounced
Saturday that manager Sparky
Anderson, who is shooting for
his second pennant in three
years at the helm, has been
rehired for two more seasons.
The contract was awarded
Anderson "in recognition of the

Buckeyes
Will Be
Contenders
COLUMBUS (UP!) - "In
case you're interested," Woody
Hayes told his curious guests,
"we will be a contender."
Friday afternoon's guests at
Ohio State were interested in
the Buckeyes' 1972 prospectsthe were the roving "Big Ten
Skywriters," a group of sportswriters on their annual tour of
Big Ten teams.
Woody wheeled out 28 first
team offensive candidates for
the writers. Highest praise was
for John Hicks, a junior tackle
who missed all of last season
with a knee injury.
"He's the best lineman we
have," Woody said. "He has
the potential to be a great one
when he gets that movement
(in his knee) completely
back."
Woody talked a lot of football
with the scribes, but also
delved into other subjects. He
said lhe modem rock sound
was too loud.
"I haven't heard Wayne King
in years," Woody lamented.
"And there is nothing wrong
with Guy Lombardo, but I
guess that dstes me ."
Asked about student unrest,
Woody said "right now on campus its damn near perfect Utere are no students."
The Buckeye coach, going
into his 22nd SUISOn at Ohio
State, said he was for more
bike trails and for preserving
and planting trees.

1.2 Million Wotch

SHINNICK NAMED
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP!) Don Shinnick, a linebacker
co~ch with the Chicago Bears
for the past wo years, has been
hired as ·an assistant coach
with the st. Louis cardinals, it
was annow1ced Friday.
Shinnick, who will be in
charge of the Cardinal
linebackers, became a coach
after 13 years as a player with
the Baltimore Colts. Shinnick
will be with the Cardinals for
\&lt;Jnighl's pre-season game .with
the Green Bay Packers.

Olympic Sports

run1117. I wouldn't bavt {
Named hbn. He pltcbed Ollf II
hlJ best g1111es." .
· · ·

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Corrales Wins
Fistic 'Battle
CHICAGO (UP!) - Burly
Pat Corrales may have won the
listie battle but the Chicago
Cubs bombed the San Diego
Padres 14-3 in a game Friday
that was highlighted by a
slugging match at the plate.
Corrales and Cubs outfielder
Rick Monday were involved in
the brawl which led to both
dugouts
emptying
and
numerous other players ex·
changing blows. Monday and
Corrales were both ejected
from the game.
The battle broke out when
Monday was knocked down by
pitcher Bill Greif after Elrod
Hendricks hit his first of two
homers in the game and
Carmen
Fanzone
also
homered .
Observers said Corrales
proved the more effective
pw1cher, landing several good
blows on Monday. Others who
were osberved landing blows
were San Diego's Derrel
Thomas and Randy Hundley of
the Cubs, who was not in the
lineup .
At the time of the outbreak,
Chicago held a S-J iead. But the
Cubs put the game out of San
Diego's reach in the seventh on
a nine-run rally highlighted by
Hendricks' second homer good
for three runs.
The Cubs rapped 16 hits off
five San Diego pitchers with
Greif taking the loss to make
his record S.l!i. Bill Hinds
started for Chicago and got the
win , his 10th against eight
losses.
Thomas was the o.Jiy effective hitter for the Padres
with three safeties and a run
batted in . John Jeter had lhe
other San Diego hit.

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in the State Baseball Tournament, hit on lklf-13 aerials
for 141 yards, including a 39yard scoring shot to Joey
Given. Warner also turned the
left corner on t pretty bootleg
dash for a 6-yard TD to leave
the Blacks \railing only 7-6 at
halftime.
Steve Miller was the locals
top ball lugger with 33 yards
net in 9 carries. But Steve also
returned a punt for 44 yards,
grabbed a IIJ.yard pass, did the
Red-and-Black kicking, and
had himself quite a night. Paul
Durst netled 6 yards and Mike
McGinnis picked up 4 in one
try.
. A lad named Rick Morgan
had 84 yards in live sorties for

the Patriots and FB Dennis
Reed banged out :W in eight.
After a scoreless first period,
wherein So4th picked up four
first . downs, they found
therliselves back 'on their own
25 as lime ran out.
Rick Morgan ruined the
shutout. On the first play of the
second period, Morgan broke
through the left side and
outsped the local defenders,
still pouring it on as he
completed a 75-yard scamper
for the first touchdown of the
season. Tony Lamplough
swung his English foot
accurately and Sout)i led 7-0.
But on the very next series of
plays, Warner guided the

Blacks on a 67-yard scoring
march in nine cracks. The big
.~amers were a aS-yard pass to
Stricklen, then another 23-yard
shot to Dave that brought il
down to the South 6.
Another pass failed, but on
second down Warner hid the
ball on his hip and dashed
around the left side for the
tally. Steve Evans conversion
try was to the right and it was
. now 7-6.
South came back driving,
behind big John Douglas, but
Mike Fetty stopped hbn twice
on the local 36 to squelch an
incipient march.

Just before halftime, QB
Terry Crislip connected with
Murgan for a 31-yarder to the
Blacks 26, but again the local
defenders contained them.
The Patriots controlled the
ball on all save nine plays ln
the third quarter, moving to
the Blacks 19, then to tbe 14.
But each time Fetty, Vickers
and others got in the way and
the Patriots. had to cough up
the ball.
· Lamplough tried a 37-yard
field goal that fell short under
the crossbar. Minutes later, the
Blacks ·were pushed back to
their own three and were

forced ·to P\llll from their end
zone. But a bad pass from
center ensued, the ball was
smothered back there, and
South had a two-point safety to
up their narrow margin to 9-7.
The period ended that way.
Early in the fourth quarter,
the Patriots saddled their
horse again, John Douglas, and
marched 68-yards in five plays.
The big gainer was Douglas'
37-yard dash. Then Douglas
turned th right corner for the
last 10, breaking tackles and
spinning as he went in.
Lamplough booted perfectly
and South led, 1~.

Kinnaird brought the next
kickoff 21 yards to the local 43.
In seven plays the Blacks had
their second .TD. Durst had an
11-yard gain and Warner
speared Evans with a 14-yd
pass . Then Warner caught
Joey Given speeding in the
open, nailed him, and Joey lit
out like Snyder's hound for 39yards and the touchdown that
made it 16-12. The attempted
conversion run failed. But,
believe us, South fans were

perlurbet'!
South drove back to the local
31 but Bill King broke up a
fourth down Crislip pass and
Randy Warner started pitching
again.
Warner found . Paul Casto
a IS.yarder and taler speared
MiUer with a IIJ.yarder. But' the
Patriots got off the hook when
Kibbee deflected a Warner
pass into the arms of Dennis
Reeder for an important
interception.

STEER THIS WAY
By

Wirt Co. Bombs Wahama
The Wirt County Tigers
!llade believers out of the
Wahama White Falcons as
they handed host Coach Grant
Barnett's forces a 34-6 setback
Friday night in the season
opener.
The game was action packed
throughout as two kickoffs
were returned all the way for
touchdowns, a fiiDlble set up a
score and an intercepted pass
set up still another score.
Wirt County used a punishing
ground attack with three
bruising runners and a very
confident quarterback. Dave
Dunn directed his team with
ease as he used deceptive ball
handling and three of the finest
running backs in the state.
Led by 6-3 203 pound senior
llj)lback Rod Watson, the tiger
bjlckfleld med up a total of 211
y~ds rushing. After one look
al the Wlrt County team in
action I would have to say the
Tigers are on there way.
For the White Falcons
everythlng was not a total loss.
'1llere were many bright spots
along with 'some dark ones.
Mike Lewis and Mark MltcheU
~re two of the brighter sputa
for Wahama.
:Lewis, junior running back,
sbowed some real promise with
his pass receiving, running and
punt returns.
Mitchell, also a junior,
turned in a very impre98lve
game as he contributed 19
lndlvlual tackles. Tom SamseU
and Rob Lambert also played a
fine defensive game while
Terry Smith looked sharp with
his passes.
Opening Kickoff Disastrous

BILL N.ELSON

An oxidation "pill" has been
developed to cut hydrocarbon
emissions in auto exhaust systems.

which gave the Tigers an even
bigger advantage.
The White Falcon offense
still couldn't get going and
were forced to give up the ball.
Wirt County then started
rolling. With their ground
game' Rod watson became the ~
work horse of the drive.
Watson capped the series with
a five yard run to pay dirt. The
PAT was blocked and Wirt lead
21-6.
Watson completed the
scoring by bulling over from
the two with I: 37 left in the
game. The PAT was good when
the Tigers faked a kick and
There was no scoring in the passed complete for the extra
third quarter by either team point.
and the score was still a close
13-6 going into the final stanza.
Next week Wahama will take
Benny Cain broke the game their 0.1 record to Kyger Creek
open by running orer from two to take on t!Je Bobcats. This
yards out with 8:38 left in the will be the season opener for
game to make the score 1~. Kyger Creek. Game time is
Keener kicked the extra point 8:00p.m.
'

With 9:30 left In the half
Terry Smith s third down pass
was intercepted. Minutes later
the Tigers were running at the
door of another touchdown.
Wirt drove to the one yard line
where a l!i yard penalty was
assessed for allowing more
than one player to talk to the
coach after a time out. On third
and goal at the 16 yard line,
Benny cain tyed to carry the
ball in for the score he was five
yards short and thus got the
stages for an important fourth
and goaLWahama held and the
half on 6-13.

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The first automatic transmission was
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-

WAITING FOR BAllr-Point Pleasant's Jim Doeffinger (85) reaches out his arms while
waiting for an aerial from Randy Warner in the Big Blacks' game against Parkersburg South
Friday night. This pass, however, was grabbed out of bounds.

TRUCKS

Pit 992-2i'74

MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO

SOON TO BE COMPLETED.
QUAIL CREEK
.
corv&amp;tHUifily 4-

Wirt County won the toss and
elected to recleve to start the
game.
Terry Smith kicked off to
Allen Valentine on the 20 yards
line. Valentine electrified the
crowd by headlng toward the
middle of the field and then
shifting down the right side for .

a score .
The extra point attempt was
blocked by Tom SamseU, so
with just thirteen seconds
elapsing Wlrt County led by a 60 score.
'11le rest of the quarter was
played mainly around the Wirt
County 40 yard line. The white
Falcona qulck kicked on three
straight lbird down and long
yardage situations to keep the
Tigers at bay during the rest of
the quarter by comlng up with
TAKE DOWN-Two Wahama defensive players, faced here
the big play.
In the second quarter the with the task of riding down one of the powerful Wirt runners,
III
White Falcons had the ball get the job done In fine fashion. PHOTOBYSAMNJCHOLS
'
deep in their own territory
when Terry Smith faded back

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RODNEY, OHIO
Contact Newt Jones for informa tion

Phone : 245-9374 or 245-5021

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things in half measures.

By Jack Rogers
PARKERSBURG- Coach
ick Ware's 1972 Point
easant Big Blacks lost their
pening. football game to the
ighly-touted Parkersburg
uth Patriots up there Friday
lght, but they lost no stature.
The final score was 16-'12
fore an enthusiastic ·turnout
f fans , but the locals ruined a
o·hitter for Coach Mike
ayden's favored, veteran
utfit.
1 Unable to establish their
r,unning game, PPHS gave the
~atriols duckfits on the
RSSSing ann of QB Randy
~B!'ller and some pretty nifty
receiving.
~ Warner, pllchlng like he was

New "Hands Off" tuning!

By

TERRY

Parkersburg South Edges Big Blacks, 16-14

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These things of course

MUNICH (UP!) - More
than 1.2 million people have
watched the first six days of
Olympic sports, officials said
today.
The most popular so far is
soccer, watched by ap·
proximately 300,000 spectators,
followed by modem penlathlon
and riding with 165,000,
gymnastics with 108,000,
rowing with 96,1100, swimming
96,1100, boxing, 70,000 and canoe
and kayak racing 60,1100.
The figures were compiled
afler only one day of track and
field events.

Ron Fairly_and second baseman Ron Hunt.
It was mlnutes later that
Bench came through with his
game-winning hit to give Clay
carroll the v,ictory. Carroll
pitched. the last three innings
after Ross Grimsley shot out
the .Expos the first nine with
three hits.
"I got a booing lifting Grim·

HOLE-IN-ONE
GALLIPOLIS - Don
Sheets, playing In only his
third year of golf, scored a
hole in one at the local links
Wednesday.
Sheets' ace came on the
172 yard second hole with a
six iron. He shot a one over
par 35 for the round.
Dick Roderick, Jr., Lew
Rutherford and Dr. George
DavJs witnessed tbe shot.

things as well as big ones.

won but Arzhanov, sensing the

photo finish would go against
hini, attempted to wave them
away.

fine job Sparky has done in the
past three years," said Reds'
general
manager
Bob
Howsam .
"I don't want to sound cor·
ny ,'' said Sparky, "bul it really
gives me a good feeling. You
have to believe management is
sure of you when they give you
a two-year contract.
There was a slight pause and
then Anderson added, "I'm
just glad 1970 wasn't 1971."
The Reds won the pennant in
1970, Anderson's first year as
manager. With Bobby Tolan
out for the season, Tony Perez
nursing a hand injury half of
the season and Johnny Bench
in a year-long slump with a .238
average, the Reds finished tied
for fourth in the Western
Division last year. This season
the Reds have a comfortable
lead in the West and are expected to face the Pittsburgh
Pirates in the playoffs.

Then grinning, Anderson
sley,"saidSparky. "Atlheend
of the iMing I was ready to boo added, "even Grinisley might
have been booiog down in the
myseli. 1 '

21- The Sunday Ttinea-Sentlnel, Swulay ,Sept. 3, 1972

ALL MODELS ON OUR HUGE DISPLAY FLOOR!
SAVE - .SAVE - .FALL· CLEARANCE
~

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;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKANAUGA, OHIO

to pass.
The Wlrt County defensive
line put the pressure on and
finally got to Smith causlng
him to fwnble the ball at the
twelve yard line. Calvin White
picked the ball up and headed
for paydlrt.
Only Robbie Lambert saved
a TD by catching White and
bringing him down on the two
yard line.
On the very nell play Benny
Caln bu!led over the right side
for the lleCO!ld Wlrt County
score. Bob Keener kicked the
ball thr01J8h the uprights for
the extra polnt.
With 9: 49leflln the first half
the Wlrt County Tigers had a
13-G lead and It looked as If It
·was going to be a runaway but
thllwas not the case.
On the ensuing kick-of!
Wahama man~ged to break It
all the way. The ball was
kicked to Mike Lewis In the left
corner. Mike started straight
up the left !!Ide for about ten
vardl where he stopped and
thre1l a lon8 lateral pass to
R4bble Lambert on the other
stdeUne. Lambert broke ~
Iller a beautif111 block by
SlmJOII llld ICIIDJIIHII 15
yll'dllnto the end zone for the
f1nt Flkm 1Cont of the year.
'l1le point Iller touchdown
~ wu blocked 10 wltli
t:32lert,ln tbe ball the score
reid 6-13.
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20 - The Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, sept. 3, 1n2

I

'

Bench's Single Sinks Expos
CINCINNATI (UPI) Johnny Bench peered at his
still swolen left little finger and
smiled.
"The fmger hurt like hell
when I hit the ball," said
Bench, "but it still fell good."
To some, Bench's . remark
might sound contradictory. But
not to the 13,500 fans who saw
Johnny. lasb a tw(Joo()ul line
drive bases-loaded single to·
left-center in a 12th inning
Friday night to give the Reds a
1.0 victory over the Montreal
ElpOS.

Minutes ·earlier Bench had
tried to catch the Expos by
surprise with a bunt down the
third base line, but the ball
rolled foul by inches.
"What gave me the idea?,'.'
Bench grinned a,; he repeated
the question and then an-

swered, "lack of base hits."
The Reds catcher, who has
been manning right field since
fracturing his little finger some
two weeks ago, rapped his
game-winning hit after fouling
off four 3-2pitches served up by
Bill Stoneman, the hardluck

loser.
"That victory has to hurt
Houston psychologically," said
Reds manager Sparky Anderson. "it is pretty tough on
them to beat a guy like Tom
Seaver and then look up and
see where )Ve win a game 1.0 in
12 innings."
"Johnny's coming out of his
slump," said Pete Rose. "That
was the big thing tonight."
A siogle by Cesar Geronimo
touched off the Reds' 12th inn·
ing. After a sacrifice failed,
Rose doubled Geronimo to
third. It was Rose's fourth hit

of the night, giving hbn a
career total of 1,8115, a new club
record.
An intentional pass to Joe
Morgan filling the bas~s and
Montreal · manager Gene
Mauch went to a five-man
infield, putting three players
on the right side of second
base. The strategy worked
when Bobby Tolan hounccJ to
third baseman John Boccabella, who threw IQ home to
force Geronimo.
Bocabella, at the time, was
playing between first baseman

Sellout Crowd Expected
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio's owner Art Modell.
Current Cleveland coach is
Nick Skorich, who, strangely
Browns - tangle in neutral enough, is a graduate of the
territory here this af· University of Cincinnati.
ternoon.
The rivalry between Brown
The exhibition· game marks and Skorich deepened this
the first pro contest ever In week with moves and counterOhio stadium - the home of moves from a waiver attempt
the Ohio State University by the Browns.
Bur;keyes. A sellout crowd of
Cleveland wanted to put
about 85,000 is expected.
tackle Bob McKay on the inThe ganie will be a home- jured waiver list, but Brown
coming of sorts for Bengals placed a claim on him. The
coach Paul Brown, who was an move forced Cleveland to put
Ohio State coach several years McKay back on the active rosbefore the era of Woody Hayes ter even though he can't play.
began.
Brown also tried lo pickup
Bubba
Smith of the Baltimore
Brown coached the Buckeyes
for three seasons, beginning in Colts the same way.
"Lot Of Heat"
1941, and wound up with an 188-1 record. Brown also headed
"I've been getting a lot of
the Cleveland Browns, only to heat for doing something to try
be fired In 1962 by Browns to help my team," Brown
pro football rivals - the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland

answered his critics . "But it's
within the rule. It's just a matter of trying to help my team."
Today's 2 p.m. game is the
next-to-last preseason game
for both Ohio clubs. Neither
team has had much of an
exhibition season so far, but
hoth clubs say they have been
concentrating on getting ready
for the regular campaign, not
winning the exhibitioners.
In fact, Cleveland hasn't won
any of its four preseason
games, but appeared to be
gaining momentum in last Sal·
urday night's narrow 21J.l7 loss
to the Minnesota Vikings.
Cincinnati, with a 2-2 exhibition slate, went undefeated in
last year's preseason games
only to wind up with a disma1410 regular record. The Bengals
ha ve been building· more

slowly this year.
The teams have met in four
regular season games, with
Cleveland winning three.
Second-year quarterback
Ken Anderson is expected to
start for the Bengals. Two
Cincinnati regulars - safety
Sandy Durko and runnilig back
Fred Willis - will miss the
game because of injuries.
Cincinnati opens its regular
season at'New England Sept. 17
while Cleveland begins the
regular campaign that day at
home against Green Bay.
Highway officials here are
hoping to avoid a major traffic
jam Sunday, hut fear there will
be snarls because up to 250,1100
persons are expected at the
Ohio Stale Fair, just a few
blocks from the stadium.

Reynolds Snaps Sparky Granted
Losing Streak
·''

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Ken Reynolds, a victim of
non-support throughout most of
the season, earned hlJ first win
of the year as the Philadelphia
Phlllies routed the Atlanta
Braves, ll-1, in fhe first game
of a twl-nlght doubleheader.
The Braves stormed back to
win· lb~: nightcap, 11-5.

Ueynolds, who entered
Friday night's contest with a ().
12 record, was bolstered by a
seven-run Phillie rally in the
fourth inning. He limll!!d the
Braves to just seven hits with
Rico Carty's leadoff homer in
the second inning spoiling
Reynolds' bid for a shutout.
"I hadn't really been pit.
cbing that badly but I was
beginning to fee! I wasn't ever
going to win this year," the 2!'&gt;year old lefthander said. "I
hadn't been knocked out much
but It seemed like I kept losing
the close ones."
But things were different in
the Phillles' first game victory
and Reynolds found little
reason to complain. Tommy
Hutton and Larry Bowa paced
the attack with four hits apiece
and Joe Lis added a three-run
homer.
The Other Games
In other National League
games Chicago bombed San
Diego, 14-3, Pittsburgh ripped
San Francisco, 10-6, Cincinnati
blanked Montreal, 1.0, in t2
lnnings, Houston topped New

York, IHJ, and St. Louis and Los
Angeles
divided
a
doubleh ea der , the Cards
winning the opener, !i-1, and the
Dodgers salvaging
the
nightcap, 2-\.
In th e American league
Oakland beat Detroi t, 4-1,
Baltimore edged California, 32, New York shut out Chicago,
4.0, Boston nipped Kansas City,
1-0, Minnesota defeated
Cleveland, !i-4, in 10 innings,
and Milwaukee blanked Texas,
3.0.
Willie Stargell drove in two
runs to raise his major leagueleauing total to IO!i as the
Pirates ran their winning
streak to four straight. ')'he
Pirates battered five San
Francisco pitchers for 12 hits
as they maintained their
comfortable 11-game lead over
Chicago in the National League
East.
Elrod Hendricks' second
hom e run of the game, a threerun blast, ignited a nine-run
seventh inning as tl1e Cobs
ripped San Diego in a game
marred by a fourth-inning fight
featuring Rick Monday and
Pat Corrales.
They Argue
Monday, the Chicago centerfielder, and Corrales, the San
Diego catcher, argued at home
plate after Monday was
knocked down in the fourth
inning, following homers by
Hendricks and carmen Fanwne on consecutive pitches.

Ohio Native Wins
Track Gold Medal
MUNICH (UP!) - Dave
Wattle won the first gold medal
for the United States in the
Olympic track and field
competition by charging down
the stretch and lunging at th·e
finish line to nip Evgeni Ar·
zhanov of the Soviet Union
Saturday in the 800 meter run.
Wattle, who came to Munich
with tendonitis and was less
\ than confident going into the
early heats, was timed in 1:45.9
the same time turned in by the
Russian.
The bronze medal winner
was not immediately determined because of an apparent
complaint filed against one of
the runners.
Wottle, of Canton, Ohio, who
wears 1 gray baseball cap to
bep hla hair out of his eyes,
lralled.the other seven runners
through thefirllt400meters. He
becan to move up on the
bllekstretch of the second lap
but aWl was running fifth as
the field entered the last turn.
Wottle charged to the outside
1t the top of the homestretch
. and quickly passed everyone

11c:ept Anhanov.
WotUe moved In front by

inches in the last five meters
and the Ru ssian made a
desperate lunge at the tape
only to sprawl onto the tartan
track just past the finish line.
Wottle waited until the of·
ficial results were flashed onto
the board before taking a
victory lap around the track.
The photographers quickly
gathered around the Russian
after the race thinking he had

Two Year Pact
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Reds an nounced
Saturday that manager Sparky
Anderson, who is shooting for
his second pennant in three
years at the helm, has been
rehired for two more seasons.
The contract was awarded
Anderson "in recognition of the

Buckeyes
Will Be
Contenders
COLUMBUS (UP!) - "In
case you're interested," Woody
Hayes told his curious guests,
"we will be a contender."
Friday afternoon's guests at
Ohio State were interested in
the Buckeyes' 1972 prospectsthe were the roving "Big Ten
Skywriters," a group of sportswriters on their annual tour of
Big Ten teams.
Woody wheeled out 28 first
team offensive candidates for
the writers. Highest praise was
for John Hicks, a junior tackle
who missed all of last season
with a knee injury.
"He's the best lineman we
have," Woody said. "He has
the potential to be a great one
when he gets that movement
(in his knee) completely
back."
Woody talked a lot of football
with the scribes, but also
delved into other subjects. He
said lhe modem rock sound
was too loud.
"I haven't heard Wayne King
in years," Woody lamented.
"And there is nothing wrong
with Guy Lombardo, but I
guess that dstes me ."
Asked about student unrest,
Woody said "right now on campus its damn near perfect Utere are no students."
The Buckeye coach, going
into his 22nd SUISOn at Ohio
State, said he was for more
bike trails and for preserving
and planting trees.

1.2 Million Wotch

SHINNICK NAMED
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP!) Don Shinnick, a linebacker
co~ch with the Chicago Bears
for the past wo years, has been
hired as ·an assistant coach
with the st. Louis cardinals, it
was annow1ced Friday.
Shinnick, who will be in
charge of the Cardinal
linebackers, became a coach
after 13 years as a player with
the Baltimore Colts. Shinnick
will be with the Cardinals for
\&lt;Jnighl's pre-season game .with
the Green Bay Packers.

Olympic Sports

run1117. I wouldn't bavt {
Named hbn. He pltcbed Ollf II
hlJ best g1111es." .
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Corrales Wins
Fistic 'Battle
CHICAGO (UP!) - Burly
Pat Corrales may have won the
listie battle but the Chicago
Cubs bombed the San Diego
Padres 14-3 in a game Friday
that was highlighted by a
slugging match at the plate.
Corrales and Cubs outfielder
Rick Monday were involved in
the brawl which led to both
dugouts
emptying
and
numerous other players ex·
changing blows. Monday and
Corrales were both ejected
from the game.
The battle broke out when
Monday was knocked down by
pitcher Bill Greif after Elrod
Hendricks hit his first of two
homers in the game and
Carmen
Fanzone
also
homered .
Observers said Corrales
proved the more effective
pw1cher, landing several good
blows on Monday. Others who
were osberved landing blows
were San Diego's Derrel
Thomas and Randy Hundley of
the Cubs, who was not in the
lineup .
At the time of the outbreak,
Chicago held a S-J iead. But the
Cubs put the game out of San
Diego's reach in the seventh on
a nine-run rally highlighted by
Hendricks' second homer good
for three runs.
The Cubs rapped 16 hits off
five San Diego pitchers with
Greif taking the loss to make
his record S.l!i. Bill Hinds
started for Chicago and got the
win , his 10th against eight
losses.
Thomas was the o.Jiy effective hitter for the Padres
with three safeties and a run
batted in . John Jeter had lhe
other San Diego hit.

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.I

.',

I•

in the State Baseball Tournament, hit on lklf-13 aerials
for 141 yards, including a 39yard scoring shot to Joey
Given. Warner also turned the
left corner on t pretty bootleg
dash for a 6-yard TD to leave
the Blacks \railing only 7-6 at
halftime.
Steve Miller was the locals
top ball lugger with 33 yards
net in 9 carries. But Steve also
returned a punt for 44 yards,
grabbed a IIJ.yard pass, did the
Red-and-Black kicking, and
had himself quite a night. Paul
Durst netled 6 yards and Mike
McGinnis picked up 4 in one
try.
. A lad named Rick Morgan
had 84 yards in live sorties for

the Patriots and FB Dennis
Reed banged out :W in eight.
After a scoreless first period,
wherein So4th picked up four
first . downs, they found
therliselves back 'on their own
25 as lime ran out.
Rick Morgan ruined the
shutout. On the first play of the
second period, Morgan broke
through the left side and
outsped the local defenders,
still pouring it on as he
completed a 75-yard scamper
for the first touchdown of the
season. Tony Lamplough
swung his English foot
accurately and Sout)i led 7-0.
But on the very next series of
plays, Warner guided the

Blacks on a 67-yard scoring
march in nine cracks. The big
.~amers were a aS-yard pass to
Stricklen, then another 23-yard
shot to Dave that brought il
down to the South 6.
Another pass failed, but on
second down Warner hid the
ball on his hip and dashed
around the left side for the
tally. Steve Evans conversion
try was to the right and it was
. now 7-6.
South came back driving,
behind big John Douglas, but
Mike Fetty stopped hbn twice
on the local 36 to squelch an
incipient march.

Just before halftime, QB
Terry Crislip connected with
Murgan for a 31-yarder to the
Blacks 26, but again the local
defenders contained them.
The Patriots controlled the
ball on all save nine plays ln
the third quarter, moving to
the Blacks 19, then to tbe 14.
But each time Fetty, Vickers
and others got in the way and
the Patriots. had to cough up
the ball.
· Lamplough tried a 37-yard
field goal that fell short under
the crossbar. Minutes later, the
Blacks ·were pushed back to
their own three and were

forced ·to P\llll from their end
zone. But a bad pass from
center ensued, the ball was
smothered back there, and
South had a two-point safety to
up their narrow margin to 9-7.
The period ended that way.
Early in the fourth quarter,
the Patriots saddled their
horse again, John Douglas, and
marched 68-yards in five plays.
The big gainer was Douglas'
37-yard dash. Then Douglas
turned th right corner for the
last 10, breaking tackles and
spinning as he went in.
Lamplough booted perfectly
and South led, 1~.

Kinnaird brought the next
kickoff 21 yards to the local 43.
In seven plays the Blacks had
their second .TD. Durst had an
11-yard gain and Warner
speared Evans with a 14-yd
pass . Then Warner caught
Joey Given speeding in the
open, nailed him, and Joey lit
out like Snyder's hound for 39yards and the touchdown that
made it 16-12. The attempted
conversion run failed. But,
believe us, South fans were

perlurbet'!
South drove back to the local
31 but Bill King broke up a
fourth down Crislip pass and
Randy Warner started pitching
again.
Warner found . Paul Casto
a IS.yarder and taler speared
MiUer with a IIJ.yarder. But' the
Patriots got off the hook when
Kibbee deflected a Warner
pass into the arms of Dennis
Reeder for an important
interception.

STEER THIS WAY
By

Wirt Co. Bombs Wahama
The Wirt County Tigers
!llade believers out of the
Wahama White Falcons as
they handed host Coach Grant
Barnett's forces a 34-6 setback
Friday night in the season
opener.
The game was action packed
throughout as two kickoffs
were returned all the way for
touchdowns, a fiiDlble set up a
score and an intercepted pass
set up still another score.
Wirt County used a punishing
ground attack with three
bruising runners and a very
confident quarterback. Dave
Dunn directed his team with
ease as he used deceptive ball
handling and three of the finest
running backs in the state.
Led by 6-3 203 pound senior
llj)lback Rod Watson, the tiger
bjlckfleld med up a total of 211
y~ds rushing. After one look
al the Wlrt County team in
action I would have to say the
Tigers are on there way.
For the White Falcons
everythlng was not a total loss.
'1llere were many bright spots
along with 'some dark ones.
Mike Lewis and Mark MltcheU
~re two of the brighter sputa
for Wahama.
:Lewis, junior running back,
sbowed some real promise with
his pass receiving, running and
punt returns.
Mitchell, also a junior,
turned in a very impre98lve
game as he contributed 19
lndlvlual tackles. Tom SamseU
and Rob Lambert also played a
fine defensive game while
Terry Smith looked sharp with
his passes.
Opening Kickoff Disastrous

BILL N.ELSON

An oxidation "pill" has been
developed to cut hydrocarbon
emissions in auto exhaust systems.

which gave the Tigers an even
bigger advantage.
The White Falcon offense
still couldn't get going and
were forced to give up the ball.
Wirt County then started
rolling. With their ground
game' Rod watson became the ~
work horse of the drive.
Watson capped the series with
a five yard run to pay dirt. The
PAT was blocked and Wirt lead
21-6.
Watson completed the
scoring by bulling over from
the two with I: 37 left in the
game. The PAT was good when
the Tigers faked a kick and
There was no scoring in the passed complete for the extra
third quarter by either team point.
and the score was still a close
13-6 going into the final stanza.
Next week Wahama will take
Benny Cain broke the game their 0.1 record to Kyger Creek
open by running orer from two to take on t!Je Bobcats. This
yards out with 8:38 left in the will be the season opener for
game to make the score 1~. Kyger Creek. Game time is
Keener kicked the extra point 8:00p.m.
'

With 9:30 left In the half
Terry Smith s third down pass
was intercepted. Minutes later
the Tigers were running at the
door of another touchdown.
Wirt drove to the one yard line
where a l!i yard penalty was
assessed for allowing more
than one player to talk to the
coach after a time out. On third
and goal at the 16 yard line,
Benny cain tyed to carry the
ball in for the score he was five
yards short and thus got the
stages for an important fourth
and goaLWahama held and the
half on 6-13.

Safety engineers emphasize the importance of the car "fitting" the
driver, so that he can comfortably
perform all driving functions.
That subdued "putt-putt" at the tail
pipe may be caused by leaky exhaust
valves which permit the mixture to
finish combustion in the muffler.
The first automatic transmission was
introduced in 1938.
A stretch of empty highway is a good
place to test your brakes to make sure
they don't pull to the left orright.
Why not come to a full stop at Smith
Nelson Motors, Inc. for a fine selection
of safety-checked cars.
Open Evenings Till 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till · 5 p.m.
Service on Sat. Till 12 noon.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS,INC.

-

WAITING FOR BAllr-Point Pleasant's Jim Doeffinger (85) reaches out his arms while
waiting for an aerial from Randy Warner in the Big Blacks' game against Parkersburg South
Friday night. This pass, however, was grabbed out of bounds.

TRUCKS

Pit 992-2i'74

MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO

SOON TO BE COMPLETED.
QUAIL CREEK
.
corv&amp;tHUifily 4-

Wirt County won the toss and
elected to recleve to start the
game.
Terry Smith kicked off to
Allen Valentine on the 20 yards
line. Valentine electrified the
crowd by headlng toward the
middle of the field and then
shifting down the right side for .

a score .
The extra point attempt was
blocked by Tom SamseU, so
with just thirteen seconds
elapsing Wlrt County led by a 60 score.
'11le rest of the quarter was
played mainly around the Wirt
County 40 yard line. The white
Falcona qulck kicked on three
straight lbird down and long
yardage situations to keep the
Tigers at bay during the rest of
the quarter by comlng up with
TAKE DOWN-Two Wahama defensive players, faced here
the big play.
In the second quarter the with the task of riding down one of the powerful Wirt runners,
III
White Falcons had the ball get the job done In fine fashion. PHOTOBYSAMNJCHOLS
'
deep in their own territory
when Terry Smith faded back

"·,\e
ov

• ••

RODNEY-CORA ROAD
RODNEY, OHIO
Contact Newt Jones for informa tion

Phone : 245-9374 or 245-5021

.

ALL .'72 HONDA
MOTORCYCLES
REDUCED
.
FOR CLEARANCE!
OVER 100 MOTORCYCLES TO CHOOSE FROM.

When the makers of mobile

homes say "modern", they

,,

ONE IDEA BETTER FROM PHILCO·FORD

and

are not vital, but why do
things in half measures.

By Jack Rogers
PARKERSBURG- Coach
ick Ware's 1972 Point
easant Big Blacks lost their
pening. football game to the
ighly-touted Parkersburg
uth Patriots up there Friday
lght, but they lost no stature.
The final score was 16-'12
fore an enthusiastic ·turnout
f fans , but the locals ruined a
o·hitter for Coach Mike
ayden's favored, veteran
utfit.
1 Unable to establish their
r,unning game, PPHS gave the
~atriols duckfits on the
RSSSing ann of QB Randy
~B!'ller and some pretty nifty
receiving.
~ Warner, pllchlng like he was

New "Hands Off" tuning!

By

TERRY

Parkersburg South Edges Big Blacks, 16-14

•'

0

'

World's favorite motorcycle.

These things of course

MUNICH (UP!) - More
than 1.2 million people have
watched the first six days of
Olympic sports, officials said
today.
The most popular so far is
soccer, watched by ap·
proximately 300,000 spectators,
followed by modem penlathlon
and riding with 165,000,
gymnastics with 108,000,
rowing with 96,1100, swimming
96,1100, boxing, 70,000 and canoe
and kayak racing 60,1100.
The figures were compiled
afler only one day of track and
field events.

Ron Fairly_and second baseman Ron Hunt.
It was mlnutes later that
Bench came through with his
game-winning hit to give Clay
carroll the v,ictory. Carroll
pitched. the last three innings
after Ross Grimsley shot out
the .Expos the first nine with
three hits.
"I got a booing lifting Grim·

HOLE-IN-ONE
GALLIPOLIS - Don
Sheets, playing In only his
third year of golf, scored a
hole in one at the local links
Wednesday.
Sheets' ace came on the
172 yard second hole with a
six iron. He shot a one over
par 35 for the round.
Dick Roderick, Jr., Lew
Rutherford and Dr. George
DavJs witnessed tbe shot.

things as well as big ones.

won but Arzhanov, sensing the

photo finish would go against
hini, attempted to wave them
away.

fine job Sparky has done in the
past three years," said Reds'
general
manager
Bob
Howsam .
"I don't want to sound cor·
ny ,'' said Sparky, "bul it really
gives me a good feeling. You
have to believe management is
sure of you when they give you
a two-year contract.
There was a slight pause and
then Anderson added, "I'm
just glad 1970 wasn't 1971."
The Reds won the pennant in
1970, Anderson's first year as
manager. With Bobby Tolan
out for the season, Tony Perez
nursing a hand injury half of
the season and Johnny Bench
in a year-long slump with a .238
average, the Reds finished tied
for fourth in the Western
Division last year. This season
the Reds have a comfortable
lead in the West and are expected to face the Pittsburgh
Pirates in the playoffs.

Then grinning, Anderson
sley,"saidSparky. "Atlheend
of the iMing I was ready to boo added, "even Grinisley might
have been booiog down in the
myseli. 1 '

21- The Sunday Ttinea-Sentlnel, Swulay ,Sept. 3, 1972

ALL MODELS ON OUR HUGE DISPLAY FLOOR!
SAVE - .SAVE - .FALL· CLEARANCE
~

SMITH AUTO .SALES
;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKANAUGA, OHIO

to pass.
The Wlrt County defensive
line put the pressure on and
finally got to Smith causlng
him to fwnble the ball at the
twelve yard line. Calvin White
picked the ball up and headed
for paydlrt.
Only Robbie Lambert saved
a TD by catching White and
bringing him down on the two
yard line.
On the very nell play Benny
Caln bu!led over the right side
for the lleCO!ld Wlrt County
score. Bob Keener kicked the
ball thr01J8h the uprights for
the extra polnt.
With 9: 49leflln the first half
the Wlrt County Tigers had a
13-G lead and It looked as If It
·was going to be a runaway but
thllwas not the case.
On the ensuing kick-of!
Wahama man~ged to break It
all the way. The ball was
kicked to Mike Lewis In the left
corner. Mike started straight
up the left !!Ide for about ten
vardl where he stopped and
thre1l a lon8 lateral pass to
R4bble Lambert on the other
stdeUne. Lambert broke ~
Iller a beautif111 block by
SlmJOII llld ICIIDJIIHII 15
yll'dllnto the end zone for the
f1nt Flkm 1Cont of the year.
'l1le point Iller touchdown
~ wu blocked 10 wltli
t:32lert,ln tbe ball the score
reid 6-13.
0

44 SPACIOUS LOTS

Famlly PICk
Includes these
4 sandwk:has
and 4 orders
of french fries.

•

WITH APPROVED 106 LOT DEVE'-OPMENT

.30 in. x 70 ft. MOBILE PARKING PADS

onlY

CONCRETE SIDEWALKS

EverY
SundaY
(ALL DAY)

•

•

JOlt.

X

20ft. PATIOS

BLACKTOP STREETS

TWO CAR PARKING SPACE ON EACH LOT
FUTURE LAUNDRY FACILITIES

'1503 EASTERN AVEMJE

:GALUPOL,IS,
....11Jli!L-;_-----~----A

FREE LARGE HEATED SWIMMING POOL
- WITH HEATED WADING POOL FOR CHILDREN

FREE WATER • FREE CENTRAL TV CABLE • FREE REFUSE COLLECTION • FREE LARGE RECREATION AREA

�...

. ,.

• •&lt;'X'""" • M

' ,.

'"

~··

...... .

· ~··;·r·~,

..

lt;~

,

'.'t;

• r.

. .... "

t

...

• '

"'·"""'·

••

•

'

..

23 - .The SundayTiJnes.Sentinei,Sunday,Sept, 3,1972

22- TheSUndayTlmes-Sentinel,Sunday,Sept. 3,1m

Marauders Win Easily ·

Progressive Dairymen Attend Wooster Session

.
.
By C. E. BLAKESLEE
million industry conilnues to grow . In addition to lackling the
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
everyday problems of herd health, feeding, and management, we
POMEROY - Dairy Day, held annually at the lllio • must keep on (l'essing for basic researcl&gt;," Kottman said. "Bssic
Agricultural Research and Development Center, gives dairymen research is laiowledge in the bank which c;an be draWn upon both
an oppor~untty to hear about the latest in research, to take a look now and in tbe future."
at the drury research herd, and to visit their friends and neighThe dairy lndustryhas hit a "milk gusher," and most factors
bors.
including feed (l'ice, labor, herd expansion, and increased
. "No factory is more efficient that a dairy cow," Dean and production per cow point to even more milk in the future, Dr .
Director Roy M. Kollman told Ohio dairymen who gathered for
Robert E. Jacobson told the dairymen during tbe morning
(l'ogram.
Jacob:ion is a professor of agricultw;tl ecooomics and
the NEW in FARMING
rural sociology for OSU and the OARDC.
the 4~th. amual. Dairy Day program. Nearly 900 milk producers
Average Ohio prices for all milk, at $6.30 per hundredweight,
and thetr farnUtes took part in Dairy Day activities August 11 at
are uP more than 50 per cent since 1963. Tbe big question mark,
the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center
Jacobson said, ili wheiher or not these prices can be maintained
Wooster.
'
as production increases. The picture is complicated by a decline
"Thanks to strong basic research and education programs
in per capita lX1nsumption.
and excellent marketing and advertising efforts, Ohio's $300
Whole milk conswnption is down from 276 pounds P.r person
.

By KEITH WISECUP

MIDDLEPORT- The Meigs
Marauder gridders were
Impressive in their first and
only scrimmage game this
year with a 34.0 romp over the
Warren Local Warriors here
Saturday morning .
Both Meigs' defensive and
offensive lines dominated the
just as big, but not as sharp,
Warriors. The Marauders piled
up 415 total yards. 226 rushing
and !Bll passing, to only (04 for
Warren . The
Warriors
managed only 19 yards rushing
In 29 attempts, an average of
only .7 yards per carry. Meigs
averaged 5.8 per carry.
The Marauders scored on
their first two possessions and
were driving close the third
time they had the ball but a
fumble on the 10-yard-line
stopped the threat.
The first TD was made by
Chuck Faulk on a one-yard run
set up by Andy Vaughan's 24
yard sprint to the two. Lou
McKinney booted the extra
point.
The second six-pointer was a

.'
..

.
J, lo

'"
('\
,.''II

I.:~

(..

I·

beautiful 37-yard pass from
Vaughan to !Jill Chaney .
McKinney's kick was barely
off to the left, lbe only one he
missed in seven attempts.
While the Warriors were
hardly making a dent in the
powerful Meigs defense, the
Marauders struck for their
third score on a one-yard
plunge by Dallas Weber that
was set up by Chuck Faulk's 47
yard scamper to the six.
McKinney again split the
uprights.
The Meigs reserves then
entered the game and drove
down the field against the
Warren first team defense,
going 37 yards in eight plays.
Terry Whitlatch hit paydirt on
a five yard run. McKinney
added the extra point again.
The final Meigs six-pointer
came when Jay Warner hit
Dave Wolfe with a perfect 68
yard pass. The play came on a
fourth and one situation at the
Meigs 32 yard line. McKinney
added his final extra point to
make it 34-0.
Coach Charley Chancey said

after the game, "Things went
about as I expected." But the
dean of SEOAL coaches,
Chancey, must have been quite
pleaSed with the sharp play of
the offense and the hard-bitting
of the defense.
The Marauders will open
their season next Friday at
Marauder Stadlwn at 8 o'clock
against the Reemelin t:Wns.
Warren Loeal, predicted to 1
be one of the tougher teams in
the Tri·Valley Conference,
suffered a casualty when first
stringer Dennis Orriw was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Middleport E-R
squad three-quarters through
the scrimmage. He was treated
and released. He apparently
~)lflered a severe knee injury.
Meigs-Warren Loco I Statistics
Meigs Warren
First Downs
19
6
Yards Rushing
226
19
Yards Passing
189
85
Totals Yards
415
104
Pass Attempts
16
13
Passes Completed 9
5

Passes Had Int.

Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties

0

1

2

3

2

3-12

1

0-0

Blue Devils Whipped, ·30·0

b

SOUTH POINT - The lllio
Valley Conference champion
Pointers limbered up for their
opening game here Saturday
by defeating the SEOAL
Gallipolis Blue Devils, 3().0 in a
controlled scrimmage.
South Point . struck for
paydlrt for the first time when
quarterback lUck Sharp hit
Marty Patrick with a 49 yard
aerial. Howard Cornett kicked
the extra point for a 7./J lead.
The Pointers struck for the
second time with an 80 yard
march In 12plays. Fred Walker
cllmaxed the drive with an
eight yard run. Cornett, again
kicked the extra point. For the
next- 45 minutes, both teams
battled to an ~ tie.
South Point scored its third

oouchdown against the Blue
Devil second unit. Sharp hit
Phil Johnson on an 81 yard
touchdown pass. Randy Smith
passed to Patrick for the
conversion. The final South
Point score came on a five yard
run by Glen KoiDlS. Walker ran
the extra points for a ~ lead.
GAllS drove to tbe Pointers'
one yard line late in the first
half but quarterback J'tmmy
Niday fumbled the snap on
third down. Sophomore David
Graham later rambled 15
yards for a TD but it was
nulllfied on a clipping penalty.
The Blue Devils collected 15
first downs and 163 yards
rushing. Graham was the
leading ground gainer with 62
yarda in 13 attempts. Mike
Berridge had 30 yards in seven

tires and John Walter
collected 28 yards in seven
attempts. Berridge and Niday
combined for five pass com·
pletlons in 12 attP!IIpts for 70
yards.
South Point had 14 first
downs, 156 yards rushing and
217 yards pa.ssing.
Senior fullback Kev Sheets,
junior end lUck Grymes and
sopbomore tackle Mike Evans
were all sidelined and did not
dress.
Gallia Academy will open its
1972season Saturday afternoon
on Memorial Field against
Akron Manchester.

Inaugural Medals
Issuing of official inaugural medals to commemorate
U.S. presidents ap11arently
derived from identification
badges used by members of
inaugural committees. The
badges became larger and
m ore decorative, evolved
into commemorative inaugu.
ral medals and these are
now treasured by collectors
throughout the world.

ALLEY RENOVATED - The Skyline Lanes Bowling
Alley at Kanauga has undergone an extensive renovation
(l'ogram the past three months. Twenty.four new bowling
lanes have been Installed, 12 new ball returns were pur-

!Individual Rushing)
GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER
TCB YG Avg.
Dean Rees
5 25 s.o
David Graham 13 62 4.7
Mike Berr idge
7 30 4.2
John Walter
7 28 4.0
John Myers
4 16 4.0
Craig Fisher
2 6 3.0
Ken Collier
1 -1 -1
Jim Niday
8
.J -3.3
e
TOTALS
47 163 3.5
Avg.
~ .
Keith Brown
9 59 6.5
~
Terry l-lughes
6 25 4.1
.
Rick Sharp
6 23
KANSAS
CITY
M
I
·
.
, o. (UP ) - Nebraska, 246; 3. Colorado, Fred Walker
8
..M~&amp;.~t,v ,OI!la.boma, .l!!l!l~t~~, in ·· I96~s"Stite;"J85;-' 5:'1'""G1eii"Rb1ins''' '".-4 ,,i.e:::.~'•~·"
' the · big game IJ!st year, is Iowa state 139· s· Kansas 92· Rodney Ball
3
favored to dethrone national 7. Oklah~a S~te, 5912;
~g~'J(L~mllh
~ 15 !:~
"'·
champion Nebraska in Big Missouri, 56\2.
·
1Individual Passing I
'\
Eight Conference football
Nebraska and Oklahoma
GALLIPOLIS
.
.
PLAYER
A
C
I
YGP
TD
chase this faII, according to a were p1cked as low as thtrd on Nlda
8 5 1 70 o
poll of 34 writers and broad- only one ballot each.
Berr{dge
4 o o o o
casters who completed a nine·
The lOth annual Big Eight TOTALS
12 s I 70 o
daY tour of the football camps Skywnters
·
SOUTH APOINT
also tabbed PLAYER
c 1 YGP TD
th1s week.
Oklahoma's Greg Pruitt as the Sharp
10 s o 172 2
Oklahoma drew 24 of the 34 offensive player of the year
Kouns
2 1 o 45 o
first-place votes cas_,t wh'l
N
b
k
,
·
h
Gl
'
TOTALS
12
6 0 217 2
1e e ra~ as R1c
over as the
(Individual Receptions)
Nebraska recetved nme and defenSive player of the year,
GALLIPOLIS
Colorado one.
Nebraska's David Hwnm as PLAYER
C-A YG TO
BOWUNG ALLEY MANAGER Tom Roettker, a former resident of Columbus, sits at the
The order of finish,. with the sophomore offensive player ~~l;~tlne
~l ~
new scoring tables recently installed in the Skyline Lanes Bowling Alley at Kanauga. Twelve
points tabulated on a basts of 8 of the year, and Oklahoma's Berridge
2-3 IS o
new
ball returns, all new score screens and 24 new bowling alleys have been installed at the
~ for first, 7 for second, 6 for Rod Shoate as the sophomore Fisher
0-1 o o
alley.
..,
third , etc ..·
defenstve
· payer
1
0-1
o o
~
o·f th e year. · Graham
Briggs
0.2 0 o
~•
I. Oklahoma, 261 ; 2.
TOTALS
5-12 70 o
SOUTH POINT
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
RUSSIAN WINS
the seven Olympic races.
Johnson
3-3 118 1
MUNICH
(UP!
)
Yuri
Three of the winning times
•
Patrick
1-l 49 1
Malishev of the Soviet Union were the fastest in Olympic
i"
Taylor
1-1 45 0
Kouns
1-1 5 0
"
clocked the second fastest time history, but did not count as
~
Walker
0-3 0 0
in Olympic history Saturday to official records because
~
Coach Dave Boston's scrimmage Saturday because Sin~zi c h
0-1 o o
win the singles sculls gold courses around the world are
, ! Nelsonville-York Buckeyes he stayed at O'Bieness Sm1fh
0-1 o o
medal,
the crown jewel of ·not standard.
'1 won th etr
. th tr
' d s tratg
. ht Hospt'tal m
' Athensw here one of , TOTALS
Hughes
0-1
0
0
6-12 211 2
world
rowing
.
scrimmage, game this year his players is undergoing
TEAM STATISTICS
New Zealand held off rushing
The New Zealand victory
with an impressive 4~ win treatment for an arm injury. D_EPARTMENT
G SP
ALBANY - Alexander,
. .
F1rst Downs
15 14
challenges
by
the
United
States
oouched
off wild celebrations
1 over the Eastern Eagles at The tn)ury appeared to be Yards Rushing
21 3 157 behind the passing arm of and East German oarsmen to with hundreds of spectators
: Nelsonville Saturday morning . either a bad bruise or a frac- Lost Rushing
50 s senior Greg Brooks, came on
1
The Buckeyes have beaten lure.
Npet RAushing
163 152 strong in the second half here win the other classic event, the wading into the chilly waters of
Portsmouth Notre Dame, 14~.
ass ttempts
12 12 Saturday to defeat the eights, and East Germany the Olympic course to cheer
Completion s
5 6
Kyger Creek, 14-8, and now the
Intercepted
1 0 Southern Valley Athletic finished with a medal in each of the winners .
Eagles. Coach Boston said his
PLAYERS RECALLED
Yards Passing
70 217 Conference North Gallia
boys were tremendously fired
Total Yards
233 369 Pirates, 20.1J, in a football
HOUSTON (UP!) - The Lost Fumbles
1 1
up for the game.
Houston Astros have recalled Penalties
1-156-50 scrinunage.
"We were flat against Kyger four farm hands from their
By Quarters'
Both teams played on even
·
f
Gallipolis
0 0 0 o- 0 terms during the first half.
Cree k, so the compariSon
o Oklahoma City American s. Point
14 8 o 8- 30
Neither scored although both
1, scores between KC and Association club and ordered
IGAHS Lineup)
Eastern against us mean lit- them to report to the parent
ENDS - John Groth, Leon drove toward the other's goal.
' tie," added Boston.
Smith, Tom Valentine, Leon
team Tuesday for the opener Brl~gs , Bill Thomas. Tim The Pirates were inside the
Alexander five yard line .three
The Eagles couldn't seem to for a series here againsl the Weaver, Dean Epling.
eKIT •MARLETTE ·~ . eT~AVELO
rid themselves of the doldrwns Atlanta Braves.
'
GUARDS - Bob Condee. times . Brooks broke it open in
early in the game, never
Mike Wolfe, Pat Boster, Ben
Let us show you the facinating way a quality
Called up were southpaw Baxter, Kirt Frazee, Dan the second half, twice on long
bombs.
complete home is made. Ready for your
According to pitcher Mike Cosgrove (7-8), Woodard, Tony Merola.
1 recovering.
Coach John Blake's Pirates
fa !~lilY to move in - in just days through the
I
Boston, Coach Roger Kirkhart catcher Cliff Johnson 1.2B8) , Weldon Wahl, Rex Plymale.
of the Eagles apparently was
David Bryan. Jim Craft, played without their two big
m1racle of modular . and sectional housing.
in fie 1der Gary Sutherland Randy Rife, Ke:1 Will.
, not too pleased with Eastern's ( .307) and outfielder Rich
TACKLES - Matt Epl ing. backs, Kimberly Hall and Phil
::
performance . The Eagles Chiles (.267).
Bob Wood, Dave Brown. John Hollenbaugh. Both are nursing
1
defeated Glouster in an earlier
Null, Bob Nibert.
injuries.
'
Cosgrove had a 3.91 earned
CENTERS - Fred Ford,
.•
5%
Up To 30 Years To Pay
North Gallia drove to the
( scrinunage this week and lost run average with the 89ers, Scott Epling. Doug Brown.
If you own your lot, you probably can qualify
oo New Lexington last Satur· while Chiles _ who had been
BACKS - Jim Niday. Mike Spartan goalline three times
with no down payment.
day.
wt'th the Astros ·earlt'er - had Berridge. Ken Collier. David but their smaller backs just
Graham, Dean Rees. John could not push it over.
kh
uld
be
• Coach Klr art co not
hit 7home runs and driven in 43 Walter. Craig Fisher. John
reached for comments on the runs at Oklahoma City .
Myers. Ken New.
SUIT FILED
eELCONA •GRANVILLE •FOREST PARK
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - The
eARLINGTON •MARLETTE
World Hockey Association has
filed a multi-million dollar
Low down payment, up to 12 years. Gl Loans
anli·trust suit against the
ava.ilable, no down payment, 12 years to pay.
National Hockey League, each
It All Adds Up To .• ,
of its member clubs and
MUNICH (UP!) - Lones
eQUALI!Y •SERVICE •PRICE
record 379 in the standing vancing, paced by Mark Spitz Clarence Campbell, president
Wigger, ·a 35-year-old U. s.
position, to gain the United who qualified for a shot Sunday of the league.
HOURS: 9 'TIIB Monday thru Friday
Anny major from Columbus,
Garry
L.
Davidson,
States' 14th gold medal of the night at his sixth gold medal.
9 'Ti.15 Saturday-Closed Sunday
Ga., nosed out a Russian to win Games.
of
the
WHA
said
the
president
Wigger and Russia's Boris
lhe gold medal in free rifle
However, the Soviet Union Melnik had exactly the same suit, filed Friday, "Will test the
~~
·
·~
shooting In the Olympic Games
won two gold medals in total, 1,155, in the free rifle but reserve clause and other
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
. . ~,·.
today, although the Soviets
Olympic rowing earlier In the the American won on the basis monopolisllc practices
lttld their overall medal lead in day for a total of 21 so far in the
engaged in by the NHL.' '
of a better scOre on his final 10
the Gamer. ·
Games. At late afternoon,
. The suit sought $9 million
~~~ .
Wigger, who won a gold Russia had a total of 47 medals shots from a laieellng position . actual
damages, $48 million in
.
4lh
medal In lllllall bore rifle against 39 for the United His· 379 in s'-'tding broke a
Set Jim St11tsor Joe Giltl ·
world record of 376 by Swlt· punitive damages, and inshooting In the 1964 Olympics States.
Opper Rt. 7 Ntxt Door to Auto AuctiOII
ill Tokyo, shot a total of 1,155 In swimming and track, U.S. zerland's August Hollenstein junctive relief to prevent
prolification
of
suits
on
the
Phone
446·t340
Gllllpolll, Olllo·
points, lncludlns a world athletes · were aenerally ad- that had stood since 1963.
reserve cause.

·Oklahoma Picked
al
Ch
' Nat1on
amps

1t

STAUB REINSTATED
HOUSTON (UP! ) - Rusty
Staub, the New York Mets'
leading hitter , has been
reinstated from the disabled
list, the club announced Friday
night.
Staub. who has been on the
list since July 24 with a broken

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CINCINNATI (UP! ) -B. J. Riddle, the first air mail
(Barney) HU8ger' 64,~onal.\&gt;. CBI'I'-ie..between l~natl and
vi~e president of Ainerican Chicago as a bookkeej)er In
Airlines, was killed Friday 1929 and moved to American
night In a three-car collision on Airlines later.
Colwnbia Parkway. Hugger,

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LIGHTED

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bone In the wrist, has a .297
batting average, nine ·home
runs and 36 RBI 's. .
Manager Yogi Berra ,
however, does not plan on
using him in anything other
than a pinch-bitting role for the
next few games.

i

i N Y Beats Eagles

IRONTON - Today's article is written
by Lincoln Ruhinen, Lands Forester, on
the Ironton Ranger District:
Imagine being camped in a wilderness
area, miles from civilization, your only
companions being your partner, and a
loon, whose wailful cry can be heard
echoing across the dark, placid lake. At
daylight slipping into YOW' canoe for a
day's fishing, and possibly catching a
ghmpse of a moose or spoiling an eagle
soaring high over ils nest as lhe day wears
on .
Such is the experience l have recently
encowllered during my vacalion in the
Boundary Waters Canoe Area located in
northern Minnesota on the Superior
National Forest. The Boundary Waters
Canoe Area is over IIOO square miles in
size, contains almost an equal number of
lakes, and is unique in that it is devoted
solely oo canoeing. To the outdoorsman
who enjoys canoeing and camping, a
vacation in this area can be a fascinating
and rewardin g experience.
If you are still planning a vacation, or
thinking about next year, the Boundary
Waters Canoe Area is only one of the
numerous vacation opportWtities the 154
National Foresls located throughout the
United States can provide .
The choice of the outing is yours;
ro ugh il on a sylvan trail or relive the days
of the pioneer by adventuring into remote
stretc hes of comparatively untouched
America, either on horseback or by toting
a backpack. Or perhaps you 'd rather take

chased and all new score screens were added. Manager Tom
Roettker said the alley is all being repainted. It is open dally
from noon to 2:30 a. m. Mixed leagues and the/woman's
bowling season begins this week.

PLAYE~OUTH ;g~N~G

a:

a leisurely drive to a nearby woods for a
picnic outing or an extended weekend
campout. Whatever your desire, your
quest for fun or excitement can be easily
satisfied.
An example of one type of vacation
would be to hike the Appalachian Trail. It
crosses eight National Forests in 2000
miles from Mount Katahdin in Maine to
Springer Mountain in Georgia. In the
West, try the Pacific Crest Trail System. It
winds through National Forests from
Canada to Mexico, along the snowmanteled skylio1e of lhe Northern
Cascades in Washington and Oregon and
down the John Muir Trail in the High
Sierras.
Other vacation ideas would be : Pan
for gold at German Gulch in the Deer lodge
National Forest in Montana, where once a
thousand prospectors staked claims:
explore dozens of ghost towns within
National Forests throughout the West ;
pick wild huckleberries in the Gifford
PinchotNational Forest in Washington; or
follow the route of Lewis and Clark over
the Lolo Trail across the Bitterroot
Mountains in the Lolo and Clearwater
National Fnrests in Montana and Idaho ,
The National Foresls also provide
numerous unique interpretive op·
portunities. Afew examples could include :
a ride on the Narrow G•uge Railroad in
the San Juan National Forest in Colorado;
a walk along theinterpretive boardwalk
through the botanical paradise of the
Cranberry Glades, Monongahela National
Forest, in West Virginia ; or an inland
waterway cruise aboard the Alaska Ferry
up the North Pacific Coast from Sealtle,

ByT.ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger

BIGFlliH
NINE-YEAR.OLD Steven
Fife, SOD of Mr. and Mra.
Roscoe Fife of Middleport,
proudly displays !be live
pound wide-mouth bass be
caught recently at Rainbow
Lake in Athens County.

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There's nothing like ORTHO UN I PEL
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______.

Washington oo Skagway. Recent additions
to the interpretive program include trails
designed for the visually and physically
handicapped. The Roaring Fork Braille
Trail, White River National Forest,
Colorado, and the Trail of the Whispering
Pines, San Bernadino Nalional Forest,
California, are the first of these to be built.
The mosl recently dedicated is the Trout
Pond Area in Florida. Nine National
Forests now feature recreation sites that
handicapped people can enjoy.
If a person just enjoys viewing the
scenery and landscape, the 183 million
acres in the National Forest System can
offer an endless variety. For example,
there are cypress swamps and sand pines
in the South, spreading hardwoods in the
Midwest and Appalachian Mountains,
giant Sequoias in the Sierras of California,
and the lush-greenery and verdant slopes
in the New England slates.
It would take a lifetime of year-round
camping - about 9~ years, if you spent a
week at each campground - to visit all the
National Forests and enjoy their . unmalched variety of scenery, natural
wonders, historic sites, and recreation
opportunities . With the exception of
Hawaii and parts of Alaska, a National
Forest is within a day's drive of almost
any point in the United States. So if you are
still in doubt as to where to spend your next
vacation, we would suggest the rewarding
experience that can be had by. vacationing
in our National Forests.
Information concerning National
Forest vacations can be obtained from the
Ironton Ranger District, Ironton, Ohio or
any other National Forest Ranger District.

Lay of the Land
By JOHN COOPER
Soli Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - We
helped J. D. Chapman near MI.
Olive Church recently with a
farm plan. He Is cleaning up
and seeding some ground and
Is planning to make his farm
into a beef cattle farm. This
year he cut a thousand bales of
hay from about six acres that
he cleaned and seeded last
year .
After he cleans an area, he
treats it according to the
testing recommendations as
made by West Virginia
University Experiment
Station . Mr. Chapman works at
Kerr Glass Company in
Huntington and on the farm as
a sideline to his regular work.
WE WERE talking with Dale
Nibert recently about his farm
operation at Apple Grove. Mr.
Nibert owns this farm, but the
dairy there is operated on a
partnership basis with Leslie
Parsons and his son, Jack.
One thing in particular which
Dale told me that I feel worthwhile to pa!l!l along is that the
crop field west of Route 2on his
farm has been in corn 27
consecutive years. Last year it
yielded 25 tons of ensilage per
acre . Mr. Nibert spreads
generous applications of
manure on this field each year
as well as fertilizing it with the
equivalent of 2,000 pounds of !().
1().10 per acre. The soil there is
SclotovUle Silt Loam.
D. E. HARTLEY, whose
farm is near Ambrosia, Is
planning to make two springs.
One is a witter seep out of a
normal hillside, the other a
seep that comes to the surf,ce
in a roc~y hollow.
Somettmes good springs
appear in hollows, but they are ·
often hard to collect Into il
catch basin. Examination of
this one, however, showed that
water was coming from under
a huge rock. A water hole
perhaps the size of two wash
tuba had been washed out
under the rock.
.
The best plltn to collect this
water seemed to be to put a
concrete dam about six feet
long icrou the hollow, make a
rock weU i)ehind the dam, fill
the additional space with
gravel and small rock, and
then cover the entire structure
with Un roof1itg which would
alide under the elllating rock.
This would prevent most of the
llirface water from, entering
the spring well. A pipe would
then be laid !rom the we.n to a
·watering trough on lower

I'

ground.
Mr. Hartley has been a
cooperator of the Western Soil
Conservation District more
than 20 years. Recently he
retired from public work and
plans to spend more time at his
farm operation.
WE WERE TALKING with
William (Bill) Lewis of Oldtown Farm. Bill, with a grin on
his face , told us that since we
had previously written a series
of stories on octogenarian
farmers and a more recent
series on young farmers, to
make the whole thing complete
we should write a series of
soories on bachelor farmers.
We are not 100 per cent sure
of all the motives behind Bill's
suggestion, but we reminded
him that there were more
bachelor farmers around the
county than he might think.
We went ahead to tell him
that we were considering a
story on Oldtown Farm but
from a standpoint of that farm
being one of the oldest farms in
the state and also one that has
worked closely with conservation programs in recent
years.

in 19!i0 to 223 pounds per person (aboltt 105 quarts) in 1971. The
decline in whole milk sales is offset somewhat by gains for skim
and low.fat milk and the growing popularity of cheese. Markets
for ice cream and collage cheese remain strong; but butter use
has dropped more than 50 percent since 1950. Overall, 25 percent
of the dairy market has been lost on a milk-equivalent basis.
With an eye toward decUning consumption, the industry is
beginning to take a closer look at supply; control (l'oposals,
Jacobson said.
He outlined one proposal offered 'for discussion by the
National Milk Producers Federation. The plan would set base
(I'Oduction levels for each producer based on his markeling
history aitd a national milk quota. Apemilty price would be paid
for milk produced above this base. Such a plan would probably
slow the current production surge, Jacohson predicted.
Each year Ohio dairymen seem to harvest a higher percentage of their roughage as corn silage, according to Dr. John
R. Staubus, professor Dairy Science at OSU and tbe OARDC.
Staubus, one of several scientists who reported on current
research, said several reasons stand behind the trend toward
more corn silage as a ~igh energy feed.
Green chopped corn ensiles weD, harvest and feeding are
easy to mechanize, and labor load is reduced at hay-making
time. Also, stage of maturity is less critical than for grasslegume forages, Staubus said.

Wheat Loading at
Longview, Wash.

OVER 100
OVER 100

LONGVIEW, Wash. (UPI) Russian ships were loading 1.5
million bushels of American
grain Friday, the first Pacific
Northwest wheat to be sold to
the USSR under a recent
United States - Soviet Union
trade agreement.
Continental Grain Co. of
Portland, Ore., said the three
Russian ships loading at
Longview and Kalama, Wash.,
would take on the grain at $1.99
per bushel in a sale that could
approach $3 million.
Meanwhile in Washington, a
Texas congressman planned
an investigation of relations
between the government and
private grain firms in handling
large wheat sales to the Soviet
Union .

BUSINESS fS BOOMING
LONDON (UP!) - Business
is booming for Britain 's candy
manufacturers despite the
slimming craze . A candy
manufacturers group said
Friday that Britons last year
ate 624,000 tons of candy, the
highest figure for 15 years. A
spokesman said sales were
boosted by "nibblers" who
miss main meals to try to slim.

No.5&amp; BLOWER
Now you can break the bottleneck of corn silage or haylage
at the base of your silo . The No . 56 Blower has an exclusive
45' feeding angle that augers the material more in a
straight-line direction than the usual90' turn found in most
blowers. The flow is faster and more uniform . And an exclusive 56-inch rotor propels the silage upward at a tip
speed of 90 mites an hour at 540 rpm. You get easy drivethrough clearance with the hopper extending 20 inches
from the housing. Let us give you full details on the No. 56
Blower. (Ask us about the new I H 51 Power Forage Feeder)

MEIGS EQUIPMENT C9.
PHONE 992-2176

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I•NTI!RNATIONAL I

Pnm·e Interest
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
5'k per cent prime interest rate
became general Friday among
the nation's major banks as
two large New York banks
increased their rates to
correspond.
First National City Bank and
Irving Trust eo. had been the
major holdouts. First National
had quoted 5% per cent and
Irving Trust sv, in the Interest
rate charged to the most
creditworthy customers.
The upward move to 51&gt; per
cent began two · weeks ago
when Chase Manhattan raised
its rate. Fin! National City
Bank and Irving Trust had
delayed their Increases
because of varying fonnulu
used in tying their rales to the
money market, banking
sources said.

Most dairymen have learned to use silage correctly when it
makes up only a part of the roughage program. "But when cbrn
silage is a major portion or the entire roughage supply,
significant adjustments are needed to make up for its nutritional
shortcomings."
Tood to excellent quality silage is about 50 pet. corn grain
and 50 percent medium to low quality roughage on a dry matter
basis. It is low in calcium, magnesium, sulphur, and (l'otein . .
These deficiencies must be made up by using a high prol•lit
concentrate mixture and adding supplemental minerals. tn.
sufficient (I'Otein can result in lower milk production and itJ.
creased body CQnditlon.
Shelled corn preserved at 25 percent moisture
with acetic and propionic acids retained its bright
yellow color, did not heat, and was mold.free. Rations containing
the acid-preserved corn maintained a high level of milk
production, although milk fat percentages appear to be low,
Palmquist reported.
·
The · chemicals prevent fermentation and inhibit mold
growth . Treated corn may be stored in any type of storage bin or
silo out of the weather. At 24c per pound, cost of treatment Is
about 15 cents per bushel. Cost of conventional drying is about 20
cents per bushel.
Other segments of the program dealt with alfalfa production,
reproduction and disease problems, and nutrition, health, and
bousing of dairy herd .replacements.
Dairymen interested in securing detailed reports on the
research results may secure copies by contacUng the County
Extension Office.

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23 - .The SundayTiJnes.Sentinei,Sunday,Sept, 3,1972

22- TheSUndayTlmes-Sentinel,Sunday,Sept. 3,1m

Marauders Win Easily ·

Progressive Dairymen Attend Wooster Session

.
.
By C. E. BLAKESLEE
million industry conilnues to grow . In addition to lackling the
Ext. Agent, Agriculture
everyday problems of herd health, feeding, and management, we
POMEROY - Dairy Day, held annually at the lllio • must keep on (l'essing for basic researcl&gt;," Kottman said. "Bssic
Agricultural Research and Development Center, gives dairymen research is laiowledge in the bank which c;an be draWn upon both
an oppor~untty to hear about the latest in research, to take a look now and in tbe future."
at the drury research herd, and to visit their friends and neighThe dairy lndustryhas hit a "milk gusher," and most factors
bors.
including feed (l'ice, labor, herd expansion, and increased
. "No factory is more efficient that a dairy cow," Dean and production per cow point to even more milk in the future, Dr .
Director Roy M. Kollman told Ohio dairymen who gathered for
Robert E. Jacobson told the dairymen during tbe morning
(l'ogram.
Jacob:ion is a professor of agricultw;tl ecooomics and
the NEW in FARMING
rural sociology for OSU and the OARDC.
the 4~th. amual. Dairy Day program. Nearly 900 milk producers
Average Ohio prices for all milk, at $6.30 per hundredweight,
and thetr farnUtes took part in Dairy Day activities August 11 at
are uP more than 50 per cent since 1963. Tbe big question mark,
the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center
Jacobson said, ili wheiher or not these prices can be maintained
Wooster.
'
as production increases. The picture is complicated by a decline
"Thanks to strong basic research and education programs
in per capita lX1nsumption.
and excellent marketing and advertising efforts, Ohio's $300
Whole milk conswnption is down from 276 pounds P.r person
.

By KEITH WISECUP

MIDDLEPORT- The Meigs
Marauder gridders were
Impressive in their first and
only scrimmage game this
year with a 34.0 romp over the
Warren Local Warriors here
Saturday morning .
Both Meigs' defensive and
offensive lines dominated the
just as big, but not as sharp,
Warriors. The Marauders piled
up 415 total yards. 226 rushing
and !Bll passing, to only (04 for
Warren . The
Warriors
managed only 19 yards rushing
In 29 attempts, an average of
only .7 yards per carry. Meigs
averaged 5.8 per carry.
The Marauders scored on
their first two possessions and
were driving close the third
time they had the ball but a
fumble on the 10-yard-line
stopped the threat.
The first TD was made by
Chuck Faulk on a one-yard run
set up by Andy Vaughan's 24
yard sprint to the two. Lou
McKinney booted the extra
point.
The second six-pointer was a

.'
..

.
J, lo

'"
('\
,.''II

I.:~

(..

I·

beautiful 37-yard pass from
Vaughan to !Jill Chaney .
McKinney's kick was barely
off to the left, lbe only one he
missed in seven attempts.
While the Warriors were
hardly making a dent in the
powerful Meigs defense, the
Marauders struck for their
third score on a one-yard
plunge by Dallas Weber that
was set up by Chuck Faulk's 47
yard scamper to the six.
McKinney again split the
uprights.
The Meigs reserves then
entered the game and drove
down the field against the
Warren first team defense,
going 37 yards in eight plays.
Terry Whitlatch hit paydirt on
a five yard run. McKinney
added the extra point again.
The final Meigs six-pointer
came when Jay Warner hit
Dave Wolfe with a perfect 68
yard pass. The play came on a
fourth and one situation at the
Meigs 32 yard line. McKinney
added his final extra point to
make it 34-0.
Coach Charley Chancey said

after the game, "Things went
about as I expected." But the
dean of SEOAL coaches,
Chancey, must have been quite
pleaSed with the sharp play of
the offense and the hard-bitting
of the defense.
The Marauders will open
their season next Friday at
Marauder Stadlwn at 8 o'clock
against the Reemelin t:Wns.
Warren Loeal, predicted to 1
be one of the tougher teams in
the Tri·Valley Conference,
suffered a casualty when first
stringer Dennis Orriw was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Middleport E-R
squad three-quarters through
the scrimmage. He was treated
and released. He apparently
~)lflered a severe knee injury.
Meigs-Warren Loco I Statistics
Meigs Warren
First Downs
19
6
Yards Rushing
226
19
Yards Passing
189
85
Totals Yards
415
104
Pass Attempts
16
13
Passes Completed 9
5

Passes Had Int.

Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties

0

1

2

3

2

3-12

1

0-0

Blue Devils Whipped, ·30·0

b

SOUTH POINT - The lllio
Valley Conference champion
Pointers limbered up for their
opening game here Saturday
by defeating the SEOAL
Gallipolis Blue Devils, 3().0 in a
controlled scrimmage.
South Point . struck for
paydlrt for the first time when
quarterback lUck Sharp hit
Marty Patrick with a 49 yard
aerial. Howard Cornett kicked
the extra point for a 7./J lead.
The Pointers struck for the
second time with an 80 yard
march In 12plays. Fred Walker
cllmaxed the drive with an
eight yard run. Cornett, again
kicked the extra point. For the
next- 45 minutes, both teams
battled to an ~ tie.
South Point scored its third

oouchdown against the Blue
Devil second unit. Sharp hit
Phil Johnson on an 81 yard
touchdown pass. Randy Smith
passed to Patrick for the
conversion. The final South
Point score came on a five yard
run by Glen KoiDlS. Walker ran
the extra points for a ~ lead.
GAllS drove to tbe Pointers'
one yard line late in the first
half but quarterback J'tmmy
Niday fumbled the snap on
third down. Sophomore David
Graham later rambled 15
yards for a TD but it was
nulllfied on a clipping penalty.
The Blue Devils collected 15
first downs and 163 yards
rushing. Graham was the
leading ground gainer with 62
yarda in 13 attempts. Mike
Berridge had 30 yards in seven

tires and John Walter
collected 28 yards in seven
attempts. Berridge and Niday
combined for five pass com·
pletlons in 12 attP!IIpts for 70
yards.
South Point had 14 first
downs, 156 yards rushing and
217 yards pa.ssing.
Senior fullback Kev Sheets,
junior end lUck Grymes and
sopbomore tackle Mike Evans
were all sidelined and did not
dress.
Gallia Academy will open its
1972season Saturday afternoon
on Memorial Field against
Akron Manchester.

Inaugural Medals
Issuing of official inaugural medals to commemorate
U.S. presidents ap11arently
derived from identification
badges used by members of
inaugural committees. The
badges became larger and
m ore decorative, evolved
into commemorative inaugu.
ral medals and these are
now treasured by collectors
throughout the world.

ALLEY RENOVATED - The Skyline Lanes Bowling
Alley at Kanauga has undergone an extensive renovation
(l'ogram the past three months. Twenty.four new bowling
lanes have been Installed, 12 new ball returns were pur-

!Individual Rushing)
GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER
TCB YG Avg.
Dean Rees
5 25 s.o
David Graham 13 62 4.7
Mike Berr idge
7 30 4.2
John Walter
7 28 4.0
John Myers
4 16 4.0
Craig Fisher
2 6 3.0
Ken Collier
1 -1 -1
Jim Niday
8
.J -3.3
e
TOTALS
47 163 3.5
Avg.
~ .
Keith Brown
9 59 6.5
~
Terry l-lughes
6 25 4.1
.
Rick Sharp
6 23
KANSAS
CITY
M
I
·
.
, o. (UP ) - Nebraska, 246; 3. Colorado, Fred Walker
8
..M~&amp;.~t,v ,OI!la.boma, .l!!l!l~t~~, in ·· I96~s"Stite;"J85;-' 5:'1'""G1eii"Rb1ins''' '".-4 ,,i.e:::.~'•~·"
' the · big game IJ!st year, is Iowa state 139· s· Kansas 92· Rodney Ball
3
favored to dethrone national 7. Oklah~a S~te, 5912;
~g~'J(L~mllh
~ 15 !:~
"'·
champion Nebraska in Big Missouri, 56\2.
·
1Individual Passing I
'\
Eight Conference football
Nebraska and Oklahoma
GALLIPOLIS
.
.
PLAYER
A
C
I
YGP
TD
chase this faII, according to a were p1cked as low as thtrd on Nlda
8 5 1 70 o
poll of 34 writers and broad- only one ballot each.
Berr{dge
4 o o o o
casters who completed a nine·
The lOth annual Big Eight TOTALS
12 s I 70 o
daY tour of the football camps Skywnters
·
SOUTH APOINT
also tabbed PLAYER
c 1 YGP TD
th1s week.
Oklahoma's Greg Pruitt as the Sharp
10 s o 172 2
Oklahoma drew 24 of the 34 offensive player of the year
Kouns
2 1 o 45 o
first-place votes cas_,t wh'l
N
b
k
,
·
h
Gl
'
TOTALS
12
6 0 217 2
1e e ra~ as R1c
over as the
(Individual Receptions)
Nebraska recetved nme and defenSive player of the year,
GALLIPOLIS
Colorado one.
Nebraska's David Hwnm as PLAYER
C-A YG TO
BOWUNG ALLEY MANAGER Tom Roettker, a former resident of Columbus, sits at the
The order of finish,. with the sophomore offensive player ~~l;~tlne
~l ~
new scoring tables recently installed in the Skyline Lanes Bowling Alley at Kanauga. Twelve
points tabulated on a basts of 8 of the year, and Oklahoma's Berridge
2-3 IS o
new
ball returns, all new score screens and 24 new bowling alleys have been installed at the
~ for first, 7 for second, 6 for Rod Shoate as the sophomore Fisher
0-1 o o
alley.
..,
third , etc ..·
defenstve
· payer
1
0-1
o o
~
o·f th e year. · Graham
Briggs
0.2 0 o
~•
I. Oklahoma, 261 ; 2.
TOTALS
5-12 70 o
SOUTH POINT
PLAYER
C-A YG TO
RUSSIAN WINS
the seven Olympic races.
Johnson
3-3 118 1
MUNICH
(UP!
)
Yuri
Three of the winning times
•
Patrick
1-l 49 1
Malishev of the Soviet Union were the fastest in Olympic
i"
Taylor
1-1 45 0
Kouns
1-1 5 0
"
clocked the second fastest time history, but did not count as
~
Walker
0-3 0 0
in Olympic history Saturday to official records because
~
Coach Dave Boston's scrimmage Saturday because Sin~zi c h
0-1 o o
win the singles sculls gold courses around the world are
, ! Nelsonville-York Buckeyes he stayed at O'Bieness Sm1fh
0-1 o o
medal,
the crown jewel of ·not standard.
'1 won th etr
. th tr
' d s tratg
. ht Hospt'tal m
' Athensw here one of , TOTALS
Hughes
0-1
0
0
6-12 211 2
world
rowing
.
scrimmage, game this year his players is undergoing
TEAM STATISTICS
New Zealand held off rushing
The New Zealand victory
with an impressive 4~ win treatment for an arm injury. D_EPARTMENT
G SP
ALBANY - Alexander,
. .
F1rst Downs
15 14
challenges
by
the
United
States
oouched
off wild celebrations
1 over the Eastern Eagles at The tn)ury appeared to be Yards Rushing
21 3 157 behind the passing arm of and East German oarsmen to with hundreds of spectators
: Nelsonville Saturday morning . either a bad bruise or a frac- Lost Rushing
50 s senior Greg Brooks, came on
1
The Buckeyes have beaten lure.
Npet RAushing
163 152 strong in the second half here win the other classic event, the wading into the chilly waters of
Portsmouth Notre Dame, 14~.
ass ttempts
12 12 Saturday to defeat the eights, and East Germany the Olympic course to cheer
Completion s
5 6
Kyger Creek, 14-8, and now the
Intercepted
1 0 Southern Valley Athletic finished with a medal in each of the winners .
Eagles. Coach Boston said his
PLAYERS RECALLED
Yards Passing
70 217 Conference North Gallia
boys were tremendously fired
Total Yards
233 369 Pirates, 20.1J, in a football
HOUSTON (UP!) - The Lost Fumbles
1 1
up for the game.
Houston Astros have recalled Penalties
1-156-50 scrinunage.
"We were flat against Kyger four farm hands from their
By Quarters'
Both teams played on even
·
f
Gallipolis
0 0 0 o- 0 terms during the first half.
Cree k, so the compariSon
o Oklahoma City American s. Point
14 8 o 8- 30
Neither scored although both
1, scores between KC and Association club and ordered
IGAHS Lineup)
Eastern against us mean lit- them to report to the parent
ENDS - John Groth, Leon drove toward the other's goal.
' tie," added Boston.
Smith, Tom Valentine, Leon
team Tuesday for the opener Brl~gs , Bill Thomas. Tim The Pirates were inside the
Alexander five yard line .three
The Eagles couldn't seem to for a series here againsl the Weaver, Dean Epling.
eKIT •MARLETTE ·~ . eT~AVELO
rid themselves of the doldrwns Atlanta Braves.
'
GUARDS - Bob Condee. times . Brooks broke it open in
early in the game, never
Mike Wolfe, Pat Boster, Ben
Let us show you the facinating way a quality
Called up were southpaw Baxter, Kirt Frazee, Dan the second half, twice on long
bombs.
complete home is made. Ready for your
According to pitcher Mike Cosgrove (7-8), Woodard, Tony Merola.
1 recovering.
Coach John Blake's Pirates
fa !~lilY to move in - in just days through the
I
Boston, Coach Roger Kirkhart catcher Cliff Johnson 1.2B8) , Weldon Wahl, Rex Plymale.
of the Eagles apparently was
David Bryan. Jim Craft, played without their two big
m1racle of modular . and sectional housing.
in fie 1der Gary Sutherland Randy Rife, Ke:1 Will.
, not too pleased with Eastern's ( .307) and outfielder Rich
TACKLES - Matt Epl ing. backs, Kimberly Hall and Phil
::
performance . The Eagles Chiles (.267).
Bob Wood, Dave Brown. John Hollenbaugh. Both are nursing
1
defeated Glouster in an earlier
Null, Bob Nibert.
injuries.
'
Cosgrove had a 3.91 earned
CENTERS - Fred Ford,
.•
5%
Up To 30 Years To Pay
North Gallia drove to the
( scrinunage this week and lost run average with the 89ers, Scott Epling. Doug Brown.
If you own your lot, you probably can qualify
oo New Lexington last Satur· while Chiles _ who had been
BACKS - Jim Niday. Mike Spartan goalline three times
with no down payment.
day.
wt'th the Astros ·earlt'er - had Berridge. Ken Collier. David but their smaller backs just
Graham, Dean Rees. John could not push it over.
kh
uld
be
• Coach Klr art co not
hit 7home runs and driven in 43 Walter. Craig Fisher. John
reached for comments on the runs at Oklahoma City .
Myers. Ken New.
SUIT FILED
eELCONA •GRANVILLE •FOREST PARK
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - The
eARLINGTON •MARLETTE
World Hockey Association has
filed a multi-million dollar
Low down payment, up to 12 years. Gl Loans
anli·trust suit against the
ava.ilable, no down payment, 12 years to pay.
National Hockey League, each
It All Adds Up To .• ,
of its member clubs and
MUNICH (UP!) - Lones
eQUALI!Y •SERVICE •PRICE
record 379 in the standing vancing, paced by Mark Spitz Clarence Campbell, president
Wigger, ·a 35-year-old U. s.
position, to gain the United who qualified for a shot Sunday of the league.
HOURS: 9 'TIIB Monday thru Friday
Anny major from Columbus,
Garry
L.
Davidson,
States' 14th gold medal of the night at his sixth gold medal.
9 'Ti.15 Saturday-Closed Sunday
Ga., nosed out a Russian to win Games.
of
the
WHA
said
the
president
Wigger and Russia's Boris
lhe gold medal in free rifle
However, the Soviet Union Melnik had exactly the same suit, filed Friday, "Will test the
~~
·
·~
shooting In the Olympic Games
won two gold medals in total, 1,155, in the free rifle but reserve clause and other
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
. . ~,·.
today, although the Soviets
Olympic rowing earlier In the the American won on the basis monopolisllc practices
lttld their overall medal lead in day for a total of 21 so far in the
engaged in by the NHL.' '
of a better scOre on his final 10
the Gamer. ·
Games. At late afternoon,
. The suit sought $9 million
~~~ .
Wigger, who won a gold Russia had a total of 47 medals shots from a laieellng position . actual
damages, $48 million in
.
4lh
medal In lllllall bore rifle against 39 for the United His· 379 in s'-'tding broke a
Set Jim St11tsor Joe Giltl ·
world record of 376 by Swlt· punitive damages, and inshooting In the 1964 Olympics States.
Opper Rt. 7 Ntxt Door to Auto AuctiOII
ill Tokyo, shot a total of 1,155 In swimming and track, U.S. zerland's August Hollenstein junctive relief to prevent
prolification
of
suits
on
the
Phone
446·t340
Gllllpolll, Olllo·
points, lncludlns a world athletes · were aenerally ad- that had stood since 1963.
reserve cause.

·Oklahoma Picked
al
Ch
' Nat1on
amps

1t

STAUB REINSTATED
HOUSTON (UP! ) - Rusty
Staub, the New York Mets'
leading hitter , has been
reinstated from the disabled
list, the club announced Friday
night.
Staub. who has been on the
list since July 24 with a broken

FIBER
GLASS
.~.BATH

COVE

I

Spartans
Shutout
Pirates

Just Like That!
MODULAR SECTIONAL HOMES

I

FINANCING AVAILABLE .
Down -

l
· Army Major Has Gold Medal

MOBILE HOMES

MOBILE HOME

.I

ES

..-••••-••••-•••••--...1

'

r
'

EXECUTIVE KILLED
Cincinnati, joined Embry·
CINCINNATI (UP! ) -B. J. Riddle, the first air mail
(Barney) HU8ger' 64,~onal.\&gt;. CBI'I'-ie..between l~natl and
vi~e president of Ainerican Chicago as a bookkeej)er In
Airlines, was killed Friday 1929 and moved to American
night In a three-car collision on Airlines later.
Colwnbia Parkway. Hugger,

WHITE
Bathtub

and

shower

combinat ion

eliminates costly Installation and main·
lenance. Ma~e of liberglas.-relnforced
pOlyester resin with a pOlyurethane foam
core. Staln-c:hlp-mar-reslstant.

$19 760

LIGHTED

l:J

l

bone In the wrist, has a .297
batting average, nine ·home
runs and 36 RBI 's. .
Manager Yogi Berra ,
however, does not plan on
using him in anything other
than a pinch-bitting role for the
next few games.

i

i N Y Beats Eagles

IRONTON - Today's article is written
by Lincoln Ruhinen, Lands Forester, on
the Ironton Ranger District:
Imagine being camped in a wilderness
area, miles from civilization, your only
companions being your partner, and a
loon, whose wailful cry can be heard
echoing across the dark, placid lake. At
daylight slipping into YOW' canoe for a
day's fishing, and possibly catching a
ghmpse of a moose or spoiling an eagle
soaring high over ils nest as lhe day wears
on .
Such is the experience l have recently
encowllered during my vacalion in the
Boundary Waters Canoe Area located in
northern Minnesota on the Superior
National Forest. The Boundary Waters
Canoe Area is over IIOO square miles in
size, contains almost an equal number of
lakes, and is unique in that it is devoted
solely oo canoeing. To the outdoorsman
who enjoys canoeing and camping, a
vacation in this area can be a fascinating
and rewardin g experience.
If you are still planning a vacation, or
thinking about next year, the Boundary
Waters Canoe Area is only one of the
numerous vacation opportWtities the 154
National Foresls located throughout the
United States can provide .
The choice of the outing is yours;
ro ugh il on a sylvan trail or relive the days
of the pioneer by adventuring into remote
stretc hes of comparatively untouched
America, either on horseback or by toting
a backpack. Or perhaps you 'd rather take

chased and all new score screens were added. Manager Tom
Roettker said the alley is all being repainted. It is open dally
from noon to 2:30 a. m. Mixed leagues and the/woman's
bowling season begins this week.

PLAYE~OUTH ;g~N~G

a:

a leisurely drive to a nearby woods for a
picnic outing or an extended weekend
campout. Whatever your desire, your
quest for fun or excitement can be easily
satisfied.
An example of one type of vacation
would be to hike the Appalachian Trail. It
crosses eight National Forests in 2000
miles from Mount Katahdin in Maine to
Springer Mountain in Georgia. In the
West, try the Pacific Crest Trail System. It
winds through National Forests from
Canada to Mexico, along the snowmanteled skylio1e of lhe Northern
Cascades in Washington and Oregon and
down the John Muir Trail in the High
Sierras.
Other vacation ideas would be : Pan
for gold at German Gulch in the Deer lodge
National Forest in Montana, where once a
thousand prospectors staked claims:
explore dozens of ghost towns within
National Forests throughout the West ;
pick wild huckleberries in the Gifford
PinchotNational Forest in Washington; or
follow the route of Lewis and Clark over
the Lolo Trail across the Bitterroot
Mountains in the Lolo and Clearwater
National Fnrests in Montana and Idaho ,
The National Foresls also provide
numerous unique interpretive op·
portunities. Afew examples could include :
a ride on the Narrow G•uge Railroad in
the San Juan National Forest in Colorado;
a walk along theinterpretive boardwalk
through the botanical paradise of the
Cranberry Glades, Monongahela National
Forest, in West Virginia ; or an inland
waterway cruise aboard the Alaska Ferry
up the North Pacific Coast from Sealtle,

ByT.ALLAN WOLTER
District Ranger

BIGFlliH
NINE-YEAR.OLD Steven
Fife, SOD of Mr. and Mra.
Roscoe Fife of Middleport,
proudly displays !be live
pound wide-mouth bass be
caught recently at Rainbow
Lake in Athens County.

BAnt CABINET

Hang over old retessed
area, Incandescent light
fixtur e with grounded
oollet . Two window-glass
mirrors and glass shelves.

..

'29'5

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ONCE

ACROSS THE FIELD
DOES IT.

FOR ntE

BAlli ROOM
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*13.95
WAL.t.ITE

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GUnERS
Replace that elderly guttering
with quality guttering. We
have all lhe .matching accessor les you need ,

10 Ft. Section
22 Ft. Section

'4.40
'9.68

STAINLESS STEEL

\

W~en

you apply UNIPEL 20-10-JO ·you '
get much more than lust Increased
forage growth. You get Increased root
growth, too, for more efficient use of
available soil moisture. And healthy,
fast:growing forage crops , will com· ·
pete more vigorously with weeds.
There's nothing like ORTHO UN I PEL
20-10-10 for pasture topdressing .

KITCHEN
SINKS
II has an exclusive Softone finish with brushed
edges and brilliant hlghlightlng . Easy to
clean.

'39'5
French City

·. B.,ilders
Supply

. 750 lit Ave. Gdipolis, 0.

--

"Cash'

UNIPEL
20-10-10 Fertilizer
"Your Farm Supply S11permarket"

.CENTRAL SOYA

OF OHIO
3rd &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Glllipolls, Olllo
L-.:::.;;;.;~;;;;,;.;;.;._;.._,;.;;.;;.,;

______.

Washington oo Skagway. Recent additions
to the interpretive program include trails
designed for the visually and physically
handicapped. The Roaring Fork Braille
Trail, White River National Forest,
Colorado, and the Trail of the Whispering
Pines, San Bernadino Nalional Forest,
California, are the first of these to be built.
The mosl recently dedicated is the Trout
Pond Area in Florida. Nine National
Forests now feature recreation sites that
handicapped people can enjoy.
If a person just enjoys viewing the
scenery and landscape, the 183 million
acres in the National Forest System can
offer an endless variety. For example,
there are cypress swamps and sand pines
in the South, spreading hardwoods in the
Midwest and Appalachian Mountains,
giant Sequoias in the Sierras of California,
and the lush-greenery and verdant slopes
in the New England slates.
It would take a lifetime of year-round
camping - about 9~ years, if you spent a
week at each campground - to visit all the
National Forests and enjoy their . unmalched variety of scenery, natural
wonders, historic sites, and recreation
opportunities . With the exception of
Hawaii and parts of Alaska, a National
Forest is within a day's drive of almost
any point in the United States. So if you are
still in doubt as to where to spend your next
vacation, we would suggest the rewarding
experience that can be had by. vacationing
in our National Forests.
Information concerning National
Forest vacations can be obtained from the
Ironton Ranger District, Ironton, Ohio or
any other National Forest Ranger District.

Lay of the Land
By JOHN COOPER
Soli Conservation Service
PT. PLEASANT - We
helped J. D. Chapman near MI.
Olive Church recently with a
farm plan. He Is cleaning up
and seeding some ground and
Is planning to make his farm
into a beef cattle farm. This
year he cut a thousand bales of
hay from about six acres that
he cleaned and seeded last
year .
After he cleans an area, he
treats it according to the
testing recommendations as
made by West Virginia
University Experiment
Station . Mr. Chapman works at
Kerr Glass Company in
Huntington and on the farm as
a sideline to his regular work.
WE WERE talking with Dale
Nibert recently about his farm
operation at Apple Grove. Mr.
Nibert owns this farm, but the
dairy there is operated on a
partnership basis with Leslie
Parsons and his son, Jack.
One thing in particular which
Dale told me that I feel worthwhile to pa!l!l along is that the
crop field west of Route 2on his
farm has been in corn 27
consecutive years. Last year it
yielded 25 tons of ensilage per
acre . Mr. Nibert spreads
generous applications of
manure on this field each year
as well as fertilizing it with the
equivalent of 2,000 pounds of !().
1().10 per acre. The soil there is
SclotovUle Silt Loam.
D. E. HARTLEY, whose
farm is near Ambrosia, Is
planning to make two springs.
One is a witter seep out of a
normal hillside, the other a
seep that comes to the surf,ce
in a roc~y hollow.
Somettmes good springs
appear in hollows, but they are ·
often hard to collect Into il
catch basin. Examination of
this one, however, showed that
water was coming from under
a huge rock. A water hole
perhaps the size of two wash
tuba had been washed out
under the rock.
.
The best plltn to collect this
water seemed to be to put a
concrete dam about six feet
long icrou the hollow, make a
rock weU i)ehind the dam, fill
the additional space with
gravel and small rock, and
then cover the entire structure
with Un roof1itg which would
alide under the elllating rock.
This would prevent most of the
llirface water from, entering
the spring well. A pipe would
then be laid !rom the we.n to a
·watering trough on lower

I'

ground.
Mr. Hartley has been a
cooperator of the Western Soil
Conservation District more
than 20 years. Recently he
retired from public work and
plans to spend more time at his
farm operation.
WE WERE TALKING with
William (Bill) Lewis of Oldtown Farm. Bill, with a grin on
his face , told us that since we
had previously written a series
of stories on octogenarian
farmers and a more recent
series on young farmers, to
make the whole thing complete
we should write a series of
soories on bachelor farmers.
We are not 100 per cent sure
of all the motives behind Bill's
suggestion, but we reminded
him that there were more
bachelor farmers around the
county than he might think.
We went ahead to tell him
that we were considering a
story on Oldtown Farm but
from a standpoint of that farm
being one of the oldest farms in
the state and also one that has
worked closely with conservation programs in recent
years.

in 19!i0 to 223 pounds per person (aboltt 105 quarts) in 1971. The
decline in whole milk sales is offset somewhat by gains for skim
and low.fat milk and the growing popularity of cheese. Markets
for ice cream and collage cheese remain strong; but butter use
has dropped more than 50 percent since 1950. Overall, 25 percent
of the dairy market has been lost on a milk-equivalent basis.
With an eye toward decUning consumption, the industry is
beginning to take a closer look at supply; control (l'oposals,
Jacobson said.
He outlined one proposal offered 'for discussion by the
National Milk Producers Federation. The plan would set base
(I'Oduction levels for each producer based on his markeling
history aitd a national milk quota. Apemilty price would be paid
for milk produced above this base. Such a plan would probably
slow the current production surge, Jacohson predicted.
Each year Ohio dairymen seem to harvest a higher percentage of their roughage as corn silage, according to Dr. John
R. Staubus, professor Dairy Science at OSU and tbe OARDC.
Staubus, one of several scientists who reported on current
research, said several reasons stand behind the trend toward
more corn silage as a ~igh energy feed.
Green chopped corn ensiles weD, harvest and feeding are
easy to mechanize, and labor load is reduced at hay-making
time. Also, stage of maturity is less critical than for grasslegume forages, Staubus said.

Wheat Loading at
Longview, Wash.

OVER 100
OVER 100

LONGVIEW, Wash. (UPI) Russian ships were loading 1.5
million bushels of American
grain Friday, the first Pacific
Northwest wheat to be sold to
the USSR under a recent
United States - Soviet Union
trade agreement.
Continental Grain Co. of
Portland, Ore., said the three
Russian ships loading at
Longview and Kalama, Wash.,
would take on the grain at $1.99
per bushel in a sale that could
approach $3 million.
Meanwhile in Washington, a
Texas congressman planned
an investigation of relations
between the government and
private grain firms in handling
large wheat sales to the Soviet
Union .

BUSINESS fS BOOMING
LONDON (UP!) - Business
is booming for Britain 's candy
manufacturers despite the
slimming craze . A candy
manufacturers group said
Friday that Britons last year
ate 624,000 tons of candy, the
highest figure for 15 years. A
spokesman said sales were
boosted by "nibblers" who
miss main meals to try to slim.

No.5&amp; BLOWER
Now you can break the bottleneck of corn silage or haylage
at the base of your silo . The No . 56 Blower has an exclusive
45' feeding angle that augers the material more in a
straight-line direction than the usual90' turn found in most
blowers. The flow is faster and more uniform . And an exclusive 56-inch rotor propels the silage upward at a tip
speed of 90 mites an hour at 540 rpm. You get easy drivethrough clearance with the hopper extending 20 inches
from the housing. Let us give you full details on the No. 56
Blower. (Ask us about the new I H 51 Power Forage Feeder)

MEIGS EQUIPMENT C9.
PHONE 992-2176

POMERO.Y, OHIO

A GOOD

COMBINATION
FROM ·LANDMARK
TWO floor heat outlets-

DOUBLE THE HEAT
OVER YOUR FLOORS!

Loads of
Home Comfort,
brought to you by
our Friendly Nice Guys!
That's LANDMARK Heating Oil Service in a nutshell: excellent product, available- to all
owners of new or existing houses, dependable
delivery by Friendly Nice Guys who have a
great easy-pay Budget Plan. It's easy to get
started with LANDMARK Heating Oil- just give
us a call!

Stands at 51;'2 %

Make-Up Starter
Prepare yoar face for

mike-up. A mllcl akla freall·
ener II 1 Cood
fer oOJ
eomplexloa1 llld 1 llllllt
mollturlzer for dry etmplel·
lln1.

nae

FEET HIGH
TONS AN HOUR

I•NTI!RNATIONAL I

Pnm·e Interest
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
5'k per cent prime interest rate
became general Friday among
the nation's major banks as
two large New York banks
increased their rates to
correspond.
First National City Bank and
Irving Trust eo. had been the
major holdouts. First National
had quoted 5% per cent and
Irving Trust sv, in the Interest
rate charged to the most
creditworthy customers.
The upward move to 51&gt; per
cent began two · weeks ago
when Chase Manhattan raised
its rate. Fin! National City
Bank and Irving Trust had
delayed their Increases
because of varying fonnulu
used in tying their rales to the
money market, banking
sources said.

Most dairymen have learned to use silage correctly when it
makes up only a part of the roughage program. "But when cbrn
silage is a major portion or the entire roughage supply,
significant adjustments are needed to make up for its nutritional
shortcomings."
Tood to excellent quality silage is about 50 pet. corn grain
and 50 percent medium to low quality roughage on a dry matter
basis. It is low in calcium, magnesium, sulphur, and (l'otein . .
These deficiencies must be made up by using a high prol•lit
concentrate mixture and adding supplemental minerals. tn.
sufficient (I'Otein can result in lower milk production and itJ.
creased body CQnditlon.
Shelled corn preserved at 25 percent moisture
with acetic and propionic acids retained its bright
yellow color, did not heat, and was mold.free. Rations containing
the acid-preserved corn maintained a high level of milk
production, although milk fat percentages appear to be low,
Palmquist reported.
·
The · chemicals prevent fermentation and inhibit mold
growth . Treated corn may be stored in any type of storage bin or
silo out of the weather. At 24c per pound, cost of treatment Is
about 15 cents per bushel. Cost of conventional drying is about 20
cents per bushel.
Other segments of the program dealt with alfalfa production,
reproduction and disease problems, and nutrition, health, and
bousing of dairy herd .replacements.
Dairymen interested in securing detailed reports on the
research results may secure copies by contacUng the County
Extension Office.

&amp;lve your family
a new standard
of livina with
1 new, patented

PHONE 992-2181

.......L.FI
. 01 HOME HEATE~ .

...,.,

It

720W3

.,. , _ lrio..to " """'"" who -

• liltiN -

HEATI~G

'

OIL

,......,. how

....,. .,... $1oalu'a . _ - '""""· Thoy'1l toll yoo, loot ..

w•.

Si..ler liYel thM MIN c....., ...,. httt 1M Mn
··~ar ..a\la """Itt thlft they~ hepM lw, Alii: ftt I ... I Rlh ..
tien- ,_.N lie nll"littcMII.
they ttll

POMEROY

See Us For Your N•w

or Used SIEGLER
Fuel 011 Heater

~

w. Carsey, Mgr.

Serving Meigs, Galli• &amp; Mason Counties
Ph. 992-2181

Open Mon.-Sat. until' p.m.

WE DELIVER- WE SERVI~ WE FINANCE

�· · ~· •.

'~

'···

'\:

·•.

~·

.

'.

·~

,·' ~-

21-The Sunday Tlml!e · Sentinel, SUnday, Sept. 3,1972

,..

~

I

. ''

.·., For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds ·
WANT . AOS
INFORMATION
' • OEADI.INES

. ,1 '
~;

•;
•.

i.;

r"',

'•

'•
{•
"a".•

~:
•
·"":

.~:

~·

0:
~:
~·

-~

.,.
..
•,

KOSCOT KOSMETICS and YARD SALE. Labor Day, SeRI.
-'P.M.
Oay Before Publlcatlorl'. · wigs, more new product5 4, 9a .m. to 7p .m.; Norma n E ~
Monday ·oead!lne 9: a.m . ·
F
f
cancellation - Corrections
Will bt·accapted unli.l9a .m . for~
Day of PUblication

REGULATIONS

comi ng soon.
or
ree
demonstration, phone 9925113.

8-17-ttc

CARO OF THAN~$
&amp; OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each addJtlonal word 2c .
BLIND f&gt;[JS
.
Addll lonal 25c Chafge · per
Adv-ertisement.
·

-In .Memory

IN MEMORY of Edward
Young, who departed this life
7 years ago, September 2.
Earth has lost its lOok of
gladness,
Heaven

•
'
..

•
~·
•

seems

to

us

more

bright,
Since t.he spirit ot our dear one.
Took Its happy , homeward
flight. .
And we long to cross that river,

of

Navada

Beaver . who passed away,

September 2, 1967 .
As years go by and time rolls

'· Each thing we do, each place we
go,
We seem to feel your presence
...

$0.

::
•.
•
•
:~

Sadly missed by Mother.
Sallie All i son , Husband,
Henry Beaver &amp; family,
Lowell an·d Bonnie Sue,
Brother, Paul Allison and
Mattie,
Sister
Audrey
Torrence .
9-J-ltc

ALLEY OOP

· ---------sadness,

:. Secret tears still flow;
;· What It meont to lose you,
~

(
.:
••

''HEll"
HEATING &amp;
'
COOLING

· Auto Sales

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

IN

PHONE 992-2156

The Dai~ Sentinel
CAMPIIS CLlTI'ER

ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th .
Last Chance to hop aboard the

PLAYHOUSE TOY train to
success. We're selling toys
and booking parties, having

But whom we could not save.
We mourn for you in silence,
No eyes can see us weep,
But many silent tears are shed,
While others are asleer..

lun and getting pa id. As a
demo I have no delivering, no
collection , and I do not need
any experience. I get free

training . Final deadl ine l or
hiring is Sept . 25. call me now.
don't wait. MargareJ Fortune.

;
Sadly rT)issed by wl e. Opal,
:· children and grandchildren .
.;
9-3-ltp
\ '"'
iN
_ M_E_M
_O
_R
_Y
_ o_t _R_o_
be_r_l -W-ood

949-5414 or Barbara Lambert,

446-3411 .
8-22-tfc

who passed .away September
5, 1971. Sadly missed by Lizzie
Wood and family .
9-3·1fc

Employment Wanted
~VAf[Al'iLE

immed iately,

General Carpenter Foreman.

IN LOVING memory of our

Phone 992-6675 .

W.

McGuire. Jr. who passed
away September lrd. four
years ago:
Nothing but memories as we

8-31 ·31p

For Rent

journey on,
Longing for a smile from a
loved one gone i

3

None know the depths of our

--,-----

6 ROOM furnished apartment.
carpeted, central heaL
utilities paid . Also tor working
men , 4 bedrooms, share living
room, kllchen, bath . Com pletely furnished, utilities
paid. Phone 992 ·3074 .
9·3-3tc

FURNISHED 3 room &amp; bath

KINGS ISLAND was great.
Thanks to all who voled for
me and made the lrlp
possible. - Jeff Warner .
9-3-llp

apartment , nice loca ti on,
private entrance ; phone 99'2 ·

3432 or 992·2780.
9-J.tfc

~r: avement .

Mrs. Evelyn Landers
9-3-ltc

;THE FAMILY of Steve Eibln
wish lo express their lhonks
tor all who helped in any way
al the time of death ol their
beloved wife, mother and
grandmother, Mary Eblin.
Special thanks to Rev. Cecil
· • Wise, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, the singers, Jennie
Pianist,
the
Grefe.
pallbearers, Ewing . Funeral
Home,
Holzer
Medical
Center. Or. Hands &amp; Or.
Prendergast, to all who sent
food and flowers ; and also for
the many prayers. May God
Bless each and every one.
9-3-1fp

~

phone 9nJ502,
phone 675·2372.

eveni ngs

pro xi mat ely

Racine , Ohio .

septic lank and a drilled well
and a dug well. Doyle Hudson,
Phone 992 ·5048.
8-31 -3tc

8-16-lfc
-:--------SEVERAL varieties of lop

quality, tree .r ipened , ca nning
peaches ; now available

1 acre

72 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
DEMO
SAVEl

992-5342

ESTATE AUCTION. Seplember
8 and 9&lt; 1972, at 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m ., ~riday, September 8th
sold. Saturday
The entire
stock
of
and
10 a.m
. until
Antiques and Furniture of the
Grace Vaughn Antique Shop
will be sold In the Rock
Springs Grange Hal l on the
Meigs Co. Fair Ground
located at Junction of State
Routes J3N and 124 out of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Cons isting in Part as follows :
Piano with 2 benches, library
lable, marble top colfee table,
china cu pboard, stands,
lamps (all

rooms,

w·w

carpet ing

lhroughout. furniture. •P·
pllance, drapes , laundry
room with Mayfag washer &amp;
dryer In Rio Grande. SS,500.
Ph . 245·5448 .
9- 1-3lc

'

FOR YOUR health's sake eat
organically grown tomatoes ;

B. Quisenberry has large
ones. IOc pound at the old Posl
Off ice building, Syracuse.
Ohio.
8-23-12tp

.

PUBLIC AUCTION
BEGINNING AT II :00 A.M.
Location : At M&amp;G ~rket on Stole Route 7, just obove
Meigs-Gollla County Line .

kinds), shades,

clocks,
pic tures,
rugs.
rockers,
buffets.
book
she lves .
coffee
mills,
silverware. bottles, ca rnlvol
glass. cut glass, pressed
glass, Insulators, stone jars,
kinds). chests, trunks, sewing
su pp lies, kitchen ware,

Allis-Chalmers, "B" Tractor (Starting bid of $600.00) ;
Walk-In Cooler JSiartlng bid of $600 .00) ; Books: Higher
Educational. Crafts &amp; Art. Some very old. Organ stools.
plano bench with severol old song books, dishes.
glassware, cerai'nlc5, vases. candle sticks. kitchenware,
old door bell, show case•. meat cooler. meat block, scoles,
grocery carts &amp; check -out countar. Beds, dressers, couch
&amp; choirs, dining tables &amp; choirs. bullet. dinette set•,
stands (all sires), end tables, radio, record player &amp;

baskets, desks , baby rcx:ker,
cherry baby cradle, cherry

records, typewriter &amp; stand, babv bed, mirrors, swivel
chair, small deep freete, garden tractor, &amp; kerosene

chesl. love seat . corner
shelves. glass dobr dish
cupboard, large collection of
good dishes and novelties of
aII kl nds. two re t r IgeraI ors, 2
ranges, kitchen cabinet,
sweepers, 2 typewriters , TV,
wringer type washer, drop·
leaf !able, porch glider and
many other articles . This Is

pump. Other Items not listed.
Terms of Sale: Cosh, or Positive 1.0 .
Not Responsible lor Acclot.nts or Theft.
w, A • DOTSON• (OWn or )
Phono , 304-77J.SS02
LLOYD DILLENGERIAuclloneerl
Rt. No. 1, Shlde, CJIIIo- Phone : 614·696-1269
Lunch Served

brass

bed , . dressers

(all

goodInteresting
merchondlse.
DO NOT
an
·collection
of ·
MISS THIS SAlE. Nancy
Collins, Administratrix.
Terms: Cash. Lunch Served .
Not Respons ible tor ac cidents . The Bradford Auc ·
lion Co.. A. C. Bradford.
Manager. C. C. Bradford.
Auctioneer . Phone 949-3821 or
3161.
9-3-ttc

:::::::::::::::::::::::=
(A one If mud, clip tills!

FOR SALE BY. OWNER
CHALET STYLE HOME IN SECLUDED RUSTIC

TEitfty

Cadillac . Oidsm•bile

Coronel Cust. 4 Dr . Sedan. Factory air . Low
owner. We want to sell this car.

Pomeroy

Rea I Estate For .Sale

8 ROOM house. balh, large lot,
gas and electric ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms. balh. gas forced air
furnace, lots of panel ing . Nice basement with 4 room ~ and
storage . Front and side porches. All for only $8500 .00

lorced air furnace. 2 loi s. Asking Only $16,000 .00.
REEDSVILLE
NEARLY NEW- 2 nice bedrooms , balh, base ment. All

5 ROOMS &amp; bath. 2 slory block

LeSabre 4 Dr. Sedan . Factory air. Ole owner .
Real sharp. 69 model. Priced to sell.

house ; gas forced air furnac e,
11.4 acre lot. Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chester

Rd. · $5 ,500 ; phone 992-3874.
8·29 tfc
OU T OF STATE . IDEAL 5ACR E RANCH . Lake Con chas, New Mexico. $2975. No
down. No Interest. ~25 per mo.
fo·r
119 mos
Vaca tio n
Paradise . Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conhas: Box
2001 DO, Alameda, California
9450 I.

$12,000 .00

8-29·30tp
Conc has, New Me)lico. $2,975.
No Down. No Interest. S25 mo.
for
119 mos . Vacation
Parad ise. Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
200100, Alameda, California

111 ACRES
LEBANON TOWNSHIP- In new gas area with gas well .
Old sick room house, bad barn and outbuildings. Good
frog pond, and plenty of green brush . A real hide away at
the end of the fine.

HELEN L . TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

94501.
8-6-lOip
LOTS

ON

Wright

Street ,

Pomeroy ; phone 742 -5930.

8-29·12tc
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985 -3529 .
6-11 -tfc

992-3 325

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1972
ACROSS

6-Loot (tleng)
10--Mark left by
~

wound

14-t(not&amp;
19--ElCtrn ·
21-Part of
hamen
22-Frte ticket

73-Strtk•s
75-N•w•p•per

eKecutlv•
77- Rul e1tat•
ma p
715-Piur:k
SO--Equals
81-Pie ce
82-Am•nds
84-Eagles' nests

86-0verlooked
87-FI&amp;I
89- Ponenlve

24-Comu on the
scent
26-Perlls

92-Carouut

28-Chut

95---Country of

29-Panpolnt
30-G!rl 'l name

32-Strip of
!tether

33-Timld
34-Wooden pin

pronoun

Atla
98--Capltal of

Letvla
99-Atplratlon
101-Centers
103-Dispetcll

35-0x of Ctlebea

104-Anser

37-Den

105-locnte

!19--Goddeu of
htallna:
40-Frult

41-Faluhoods
42--Gratultltt
44-Talkt Idly

46-Row
47-Parforma
41-Pa'rt of face

W-Fasclnett
&amp;2-oceen&amp;
63-French article
55-LevtnUnt •

ketcll
57-Printer's

106-Newt•
gatherlns
oraanl1a tlon
(ln lt.)
107-lndetlnlte
ertlcle
108-Short jacket
110--Free Of
111-Eerth a:oddess
11 2-Ntrrow, flat
boerd

end

louchlna
70-Neckplect
71--Girt's name

llo-Aicohollc:
bevtra11
132-trnltated

133-Word or
sorrow

31-Ventilatu

94-Sun aod

33-Reward

96-Do!phlnlike
cetacean

36--Sacred bull
38-Piant of

Uf-Anclent aalley

46-Aniry

150-Partalnlna to

outburst
47- Profound
49-0rlnks slowly
51-Parts of
skel•ton
52-Retail

coin

the stars
152-TelC
153-Gup for
breath
154-Ratlonel
156-Boa:s down
1$7-Mutlc.t
Instruments
158-Emmets
159-Ena:llsh
streetcar
160--Passaa:eway
DOWN
1-The ntrra
2-Short ruri
3-Sub]ect to
artreme heat
4-SIIkworm
5-Firn

7-Small lump

um

92-Th• urlal

148--0ctoroons

l!lroducts
145-0id French

115-Prepotltlon
117-Hebrew month

119-Cooled lave
12
rlbt

27-G runome
28-Loved one

mustard
fam ily
40--Evera:reen tree
41-Ciayey earth
43-Resorts
4 5-More rigid

143-Baker's

6--Qulall

Thou holdln1
m 1ure
oftloe
126--Vnsel
~Blemish ·
12?- Hott
66-Compue point
128-Mestlzo
61--A continent
6~bove

135-Graln (p l.)
137-Walk
139-Scottlsh c:ep
14Q-Lec
141-Turptmtlne
lna:redlent

113-A continent

62

(abbr.)

134-Footllke l!l&amp;rt

8-Wine cups
9-Reflntd
to-Lence
11-Cavll
12-Beut of
burden
13-Rupees {abbr.)

14- lsthmus
15-Natlve metal

16-ldolh:u
17---¢0\lltl
18-Sows
20-Trade for

money
23-Prophet
25-Strlke

MIDDLEPORT- LIKE
NEW
Very modern kitchen with
dining bar . Dining room, 2
bedrooms with closets. I iving
room 12 x 26 , has gas
firepla ce. Bath . Carpeted

throughout . Ca rport tor 2
cars. Large storage building.
Storm doors and windows.,

$12.500 .
ID EAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lake

refrigerator-freez er . Full basement with garage. All
electric home. Asking 524,000.00

220ACRES
2 GOOD HOUSES-3 1arge barns, 3 cisterns. Some timber,
minerals . On a good blacktop road ,
CALL US FOR A LOOK AT THE INSIDE OF OUR
HOUSES. YOU MAY BE SURPRISED. WE HAVE A
KEYANDPICTUREATTHE OFFICE . LOOK FOR THE
RED, WHITE , AND BLUE SIGN FOR A GOOD BUY.

Rt . 1,

Monaco 4 door Hard Top . Full power equipment, air. one owner. only 26,000 miles ..

1969 Buick ................... }2195

electric home . Nice lot out in the country. Asking

VACANT LAND
50 ACRE&amp;-Hunting and ca mping land . Located in
Rutland Township, on a good road . Only ss.ooo.oo
READY FOR YOU
3 BEDROOM &amp;-2 baths, nice kitchen wilh stove and

Real Estate For Sale

Middleport. Phone 992 -2602.
8-27 -8tp

NEW HOME
THE TEK- 3 bedrooms , nice bath, kitchen has stove and
r efrigerator, with lots of cabi nets and double sink. Large
closets In each bedroom and at fr ont and back door s. Gas

1970 Dodge ................. }2695

. '' You' ll Like ('•1,.. Quality Way of,Doing_Business' '

Virgil R Teaford, Sr.. Broker

23-Calm

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9th

1971 Dodge ........... only $2695

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1- T,.mutous

1" " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

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.

KARR &amp; VANZANDT
GMAC Financing Available

establishments
53- Hold on
property

9~-Group

of five

97- Eayptlan
sklnk

100-A sta te (abbr.)
102-F'erformed
alone
105--Move to and
fro
109-Torpld
112- Skidded

113-Dutch
measure (pl.)

114-Most
competent
116-A state
118-0reg:s
120--Wom an's
undara:arment
121-coto rle$$

54-Heraldry:
erarted
56-Able

122-Si mplest

59-Short story
60-Fuel

suddenly
125--Relatu again

61-Cines
63-Unusutl
65--Cravats

126-Thlnly

67-Worm
70--1 nslde of
footb11U

72-Genus of
arasses

74- Symbol for
tellurium

75---Pronoun
77-Polnts of
hammer
79-Perlod of time

83--Grllk letter
85- Natlv•
American
86-Simplt
87-Demure

88-lretand
89-Two (Ramen
number)
· 90-Worthlus
91-Cuttleflah

SffiiNG NEAR MEIGS HIGH satOOL

$9,500 .00 .
MODERN ESTATE
Over3AC RES .1 story home.
3 bedrooms with closets .
Mod ern kitchen with dish .
washer and dining area.
Utility room . Bath . Own
water or Chester water .
Large garage . Cold room for
frui ts and deep freeze. Fruit
trees, berr ies, grapes, etc.
Pony pen, Chicken house.

GREAT FOR JU ST $18,900.
WE HAVF OTHER
PROPERTIES.
CAL L TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-22S9
If no answer 992-2568

10 room

house l

350 V-8 engine, Turbo Hydramatic, power steer ing . Nova
Rally equipment, interior group, bumper guard vinyl
roof, golden brown finish.
'

1971 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door ..... $3095
Beige finish, vinyl top, v i nyl i nterior , factory air con.
dltioned, w -w tires, like new, 327 V-8 engine, power
steering, Turbo Hydramatic, rad io &amp; man y other extras.
See this now.

1970 Monte Ca~o ................... $2895
locall owner with le ss than 21,000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body , blk . knit interior , radio, Turbo
Hydramat ic power steering, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
fires, like new. A nicy luxury car.

1970 Camara H.T. ................... $2295
Local owned &amp; less than 24,000 m iles . Green finish, green
vinyl bucket seats with console, 350 v .s en gine, 4 speed
trans., power steering , rear air reflector, radio, like new
w-w tlres, no teenage driver. Sharp, man, sharp.

1967 Buick only ............ $1595

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr•. ~......... ..'1795

Elec. 225 4 Dr. H. T. Full power and air. Real
nice. 67 model.

Local 1 owner car, green finish, clean interior , good tires,
2000cc engine. radio, 4-speed trans.

1969 Ford ...................... $1595
F-L 500 Wagon. Auto. Small VB. Real nice
wagon . Local owner.

1965 Buick ...................... $695
Wildcat. All white. Runs real good . Make
some one a real nice car for the price.

·-------------------~
This Week Special
I

II
I
I
I

I

1969 lnl 1h Ton Pickup
48,921 miles on it. This Week

only '1395

I
I
I

~-------------------J
We Service What We Sell

Our Word Is Our Bond
Open Evenings Till7 p. m. &amp; Sat. Tills P.M.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

8

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
lfi!!IIIP!!!I

~

992-217 4

auick

PQI)tiac •

New 1972 Closeouts!

Chevrolet Brookwood 2 Seat Sl Wagon
Dark Blue with alack vinyl interior. roof drip mldg., body
side mldg ., L 78x15 WW tires, P. B., Radio, Luggage
Carrier, 350, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, P. Steering
and Brakes.

. Retail $4210.40 - Closeout $3598.00

NEW '72 CHEV. 1 TON CHASSIS
60" cab to axle. Color whlfe .red. 350 V-8 engine. H. duty
frt . &amp; r. shocks, West Coast mirrors, H. duty frt. springs,
h. duty rear &amp; au)liliary springs, power steering, 750x16 ·8
ply frt. &amp; rear duals, H .D .. rad iator gauges. radio, custom
deluxe cab.

Retail $4106.76 - Closeout $3398.00

NEW 6 CYL Vz TON 8' PICKUP
Mirrors, Booster brakes, H.O. R springs, Step bumper .

'72 Closeout $2594

-. &amp;':Other New 1972

Business Services

Chevrolet Pass. Cars In Stock

NEW HOMES

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

3 BEDROOMS

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

- 992 -2126

2 New Homes. all electric. 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, with lake frontage;
at Five Points area .

scattered
127-E&amp;yptllln

dancing girl
131-Recollect
132- Essance
133-Goals
134-Nulsances
136-Piaces
138-Pockttbook
14D-Sm•ller
amount
141- Leett
142-Approllch
144-Brlslle
14?-Crlm so n
148-Male
149--Nahoor sheep

151-Burma
tribesman

153-Partnt
(colloq,)
~55-Printer's

mea&amp;ul'l

PRICE

$500 DOWN buys 4 rooms, bath,
close to deep mine ; 80ft . lot
on har d road ; M&amp;G Food

Markel , Rt. 7, 3 mi. Soulh.
Middleport ; also I railer space
for rent.

9-3-3tp

roofing,

CONSTRUCTION ,
porch

repair

and

electrical ; phone 742-4286.
8-16-301c

EARTH MOVING

INTERIOR , exterior paint ing,
Dozer &amp; End lo1der work,

remodeling , build ing . Contact
Ernest Deeter, Bashan .

8-31 -61c

ponds,
f'rom the largesl
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

basement,

land·

scaping. We have 2 size
dozers~ 2 size loadtrs. Work

POMEROY - House. 6 rooms &amp; SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
done by hour or contract .
bath, 2 large porches, large
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Pn'
Free Estimates. We also
lol, newly painted ; phone 992 662-3035.
haul lilt dirt, top soil. Dump
3394.
2-12-tfc
trucks and low-boy for hire.
9-3-3tc
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
BACKHOE AND DOZER woro :
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
5 ROOM house, bath. Iron!
Septic tanks Installed. GeorQe
alter 7 p.m. or phone 992 porch , full basement, two lots .
LBi11l Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
5232.
S. D. Buskirk. Sr .. 341 Page
Pomerov
4-l5· iiC Ph .. 991 -2174
St ., Middleporl. Ohio. ,
N-:G:--cM
-:-:a cc-h-:i-ne
- s' e_r_v1ce '
' 9-3-3tp "s;:E:-:W:-:1:-:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
clean, oil, adiust, $399, In you; RE!iSONABLE rate•. Ph. 446- OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, dl thome; phone 992-5331.
4782. Galii!'Oiis. John Russell,
chlng service; top soli, fill
8-11 -30tc
Owner &amp; Operator.
~
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex ·
5-12-lfc
cavafing. Phone 992-5367,
AUTOMOBIL~ msurance been
Dick Karr, Jr .
cancelled?
Lost
your c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
9-1-tlc
operator's license? Call 992·
Complete Service
2966.
Phone949·3821
6-15-tfc
Racine', Ohio
·s·EE US FOR: Awnings. storm
'Crltt Bradford
·doors and windows. drp'orts,
marquees, ~lumlnum 'siding
and railing . 'A, Jacob, sales
representative . . For tree:
estimates, ··phone Charie 91
Lisle, Syrocuse, V. V
Johnson a~d Son, Inc. '
3·2-tft

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

-------

-- - -

.,---,.--~--

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY

•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Til S
Monday lhru Saturday

'06 E. M1in, Pomerov,O.

LOOK
BUY A 1972 SKYLARK

macnlne; 23'' fan; e ectrl&lt;: heater ; wool rugs; porch swing;

FOR ONLY

~31

Bln~ulars .

tot,;::;:.•~

Pomeroy

Business Services

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

misc._pots. pans&amp; dishes; foldh)g cot; misc. cha1rs.
GUNS: Ithaca 20 Jll!. pumJ&gt;, less than one box of shells has
been shot; Winchester model 255-22 mogum with SC!lfle; HI
Standard 22 auto. pistol; 12. ga. single barrel: 7x50 power

rockers ; chairs; stone ·

•11

Business Services

Kenmore gas range; 3-plece bedrOQm suite; metal war -

RCA VlctrQia with
&amp; Jimmy Rodgers;
lamps; kraut cutter;

~

4-5-tfp

------

drol&gt;es; beds; dressers ; night stands; living room suite;
matchlngrocker&amp; r~cliner i coffee table; end tables;.t~mps ;
Oiymplc&gt;tereo AM· FM raolowlth 18 s~akers ; 21" MOTorola
T. V ·i record cabinet[· clock radio ; New Home electric sewing

ANTIQUES OR
records.
of
Mantel

..'l795

.rots.
949-4313.
bath, Phone
basement,
garage, two • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Sept, 9, 1972
10:JOA.M.
Thechatt~ls oft be estateolthe lale Elbert Taylor will be sold
at the reSidence locat_ed on. S.R. 611 approx. 1 mile west of
U.S. Route 33 at Darwm~Oh10 . Wttchlorulesi.ans
TRACTOR &amp; EOUIPMt:NT: M.F. 135 qas will\ No. 7~ belly
mount mower. This tractor Is In excellent condill!'." with less
than6Sactual hours. Wot~sooa setaratelv 3 p 12" ~erg
olow ; 3 ot. Ford s~ooo ;
rborn lsk ; _ruhh.r tire trailer
TOOLS &amp; MISC.: Slmplicl y Rota. uf; Grinder; Vise; Pipe
vise; Larae anvil ; Soool rope ; Drill pre$S( e•t. loddors;
wnee1 Darrow ; soctceT' sets lf2. ~. 'I•, complere; hahCI tools ;
mise·. l'ing yangs.
HOUSEHOlD: 1&gt;0" round .drop.leaf_plne table with 4 chairs ; ·
Copper-tone Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer; Utility cabinets ;

u ••••

A 1 owner sharp car, yellow fi nish with bla ck accen ting ,
blk . top, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering .
radio, new w·w tires.

OPIL

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

TIHICKS

1968 Camara Convertible ••

123-Brnk

129-Grut bustard

69-Near

10 ACRES
Must sel l at once. 3
bedrooms W. closets, Bath,
Dining, Basement . Porches.
01 blacktop road . Chester
water. B. G. forced air
fu rnace. 20 minutes out .

RACINE -

Outstanding One-&amp;ner Trade-Ins
1972 Nova 2.Dr...................... $2895

ONLY 5-1972 OLDSMOBILES
REMAINING AT SALE PRICES

8-6-30tc

Sale' Prices!!

•

fabulous Selectioa-lodc lolto11 Prktsl

Firemlst green, green vinyl top, green i nter ior, lull
power equipment, Climate Control air condit ioning ,
less than 2.000 miles .

with

110 Mechanic Street

K

Of Course You Can"

through early September; CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots al Rock Springs,
Bob'~ Market, Mason, W. Va .•
close to High School &amp; Fair
above the Pomeroy -Mason
Ground
; call or see Bil l Witte,
Bridge; phone 773-5308 .
992-2789
after 5 p.m. week·
8-15-ttc
days .

o:;R:ea-:-1-;:E-:sta-:-t-e ""
Fo-r -;:Sa71e-

Out They GO

USED CARS

CADILLAC,

8-30-lfc
BOBWHITE Qua ils. Phone 985·
3972. John Thomas, Rt . 2. Box 8 ROOM, 2 story br ick house,
98, Leon , W. Va .
. basement, barn &amp; out 9-J.6tc
buildings .- 1 to 3 acres as
needed ; on Ohio Power
COAL Limestone, Excelsior . electric; on Main Street, RutSalt Work s. E. Main St .•
land ; phone 742-4691 alter 5
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
p.m.
4-12.tfc
9-1-6fc
.POODL'E puppies, Silver To)i, ONE ACRE and old house in
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 Pomeroy . Phone 992-6675.
5443 .
B·31 -3fp
8-13-lfc . - - - - - - -- ;:;:
· ;:-;:~·7,··:::--c--c--TWO BUILDING Lots In
CANNING
tomatoes
and
Harrisonville . One Is apmangoes . Geraldine Cleland,

-··"
ii

"OWN A

4 ROOMS &amp; bat~ furnished REDUCED to sell , reglstereci'
apartmenl. 114 Mulberry
Toy Fox Terrier puppies,
Ave ., Pomerov . references ;
Healthy . have had shots, S25
phone 992-6698.
each . Papers furnished.
9-3-tfc
Phone 7 '2·5625 .
8-29·6IC

SPECIAL appreciation and
thanks to all the neighbors
and friends for flowers, food,
cards and kindness after the
recent dealh of my son Orville
Landers ;
Rev.
William
Knittel and Sister Dugan,
Emergency Squad, Mid·
dleporl and Pomeroy Pollee
and all was appreciated
, .
~ \..• ._d_urlng
the
lime
of

cords and gifts. It was all
deeply appreciated.
Lillie Dyke
9-3· 11c

un ·

8-10-tfc

Card c! Thanks

grandchildren . for flowers,

aparlment ,
1

Sadly missed by Mother,
Father, Sisters and Brothers,
Marvin W. McGuire, Sr. and
family.
9-3-ltc

·1 WOULD like to thank my
friends and neighbors for the
cards I received while a
patient In Pleasant Valley
Hospital; the Busy Bee Class
• of the First Baptls Church for
... flowen ; my children and

ROOM

furn ished, 408 Spri ng Ave.,
Pomeroy.

deep regret,
But we remember· when others
forget .

:

ol Sl.50 per week or pay
$101.47 ; phone 992-5331.
8-29-ffc

Hartford, W. Va.

Upon a precious grave.

Marvin

cabinet ; take over payments

Clifton and

. Beneath lies one we dearly
loved,

son.

Repossessed, looks like new ;

beaulilui hand rubbed Walnut

husband, father and grandfather, Henry Capehart, who
passed away four years ago,

dear

p

LEASANT . - 6 room
house. P 1 Paths, recreation
room, new buiU -in kitchen,
must se lL leaving town . Dav~

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

·•

~ IN • LOVING memory 'of our

:
•
:
•

Mobile Homes For Sale

CARRIERS
WANTED

No one will ever know.
When days are dark and dreary,
And everything goes wrong ,
We seem to hear you whisper,
Cheer up and Carry on .
Each time we see your picture,
You seem to smile and say,

• September 3, 1968.
: Softly the stars are shining.

.

Ox35 HOUSE . trailer ; country 40" WHITE electric range, good ALLIS-C HALMERS C tractor
with •Ide mower ; Oscar
condition . S50; 238 South
location; phone 992-3954.
everything half -price ,to
Weber. State Route 2-48 .
·
9-1-3tc
Second Ave .• Middleport.
Senior Citizens . The Beauty
H31p
.
9.3-:Jfc
Spot. Phone ,992 -2840 .
3 AND 4 ROOM furnfshed a'rll!'
8-31 ·31c
unfurPIIShed
apartments. . SIZE 7, while buc~ band ' shoe, STEREO tape player for car •
ohone 992-SI34.
• · used 1 marching season; call
$25 ; call 992·5786.
9-1-3fc
4-f2.ftc, 985-3978 afler 4 p.m.
9·J.4tp
c.N~E"-W~~M~OuB~ITLEE~h"-o=m~e;- In ·
5-15" CHEVY wheels, 2'11"
COURT Street Cab, · Pomeroy .
Syracuse. completely fur· STOK ERMATIC stove, side
opening : 2-15" Ford wheels.
will be closed on Labor Day.
nlshed, air -conditioning In
Window,
2¥1'' opening; 1·16" Ford
Sept. 4th and w iII be open tor
mount
Ford
mowing
bedroom. Phonem-2441 after
wheel. 3'18" oPening; 1-lA"
Air Conditioners
machine. both In good con business . Tuesday . Sept. 5th .
5 p.m.
Ford wheel; 2""" opening ; 29-1;21p
dillon ; phone 742-4626 .
8-31 -tfc
Hot Water Heaters
16" Chry'sler wheels , 3'12''
.
9-3-:Jfp
opening; SJ a piece; phone
. Plumbing
742 -4691 after 5 p.m.
DO
YOURSELF
A
FAVOR
Electrical Work
9-1-31c
select. clean used · fu"rniture ,
1967 2 door Hardtop Olds Delta
guaranteed appliances at the
Custom 88. phone 949-2381.
LOWEST prices In the area at TWIN Needle Sewing Machine
9-3-3tc
1972 model In walnut stand •
KUHL'S B'ARGAIN CEN All features built In to make
TER, "at caution tight", Rt .
fancy designs and do stretch
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
sewing. Also buttonholes,
Closed Mondays;' phone 667ADD· A-ROOMS BY VEMCO 3858 .
.
blind hems etc. $43.35 cash
992-2448
ADD . ROOM(S) TO YOUR
price or terms available,.
9-3-6tc
Pomeroy, 0 .
MOBILE
I'IOME
FOR
. Phone 992-5641.
BORN., DEN. OFFICE. 16 LEGHORN hens, phone 9499-Htc
LILA RIDENOUR will be
STD. PLANS . SAVE TIME .
4781.
. operating Grace's Beauty
sss .
9-J-:Jfp VACUUM Cleaner . Electro
Shop. starting Sept. 6th. Open
9-3- ltc
Hyg Jene New Demonstrator
for business as usual.
2·WHEEL utility Scout Trailer,
has all cleaning attachments
9-3-2tc 1970 60&lt;12 lotal electric mobile
plus the new Electro Suds lor
4'h'x6' with good tlreS i spare
home, take over payments ;
,tire mounted . 1-large storage
shampooing carpet. Only
phone 985-3378.
bin with hinged cover · $70 ;
$27.50 cash price or terms
9-3-31p
available . Phone m -5641.
8'x8' umbrella tent with In·
9-I-6ft
terior telescoping poles; 6 foot
OLD Furniture, . oak tobles. ··
.
. •
organs, dishes, clocks, brass CASij paid tor ali ma~es ana
height Inside; needs minor
beds, or complete households.
models of mobile homes;. repairs and door screen·tng. CHRYSLER BOAT DEALER. 1
Write M .
Miller, Rt . 4,
Ph011e area code 614-4f.l·9531. . Completely waterproofed ·
T•rry Bass Fishing Boat with
S25; call 992-5815 afler 5 p.m.
20 h. Mercury, w-traller; 1
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call m -6271.
.
4-13·tt&lt;
6-28- tfc '
. .
,
9-3-lfc
Monarch Fishing Bootwllh,20
--------.FOR THE BESTdealln a new
h. Mercury , w -traller ; 1
or used mobile home, try SGUNS and 1.72 acre lot. Phone
Cherokee Fishing Boot with
Kanauga Mobile Home Sajes,
742-3656.
40 h. Johnson, w-fralleri yolJr
Kanauga. Ohio.
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
9-3·21p
pick for $1,000: also 1972 GMC
7-16-JOtc
Toys &amp; Gills now thru
Sr.rint pickup, l~tomafic, W·
December with lhe oldest Toy
MAYTAG washer &amp; dryer .
a r, $4,250 ; 1972 lnte•natlonal
Party Plan in the Country.
white; green lounge chair;
pickup, $2,650; 1971 Dodge
Hig hes t commissions, No
excellenl condition; phone
pickup, S2,350 ; 1970 Ford
•
Air
Conditioners
after 5 p.m . 992·3442.
Cash Outlay. Call or write
Falrlane SOO, w -alr, $1,950 ;
•Awnings
"Santa 's Partles", Av on Ct.
9-3-5tc
1969 Cadillac DeVIlle Sedan,
06001. Tel. I (203) 673-3455.
loaded. $3,450; 1971 ln ·• Underpinni~g
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
H&amp;Ndayold or starled Leghorn
ternallonal pickup, like new,
pullets . Both floor or cage
9·1-ttc 'c omplete mobile homel
$2,350; 19-48 Chevrolet pickup,
grown available. Poultry
like new. S1,050 ; Longfellow
serv.i ce - plus gigantic
REFINED woman in need ol 'display
&amp; automation.
Motors , 2 mi. S., Ravenswood
of mobile homes , , housing
home to l ive in and care for
Modern Poultry. 399 W. Moin,
on Rt. 2; phone (304) 273-3594.
invalid woman. Nursing always available at ...
Pomeroy , 992-2164.
9-1-2tc
experience not necessary .
9-3-ltc
MILLER
Salary negotiable. Wr ite E.
MOBILE HOME tor sale
Donaldson. 5440 Phea sa nt
LeBLANC clarinet, B flat, very 1969 SCHULT Custom mobile
MOBILE HOMES
Drive, Orient, Ohio 43146 .
good condition; phone 667home. 60xl2, double expando.
9-1-2tc
3511 or 667-3400.
Early American Decor, new
1220 Washington Blvd.
8-29-61c
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
carpet, awning and un ·
HAVE immediate opening for
derplnnlng ; phone 992-3712.
pari time office girl; " typlng
KENNEBEC potatoes, SS for
9-1-6tc
essentiaL shorthand helpful
100 Ib . ;see John Pape. Ra cine 7::7'::-:;-::-;--::--.-:-::::-::=---;:;
but not requ ired ; Write Box
or phone 949-3025.
COLONIAL style stereo. AM729-A, c-o The Dally Sentinel. 2 MINIATURE poodles , S25
FM radio, 4 speakers • .t speed
8·29·61c
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giv ing
each. Phone 992-7230.
record chonger. Balance
full resume with referen ces,
S78.52. Use our budget terms .
8-31 -Jtc 1965 HARLEY Davidson 74,
previous employment, and
Phone 985·4132.
Call 992-7085.
8-30-6tc
training .
9-1·6fc
NEW DELUXE
ZIG -ZAG
9-3-tfc
sewi ng
machine .
This
Fil rpa trIck Or· _
M_O_D_E:-:R
:-:N-:--:-W
- a-1-nu-:t- s-:t-er-e-o.--:-:
AMmachine makes buttonholes , AP P L E S,
chards , State Route 689 .
FM radio. features ~ speed
darns and embroideries ; all
wi lhout attachments ; phone
Phone Wilkesv ille 669-3785.
changer, 4Spaakers. separate
992-5331 .
8-30-lfc controls . Balance $68.41. Use
our budgel lerms . Coil m 8-29-tlc
ALL electric mobile home wi th
7085 .
add·on, enclosed porch, 7
8
TRACK
STEREO
9-1-6fc

.; Don't cry. I'm only sleeping,
We will meet again some day.
• Sadly missed by wife,
• children and grandchildren.
9-J•llp
'•
•
:

For.Sale

For Sale

'. IN MEMORY of our father,
•; grandfather and husband.
.:
Carl Walton who departed
this life. September 4, 1910.
Our hearts still ache with
::

..

SPECIAL for t~e Older Girl
Now lhru . Septe mber 15,

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

PT

etc., excellen t condition ..
Phone 985·3842 before 8: 30
a .m . and after 9 p.m.
9_3_61 P

Help Wanted

Sadly missed by wile. Katie
and family .
9-3-lfp
MEMORY

For Rent

o.

Long to rest upon that shore,
There to see, and know, and
love him,
With the Savior, evermore.

IN

Notice

F.;r Sale

1970 DELTA Roya le, power
steering, brakes, air, tape,

Wanted To Buy

.,
on,
1
•. It seems your near, altho your
~
gone ,

:•
•:
••

Gravely outfit, brass bells,

N~lice

.'

ZI-TbeSundayTime.s -Sentlnei;Swtday,Sept3,1972

'

"'\8 :30 a .m.,. tq S: OO.p.m, Daily,
011
a :30 a . m. lo 12 :00 Noorl
Saturday .

'•

Hysell
residence ,
near
Hospital on County Road No.
76; antiques and misc. items ;

. The Publisher reserves the
etc.
rloht to edit or retect any ad,
9-1-21p
deemed
objectional.
The REWARD, for shopping at
publisher wllf not be responsible, Showalter's Wet Pet Shop, P
- -IA
_ N_
O_ &amp;_o_r_g-a n-,-le-ss_o_n_s-;by
for more than one · incorrect
CheSter, Ohio: 10 per cent of
graduate
of
Cincinnati
Insertion . R-ATES
·
your total purchase may be
Conservatory of Music with 23
tFor wan' Ad Service
applied to the purchase of any
years teaching e)lperience;
5 cents per Word one insertion
ceramic items .
ph one 992·3825 .
Minimum Charge 7Sc *
S-2-JOtp
8-23-12tc
12 cents per word thrn .
consecutive lnse-rtibri's .
18 cents per ' word sfX con·
secutlve Insertions. 1
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads palct w ithin 10 days .

OFFICE HOITR\, &amp;

I,

Notice

Notice

'

00

NEVER AGAIN WILL YOU BUY A NEW
SKYLARK FOR SUCH A LOW, LOW PRICE.

3 bedroom, 2 bath, fully carpeted, al •• .
electric, with wood burning fireplace,
spring water, set on nearly.ln acre of
large trees. $25,000 firm, adjoining lot
available. Shown by appointment only.
. Phone 992-3183.

Open Evenin.g s Ti117 p.m. &amp; Sat. TillS P.M. Service Till12 Noon on Sat.

WMP0/1390~
GN YOUR DIAL

••
\•

:$Mt1H NELSON MOTORS, INC.
81iic;k

IIAII

992·2174
PatltiiC .

sr.. POIIEIOY, OHIO
'

8
,

�· · ~· •.

'~

'···

'\:

·•.

~·

.

'.

·~

,·' ~-

21-The Sunday Tlml!e · Sentinel, SUnday, Sept. 3,1972

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.·., For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds ·
WANT . AOS
INFORMATION
' • OEADI.INES

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KOSCOT KOSMETICS and YARD SALE. Labor Day, SeRI.
-'P.M.
Oay Before Publlcatlorl'. · wigs, more new product5 4, 9a .m. to 7p .m.; Norma n E ~
Monday ·oead!lne 9: a.m . ·
F
f
cancellation - Corrections
Will bt·accapted unli.l9a .m . for~
Day of PUblication

REGULATIONS

comi ng soon.
or
ree
demonstration, phone 9925113.

8-17-ttc

CARO OF THAN~$
&amp; OBITUARY

Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each addJtlonal word 2c .
BLIND f&gt;[JS
.
Addll lonal 25c Chafge · per
Adv-ertisement.
·

-In .Memory

IN MEMORY of Edward
Young, who departed this life
7 years ago, September 2.
Earth has lost its lOok of
gladness,
Heaven

•
'
..

•
~·
•

seems

to

us

more

bright,
Since t.he spirit ot our dear one.
Took Its happy , homeward
flight. .
And we long to cross that river,

of

Navada

Beaver . who passed away,

September 2, 1967 .
As years go by and time rolls

'· Each thing we do, each place we
go,
We seem to feel your presence
...

$0.

::
•.
•
•
:~

Sadly missed by Mother.
Sallie All i son , Husband,
Henry Beaver &amp; family,
Lowell an·d Bonnie Sue,
Brother, Paul Allison and
Mattie,
Sister
Audrey
Torrence .
9-J-ltc

ALLEY OOP

· ---------sadness,

:. Secret tears still flow;
;· What It meont to lose you,
~

(
.:
••

''HEll"
HEATING &amp;
'
COOLING

· Auto Sales

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

IN

PHONE 992-2156

The Dai~ Sentinel
CAMPIIS CLlTI'ER

ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th .
Last Chance to hop aboard the

PLAYHOUSE TOY train to
success. We're selling toys
and booking parties, having

But whom we could not save.
We mourn for you in silence,
No eyes can see us weep,
But many silent tears are shed,
While others are asleer..

lun and getting pa id. As a
demo I have no delivering, no
collection , and I do not need
any experience. I get free

training . Final deadl ine l or
hiring is Sept . 25. call me now.
don't wait. MargareJ Fortune.

;
Sadly rT)issed by wl e. Opal,
:· children and grandchildren .
.;
9-3-ltp
\ '"'
iN
_ M_E_M
_O
_R
_Y
_ o_t _R_o_
be_r_l -W-ood

949-5414 or Barbara Lambert,

446-3411 .
8-22-tfc

who passed .away September
5, 1971. Sadly missed by Lizzie
Wood and family .
9-3·1fc

Employment Wanted
~VAf[Al'iLE

immed iately,

General Carpenter Foreman.

IN LOVING memory of our

Phone 992-6675 .

W.

McGuire. Jr. who passed
away September lrd. four
years ago:
Nothing but memories as we

8-31 ·31p

For Rent

journey on,
Longing for a smile from a
loved one gone i

3

None know the depths of our

--,-----

6 ROOM furnished apartment.
carpeted, central heaL
utilities paid . Also tor working
men , 4 bedrooms, share living
room, kllchen, bath . Com pletely furnished, utilities
paid. Phone 992 ·3074 .
9·3-3tc

FURNISHED 3 room &amp; bath

KINGS ISLAND was great.
Thanks to all who voled for
me and made the lrlp
possible. - Jeff Warner .
9-3-llp

apartment , nice loca ti on,
private entrance ; phone 99'2 ·

3432 or 992·2780.
9-J.tfc

~r: avement .

Mrs. Evelyn Landers
9-3-ltc

;THE FAMILY of Steve Eibln
wish lo express their lhonks
tor all who helped in any way
al the time of death ol their
beloved wife, mother and
grandmother, Mary Eblin.
Special thanks to Rev. Cecil
· • Wise, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grate, the singers, Jennie
Pianist,
the
Grefe.
pallbearers, Ewing . Funeral
Home,
Holzer
Medical
Center. Or. Hands &amp; Or.
Prendergast, to all who sent
food and flowers ; and also for
the many prayers. May God
Bless each and every one.
9-3-1fp

~

phone 9nJ502,
phone 675·2372.

eveni ngs

pro xi mat ely

Racine , Ohio .

septic lank and a drilled well
and a dug well. Doyle Hudson,
Phone 992 ·5048.
8-31 -3tc

8-16-lfc
-:--------SEVERAL varieties of lop

quality, tree .r ipened , ca nning
peaches ; now available

1 acre

72 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
DEMO
SAVEl

992-5342

ESTATE AUCTION. Seplember
8 and 9&lt; 1972, at 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m ., ~riday, September 8th
sold. Saturday
The entire
stock
of
and
10 a.m
. until
Antiques and Furniture of the
Grace Vaughn Antique Shop
will be sold In the Rock
Springs Grange Hal l on the
Meigs Co. Fair Ground
located at Junction of State
Routes J3N and 124 out of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Cons isting in Part as follows :
Piano with 2 benches, library
lable, marble top colfee table,
china cu pboard, stands,
lamps (all

rooms,

w·w

carpet ing

lhroughout. furniture. •P·
pllance, drapes , laundry
room with Mayfag washer &amp;
dryer In Rio Grande. SS,500.
Ph . 245·5448 .
9- 1-3lc

'

FOR YOUR health's sake eat
organically grown tomatoes ;

B. Quisenberry has large
ones. IOc pound at the old Posl
Off ice building, Syracuse.
Ohio.
8-23-12tp

.

PUBLIC AUCTION
BEGINNING AT II :00 A.M.
Location : At M&amp;G ~rket on Stole Route 7, just obove
Meigs-Gollla County Line .

kinds), shades,

clocks,
pic tures,
rugs.
rockers,
buffets.
book
she lves .
coffee
mills,
silverware. bottles, ca rnlvol
glass. cut glass, pressed
glass, Insulators, stone jars,
kinds). chests, trunks, sewing
su pp lies, kitchen ware,

Allis-Chalmers, "B" Tractor (Starting bid of $600.00) ;
Walk-In Cooler JSiartlng bid of $600 .00) ; Books: Higher
Educational. Crafts &amp; Art. Some very old. Organ stools.
plano bench with severol old song books, dishes.
glassware, cerai'nlc5, vases. candle sticks. kitchenware,
old door bell, show case•. meat cooler. meat block, scoles,
grocery carts &amp; check -out countar. Beds, dressers, couch
&amp; choirs, dining tables &amp; choirs. bullet. dinette set•,
stands (all sires), end tables, radio, record player &amp;

baskets, desks , baby rcx:ker,
cherry baby cradle, cherry

records, typewriter &amp; stand, babv bed, mirrors, swivel
chair, small deep freete, garden tractor, &amp; kerosene

chesl. love seat . corner
shelves. glass dobr dish
cupboard, large collection of
good dishes and novelties of
aII kl nds. two re t r IgeraI ors, 2
ranges, kitchen cabinet,
sweepers, 2 typewriters , TV,
wringer type washer, drop·
leaf !able, porch glider and
many other articles . This Is

pump. Other Items not listed.
Terms of Sale: Cosh, or Positive 1.0 .
Not Responsible lor Acclot.nts or Theft.
w, A • DOTSON• (OWn or )
Phono , 304-77J.SS02
LLOYD DILLENGERIAuclloneerl
Rt. No. 1, Shlde, CJIIIo- Phone : 614·696-1269
Lunch Served

brass

bed , . dressers

(all

goodInteresting
merchondlse.
DO NOT
an
·collection
of ·
MISS THIS SAlE. Nancy
Collins, Administratrix.
Terms: Cash. Lunch Served .
Not Respons ible tor ac cidents . The Bradford Auc ·
lion Co.. A. C. Bradford.
Manager. C. C. Bradford.
Auctioneer . Phone 949-3821 or
3161.
9-3-ttc

:::::::::::::::::::::::=
(A one If mud, clip tills!

FOR SALE BY. OWNER
CHALET STYLE HOME IN SECLUDED RUSTIC

TEitfty

Cadillac . Oidsm•bile

Coronel Cust. 4 Dr . Sedan. Factory air . Low
owner. We want to sell this car.

Pomeroy

Rea I Estate For .Sale

8 ROOM house. balh, large lot,
gas and electric ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING
POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms. balh. gas forced air
furnace, lots of panel ing . Nice basement with 4 room ~ and
storage . Front and side porches. All for only $8500 .00

lorced air furnace. 2 loi s. Asking Only $16,000 .00.
REEDSVILLE
NEARLY NEW- 2 nice bedrooms , balh, base ment. All

5 ROOMS &amp; bath. 2 slory block

LeSabre 4 Dr. Sedan . Factory air. Ole owner .
Real sharp. 69 model. Priced to sell.

house ; gas forced air furnac e,
11.4 acre lot. Rt. 7 &amp; Old Chester

Rd. · $5 ,500 ; phone 992-3874.
8·29 tfc
OU T OF STATE . IDEAL 5ACR E RANCH . Lake Con chas, New Mexico. $2975. No
down. No Interest. ~25 per mo.
fo·r
119 mos
Vaca tio n
Paradise . Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conhas: Box
2001 DO, Alameda, California
9450 I.

$12,000 .00

8-29·30tp
Conc has, New Me)lico. $2,975.
No Down. No Interest. S25 mo.
for
119 mos . Vacation
Parad ise. Free Brochure.
Ranchos Lake Conchas : Box
200100, Alameda, California

111 ACRES
LEBANON TOWNSHIP- In new gas area with gas well .
Old sick room house, bad barn and outbuildings. Good
frog pond, and plenty of green brush . A real hide away at
the end of the fine.

HELEN L . TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

94501.
8-6-lOip
LOTS

ON

Wright

Street ,

Pomeroy ; phone 742 -5930.

8-29·12tc
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
985 -3529 .
6-11 -tfc

992-3 325

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1972
ACROSS

6-Loot (tleng)
10--Mark left by
~

wound

14-t(not&amp;
19--ElCtrn ·
21-Part of
hamen
22-Frte ticket

73-Strtk•s
75-N•w•p•per

eKecutlv•
77- Rul e1tat•
ma p
715-Piur:k
SO--Equals
81-Pie ce
82-Am•nds
84-Eagles' nests

86-0verlooked
87-FI&amp;I
89- Ponenlve

24-Comu on the
scent
26-Perlls

92-Carouut

28-Chut

95---Country of

29-Panpolnt
30-G!rl 'l name

32-Strip of
!tether

33-Timld
34-Wooden pin

pronoun

Atla
98--Capltal of

Letvla
99-Atplratlon
101-Centers
103-Dispetcll

35-0x of Ctlebea

104-Anser

37-Den

105-locnte

!19--Goddeu of
htallna:
40-Frult

41-Faluhoods
42--Gratultltt
44-Talkt Idly

46-Row
47-Parforma
41-Pa'rt of face

W-Fasclnett
&amp;2-oceen&amp;
63-French article
55-LevtnUnt •

ketcll
57-Printer's

106-Newt•
gatherlns
oraanl1a tlon
(ln lt.)
107-lndetlnlte
ertlcle
108-Short jacket
110--Free Of
111-Eerth a:oddess
11 2-Ntrrow, flat
boerd

end

louchlna
70-Neckplect
71--Girt's name

llo-Aicohollc:
bevtra11
132-trnltated

133-Word or
sorrow

31-Ventilatu

94-Sun aod

33-Reward

96-Do!phlnlike
cetacean

36--Sacred bull
38-Piant of

Uf-Anclent aalley

46-Aniry

150-Partalnlna to

outburst
47- Profound
49-0rlnks slowly
51-Parts of
skel•ton
52-Retail

coin

the stars
152-TelC
153-Gup for
breath
154-Ratlonel
156-Boa:s down
1$7-Mutlc.t
Instruments
158-Emmets
159-Ena:llsh
streetcar
160--Passaa:eway
DOWN
1-The ntrra
2-Short ruri
3-Sub]ect to
artreme heat
4-SIIkworm
5-Firn

7-Small lump

um

92-Th• urlal

148--0ctoroons

l!lroducts
145-0id French

115-Prepotltlon
117-Hebrew month

119-Cooled lave
12
rlbt

27-G runome
28-Loved one

mustard
fam ily
40--Evera:reen tree
41-Ciayey earth
43-Resorts
4 5-More rigid

143-Baker's

6--Qulall

Thou holdln1
m 1ure
oftloe
126--Vnsel
~Blemish ·
12?- Hott
66-Compue point
128-Mestlzo
61--A continent
6~bove

135-Graln (p l.)
137-Walk
139-Scottlsh c:ep
14Q-Lec
141-Turptmtlne
lna:redlent

113-A continent

62

(abbr.)

134-Footllke l!l&amp;rt

8-Wine cups
9-Reflntd
to-Lence
11-Cavll
12-Beut of
burden
13-Rupees {abbr.)

14- lsthmus
15-Natlve metal

16-ldolh:u
17---¢0\lltl
18-Sows
20-Trade for

money
23-Prophet
25-Strlke

MIDDLEPORT- LIKE
NEW
Very modern kitchen with
dining bar . Dining room, 2
bedrooms with closets. I iving
room 12 x 26 , has gas
firepla ce. Bath . Carpeted

throughout . Ca rport tor 2
cars. Large storage building.
Storm doors and windows.,

$12.500 .
ID EAL 5·ACRE RANCH . Lake

refrigerator-freez er . Full basement with garage. All
electric home. Asking 524,000.00

220ACRES
2 GOOD HOUSES-3 1arge barns, 3 cisterns. Some timber,
minerals . On a good blacktop road ,
CALL US FOR A LOOK AT THE INSIDE OF OUR
HOUSES. YOU MAY BE SURPRISED. WE HAVE A
KEYANDPICTUREATTHE OFFICE . LOOK FOR THE
RED, WHITE , AND BLUE SIGN FOR A GOOD BUY.

Rt . 1,

Monaco 4 door Hard Top . Full power equipment, air. one owner. only 26,000 miles ..

1969 Buick ................... }2195

electric home . Nice lot out in the country. Asking

VACANT LAND
50 ACRE&amp;-Hunting and ca mping land . Located in
Rutland Township, on a good road . Only ss.ooo.oo
READY FOR YOU
3 BEDROOM &amp;-2 baths, nice kitchen wilh stove and

Real Estate For Sale

Middleport. Phone 992 -2602.
8-27 -8tp

NEW HOME
THE TEK- 3 bedrooms , nice bath, kitchen has stove and
r efrigerator, with lots of cabi nets and double sink. Large
closets In each bedroom and at fr ont and back door s. Gas

1970 Dodge ................. }2695

. '' You' ll Like ('•1,.. Quality Way of,Doing_Business' '

Virgil R Teaford, Sr.. Broker

23-Calm

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9th

1971 Dodge ........... only $2695

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1- T,.mutous

1" " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

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.

KARR &amp; VANZANDT
GMAC Financing Available

establishments
53- Hold on
property

9~-Group

of five

97- Eayptlan
sklnk

100-A sta te (abbr.)
102-F'erformed
alone
105--Move to and
fro
109-Torpld
112- Skidded

113-Dutch
measure (pl.)

114-Most
competent
116-A state
118-0reg:s
120--Wom an's
undara:arment
121-coto rle$$

54-Heraldry:
erarted
56-Able

122-Si mplest

59-Short story
60-Fuel

suddenly
125--Relatu again

61-Cines
63-Unusutl
65--Cravats

126-Thlnly

67-Worm
70--1 nslde of
footb11U

72-Genus of
arasses

74- Symbol for
tellurium

75---Pronoun
77-Polnts of
hammer
79-Perlod of time

83--Grllk letter
85- Natlv•
American
86-Simplt
87-Demure

88-lretand
89-Two (Ramen
number)
· 90-Worthlus
91-Cuttleflah

SffiiNG NEAR MEIGS HIGH satOOL

$9,500 .00 .
MODERN ESTATE
Over3AC RES .1 story home.
3 bedrooms with closets .
Mod ern kitchen with dish .
washer and dining area.
Utility room . Bath . Own
water or Chester water .
Large garage . Cold room for
frui ts and deep freeze. Fruit
trees, berr ies, grapes, etc.
Pony pen, Chicken house.

GREAT FOR JU ST $18,900.
WE HAVF OTHER
PROPERTIES.
CAL L TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-22S9
If no answer 992-2568

10 room

house l

350 V-8 engine, Turbo Hydramatic, power steer ing . Nova
Rally equipment, interior group, bumper guard vinyl
roof, golden brown finish.
'

1971 Chevrolet BelAir 4 Door ..... $3095
Beige finish, vinyl top, v i nyl i nterior , factory air con.
dltioned, w -w tires, like new, 327 V-8 engine, power
steering, Turbo Hydramatic, rad io &amp; man y other extras.
See this now.

1970 Monte Ca~o ................... $2895
locall owner with le ss than 21,000 miles, factory air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua body , blk . knit interior , radio, Turbo
Hydramat ic power steering, &amp; disc brakes, white-wall
fires, like new. A nicy luxury car.

1970 Camara H.T. ................... $2295
Local owned &amp; less than 24,000 m iles . Green finish, green
vinyl bucket seats with console, 350 v .s en gine, 4 speed
trans., power steering , rear air reflector, radio, like new
w-w tlres, no teenage driver. Sharp, man, sharp.

1967 Buick only ............ $1595

1971 Ford Pinto 2 Dr•. ~......... ..'1795

Elec. 225 4 Dr. H. T. Full power and air. Real
nice. 67 model.

Local 1 owner car, green finish, clean interior , good tires,
2000cc engine. radio, 4-speed trans.

1969 Ford ...................... $1595
F-L 500 Wagon. Auto. Small VB. Real nice
wagon . Local owner.

1965 Buick ...................... $695
Wildcat. All white. Runs real good . Make
some one a real nice car for the price.

·-------------------~
This Week Special
I

II
I
I
I

I

1969 lnl 1h Ton Pickup
48,921 miles on it. This Week

only '1395

I
I
I

~-------------------J
We Service What We Sell

Our Word Is Our Bond
Open Evenings Till7 p. m. &amp; Sat. Tills P.M.
Service Till 12 Noon on Sat.

8

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
lfi!!IIIP!!!I

~

992-217 4

auick

PQI)tiac •

New 1972 Closeouts!

Chevrolet Brookwood 2 Seat Sl Wagon
Dark Blue with alack vinyl interior. roof drip mldg., body
side mldg ., L 78x15 WW tires, P. B., Radio, Luggage
Carrier, 350, V-8 engine, turbo hydramatic, P. Steering
and Brakes.

. Retail $4210.40 - Closeout $3598.00

NEW '72 CHEV. 1 TON CHASSIS
60" cab to axle. Color whlfe .red. 350 V-8 engine. H. duty
frt . &amp; r. shocks, West Coast mirrors, H. duty frt. springs,
h. duty rear &amp; au)liliary springs, power steering, 750x16 ·8
ply frt. &amp; rear duals, H .D .. rad iator gauges. radio, custom
deluxe cab.

Retail $4106.76 - Closeout $3398.00

NEW 6 CYL Vz TON 8' PICKUP
Mirrors, Booster brakes, H.O. R springs, Step bumper .

'72 Closeout $2594

-. &amp;':Other New 1972

Business Services

Chevrolet Pass. Cars In Stock

NEW HOMES

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

3 BEDROOMS

Your Chevy Dealer
Open Eves. Til8

- 992 -2126

2 New Homes. all electric. 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, with lake frontage;
at Five Points area .

scattered
127-E&amp;yptllln

dancing girl
131-Recollect
132- Essance
133-Goals
134-Nulsances
136-Piaces
138-Pockttbook
14D-Sm•ller
amount
141- Leett
142-Approllch
144-Brlslle
14?-Crlm so n
148-Male
149--Nahoor sheep

151-Burma
tribesman

153-Partnt
(colloq,)
~55-Printer's

mea&amp;ul'l

PRICE

$500 DOWN buys 4 rooms, bath,
close to deep mine ; 80ft . lot
on har d road ; M&amp;G Food

Markel , Rt. 7, 3 mi. Soulh.
Middleport ; also I railer space
for rent.

9-3-3tp

roofing,

CONSTRUCTION ,
porch

repair

and

electrical ; phone 742-4286.
8-16-301c

EARTH MOVING

INTERIOR , exterior paint ing,
Dozer &amp; End lo1der work,

remodeling , build ing . Contact
Ernest Deeter, Bashan .

8-31 -61c

ponds,
f'rom the largesl
Bulldozer Radiator
Smallest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

basement,

land·

scaping. We have 2 size
dozers~ 2 size loadtrs. Work

POMEROY - House. 6 rooms &amp; SEPTIC lanks cleaned. Miller
done by hour or contract .
bath, 2 large porches, large
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Pn'
Free Estimates. We also
lol, newly painted ; phone 992 662-3035.
haul lilt dirt, top soil. Dump
3394.
2-12-tfc
trucks and low-boy for hire.
9-3-3tc
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
BACKHOE AND DOZER woro :
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
5 ROOM house, bath. Iron!
Septic tanks Installed. GeorQe
alter 7 p.m. or phone 992 porch , full basement, two lots .
LBi11l Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
5232.
S. D. Buskirk. Sr .. 341 Page
Pomerov
4-l5· iiC Ph .. 991 -2174
St ., Middleporl. Ohio. ,
N-:G:--cM
-:-:a cc-h-:i-ne
- s' e_r_v1ce '
' 9-3-3tp "s;:E:-:W:-:1:-:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
clean, oil, adiust, $399, In you; RE!iSONABLE rate•. Ph. 446- OOZE R and back hoe work.
ponds and septic tanks, dl thome; phone 992-5331.
4782. Galii!'Oiis. John Russell,
chlng service; top soli, fill
8-11 -30tc
Owner &amp; Operator.
~
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex ·
5-12-lfc
cavafing. Phone 992-5367,
AUTOMOBIL~ msurance been
Dick Karr, Jr .
cancelled?
Lost
your c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
9-1-tlc
operator's license? Call 992·
Complete Service
2966.
Phone949·3821
6-15-tfc
Racine', Ohio
·s·EE US FOR: Awnings. storm
'Crltt Bradford
·doors and windows. drp'orts,
marquees, ~lumlnum 'siding
and railing . 'A, Jacob, sales
representative . . For tree:
estimates, ··phone Charie 91
Lisle, Syrocuse, V. V
Johnson a~d Son, Inc. '
3·2-tft

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

-------

-- - -

.,---,.--~--

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY

•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992·2550

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
On Most American Cars

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 Til S
Monday lhru Saturday

'06 E. M1in, Pomerov,O.

LOOK
BUY A 1972 SKYLARK

macnlne; 23'' fan; e ectrl&lt;: heater ; wool rugs; porch swing;

FOR ONLY

~31

Bln~ulars .

tot,;::;:.•~

Pomeroy

Business Services

PH. 992-2571
OR 992-3975

misc._pots. pans&amp; dishes; foldh)g cot; misc. cha1rs.
GUNS: Ithaca 20 Jll!. pumJ&gt;, less than one box of shells has
been shot; Winchester model 255-22 mogum with SC!lfle; HI
Standard 22 auto. pistol; 12. ga. single barrel: 7x50 power

rockers ; chairs; stone ·

•11

Business Services

Kenmore gas range; 3-plece bedrOQm suite; metal war -

RCA VlctrQia with
&amp; Jimmy Rodgers;
lamps; kraut cutter;

~

4-5-tfp

------

drol&gt;es; beds; dressers ; night stands; living room suite;
matchlngrocker&amp; r~cliner i coffee table; end tables;.t~mps ;
Oiymplc&gt;tereo AM· FM raolowlth 18 s~akers ; 21" MOTorola
T. V ·i record cabinet[· clock radio ; New Home electric sewing

ANTIQUES OR
records.
of
Mantel

..'l795

.rots.
949-4313.
bath, Phone
basement,
garage, two • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Sept, 9, 1972
10:JOA.M.
Thechatt~ls oft be estateolthe lale Elbert Taylor will be sold
at the reSidence locat_ed on. S.R. 611 approx. 1 mile west of
U.S. Route 33 at Darwm~Oh10 . Wttchlorulesi.ans
TRACTOR &amp; EOUIPMt:NT: M.F. 135 qas will\ No. 7~ belly
mount mower. This tractor Is In excellent condill!'." with less
than6Sactual hours. Wot~sooa setaratelv 3 p 12" ~erg
olow ; 3 ot. Ford s~ooo ;
rborn lsk ; _ruhh.r tire trailer
TOOLS &amp; MISC.: Slmplicl y Rota. uf; Grinder; Vise; Pipe
vise; Larae anvil ; Soool rope ; Drill pre$S( e•t. loddors;
wnee1 Darrow ; soctceT' sets lf2. ~. 'I•, complere; hahCI tools ;
mise·. l'ing yangs.
HOUSEHOlD: 1&gt;0" round .drop.leaf_plne table with 4 chairs ; ·
Copper-tone Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer; Utility cabinets ;

u ••••

A 1 owner sharp car, yellow fi nish with bla ck accen ting ,
blk . top, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering .
radio, new w·w tires.

OPIL

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

TIHICKS

1968 Camara Convertible ••

123-Brnk

129-Grut bustard

69-Near

10 ACRES
Must sel l at once. 3
bedrooms W. closets, Bath,
Dining, Basement . Porches.
01 blacktop road . Chester
water. B. G. forced air
fu rnace. 20 minutes out .

RACINE -

Outstanding One-&amp;ner Trade-Ins
1972 Nova 2.Dr...................... $2895

ONLY 5-1972 OLDSMOBILES
REMAINING AT SALE PRICES

8-6-30tc

Sale' Prices!!

•

fabulous Selectioa-lodc lolto11 Prktsl

Firemlst green, green vinyl top, green i nter ior, lull
power equipment, Climate Control air condit ioning ,
less than 2.000 miles .

with

110 Mechanic Street

K

Of Course You Can"

through early September; CONVENIENT but secluded
building lots al Rock Springs,
Bob'~ Market, Mason, W. Va .•
close to High School &amp; Fair
above the Pomeroy -Mason
Ground
; call or see Bil l Witte,
Bridge; phone 773-5308 .
992-2789
after 5 p.m. week·
8-15-ttc
days .

o:;R:ea-:-1-;:E-:sta-:-t-e ""
Fo-r -;:Sa71e-

Out They GO

USED CARS

CADILLAC,

8-30-lfc
BOBWHITE Qua ils. Phone 985·
3972. John Thomas, Rt . 2. Box 8 ROOM, 2 story br ick house,
98, Leon , W. Va .
. basement, barn &amp; out 9-J.6tc
buildings .- 1 to 3 acres as
needed ; on Ohio Power
COAL Limestone, Excelsior . electric; on Main Street, RutSalt Work s. E. Main St .•
land ; phone 742-4691 alter 5
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
p.m.
4-12.tfc
9-1-6fc
.POODL'E puppies, Silver To)i, ONE ACRE and old house in
Park view Kennels, Phone 992 Pomeroy . Phone 992-6675.
5443 .
B·31 -3fp
8-13-lfc . - - - - - - -- ;:;:
· ;:-;:~·7,··:::--c--c--TWO BUILDING Lots In
CANNING
tomatoes
and
Harrisonville . One Is apmangoes . Geraldine Cleland,

-··"
ii

"OWN A

4 ROOMS &amp; bat~ furnished REDUCED to sell , reglstereci'
apartmenl. 114 Mulberry
Toy Fox Terrier puppies,
Ave ., Pomerov . references ;
Healthy . have had shots, S25
phone 992-6698.
each . Papers furnished.
9-3-tfc
Phone 7 '2·5625 .
8-29·6IC

SPECIAL appreciation and
thanks to all the neighbors
and friends for flowers, food,
cards and kindness after the
recent dealh of my son Orville
Landers ;
Rev.
William
Knittel and Sister Dugan,
Emergency Squad, Mid·
dleporl and Pomeroy Pollee
and all was appreciated
, .
~ \..• ._d_urlng
the
lime
of

cords and gifts. It was all
deeply appreciated.
Lillie Dyke
9-3· 11c

un ·

8-10-tfc

Card c! Thanks

grandchildren . for flowers,

aparlment ,
1

Sadly missed by Mother,
Father, Sisters and Brothers,
Marvin W. McGuire, Sr. and
family.
9-3-ltc

·1 WOULD like to thank my
friends and neighbors for the
cards I received while a
patient In Pleasant Valley
Hospital; the Busy Bee Class
• of the First Baptls Church for
... flowen ; my children and

ROOM

furn ished, 408 Spri ng Ave.,
Pomeroy.

deep regret,
But we remember· when others
forget .

:

ol Sl.50 per week or pay
$101.47 ; phone 992-5331.
8-29-ffc

Hartford, W. Va.

Upon a precious grave.

Marvin

cabinet ; take over payments

Clifton and

. Beneath lies one we dearly
loved,

son.

Repossessed, looks like new ;

beaulilui hand rubbed Walnut

husband, father and grandfather, Henry Capehart, who
passed away four years ago,

dear

p

LEASANT . - 6 room
house. P 1 Paths, recreation
room, new buiU -in kitchen,
must se lL leaving town . Dav~

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

·•

~ IN • LOVING memory 'of our

:
•
:
•

Mobile Homes For Sale

CARRIERS
WANTED

No one will ever know.
When days are dark and dreary,
And everything goes wrong ,
We seem to hear you whisper,
Cheer up and Carry on .
Each time we see your picture,
You seem to smile and say,

• September 3, 1968.
: Softly the stars are shining.

.

Ox35 HOUSE . trailer ; country 40" WHITE electric range, good ALLIS-C HALMERS C tractor
with •Ide mower ; Oscar
condition . S50; 238 South
location; phone 992-3954.
everything half -price ,to
Weber. State Route 2-48 .
·
9-1-3tc
Second Ave .• Middleport.
Senior Citizens . The Beauty
H31p
.
9.3-:Jfc
Spot. Phone ,992 -2840 .
3 AND 4 ROOM furnfshed a'rll!'
8-31 ·31c
unfurPIIShed
apartments. . SIZE 7, while buc~ band ' shoe, STEREO tape player for car •
ohone 992-SI34.
• · used 1 marching season; call
$25 ; call 992·5786.
9-1-3fc
4-f2.ftc, 985-3978 afler 4 p.m.
9·J.4tp
c.N~E"-W~~M~OuB~ITLEE~h"-o=m~e;- In ·
5-15" CHEVY wheels, 2'11"
COURT Street Cab, · Pomeroy .
Syracuse. completely fur· STOK ERMATIC stove, side
opening : 2-15" Ford wheels.
will be closed on Labor Day.
nlshed, air -conditioning In
Window,
2¥1'' opening; 1·16" Ford
Sept. 4th and w iII be open tor
mount
Ford
mowing
bedroom. Phonem-2441 after
wheel. 3'18" oPening; 1-lA"
Air Conditioners
machine. both In good con business . Tuesday . Sept. 5th .
5 p.m.
Ford wheel; 2""" opening ; 29-1;21p
dillon ; phone 742-4626 .
8-31 -tfc
Hot Water Heaters
16" Chry'sler wheels , 3'12''
.
9-3-:Jfp
opening; SJ a piece; phone
. Plumbing
742 -4691 after 5 p.m.
DO
YOURSELF
A
FAVOR
Electrical Work
9-1-31c
select. clean used · fu"rniture ,
1967 2 door Hardtop Olds Delta
guaranteed appliances at the
Custom 88. phone 949-2381.
LOWEST prices In the area at TWIN Needle Sewing Machine
9-3-3tc
1972 model In walnut stand •
KUHL'S B'ARGAIN CEN All features built In to make
TER, "at caution tight", Rt .
fancy designs and do stretch
7, Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
sewing. Also buttonholes,
Closed Mondays;' phone 667ADD· A-ROOMS BY VEMCO 3858 .
.
blind hems etc. $43.35 cash
992-2448
ADD . ROOM(S) TO YOUR
price or terms available,.
9-3-6tc
Pomeroy, 0 .
MOBILE
I'IOME
FOR
. Phone 992-5641.
BORN., DEN. OFFICE. 16 LEGHORN hens, phone 9499-Htc
LILA RIDENOUR will be
STD. PLANS . SAVE TIME .
4781.
. operating Grace's Beauty
sss .
9-J-:Jfp VACUUM Cleaner . Electro
Shop. starting Sept. 6th. Open
9-3- ltc
Hyg Jene New Demonstrator
for business as usual.
2·WHEEL utility Scout Trailer,
has all cleaning attachments
9-3-2tc 1970 60&lt;12 lotal electric mobile
plus the new Electro Suds lor
4'h'x6' with good tlreS i spare
home, take over payments ;
,tire mounted . 1-large storage
shampooing carpet. Only
phone 985-3378.
bin with hinged cover · $70 ;
$27.50 cash price or terms
9-3-31p
available . Phone m -5641.
8'x8' umbrella tent with In·
9-I-6ft
terior telescoping poles; 6 foot
OLD Furniture, . oak tobles. ··
.
. •
organs, dishes, clocks, brass CASij paid tor ali ma~es ana
height Inside; needs minor
beds, or complete households.
models of mobile homes;. repairs and door screen·tng. CHRYSLER BOAT DEALER. 1
Write M .
Miller, Rt . 4,
Ph011e area code 614-4f.l·9531. . Completely waterproofed ·
T•rry Bass Fishing Boat with
S25; call 992-5815 afler 5 p.m.
20 h. Mercury, w-traller; 1
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call m -6271.
.
4-13·tt&lt;
6-28- tfc '
. .
,
9-3-lfc
Monarch Fishing Bootwllh,20
--------.FOR THE BESTdealln a new
h. Mercury , w -traller ; 1
or used mobile home, try SGUNS and 1.72 acre lot. Phone
Cherokee Fishing Boot with
Kanauga Mobile Home Sajes,
742-3656.
40 h. Johnson, w-fralleri yolJr
Kanauga. Ohio.
ATTENTION LADIES- Sell
9-3·21p
pick for $1,000: also 1972 GMC
7-16-JOtc
Toys &amp; Gills now thru
Sr.rint pickup, l~tomafic, W·
December with lhe oldest Toy
MAYTAG washer &amp; dryer .
a r, $4,250 ; 1972 lnte•natlonal
Party Plan in the Country.
white; green lounge chair;
pickup, $2,650; 1971 Dodge
Hig hes t commissions, No
excellenl condition; phone
pickup, S2,350 ; 1970 Ford
•
Air
Conditioners
after 5 p.m . 992·3442.
Cash Outlay. Call or write
Falrlane SOO, w -alr, $1,950 ;
•Awnings
"Santa 's Partles", Av on Ct.
9-3-5tc
1969 Cadillac DeVIlle Sedan,
06001. Tel. I (203) 673-3455.
loaded. $3,450; 1971 ln ·• Underpinni~g
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
H&amp;Ndayold or starled Leghorn
ternallonal pickup, like new,
pullets . Both floor or cage
9·1-ttc 'c omplete mobile homel
$2,350; 19-48 Chevrolet pickup,
grown available. Poultry
like new. S1,050 ; Longfellow
serv.i ce - plus gigantic
REFINED woman in need ol 'display
&amp; automation.
Motors , 2 mi. S., Ravenswood
of mobile homes , , housing
home to l ive in and care for
Modern Poultry. 399 W. Moin,
on Rt. 2; phone (304) 273-3594.
invalid woman. Nursing always available at ...
Pomeroy , 992-2164.
9-1-2tc
experience not necessary .
9-3-ltc
MILLER
Salary negotiable. Wr ite E.
MOBILE HOME tor sale
Donaldson. 5440 Phea sa nt
LeBLANC clarinet, B flat, very 1969 SCHULT Custom mobile
MOBILE HOMES
Drive, Orient, Ohio 43146 .
good condition; phone 667home. 60xl2, double expando.
9-1-2tc
3511 or 667-3400.
Early American Decor, new
1220 Washington Blvd.
8-29-61c
423-7521
BELPRE, 0 .
carpet, awning and un ·
HAVE immediate opening for
derplnnlng ; phone 992-3712.
pari time office girl; " typlng
KENNEBEC potatoes, SS for
9-1-6tc
essentiaL shorthand helpful
100 Ib . ;see John Pape. Ra cine 7::7'::-:;-::-;--::--.-:-::::-::=---;:;
but not requ ired ; Write Box
or phone 949-3025.
COLONIAL style stereo. AM729-A, c-o The Dally Sentinel. 2 MINIATURE poodles , S25
FM radio, 4 speakers • .t speed
8·29·61c
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, giv ing
each. Phone 992-7230.
record chonger. Balance
full resume with referen ces,
S78.52. Use our budget terms .
8-31 -Jtc 1965 HARLEY Davidson 74,
previous employment, and
Phone 985·4132.
Call 992-7085.
8-30-6tc
training .
9-1·6fc
NEW DELUXE
ZIG -ZAG
9-3-tfc
sewi ng
machine .
This
Fil rpa trIck Or· _
M_O_D_E:-:R
:-:N-:--:-W
- a-1-nu-:t- s-:t-er-e-o.--:-:
AMmachine makes buttonholes , AP P L E S,
chards , State Route 689 .
FM radio. features ~ speed
darns and embroideries ; all
wi lhout attachments ; phone
Phone Wilkesv ille 669-3785.
changer, 4Spaakers. separate
992-5331 .
8-30-lfc controls . Balance $68.41. Use
our budgel lerms . Coil m 8-29-tlc
ALL electric mobile home wi th
7085 .
add·on, enclosed porch, 7
8
TRACK
STEREO
9-1-6fc

.; Don't cry. I'm only sleeping,
We will meet again some day.
• Sadly missed by wife,
• children and grandchildren.
9-J•llp
'•
•
:

For.Sale

For Sale

'. IN MEMORY of our father,
•; grandfather and husband.
.:
Carl Walton who departed
this life. September 4, 1910.
Our hearts still ache with
::

..

SPECIAL for t~e Older Girl
Now lhru . Septe mber 15,

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

PT

etc., excellen t condition ..
Phone 985·3842 before 8: 30
a .m . and after 9 p.m.
9_3_61 P

Help Wanted

Sadly missed by wile. Katie
and family .
9-3-lfp
MEMORY

For Rent

o.

Long to rest upon that shore,
There to see, and know, and
love him,
With the Savior, evermore.

IN

Notice

F.;r Sale

1970 DELTA Roya le, power
steering, brakes, air, tape,

Wanted To Buy

.,
on,
1
•. It seems your near, altho your
~
gone ,

:•
•:
••

Gravely outfit, brass bells,

N~lice

.'

ZI-TbeSundayTime.s -Sentlnei;Swtday,Sept3,1972

'

"'\8 :30 a .m.,. tq S: OO.p.m, Daily,
011
a :30 a . m. lo 12 :00 Noorl
Saturday .

'•

Hysell
residence ,
near
Hospital on County Road No.
76; antiques and misc. items ;

. The Publisher reserves the
etc.
rloht to edit or retect any ad,
9-1-21p
deemed
objectional.
The REWARD, for shopping at
publisher wllf not be responsible, Showalter's Wet Pet Shop, P
- -IA
_ N_
O_ &amp;_o_r_g-a n-,-le-ss_o_n_s-;by
for more than one · incorrect
CheSter, Ohio: 10 per cent of
graduate
of
Cincinnati
Insertion . R-ATES
·
your total purchase may be
Conservatory of Music with 23
tFor wan' Ad Service
applied to the purchase of any
years teaching e)lperience;
5 cents per Word one insertion
ceramic items .
ph one 992·3825 .
Minimum Charge 7Sc *
S-2-JOtp
8-23-12tc
12 cents per word thrn .
consecutive lnse-rtibri's .
18 cents per ' word sfX con·
secutlve Insertions. 1
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads palct w ithin 10 days .

OFFICE HOITR\, &amp;

I,

Notice

Notice

'

00

NEVER AGAIN WILL YOU BUY A NEW
SKYLARK FOR SUCH A LOW, LOW PRICE.

3 bedroom, 2 bath, fully carpeted, al •• .
electric, with wood burning fireplace,
spring water, set on nearly.ln acre of
large trees. $25,000 firm, adjoining lot
available. Shown by appointment only.
. Phone 992-3183.

Open Evenin.g s Ti117 p.m. &amp; Sat. TillS P.M. Service Till12 Noon on Sat.

WMP0/1390~
GN YOUR DIAL

••
\•

:$Mt1H NELSON MOTORS, INC.
81iic;k

IIAII

992·2174
PatltiiC .

sr.. POIIEIOY, OHIO
'

8
,

�'

'

.

'

• • •,.

ftl

•

•

•

'

.,

:!6- The~Tlmei-Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. 3,1972

In Memory

Notice

IN LOVING memory of James PORCH SALE Sept . 5. 6, 7, at
F. · Day who passed • away
Mrs. Joe Camden's In Bidwell
Sepl. 3. 1969.
on Rt . 554. Extra nice items.
206-3
Just a Prayer from us who
loved you.
SEVERAL varieties of lop
Precious. kind and true;
Just to say how much we miss

quality tree ripened canning
peaches, now avaHable thru

you

ear ly

you .
You couldn't say good·byeto us.

Bob's

Phone 773-5308.

Perhaps 'twas just as well ;

We . neVer could have said
goodbye.
To the one we loved so well .

II was a sudden endi ng,

Too sudden to forget;
And we who loved you dearly,
Are the ones who can't forget .
Your memory is our keepsake ,
With which we'll never part;

God has you in his keeping

September .

Market, Mason, just above
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

Because we thought the world of

192-tl

DAY t!ARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
licensed .loy Sta le of Ohio, l'h
miles west of new hospita L
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446·

IJJ~

srRour·

25 Locust St,

RE-ALTY

Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 4%-2674

•World's Largest

REALTY
·

Real Estate Foi Sale

Lucille Brannon

Eve. 446-1226

lHE. LEADER SINCE 1900 iN '
SERVING THE NATION'S
u .8oo
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
2 BR &amp; bath. W·W carpel in LR.
Ph. 4%·0008
all furniture included, lot
lOO'xlOO', in city.

FARMS
3657 . Day care that says " we
11 0,000.
ONE of Gallla Co.'s batter
care." ·· Madg e Ha Uidren. 2 BR cottage &amp; outbuildings. 16
farm s. 146 A., mostly new
Owner; Loredllh &amp; John
fences, 2 barns,· ~llo, pond,
acres, good building lots.
Hauldren, Operators.

We have you In our heart.

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

$13,000
3 BR one floor plan, large
garage, level loi in city.

creek, fronts on 2 rds., 1,352

r---.---- - ---r

MASSIE

The WISEMAN
Ag'ency

Realty, 32 State St
. Tel. 446-199,

REALTOR

CHESHIRE - Split-Level. 8 yr.
old, ·5 rms ., large bath. llv.
rm ., 18'x24' with F.P.. all
carpet, gas fur . 2 car garage

Price $31,500.

-

Cheap

housing, real ni ce. 3 bd. rm .•
large li v. rm ., nice bath ,

copper plumbing. all life
cei linq, oil fur ., 2 car garage.
Large shaded. lot. Walk to
school. Only S12,500.

lb. fob. base, 44 A. corn ~se,
25 A. corn goes wi th sale,
modern home with full NEAR Clay Sthool - Extra
basement.
S!S.OOO
nice, 3 bdrm .• new carpet in
panel ing, cement work, 3 BR. new ranch sty le just v..
liv. rm .. din . area, and hal l. It
1lS A. - Close to Rio, lots of
IN MEMORY of Henry Allison
barbecue. patios. or garage, '
mi le to Tycoon Lake, 2Jt..
has
new. Aerobic Septi c tank,
bottom
land
and
lots
of
farm
who lefl us one year ago
ca rport. etc.? You name it,
acres good land.
full
base., with pa rt ial
today , Sept. 3.
equipment.
we'll do it. Reasonabl e rates .
flni!hed rec . rm ., attached
Oh, how we miss you.
Call 446-0126 or 446-1753.
$15,000
Words can never tell,
119-11 4 BR one floor plan, w-w carpet 163 A. - Beef. hog and grain gar. and located on 112 A.
shaded lot. Price reduced for
But we all plan to meel you
farm .
=-:-:-:---:----in 5 rooms. aft. garage, 2
quick sale.
For with you all things are wel l . ROOF lN G and guller work.
outbu ildings, 111.. acre lost.
2'1 A. - State Route 160, vacant
Sadly missed by wife &amp;
Wi ll iam Mitchell, 388-8507.
CHESHIRE - 5 rm . frame ,
$8.700.
chi ldren .
67-11
$14,200
H.W. floors, attach gar., fuel
208-1
2 BR one floor plan, forced air 30 A. - Vinton area, like new
oi l fur ., storm doors and
TOO L t sharpening
saws,
windows, aluminum si ding, ·
oil furnace, 1 car garage, 39
mobile home.
scissors and shears, mower
acres
.
nice shrubbery and level lot.
Card of Thanks
114·11
wife, -:c::-:::::-:--:---chlldren &amp; grandchild~en .
o)OESl'our home need pa inting,.
208-1 sidi ng, roofing, remode ling,
Sad ly

missed

by

I WOULD like to take this opportunity to thank all my

blades, drill bits, barber
clippers, a nd cutle ry. Sharp
~h op. afley rear 147 Second

Ave.
fr iends and relati ... es for the
139·11
lovely cards I received on my
birthday . Your kindness wi ll
never be forgotten. Mrs . TV Service black and wh ite or
George (Arlena) Keith . color. Color includes cleaning
tuner.
ad jus ti ng
color,
Grover City. Ohio.
208·1 demagnE-tizing pictu re- tube.
Gal l ia Refrigerat ion, 611

- - -_....,.--

Thi rd. 446 -4066.
206-3

Wanted To Do

MOTOR CYCLE. Pleasure
Trai l. Open s Saturday &amp;
roof ing ,
Sunday. Sa turday 1 till dusk,

REMODELING, building new

rooms , ce ment,
siding, furnace ins. J. H.

Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.

68-ff

Sunday I til l 6 p.m . Leonard
Newberry Fa rm, Hannan
Trace Rd., between Patriot &amp;

Rl. 775. Adm . $1.00. Trails for
pre;li ce nsed cyclists an d

NOTICE

begmners .

PR IVATE guitar instructions, - - - - - - - - - - 1972, 1973. enrollment now
being accepted . Please call RA~PH'S Ca rpel &amp; Upholstery
between 1 and 5 p. m. onl y 446Clea ning Service.
Free
0706.
esti mates. Ph. 446-02'14. Ralph
206·6 _...A._Dayls, owner .
9-ff
~:-----

PR IVATE piano instructions, GLASS for all needs . Home
1972, 1973 enrollmen t now

ser vice and insurance claims.
Russ's Glass Serv ice, 704 Pine

being accepted. Please cal l
between 1 and 5 p. m. only 446·
0706.
206·6

have brought home the
spade contract.
South couldn't do anything
except follow to the firs t
heart. He didn 't have to ruff
the second one, and if he
had just discarded a low
diamond everything would
have been easy from · then

NORTII

2
• AI074
• Q4
AI0543
.7 2
WEST
EAST
• 5
• Void
. • AK95
.108763 2
~+J972
+KQ
.AJ43
.QI0986

+

on.

(D)

• J

+86

•Ks
East- West vulnerable

4.

East South

Pac;s Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

bu ilt in

laundry room, garage.

l ot, like new , comp l etely
furni shed, l ip out rm. , central

$21,500.

carpet throughou t,
double
carpot,
storage
W·W

bui ld ing. large lot.
S24,500
3 BR, 2 bath, ranch sty le, family
room , ca rport and stor age.

126.900
3 BR . 1'12 tile bath , all brick
rancher. garage. covered
patio, conc rete dr ive and
street.

$42,000
96 ACRES on Rl . 7, all electric
brick ranch sty le, wb
f ireplace in large fami ly
room , carpeted throughout ,
pa tio ,
garag e,
quick
possession .

Help Wanted

$MONEY$

slope, 5 room house with bath,
plenty wa ter , rooms are

refr igerator, air cond., all
drapes and curtains, $14,500 .

paneled with ti le ceilings.
Priced at $11,600 and included

built -in

VINTON

kitchen

-

with

Completely

the washer, dryer , and
cooks tove and heating stove.

remodeled 2 stor y home with

basement. wil l sell or trade. NEAR K.C. H. SC.-Colon ial, 2
story, 8 big rms., base ., 3

RIO GRANDE - Lovely 3 yr.
baths. 3 A. $50,000.
old brick priced to sell. $21 ,000
includes 6 rms .• HW floors , PATRIOT 2 story, older
built.in kitchen , air cond . and
drapes.

home. sound, water fine , 2 A.

fl at lot ; price $13,000.

NEW LI ST IN G - CIT Y - KERR - All brick, HW and
carpet firs., 7 rm s. plus full
Lovely 2 BR home on a flat
base .. 1 A. lot. II has 3 baths
shady lot. Can be bought
and 2 ca r garage.
reduced to $35 ,000.

furni shed or unfurn ished .

MIDDLEPORT

Pr ice

PR ice

reduced. Love ly 12 rm . brick ST. RT 2H! - New, all elec ., S
on a corner lot . Could be used
rms ., 2 car gar ., vinyl Sid . on
as 2 3 or 4 apartments.
·.7 A. lot . $18.000.

POMEROY - Remodeled older BABY FARM - Located on
home . Now being rented for
Carter Rd ., 5 A. , 2 story
$185 per month . Low down
payment on $17 ,500 .

house, 6 rms. , bath, laun dry,
paneling &amp; carpet . It has
cellar, chicken house, storage

MILLS VILLAGE - Im mediate

bldg . and garage. Plenty good

occupancy, love ly 1 story
water . Price $14.900.
home with fu ll basement,
formal dining room, family GREEN ACRES Price
room, 2 WB fireplace s,
reduced on th is beauty, 4 yr.
IOOx-300 rot.
old ranch, H.W. floors
beauti ful kitchen, 3 Bd. rms.:
PRICE
J"ced to s1 4,500! 2
1111 baths . This house ls like

story . S.f}, ''ers 4 BR, large
forma l '::"(-(} room . full

new. Only $22.500,
FAR"1S

basements.
.s of shade 75 A. modern 5 rm . home, 5
trees . Route 141.
barns, 15 A. development

land. one of Galli a Co.'s best.
BELIEVE it or not! 4rms. bath 160 A. on St. Rl. 325, 100 A.
and basement in city for less tractor land. good bldgs. and
than $5,000. Make us an offer .

Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manag er

plenty water .
204 A. near Lecta. lots of tim .
ber , 7 rm . house, 2 barns and

SELLI NG at th e rate of 2 or J
properties each week makes
H difficult to keep enough
listings. If vou want yours
so ld . call th e Wiseman
Agency .

Apartment House
3 UNITS {a ll rented) on a fu l l
ci ty lot in 600 bloc k of Second
Ave , P rice· it yourself and if
you get close to S20,000, it's
all yours

New Listing

JJ&amp;lWIDibrn®""" ~-MJ .-4 ,_.
hy U E Nt't! AJ'INOLO .mel BOA LE F

Unocramble theoe four Jumbleo,
one letter In each square, to
form four ordinary worda.

brand toys for PLAYHOUSE .

MOVING
TO
EUROPE .
Here 's your
chance at a rear ni ce 3
bedroom home located on a
large flat tot at edge of town .
In clud ing large living and
dining room , nice kitchen
(range , refrlg,, washer and
dryer stay s), fu ll basemen t,
central air and garage. Lor is
ex tra ni ce. Cou ld be co m.
merciel .

Free suppl ies, no col lecting .
Check the rest then work tor

(move tomorrow) . Just like
new throughou t, wall to wall
carpet , 2 baths. beautiful
kitchen (range oven buill ·
in J. large rooms. large fla t
lot in new sub ·dlv lsion .

$28,000.

We Have
25 New Homes
To Choose From
SOME are finished readv fo r
occupancy, others in all
different stages ot con .
struction . You name i t and
we'll have . Look now befor e
someone else buys the one
you wanted . we will help you
find the finan cing it it 's
humanly possible . Call Ike
Wiseman lor all details .

Bargain Hunters
Here's A Bargain

the best. Don't wait fill it 's too
late. CALL Barbara Lambert,
446-3411.
208-lf
TEMPORARY part-lime help

I .J'UJJOO
I

ATTENT ION LADIES - Sell
Toys 8. Gifts now lhru
December with the oldest Toy

KXJ (J I
..

rAiiLED

J

I

I

tJ

1

DAI'OAG1
\

I

I

v1 I

r

r Pride SIIIPRISUIISWIUen

1~

5TATE OF WOME~
EAr;:L IEFC: DAYS.

Now· arranre t.he circled Jetton
to form the IUrprlu &amp;l\lwer, u

(Amwrri 'lnnda~)

AaiWrrt Brare •' ,,., lt~•flf"h-f'uuld br

AUCTION

sERVia

"SElL TH£ AUCTION.
WAY"

·JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444. .

ex.tra lots on Route 7, house

shown by appolnlmenl.

94x300', garage.
Cash Outlay . Call or wr ite
" San ta's Parties", Avon, Ct.
06001. Tel. 1 (203) 673-3455. Farm home with 8 room house,
ba th, oil heat, storm doors
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
and
windows, 257 A. wllh 2
207-26
large barns, 1100 T. B. 13 A.
Corn. 45·A. bottom land, good
BABYS ITT ER needed In VInton
water and good fence; 10
home for 2 grade school
miles from City on black lop
ch ildren. light housekeeping,
road .
can live in, Call 388-9901
evenings or 446-9695.

I ( I I XX11 X1

lumbl'" WHISK fRANC DOUIU 115101
doft6~rou• ! -

county wafer available, house
set on 2 lots SOxlSO' and 2

Party Plan in the Coun try. In City. 3 B. R. house. gas fur nace. bath. on large lot,
Highest commissions, No

~::;·::;~~~;;~;t-,~;..1~~·liUC(OIIed by the above cartoon.

l'ettHday•a

water available.

wan ted. Idea l for mothers and
housewives. For interview AI Kanauga 3 B. R. house with
full basement, gas furna ce,
ca ll 446-2980.

208-3

(;(}RRJ

Severa l outbuildings and
1 A. land fenced in. County

A " liD SKIN"

Wanted To Buy

A. Farm and camp site on
207-3 240Raccoon.
New brick home.
elc. heat. bath, lot fenced ln .
Shown by appointment.

2 B. R. home close to clly with
city wa ter, lot about o;, A.
Pr ice reduced to $9500.
Olllce446 ;1066
Evening Call:
Ron Canaday, 446-3636
GOOD CLEAN used turn .
Russell D. Wood. 446·4618
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn. 446·
John I. Richird5, 446·0280
9523. '
170-lf
GRAPES and v, gallon canning
jars. Ph . 446-0212.
204-5

Camping Equipment
JUST arrived . 1973 Starcraft
Campers. All 1972 units huge
discount. We service what we

sell. Camp Conley Slarcratt
Sales, 62 North of Poln'
Pleasant behind Red Carpel
Inn.
___:_
163-lf

____

Mobile
Homes .for Sale
.
GOOD USED MOBILE HOMES
1970 S~y l i n e 12x50 2 Br.
1967 Horizon t2x50 2 Br.
1970 Richardson 12x65 3 Br.
1965 Vlndale lOxSO 2 Br.
1960 Van Dyke .lOx40 2 Br.
1960 Va11 Dyke 10x50 2 Br
Tri·Countv Mobile Homes
2013 Eoslern Ave.
Gallipolls, Ohio
4%-0175

. "

II

'.

couple. All city services, close•
to stores , beautiful area.:
priced under $10.000.
;.

small home for retlr~e

or:

PLUSH MOBILE HOME ....;:
Five rooms with bath plus:
additional
20 X· 28 build ing :;
104 ACRE Beef and Da iry
Plen
ty
of
water
wllh drillec!•
Farm . 6 room home. 2 barn5 .
well and coun ty water, :
Deep well. Slate Rt. 55~. Ca ll
com plet ely furn ished an~ .
446·4127 . This farm reduced
ready to move in .
$4,000 due to retirement. Wil l
trade for home near lawn.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY -:
Nlce

VINTdN, nice 2 bedroom home
on Jackson St. Garden . Call
446-ml.

redecorated

three ·

bedroom home plus two good :
mobile homes. Presenl In-·

'795

302 V-8, radio. wheel covers,

'·1595

standard transmission. Sharp.

68 FORD GAL 500

'1095·

2 Dr. hardtop, 302 V-8 engine, a uto.
trans.. p. steering. Nice.

month plus his home. Now Is:
the time to buy this money .

maker.

Evenings
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
D. J . Wetherholl, 446-4244
Sleven A. Belz, 446-9583

"

65 BUICK WILDCAT
4 Or. hardtop, V-8. aula . trans., p.

'695

steering, low mileage. loca lly
owned. Sharp,

69 KALAWSKI 90 street l;like.:

Extra sprocke,IS. excellent ·
condition. also gas tloor :
fu rnace. 446-3553.
208-3.

NEAR hospital, 4 ar,.re farm f
remodeled 3 bdr m. home,
forced air heat, rural water. FOR " A job well done feeling" '
clean carpets wllh Blue :
Price $11,500. See today!
Lustre .
Rent
electri c·
sham pooer $1. Centrai ·Supply :
~-

66 CHEV. BELAIR

·,

208-6:

EXCELLE NT flat land for
Home build ing in dandy
rural ne ig hborhood , S minute
drive from town . Ci ty school
district.
rural
water
Beaut iful at ~5 . 000. Don't
miss seeing them , on l y 3 left.

Summer Cottage
On Raccoon Creek
SLEE PS 8, is fully turn ished

used for pasture.

2 dr. hardtop, V-8. auto., p. steering,
lac. air cond., vi nyl roof, bucket
seals, lac. stereo !ape system. w-s-w
w-eavers, locally owned In

Jay S~epperd 4'46·0001
Denver K. Higtev 4%·0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur 446-0003

--------

KIRKWOODdoublewlde mobile :
home 24x56. 3 bedrooms. 2;
baths, furn ished, central air . &lt;
home to be moved . 446-2604. :·

Mobile home. 3 bedrooms. 3
miles from Ctlv Pork,
Private lot, all utilities
furnished $175. Available
Sept. 4. Call 446-0263 11 to 4,
446 -1203 after 5 p.m.
SLEEPI NG room's for rent.
Gallia Hotel . 446·9715 .
181 ·If

SIMPLI CITY riding .tractor, 3;:
speed trans .. 32 1n. rotary f
mower, 48 in. dozer blade 1 10" ::
turn plow, reat mount rotary •:

IIIIer .

Tracter

drag .:·

cultivator, 42 in . side mount •:
cycle bar. Will deliver . Call ;.

2 dr . hardtop. p. steering, p. brakes.
lac. air. vinyl roof with many other
extras. Locally owned.

$

'1495

2 Door Sedan
With Air Cond.

1968 BUICK

1969 Chev. Pickup

Special. 2 Dr .. Air Cond ., V8,
Auto. Trans .

4 Dr . Sedan with

Air Cond .

'1995

'1395

1969 Dodge Pickup

1966 VOLKSWAGEN

Long bed, V-8, 27,000 miles,
adventure pkg . Nice for
cam per.

Two To Choose from. Red,
White. Were $895.00.

68 OODGE
DART GTS
2 DR. HARDTOP

Was 51695.00.

'1895

'795

30
- MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
.UP TO 36 MONTHS

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
Gallipolis, Dhio

For Sale

69 MERC~RY MONTEGO
2 Dr. Hardtop, V-8, aut. irans., P.

steering, vinyl roof, one owner.
while with blk. vinyl roof.

'1595

... Meet the
lnlck
that beats

- -- - - - - - Call 256·61189.
•
2 BEDROOM lr• lle r. Hen 208·11"
derson, W. Va . 675-4130 .
202-6 YARD SA LE Sept. 7, 8 &amp; 9 on .
Rl . 554 next to Bidwell Mill ing·
PR IVATE trailer space. Rl . 7. 3
In Bidwell. Some used fur -·
miles below
Gallipol is
nilure and new and old dishes .
overlook ing river , city water ,
208-3.
446-0599.
205-4 1970 PLYMOUTH Fury, 318 cu. '
BRADBURY

efficiency

apartmen ts. for rent, adults

only . No pels, 72'1 Second Ave .
Ph . 446-0957.
205-11

208·3

Ll'l ......r.

in ., auto. transmission , air ·
cond ., power steering, Radial

Don says: We have the best selection of sharp, loca I, preowned cars in the Tri-County area.
'71 BUG, orange, blk. int .• 4-sp., radio, 16.000 mi .
'70 BUGS, beige &amp; blue. nicely equipped.

'70 MAVERICK, factory A-C. auto., radio.
'70 DODGE, 440 H.T., auto., P. S. &amp; P. B., red w-vinyl top.
'70 OLDS, Delta 88, factory A· Cwith everything.
'70, '69 &amp; 68 Ford 112 Ton Pickups
Walk-In Pickup Camper-like new, h'ls everything.
'69 FORO, Gal . 500 H.T., factory A· C &amp; everything .
.'69 LTD, 2 dr . H. T., auto., P.S., P. B. Very nice.
'69 CHEV., 327 V-8, factory A-C. auto ., P.S,
'61 P.I..Y.',.fllrY ll,l ,4.dr ... V,-~ •.auto., P.S.
'68 FAIR LANE, Red convt., 289 V-8, auto., P. S. Nice.
'67 CHEV., Impala H.T., V-8, auto.
'67 MUSTANG, red, '6', auto., very, very sharp .
'67 TO RON ADO, wht,, blk. vinyl top, lac. A-C. Everything.
Lots Of Low Priced Cars -$100 Up

With a new metal building.
N ew ~ bJJilQing ...... at.tracts '
business, increase profits,
provide greater efficfenty.
Let us devot e our time in
your buildmg planning . For
assistance in planning and
cost estima te, call Southern
Construct i on Co, Proc·
torv ill e, Ohio. Represen ta tives: R. Butcher, area

$119'.5

$895
$1195
$1495

code 614, 886-5809. M. S.
Smith, area code 61 4, 886·

6885.
Si.AMESE and Balinese kitten s.
Trained, cleaner ilnd quie ter
than dogs, smarter than you .
Phone 446·3844 after 4 .

203 -6

SIEG LE R fue l oi l heat er 70,000
BT U, Speed Queen portable

TRIUMPH Bonneville. 650
TWO new trailers all electric, '4 1971
CC,
Iow mlleageluslllke new .
mile off Rt. 7. Call 446-1405 or
Call 245-9311 .
446-3468.
207·3
181-11
wagons. bred &amp; open
SLEE PIN(',I ROOMS, . weekly 2 FOLAGE
Hol sle ln heifers , 614-286-2496.
rates. Park Central Hote l.
207 -3
308·11
~~-:---::-:---

-=-:--:--_....,.--,-..,.--

washer with spin dryer . 367·

In the tradition ol Li1 Huatlet

Am;:•l;ca~··:N~o~,~~~~~ll~ln:g~~:~l

..
truck. Totally restyled. Roomier,
new power-auiat brakes. Plua
cam englne,ti-tooll
llocul bed. 4-apeed stick and more. Take a ltlt drive ooon.1

4 Dr. Sedan, 6 cyl. engine, aut. trans.,
radio, blue metallic finish with matching intetior. 24,000 act. miles. Like
MW.
•

·~~~~~uruill~W.~~

APARTMENT for construction
men . Ph. 4-46-0756.
267-h

AUCTION

------

SMITH AUTO SALES

VAlLIE TONEY

KANAUGA, .OHIO
For Sale

For Sale

7637.

For Sale

1970 FORD

'17-9 5
WOOD MOTOR SALES

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1966 Schu ll 12x50, 2 bedroom
1961 Na shua 10x50, 2 bedroom

1954 Anderson Bx36, 1 bedroom
196Y Capella 50x12, 2 bdrm .
1968 Ki rkwood 60xl2, 2 bdrm.
1962 Gibraltar 55x10.• 2 bdrm .
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; \liand St.
Pt. Pleasant
( Nexllo He ck's)

NEW tobacco sticks, ready to

use. Ph . 379-2166.
198-12

.

t':

• USED CAR BARGAINS•

1972
VEGA GT. .............. '2295
Like new, 13,000 miles.
1971 PINT0.................... '1595
One owner, local car.

1970
OPEL SEDAN .........' 1295
Like New.
1969
VOLKSWAGEN .... ! 1295
Nice, one own er.

1969 OPEL STATION WAGON ... !1195
I

car.

Gallipolis Chrysler·
Gallipolis

All electric five room
house.
15
acres.
Mercerville area. Ph.
256-6588.

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE inspection . Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator lor
Extermlnal Termite Service.

Grande. Phone 245-Sl15.

206·3
happy , health y. farm rarsed .
Jackson 988-2601.
205-6 TWO 8,000 BTU Air Con ·
di tioners. New. A lso bedroom
fur·niture . Phone 446-9282
after 6 p. m.

19 Belmont Dr.
267-11
Central Air Conditioning
&amp;

~ Your Massey-Ferguson Dealer

TARA

·TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENts

Vinton. Oh io

--_....,.---144·11

For. lnform1tlon Clll Stlirlty Acltdllll--367·7250

--

eoor eo.

416-:f.li eo. •.

I~

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell 's Plumbing. 4~;;81)

BOB
LANE ' S Complete
Bookkeeping and Tax Set·
vice. 424'12 Fourth Ave ..
l&lt;anauga. Office hrs . 9 a .m.·l
243-tl
p.m . Ph. 446-1049 .
_
11

RICE'S

------

Phone 317-7579 or 367-7706.
146-h

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Slar Rt .. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133

1

·him-•

Backhoe and Oor:er ·service.
Septic tanks, la rm ditching,.
ponds . Free Estimate~ .

Healing

Free Eslimates
Stewa rt's Hardware

DEAD STOCK

1112 BATHS

446-3273

Services Offered

Services Offered

1:""

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

."Y\IY.

1972 GOLD
DUSTER, on~

- - -- -

:P·

.

EXAMPLE:

SER'fA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
box springs $29 up. 955 Second rnoved to home with bui lt -i n
line, good with ch ildren . Has
THOMAS FAIN
Ave. 446·1171 .
sho ls , Ph . 367-7205.
trailer. Call A-46-4602 .
ca n be seen 1902 Eastern
EXTERMI NATING CO.
range
.
Ph
.
446-2219.
10·11
Termite &amp; Pest Control
205-3 UPRIGHT Piano. never wet.
207-3 Ave., Gallipolis.
205·3
la ir condit ion. S25. 446-9700.
Wheelersburg, Ohio
207·3
T:::-W-1N--:-N,-:E,-::E,-:D::--L-::E-::-Se-w-;-1ng
AKC
REG.
English
bulldog
,
206-3
- - -- - New GMC
SI NGER Sewing Machine Sales
Machine 1972 Model In walnut
l
emale,
7
months
old.
all
Truck Hudquortors
&amp; Service . All models In
·stand. All features built In to
shots, housebroken $50. 446· PICKUP tru ck topper 5150 . '68 C&amp;S Electrical Service &amp;
1962 o;, ton GMC Pick up
stock.
Free delivery . Service
PIPES,
Pipes.
Pipes,
GBO,
Pontiac Bonneville, loaded.
1
make lanty designs and do
1944.
!966
/z
lon
GMC
Pi
ckup
Repairs . House wiring,
guaranteed . Models pr iced
C~eratan. ·BBB,
Jobey, 1969 CNds 88
Cattle rac ks. Phone 388-8740. electric heat, motor controls .
s~nlch sewing. Also but205-3
.
from $69.95. French City
Hilson. and others. Tawnev's ·For Sale
206'-3 Free est imates. Ph. 446-4561
tonholes, blind hems. etc.
Fabric Shoppe, Singer •P·
PI PI 111d Trophv Hou10, •22 '68 VW Red wllh blk. inl~rior .
$43.25 tash price or terms
or 675-3361.
proved dealer. 58 Court 51. LOT, rural water Installed,
Sec011d Ave.
available. Phone A-46-&lt;1578.
Radio, Good Shape with air
MAGNETIC car and true~
22-tf
!9'1-ff
Ph.
M6-9255.
20H
Plants
subdivision.
Ph.
446·
shocks with whl. adapters .
si~
ns
.
Available
6'/2"
x
18"
to
.
308-lf
3617'
20 • x U' . $12.50 to $30 pair.
BANKS TREE SERVICE
AU TYPES of building
Only $875. Al so Torqueflile
205-6
446·1397. Simmons Pig . &amp; FREE estimates, llabilily In·
VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
materials. blcick, brick, sewer· tr~n$. with Chevy adapter 1972 GMC Jimmy 4 wheel dr ive
Office Equip. Made to order, surance . Pruning, trimming
Hvglene New Demonstrator
pfpn, windows. llnt.ls, etc•. chup. 446-2416.
307-V8 1 four speed trans ., free DINETTE set, table and 4
Signs of all kinds.
and cavity work, tree and
has all cloning· altac:hmtrils
Claude Wlnten, Rio Grande, 1970 lnlernaflonal Dump Truck.
whee ling hubs, price for quick ' chairs. S2S; 4 section of living
plus the new Efeclro Suds for
1~
s
140·11
slump removal. Ph . 446·4953.
shampooing carpel . Only
0 . Phone 2-15-512 1 a '"' .
Exlrl clean.
sale. Call 245-5690.
room drapes, mint green, like
~---~--IJ.II
123
20/.6
S27.50 cash price or terms
'
·" '1969 2 T. GMC
new, leng th 84", total width
a•allable. Phone A-46-&lt;1571.
- .....: - - - - - - - : : · - · · ;HI Jeep Sfalion wagon
206" S25; 2 wigs, one human BOATforsale. 16ft. runabout 80 GILLENWATER'S septic tank
Mercury
eng ine,
1
1
20H ·
AT SPECIAL
1964"" T. GMC PU
U$ED FURNITURE ha ir S10, one synthetic S5. horse
trailer, Del Ginger ich . 628 cl~anlng and repa r, a so
1
7
388
8666
BUNK bed set comptele with med . brown . Ph .
· 205 _3
" Jtepster
------.
Fourth. Phone 446·3778.
house wrecking . Ph. 446·9499.
LOWER
PR ICES . 19il7
Yz ton Chevrolet pickup
ALL eleclrlc mobile home wllt1
.
Established In 1940.
202
6
spr ings and mattresses or can - - - - - - - - - add on, encloHd porch, 7
NEW I USED
19il7 ~ T. Chev. PU
169-11
be used as trundle bed - 3
Labor Day Specials
rooms,
w-w
urpeflng I-BEAMS, Channel, angle • ., . . Yz :T· GM ~U
real nice 2 pc. living room
1963 Nimrod , fold down camper. 1960 CHAMPION 10 x 50 trailer, 0. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
throughovt, furniture.
shHf and plale •'"1, rounds,
~ ~ ~~~~
suites - 2 couches - 2 en d good condition S299; 1972
new gas furnace, $2,000. Ph .
Delivery Service . Your
pllanct, draptJ, Inn rz
flats reinforcing bars end · 19il6 ~ T · GMC
tables - real nice desk with Apache Eagle, like new $619,
~77634.
.
patronage
will be ap.
roo111 wllt1 Mllvfll! washer
·r· GMC PU
chair - Speed Queen wringer . 1972 Apache solid slate Yuma ,
11111,; roll, pipe, culverll and
202 12 preclaled . Ph. 446-0463.
'ron
dryer In Rio Grande. $5,500.
equlpinent. Prompt drilling.
Ford
flat
.
washer
twln
site
box
Reg . $1399, $99'1 . Amsbary
]. If
Ph. 2-15-S..,..
:!07 If Nelma~ Co .• Nelsonville, 19il7 ·_ 1,1, Ton GMC Pi ckup
springs and mattress wit~ Apache
Trailer
Sales.
631
legs - old trunks - lawn
-----::-""':::--::'"-· ·
Ohio, P. 0. Box 291. Ph. 753· !964 _ CO 1600 International
Services O.ffere~
f.=~~~~~::;;-,
Fourth Ave .
mower - 7 pc . dinette set , In
1554. call coiled.
· t•uck
205-4 LAST
BID
home
irn
·
1'..
NHII Anollltr Bldg?
181·H '
good shape.
SEE our aluminum bldgs. - - - - - - - ·1967 \'&gt; T. GMC PU
provemenls . alumtnum ·
•
IF · you are building a new siding:
Huvy duty,. with flooring, IT 'S Inexpensive lo clun rugs 1?6.3 F*J'or~ Truck
~utters
,
roofing
·
home or remodeling, see us.
repairs, b1g or small. Pay
SS:OOServiceCharge
wired for e ectrlc. Also West
and upholsterv wllt1 Blue 19il6 'Ill T. GMC PU
only laborandmalerlal. Woo·k
Willremoveyourdead
We ;;re bui lders. Distributor
VIrginia chunk coal, drain
Luslre,
Rtnl
electric
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE for Hotpoinl Appliances •. guaranteed, Free estimates .
horseandcows
tile, oell Ill e. ument &amp;
Sl. Central Supplv
rRUCKS,Ih-.:.
854 Second Ave., 446·9523
ortar
.
.
c;a111~11
Block
&amp;
•
,.......
113
Pine
St.
Ph. 388·8221.
l
Call Jackson 28(o.AS:)1
Allison Electric.
111
201 ·11
1s.f.lf
•
194-11
123\lt Pine.
202·6
w.un
1966 CAPRICE Chevrolet. 1• fl. SHETLAND ponv. 42 lnch01
boat with 40 HP motor &amp;· high, gentle wilh children,

.

BY OWNER

171 -tl GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Car l Winters, Rio

AKC REG . 3 mon ths old mal e
dachshund. excellent blood
ex.tras. Reasonable . Rece ntly

8 uy.

1639 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

For Sale
For Sale
electric range . 6 months old.
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R 30"excellent
condition , many

Ma k~ Sure Yo~ 9Je.fk , With ,~~ . Before

207 -3

USED mobile home 10'x 40'
6-il
furnished , also air con ditioned. Pomeroy Motor Co .,
Pomeroy, Oh io . Chevrolet '67 FORD Pickup with lillie
Champ camper . 15 fl. boat
dealer .
with 80 HP Mercury engine
205-6
and trail er . 92 Chi llicothe
Road , Gallipol is, Ohio.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • GERMAN Shepherd puppy ,

Eastern Ave.

OVER COST'

BE ONE STEP AHEAD

tires, good

Datsun's aew
Ll1 Bustier.

00

204-11

· condition . 256-1385.
208-3
NEW 2 bedroom mobile homes.
Will lease or rent by week or 42 EWE S. good ones. Ph . 256month. Call ~46-0683 or 446·
6885.
0008.
208·3
190-11

PLYMOUTHS

Ave .. 446 -1171.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD

and

of free parking , 955 Second

DON WATTS V.W. INC.

PONTIAC Catalina V-8, '

ALL 1972
CHRYSLERS

sale . Open Friday 11118. plenty

AT

208-6.

standard, new

coppertone. Phi1co au t o.
washer, Maytag wringer
washer, l dinette sets, 7
pieces , good shape ; bedroom
suite, 3 pieces ; occasional
chair.
NEW: Lawn furn. now on

$1895
$1 695
$1795
$1995
$2595
$1495-$2195
$1595
$1995
$1795
$1595
$1288

SEE
DWIGHT SIEVERS. JOHN SANG OR STEVE ROACH

Ford fractor, plow disc,
mower, cultivator . 446· 1216.
Wallace Kemper .
196~

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE
USED: Like new Adm iral ref .•

Iires. good condition, 1950 :

1

2 BEDROOM trailer in city,
uti lities paid. Ph . «6-0893.

VOLKSWAGEN

1995

.
55 GALLON electr ic hoi water:;.

NOW ·Is THE TIME TO BUY llfAT NEW
M. F. TRACTOR OR M. F. HAY BALER
BEFORE THE PRICE GOES UP AGAIN. .

I

26,000 miles, radio, one owner.
Sharp.

'3995

With Air Cond .

69 CHEV. CAPRia

446-0278. 675-3796, call after 4;:
p.m.
•·
208-s ::

------

L--~~--------------------~

drive,

'795

4 dr . seda n, 6 cyl. engine. auto.
trans ., radio. Nice.

208 ·4!:

- - - - - - - - - - ,·

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY

Phone : 446-1 044
Owner: Bill Wooldridge

VOLKSWAGEN

1970 MAVERICK

lustre way from carpets and :·

upholstery . Renl electric ;·
shampooer $1 . Mur phys
Lower Store.
•
108·6: '

------

Gallipolis. Ohio ·

SUPER VAN

50 State Street

65 CHEV.II

COMPLETE FARM

Upper Rl. 7-Kanauga

1970

1969 DODGE
CORONET 500

NEWPORT
4 DR. SEDAN

I

•

TRACTOR

1970 FORD

V-8 engine

1969 DiRYSLER

'3 195

TAKE SOIL away the Blue :

10:00 A.M.

r=-=~GALLIPOLIS

V-8 engine.
Auto .
Tran ·
smission

Eldorado. frl . wheel
vinyl lop . air. sharp.

71 MERCURY COUGAR

lank $35. Ph . 446-0418 after:•;
VERY n ice 3 MEN, Tired ot Holels and
5:30.
.
bedroom
home ,
full
restauran t food? A clean,
basement , large lot. You 'l l
208-3
qui et r oom with refrigerator
love the kitchen . Large
carpete:: living room . Edge
and cooki,ng tacll illes. S35 JD 350 dozer. 67 model with .
of town, $\6,500 buys It and
month . Ul•llti,H •!d. 44!\·ol416 ~· ~lade and wrench . 66 modelo
1t's tru e by W bar'g"alfl · - .;
\"I:' after 6 p ·m · · •;at• '- ~:nt:;:"??.,w 6oo ser ·•es Internat ional;.,
202-6
truck . Both in A-1 condition .'
Bui Iding Lots

2 Acres

1970 DODGE
1).100 1h TON
PICKUP TRUCK

'495

4 Door. 8 cyl. engine, auto. trans.

For Sale

1969 Cadillac

Long bed, V-8, cust . cab. worth
more.

come to owner over $250 per ~

HOUSE. 4 rooms &amp; bath , adults
FRI., SEPT. 15
WOULD CONSIOER
only. 446-1736.
TRADING
207-3
needs work, will discuss
price. Ph. 446·9286affer 2 p.m. 3 BR HOME. lull basement and
recently redecora t ed . TRAILER space, rrivale lot, on
204-4
Located at 27 Evans Heights.
Rl. 160. Evergreen . Call 446·
Would
consider trading for
3805.
39 ACRES, 7 room house with
farm or Mobile Home.
207-3
balh , other ou tbuilding s In
DISPERSAL
THIRD AVE. &amp;
Addison Township, $18.000.
SPRUCE ST.
105 Cattle, 4 horses. 3400
Ph. 367-7607.
FURN -ISHED aparlment.
207-3 2 FAMILY dwelling wllh 4 completely remodeled. new
boles hay, all machinery and
rooms each and bath each
household furnishings, 1910
furniture and appllancn. All
apt. Already rented. Buy
HOUSE for sale by owner . New
:~,~ T. truck.
·
ulllllln paid, adults 011ly.
today •nd start collecting
4 bedroom . Central air con Rice's New&amp; Used Furn., 446·
'
.
.
rent.
9523.
.
ditioner. colonial brtck. with
Office Phone 446-1694
lots of extras. Upper bracket.
20J.If
Evenings
Shown by apf&gt;?lnlment, Point
Charles M. Neol, 446-1546
Pleasant restdence.
Pf. P!usant
ONE nlte Iorge efficiency
J . Michael Neal, 446-1503
207-ff
JGIIn Mc,.lll, Auclion•r
room, teacher prelerred. Rio
Grande 245-5142.
Complete listing In next
NEW 3 bedroom home with' 205·3 Sundlr v•s edition.
brick front, 1 car garage 120
LOTS FOR SALE
II . frontage l V2 miles from · LOCATED on Raccoon Road,
new hospi tal on Rt. 160. Call
large home and garden plots,
367-7846 or 367-7481.
adjacent to large existing
1611 -fl
brick residence afso beautiful
mobile home sites. Roads.
"B-us' in
-e-ss...,O
"'"p-po- r-=-tu-nictic:-: es
ELECTRICITY
Electricity. Water Ma ins and
underground Telephone lines.
S/,200 annually growing Gin·
Wo furnish Woter • Sewage. Garbage COllection . Ample
Field Office open from Noon
seng Root for us I Market
Parking · TV Anlonno • Walf.to.Woll Carpeting .
until dark . Offered by Hobart
guaranteed . Fall planting .
Draperies
• Rongn · Rtlrlgoroton • Air Conditionl!l9 •
Dillon and Russel Bailey,
Send $2.00 (refundable) lor
Gar.boge
Olsposols
· Dishwashers- Hut Lamps . Priv1 t1 ·
Owners . P. 0 . Box 516,
seed, instructions. GC Herbs;
Pat1os
·
Swimming
Pool . ClubhouM.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
173 Pleasant St., Middleboro.
19J.ff
Mass. 02346.
,
207-3

M r-

All Going at September Prices.

VERY ,

446-1066

large livi ng room and · la rge
kitchen with nice cabinets,
stove and deep freeze .

•

'i

45 ACRES farm In Vinton
County. Good fences and
pond. Remodeled two story
farm home. Spanish decor.
Shag carpet. 4 bedrooms,
bath and part basement.

For Rent

REALTOR

At Northup, 2 b.r. house with

4 speed trans .. aqua color.

Headquarters for Gall fa County
Real Estate. Listings needed.

1 YEAR old 3 bedroom br ick

WOOD

4 BEDROOM home, 3 baths,
nice location, city sc hools,

69 DATSUN STATION
WAGON

452 Second Avenue
·;
446·3434 446-4775
.;
FOUR ROOMS IN CITY- Nicl!'

Owner Wants House
Sold This Week

RUSSELL

possession .

Rancho Company

Green Twp.

Basement

Neal Realty

books of stamps. Sell name

Only A Few 1972 Buicks Left.

69MUSTANG

OHIO RIVER
Realty

208·6

home, bath , basement, fen 5 BEDROOM RA NCH. This
ced. pines. Add ison Twp.,
very attract ive Redwood is
$14j500
.
priced in mid Twenties and
is located at edge of town in a
·quie t spot with no close ' 7 ACRE, 6 room two story
home, State Rl . 160. Only
neighbors. Very nice kit .
chen, living room, dining and
S11 .200.
hall al l carpeted . See this one
now .
LOTS and small acreage fo r
residential or business, 11f2
New Listingmile from Medica l Center .

!flm 1Atii&amp;JU

to help him,

Easily converted to one
family dwelling . Asking
$30,000 . Shown bv ap·
porntmenf. 4-46-0208.

2 ACRE. roomy 2 bedroom

and ready to use , road and
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
only $25.000.
creek frontage . Approx . l lh
163 A. 5 mi. from Cheshire, on
acres. $8,500.
West opened the king of
Ward Rd.. no bldgs.. un ·
hearts and continued with
Owner Anxious
der l aid with coal. Price
the ace. South ruffed; led a
reduced to $19,500.
FOR 519,900 her e's a real
trump to dummy 's ace and
fine 3 bedroom horne. nice
23
A.
Lincoln
Pike,
7
r
m
.
house,
played dummy's three of
kitctlen (range .oven J. large
barn and lob. ba se. Only living room, hardwood
diamonds. East took the
$11,500.
floors , flat lot, 1112 mile out
trick and led a club. South's
near new hospital. we sold 2
90
A.
plus.
30
A.
tilla
ble,
barn,
king lost to West's ace and
tn this ne ighborhood in 2
plenty wat er, good fences,
day!. Better Hurry .
a club return left South one
many young wa ln ut, fob. base
trick short.
and most underlaid with coal.
("'EWS P.A.PU ENTERPRISE .A.~SN )
"Cheapie"
$15.750.
"Not bad," chortled South.
OLD S room br ick on ex. .
Artfu l dress ing and a smooth
"My preempt shut East and ~z:
ANY HR. 446-1998
$2.60 per hour
ce llent lot. Edge of town .
paint job wi ll lake 20 years off
Lot s worth pri ce 55,400 .
West 9ut of a small slam in
a
woman's true age. But she
Ma ke offer .
hearts ."
The bidding has been:
BEAUTIFUL
suburban
country
can' t fool a long )light of
Immediate openings
estat e bui lding site. Peaceful ;
sta irs.
"Not bad, if you follow the West North East South
for
full
or
partlime
six acre l ot wit h pond . High
I
•
Dble
Pass
old saying that half a loaf is
clea r rolling land edged with
Three
blocks
from
City
School
Pass
2
.
Pass
help.
Call
Mr
.
Napier
9
?
better than none," said
trees . 1.000 feet off Route 160
just one cross street to cross.
a.m. to 9 p.m .,
PRICE REDUCED
North. "It's too bad you You, South , hold:
on good paved road at Kerr.
3 bedroom house fenced in
THE
PRICE of this 14 acres
didn't go all the way, make .8743 • 2 +AK943 .762
Oh io. Two miles from new
Tuesday only 446-0677.
back lot. ha s 1 balh and •;,
with
4 room bl ock home ha s
hospital.
Pl
enty
good
water
your contract, and have the
What do you do now?
bath. Very nice kitchen with
been
reduced Sl.OOO. Loca ted
avai
lable.
By
owner.
Building
lots
of
cabinets,
stove
and
whole loaf."
A-Pass, Your partner is
1'12
miles
from Vinton on
restri cted . Phone 446·0940 .
and also air
North was right. Just a showing a very good hand but HOUSEWIVES - Use spare refrigerator
Keystone Road, it Is fenced
204-6
conditioning,
has
util
ity
room
and most could be farmed or
little early planning would your singleton heart is not going time to earn checks plus and car port . Imm edia te

I.

furnace.
P 'r esent
arrangement, 2 •partments.

4 Bedroom ho!fle, large
&amp; · beautiful, with 1.8 ,
acre of land in city .
school district . 446·
4570.

trajter, along river below
Eureka Dam. Ph. 256-6540.

OWNER

modular home, utility rm .,

FOR SALE; ~; ·owo4-. 2 story
brick house at 452 1st Ave. 7
rooms, 2 baths, gas hot air

.~

.•

.

4 ACRES with 12x47 New Moon

Evening :
Ike Wi seman
. 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446-4500
We Need Listings

rentals $225 per mo. Price

air. large patio with awning .
ce llar and utility building EUREKA - River view, shady
$15,500
lot,6rms. lull dry base., H.W.
Two story , 10 room two bath, NEW LISTING, Route 141 close
fl oors, liv . rm . carpeted,
garage a nd plenty good
large kitchen and formal DR .
to t ow n, lovely home pri ced to
water. This house Is built of
located on corner lot S. 6th
sell. 2 BR, LR, modern kit51. , Middl eport . •
good materia ls and well
chen. large family rm ., utility
constructed. Price $17,500.
rm .. WW carpet, central air,
$24,000
5 ROOm s and bath, ranch sty le, NEIGHBORHOOD Rd .. 3 BR BABY FARM - 5 A. gentle

West wo,uld still be on
Full or Part Time
lead. His best continuation
would be a shift to a trump.
South would win this in eith· Applications now being
er hand and go after dia- taken for men and
monds. Eventually he would women . Immediate
set up dummy 's last diamond for a club discard, and opening , must be neat
wouldn't care where the ace and dependable . Call
personnel Dept., 9 a .m.
of clubs was.
This type play is known by to 9 p.m . Tuesday. 446·
two names . The loser-on- 0694.
loser and the avoidance
play. His diamond was a OPE NING for part lime reg .
sure loser and the discard nurse, must be curren tl y
was the play of a diamond registered In State of Ohio:
loser on a heart loser.
Able to drive, own car . Duty
The avoidance part of the hours flexible , sa lary
at interv iew . Wr ite
play was that South avoided discussed
Box 52, Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631.
the possibility of East gain20 5~ 11
ing the lead to play a club .

.KQJ,98632

North

l 1/ 2 lot in city. All

tami ly kitchen. formal DR.

ki tchen, porch , work shop,
well land scaped I acre in
Addison Township .

The Loser-on-Loser Play

West

LOTS OF LOTS
$14,750
WE HAVE lots In all di rection s.
3 BR. two story home, 1f:2
Some can be bought with a INVESTMENT - In clly. good
basement, family room, FA
business location, plus 2 Aprt .
very sma ll down payment.
g,as fur .. 2 car garage, 3 acres .
rentals (could be 3). Business
Whether bu ilding or buying a
bldg. incl udes grocery and
mobile home, ca ll today.
$18,800
meat processing equipment.
Potential income from Apt .
4 BR two story home located on 12x65 MOB ILE HOME on a 1 A.

$30,000
St .. Rio Grande. Ohio. 245·
NEW bri ck r ancher, J large BR ,
5048.
l aundr y room. deep pi le
180-ff
ca rp el throughout . luxury

WIN AT BRIDGE

SOUTH

Price $20,000.

·!

Real Estate For Sale'

208·1

Off. 446-3643

in base. with laundry and
work area . Located on near 2
acre lot with river frontage.

MERCERVILLE

Real Estate For ~ale

Real Estate For Sale

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

85

HOLLEY BRO. C\)NST ..
COMPLETE water li ne 1n ·
stailation. backhoe, bulldozer
and boring machine IOrvlces.
J . p , Holl ey ?45-5018 or D. R.
Holley 245-5006.
lll ·tf

Plumbing &amp;Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HE·ATING
Cor. Fourth&amp; Pine
Phone 446·3888or 446-4477
165·1f

- - - -- -

STANDARD
Plumb ing &amp; Heating
215 Third Ave .. 446-3782 '
187-11

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
21 Gallla Ave. 416-4782
297-t

- DEWITT'S
- - - PLUMBING
--AND HEATING
Route t60 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735

__G_E_N_E_P_L_A_N_T_S_&amp;_ S_O_N_S187-t
PLUMBING _ Heating &amp; Air
' Condlllonfnn . 300 Fourth Ave.
•
Ph . 446-1637 . ( FormtriY
Brammer's

Healing.)

&amp;

Plumbi ng

4-t

------~r---

�'

'

.

'

• • •,.

ftl

•

•

•

'

.,

:!6- The~Tlmei-Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. 3,1972

In Memory

Notice

IN LOVING memory of James PORCH SALE Sept . 5. 6, 7, at
F. · Day who passed • away
Mrs. Joe Camden's In Bidwell
Sepl. 3. 1969.
on Rt . 554. Extra nice items.
206-3
Just a Prayer from us who
loved you.
SEVERAL varieties of lop
Precious. kind and true;
Just to say how much we miss

quality tree ripened canning
peaches, now avaHable thru

you

ear ly

you .
You couldn't say good·byeto us.

Bob's

Phone 773-5308.

Perhaps 'twas just as well ;

We . neVer could have said
goodbye.
To the one we loved so well .

II was a sudden endi ng,

Too sudden to forget;
And we who loved you dearly,
Are the ones who can't forget .
Your memory is our keepsake ,
With which we'll never part;

God has you in his keeping

September .

Market, Mason, just above
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

Because we thought the world of

192-tl

DAY t!ARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
licensed .loy Sta le of Ohio, l'h
miles west of new hospita L
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph. 446·

IJJ~

srRour·

25 Locust St,

RE-ALTY

Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 4%-2674

•World's Largest

REALTY
·

Real Estate Foi Sale

Lucille Brannon

Eve. 446-1226

lHE. LEADER SINCE 1900 iN '
SERVING THE NATION'S
u .8oo
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
2 BR &amp; bath. W·W carpel in LR.
Ph. 4%·0008
all furniture included, lot
lOO'xlOO', in city.

FARMS
3657 . Day care that says " we
11 0,000.
ONE of Gallla Co.'s batter
care." ·· Madg e Ha Uidren. 2 BR cottage &amp; outbuildings. 16
farm s. 146 A., mostly new
Owner; Loredllh &amp; John
fences, 2 barns,· ~llo, pond,
acres, good building lots.
Hauldren, Operators.

We have you In our heart.

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

$13,000
3 BR one floor plan, large
garage, level loi in city.

creek, fronts on 2 rds., 1,352

r---.---- - ---r

MASSIE

The WISEMAN
Ag'ency

Realty, 32 State St
. Tel. 446-199,

REALTOR

CHESHIRE - Split-Level. 8 yr.
old, ·5 rms ., large bath. llv.
rm ., 18'x24' with F.P.. all
carpet, gas fur . 2 car garage

Price $31,500.

-

Cheap

housing, real ni ce. 3 bd. rm .•
large li v. rm ., nice bath ,

copper plumbing. all life
cei linq, oil fur ., 2 car garage.
Large shaded. lot. Walk to
school. Only S12,500.

lb. fob. base, 44 A. corn ~se,
25 A. corn goes wi th sale,
modern home with full NEAR Clay Sthool - Extra
basement.
S!S.OOO
nice, 3 bdrm .• new carpet in
panel ing, cement work, 3 BR. new ranch sty le just v..
liv. rm .. din . area, and hal l. It
1lS A. - Close to Rio, lots of
IN MEMORY of Henry Allison
barbecue. patios. or garage, '
mi le to Tycoon Lake, 2Jt..
has
new. Aerobic Septi c tank,
bottom
land
and
lots
of
farm
who lefl us one year ago
ca rport. etc.? You name it,
acres good land.
full
base., with pa rt ial
today , Sept. 3.
equipment.
we'll do it. Reasonabl e rates .
flni!hed rec . rm ., attached
Oh, how we miss you.
Call 446-0126 or 446-1753.
$15,000
Words can never tell,
119-11 4 BR one floor plan, w-w carpet 163 A. - Beef. hog and grain gar. and located on 112 A.
shaded lot. Price reduced for
But we all plan to meel you
farm .
=-:-:-:---:----in 5 rooms. aft. garage, 2
quick sale.
For with you all things are wel l . ROOF lN G and guller work.
outbu ildings, 111.. acre lost.
2'1 A. - State Route 160, vacant
Sadly missed by wife &amp;
Wi ll iam Mitchell, 388-8507.
CHESHIRE - 5 rm . frame ,
$8.700.
chi ldren .
67-11
$14,200
H.W. floors, attach gar., fuel
208-1
2 BR one floor plan, forced air 30 A. - Vinton area, like new
oi l fur ., storm doors and
TOO L t sharpening
saws,
windows, aluminum si ding, ·
oil furnace, 1 car garage, 39
mobile home.
scissors and shears, mower
acres
.
nice shrubbery and level lot.
Card of Thanks
114·11
wife, -:c::-:::::-:--:---chlldren &amp; grandchild~en .
o)OESl'our home need pa inting,.
208-1 sidi ng, roofing, remode ling,
Sad ly

missed

by

I WOULD like to take this opportunity to thank all my

blades, drill bits, barber
clippers, a nd cutle ry. Sharp
~h op. afley rear 147 Second

Ave.
fr iends and relati ... es for the
139·11
lovely cards I received on my
birthday . Your kindness wi ll
never be forgotten. Mrs . TV Service black and wh ite or
George (Arlena) Keith . color. Color includes cleaning
tuner.
ad jus ti ng
color,
Grover City. Ohio.
208·1 demagnE-tizing pictu re- tube.
Gal l ia Refrigerat ion, 611

- - -_....,.--

Thi rd. 446 -4066.
206-3

Wanted To Do

MOTOR CYCLE. Pleasure
Trai l. Open s Saturday &amp;
roof ing ,
Sunday. Sa turday 1 till dusk,

REMODELING, building new

rooms , ce ment,
siding, furnace ins. J. H.

Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.

68-ff

Sunday I til l 6 p.m . Leonard
Newberry Fa rm, Hannan
Trace Rd., between Patriot &amp;

Rl. 775. Adm . $1.00. Trails for
pre;li ce nsed cyclists an d

NOTICE

begmners .

PR IVATE guitar instructions, - - - - - - - - - - 1972, 1973. enrollment now
being accepted . Please call RA~PH'S Ca rpel &amp; Upholstery
between 1 and 5 p. m. onl y 446Clea ning Service.
Free
0706.
esti mates. Ph. 446-02'14. Ralph
206·6 _...A._Dayls, owner .
9-ff
~:-----

PR IVATE piano instructions, GLASS for all needs . Home
1972, 1973 enrollmen t now

ser vice and insurance claims.
Russ's Glass Serv ice, 704 Pine

being accepted. Please cal l
between 1 and 5 p. m. only 446·
0706.
206·6

have brought home the
spade contract.
South couldn't do anything
except follow to the firs t
heart. He didn 't have to ruff
the second one, and if he
had just discarded a low
diamond everything would
have been easy from · then

NORTII

2
• AI074
• Q4
AI0543
.7 2
WEST
EAST
• 5
• Void
. • AK95
.108763 2
~+J972
+KQ
.AJ43
.QI0986

+

on.

(D)

• J

+86

•Ks
East- West vulnerable

4.

East South

Pac;s Pass
Pass
Opening lead- • K

bu ilt in

laundry room, garage.

l ot, like new , comp l etely
furni shed, l ip out rm. , central

$21,500.

carpet throughou t,
double
carpot,
storage
W·W

bui ld ing. large lot.
S24,500
3 BR, 2 bath, ranch sty le, family
room , ca rport and stor age.

126.900
3 BR . 1'12 tile bath , all brick
rancher. garage. covered
patio, conc rete dr ive and
street.

$42,000
96 ACRES on Rl . 7, all electric
brick ranch sty le, wb
f ireplace in large fami ly
room , carpeted throughout ,
pa tio ,
garag e,
quick
possession .

Help Wanted

$MONEY$

slope, 5 room house with bath,
plenty wa ter , rooms are

refr igerator, air cond., all
drapes and curtains, $14,500 .

paneled with ti le ceilings.
Priced at $11,600 and included

built -in

VINTON

kitchen

-

with

Completely

the washer, dryer , and
cooks tove and heating stove.

remodeled 2 stor y home with

basement. wil l sell or trade. NEAR K.C. H. SC.-Colon ial, 2
story, 8 big rms., base ., 3

RIO GRANDE - Lovely 3 yr.
baths. 3 A. $50,000.
old brick priced to sell. $21 ,000
includes 6 rms .• HW floors , PATRIOT 2 story, older
built.in kitchen , air cond . and
drapes.

home. sound, water fine , 2 A.

fl at lot ; price $13,000.

NEW LI ST IN G - CIT Y - KERR - All brick, HW and
carpet firs., 7 rm s. plus full
Lovely 2 BR home on a flat
base .. 1 A. lot. II has 3 baths
shady lot. Can be bought
and 2 ca r garage.
reduced to $35 ,000.

furni shed or unfurn ished .

MIDDLEPORT

Pr ice

PR ice

reduced. Love ly 12 rm . brick ST. RT 2H! - New, all elec ., S
on a corner lot . Could be used
rms ., 2 car gar ., vinyl Sid . on
as 2 3 or 4 apartments.
·.7 A. lot . $18.000.

POMEROY - Remodeled older BABY FARM - Located on
home . Now being rented for
Carter Rd ., 5 A. , 2 story
$185 per month . Low down
payment on $17 ,500 .

house, 6 rms. , bath, laun dry,
paneling &amp; carpet . It has
cellar, chicken house, storage

MILLS VILLAGE - Im mediate

bldg . and garage. Plenty good

occupancy, love ly 1 story
water . Price $14.900.
home with fu ll basement,
formal dining room, family GREEN ACRES Price
room, 2 WB fireplace s,
reduced on th is beauty, 4 yr.
IOOx-300 rot.
old ranch, H.W. floors
beauti ful kitchen, 3 Bd. rms.:
PRICE
J"ced to s1 4,500! 2
1111 baths . This house ls like

story . S.f}, ''ers 4 BR, large
forma l '::"(-(} room . full

new. Only $22.500,
FAR"1S

basements.
.s of shade 75 A. modern 5 rm . home, 5
trees . Route 141.
barns, 15 A. development

land. one of Galli a Co.'s best.
BELIEVE it or not! 4rms. bath 160 A. on St. Rl. 325, 100 A.
and basement in city for less tractor land. good bldgs. and
than $5,000. Make us an offer .

Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manag er

plenty water .
204 A. near Lecta. lots of tim .
ber , 7 rm . house, 2 barns and

SELLI NG at th e rate of 2 or J
properties each week makes
H difficult to keep enough
listings. If vou want yours
so ld . call th e Wiseman
Agency .

Apartment House
3 UNITS {a ll rented) on a fu l l
ci ty lot in 600 bloc k of Second
Ave , P rice· it yourself and if
you get close to S20,000, it's
all yours

New Listing

JJ&amp;lWIDibrn®""" ~-MJ .-4 ,_.
hy U E Nt't! AJ'INOLO .mel BOA LE F

Unocramble theoe four Jumbleo,
one letter In each square, to
form four ordinary worda.

brand toys for PLAYHOUSE .

MOVING
TO
EUROPE .
Here 's your
chance at a rear ni ce 3
bedroom home located on a
large flat tot at edge of town .
In clud ing large living and
dining room , nice kitchen
(range , refrlg,, washer and
dryer stay s), fu ll basemen t,
central air and garage. Lor is
ex tra ni ce. Cou ld be co m.
merciel .

Free suppl ies, no col lecting .
Check the rest then work tor

(move tomorrow) . Just like
new throughou t, wall to wall
carpet , 2 baths. beautiful
kitchen (range oven buill ·
in J. large rooms. large fla t
lot in new sub ·dlv lsion .

$28,000.

We Have
25 New Homes
To Choose From
SOME are finished readv fo r
occupancy, others in all
different stages ot con .
struction . You name i t and
we'll have . Look now befor e
someone else buys the one
you wanted . we will help you
find the finan cing it it 's
humanly possible . Call Ike
Wiseman lor all details .

Bargain Hunters
Here's A Bargain

the best. Don't wait fill it 's too
late. CALL Barbara Lambert,
446-3411.
208-lf
TEMPORARY part-lime help

I .J'UJJOO
I

ATTENT ION LADIES - Sell
Toys 8. Gifts now lhru
December with the oldest Toy

KXJ (J I
..

rAiiLED

J

I

I

tJ

1

DAI'OAG1
\

I

I

v1 I

r

r Pride SIIIPRISUIISWIUen

1~

5TATE OF WOME~
EAr;:L IEFC: DAYS.

Now· arranre t.he circled Jetton
to form the IUrprlu &amp;l\lwer, u

(Amwrri 'lnnda~)

AaiWrrt Brare •' ,,., lt~•flf"h-f'uuld br

AUCTION

sERVia

"SElL TH£ AUCTION.
WAY"

·JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH. 446-3444. .

ex.tra lots on Route 7, house

shown by appolnlmenl.

94x300', garage.
Cash Outlay . Call or wr ite
" San ta's Parties", Avon, Ct.
06001. Tel. 1 (203) 673-3455. Farm home with 8 room house,
ba th, oil heat, storm doors
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
and
windows, 257 A. wllh 2
207-26
large barns, 1100 T. B. 13 A.
Corn. 45·A. bottom land, good
BABYS ITT ER needed In VInton
water and good fence; 10
home for 2 grade school
miles from City on black lop
ch ildren. light housekeeping,
road .
can live in, Call 388-9901
evenings or 446-9695.

I ( I I XX11 X1

lumbl'" WHISK fRANC DOUIU 115101
doft6~rou• ! -

county wafer available, house
set on 2 lots SOxlSO' and 2

Party Plan in the Coun try. In City. 3 B. R. house. gas fur nace. bath. on large lot,
Highest commissions, No

~::;·::;~~~;;~;t-,~;..1~~·liUC(OIIed by the above cartoon.

l'ettHday•a

water available.

wan ted. Idea l for mothers and
housewives. For interview AI Kanauga 3 B. R. house with
full basement, gas furna ce,
ca ll 446-2980.

208-3

(;(}RRJ

Severa l outbuildings and
1 A. land fenced in. County

A " liD SKIN"

Wanted To Buy

A. Farm and camp site on
207-3 240Raccoon.
New brick home.
elc. heat. bath, lot fenced ln .
Shown by appointment.

2 B. R. home close to clly with
city wa ter, lot about o;, A.
Pr ice reduced to $9500.
Olllce446 ;1066
Evening Call:
Ron Canaday, 446-3636
GOOD CLEAN used turn .
Russell D. Wood. 446·4618
Rice's New &amp; Used Furn. 446·
John I. Richird5, 446·0280
9523. '
170-lf
GRAPES and v, gallon canning
jars. Ph . 446-0212.
204-5

Camping Equipment
JUST arrived . 1973 Starcraft
Campers. All 1972 units huge
discount. We service what we

sell. Camp Conley Slarcratt
Sales, 62 North of Poln'
Pleasant behind Red Carpel
Inn.
___:_
163-lf

____

Mobile
Homes .for Sale
.
GOOD USED MOBILE HOMES
1970 S~y l i n e 12x50 2 Br.
1967 Horizon t2x50 2 Br.
1970 Richardson 12x65 3 Br.
1965 Vlndale lOxSO 2 Br.
1960 Van Dyke .lOx40 2 Br.
1960 Va11 Dyke 10x50 2 Br
Tri·Countv Mobile Homes
2013 Eoslern Ave.
Gallipolls, Ohio
4%-0175

. "

II

'.

couple. All city services, close•
to stores , beautiful area.:
priced under $10.000.
;.

small home for retlr~e

or:

PLUSH MOBILE HOME ....;:
Five rooms with bath plus:
additional
20 X· 28 build ing :;
104 ACRE Beef and Da iry
Plen
ty
of
water
wllh drillec!•
Farm . 6 room home. 2 barn5 .
well and coun ty water, :
Deep well. Slate Rt. 55~. Ca ll
com plet ely furn ished an~ .
446·4127 . This farm reduced
ready to move in .
$4,000 due to retirement. Wil l
trade for home near lawn.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY -:
Nlce

VINTdN, nice 2 bedroom home
on Jackson St. Garden . Call
446-ml.

redecorated

three ·

bedroom home plus two good :
mobile homes. Presenl In-·

'795

302 V-8, radio. wheel covers,

'·1595

standard transmission. Sharp.

68 FORD GAL 500

'1095·

2 Dr. hardtop, 302 V-8 engine, a uto.
trans.. p. steering. Nice.

month plus his home. Now Is:
the time to buy this money .

maker.

Evenings
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
D. J . Wetherholl, 446-4244
Sleven A. Belz, 446-9583

"

65 BUICK WILDCAT
4 Or. hardtop, V-8. aula . trans., p.

'695

steering, low mileage. loca lly
owned. Sharp,

69 KALAWSKI 90 street l;like.:

Extra sprocke,IS. excellent ·
condition. also gas tloor :
fu rnace. 446-3553.
208-3.

NEAR hospital, 4 ar,.re farm f
remodeled 3 bdr m. home,
forced air heat, rural water. FOR " A job well done feeling" '
clean carpets wllh Blue :
Price $11,500. See today!
Lustre .
Rent
electri c·
sham pooer $1. Centrai ·Supply :
~-

66 CHEV. BELAIR

·,

208-6:

EXCELLE NT flat land for
Home build ing in dandy
rural ne ig hborhood , S minute
drive from town . Ci ty school
district.
rural
water
Beaut iful at ~5 . 000. Don't
miss seeing them , on l y 3 left.

Summer Cottage
On Raccoon Creek
SLEE PS 8, is fully turn ished

used for pasture.

2 dr. hardtop, V-8. auto., p. steering,
lac. air cond., vi nyl roof, bucket
seals, lac. stereo !ape system. w-s-w
w-eavers, locally owned In

Jay S~epperd 4'46·0001
Denver K. Higtev 4%·0002
Wanda S. Eshenaur 446-0003

--------

KIRKWOODdoublewlde mobile :
home 24x56. 3 bedrooms. 2;
baths, furn ished, central air . &lt;
home to be moved . 446-2604. :·

Mobile home. 3 bedrooms. 3
miles from Ctlv Pork,
Private lot, all utilities
furnished $175. Available
Sept. 4. Call 446-0263 11 to 4,
446 -1203 after 5 p.m.
SLEEPI NG room's for rent.
Gallia Hotel . 446·9715 .
181 ·If

SIMPLI CITY riding .tractor, 3;:
speed trans .. 32 1n. rotary f
mower, 48 in. dozer blade 1 10" ::
turn plow, reat mount rotary •:

IIIIer .

Tracter

drag .:·

cultivator, 42 in . side mount •:
cycle bar. Will deliver . Call ;.

2 dr . hardtop. p. steering, p. brakes.
lac. air. vinyl roof with many other
extras. Locally owned.

$

'1495

2 Door Sedan
With Air Cond.

1968 BUICK

1969 Chev. Pickup

Special. 2 Dr .. Air Cond ., V8,
Auto. Trans .

4 Dr . Sedan with

Air Cond .

'1995

'1395

1969 Dodge Pickup

1966 VOLKSWAGEN

Long bed, V-8, 27,000 miles,
adventure pkg . Nice for
cam per.

Two To Choose from. Red,
White. Were $895.00.

68 OODGE
DART GTS
2 DR. HARDTOP

Was 51695.00.

'1895

'795

30
- MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
.UP TO 36 MONTHS

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.
Gallipolis, Dhio

For Sale

69 MERC~RY MONTEGO
2 Dr. Hardtop, V-8, aut. irans., P.

steering, vinyl roof, one owner.
while with blk. vinyl roof.

'1595

... Meet the
lnlck
that beats

- -- - - - - - Call 256·61189.
•
2 BEDROOM lr• lle r. Hen 208·11"
derson, W. Va . 675-4130 .
202-6 YARD SA LE Sept. 7, 8 &amp; 9 on .
Rl . 554 next to Bidwell Mill ing·
PR IVATE trailer space. Rl . 7. 3
In Bidwell. Some used fur -·
miles below
Gallipol is
nilure and new and old dishes .
overlook ing river , city water ,
208-3.
446-0599.
205-4 1970 PLYMOUTH Fury, 318 cu. '
BRADBURY

efficiency

apartmen ts. for rent, adults

only . No pels, 72'1 Second Ave .
Ph . 446-0957.
205-11

208·3

Ll'l ......r.

in ., auto. transmission , air ·
cond ., power steering, Radial

Don says: We have the best selection of sharp, loca I, preowned cars in the Tri-County area.
'71 BUG, orange, blk. int .• 4-sp., radio, 16.000 mi .
'70 BUGS, beige &amp; blue. nicely equipped.

'70 MAVERICK, factory A-C. auto., radio.
'70 DODGE, 440 H.T., auto., P. S. &amp; P. B., red w-vinyl top.
'70 OLDS, Delta 88, factory A· Cwith everything.
'70, '69 &amp; 68 Ford 112 Ton Pickups
Walk-In Pickup Camper-like new, h'ls everything.
'69 FORO, Gal . 500 H.T., factory A· C &amp; everything .
.'69 LTD, 2 dr . H. T., auto., P.S., P. B. Very nice.
'69 CHEV., 327 V-8, factory A-C. auto ., P.S,
'61 P.I..Y.',.fllrY ll,l ,4.dr ... V,-~ •.auto., P.S.
'68 FAIR LANE, Red convt., 289 V-8, auto., P. S. Nice.
'67 CHEV., Impala H.T., V-8, auto.
'67 MUSTANG, red, '6', auto., very, very sharp .
'67 TO RON ADO, wht,, blk. vinyl top, lac. A-C. Everything.
Lots Of Low Priced Cars -$100 Up

With a new metal building.
N ew ~ bJJilQing ...... at.tracts '
business, increase profits,
provide greater efficfenty.
Let us devot e our time in
your buildmg planning . For
assistance in planning and
cost estima te, call Southern
Construct i on Co, Proc·
torv ill e, Ohio. Represen ta tives: R. Butcher, area

$119'.5

$895
$1195
$1495

code 614, 886-5809. M. S.
Smith, area code 61 4, 886·

6885.
Si.AMESE and Balinese kitten s.
Trained, cleaner ilnd quie ter
than dogs, smarter than you .
Phone 446·3844 after 4 .

203 -6

SIEG LE R fue l oi l heat er 70,000
BT U, Speed Queen portable

TRIUMPH Bonneville. 650
TWO new trailers all electric, '4 1971
CC,
Iow mlleageluslllke new .
mile off Rt. 7. Call 446-1405 or
Call 245-9311 .
446-3468.
207·3
181-11
wagons. bred &amp; open
SLEE PIN(',I ROOMS, . weekly 2 FOLAGE
Hol sle ln heifers , 614-286-2496.
rates. Park Central Hote l.
207 -3
308·11
~~-:---::-:---

-=-:--:--_....,.--,-..,.--

washer with spin dryer . 367·

In the tradition ol Li1 Huatlet

Am;:•l;ca~··:N~o~,~~~~~ll~ln:g~~:~l

..
truck. Totally restyled. Roomier,
new power-auiat brakes. Plua
cam englne,ti-tooll
llocul bed. 4-apeed stick and more. Take a ltlt drive ooon.1

4 Dr. Sedan, 6 cyl. engine, aut. trans.,
radio, blue metallic finish with matching intetior. 24,000 act. miles. Like
MW.
•

·~~~~~uruill~W.~~

APARTMENT for construction
men . Ph. 4-46-0756.
267-h

AUCTION

------

SMITH AUTO SALES

VAlLIE TONEY

KANAUGA, .OHIO
For Sale

For Sale

7637.

For Sale

1970 FORD

'17-9 5
WOOD MOTOR SALES

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1966 Schu ll 12x50, 2 bedroom
1961 Na shua 10x50, 2 bedroom

1954 Anderson Bx36, 1 bedroom
196Y Capella 50x12, 2 bdrm .
1968 Ki rkwood 60xl2, 2 bdrm.
1962 Gibraltar 55x10.• 2 bdrm .
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp; \liand St.
Pt. Pleasant
( Nexllo He ck's)

NEW tobacco sticks, ready to

use. Ph . 379-2166.
198-12

.

t':

• USED CAR BARGAINS•

1972
VEGA GT. .............. '2295
Like new, 13,000 miles.
1971 PINT0.................... '1595
One owner, local car.

1970
OPEL SEDAN .........' 1295
Like New.
1969
VOLKSWAGEN .... ! 1295
Nice, one own er.

1969 OPEL STATION WAGON ... !1195
I

car.

Gallipolis Chrysler·
Gallipolis

All electric five room
house.
15
acres.
Mercerville area. Ph.
256-6588.

TERMITE PEST CONTROL
FREE inspection . Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator lor
Extermlnal Termite Service.

Grande. Phone 245-Sl15.

206·3
happy , health y. farm rarsed .
Jackson 988-2601.
205-6 TWO 8,000 BTU Air Con ·
di tioners. New. A lso bedroom
fur·niture . Phone 446-9282
after 6 p. m.

19 Belmont Dr.
267-11
Central Air Conditioning
&amp;

~ Your Massey-Ferguson Dealer

TARA

·TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENts

Vinton. Oh io

--_....,.---144·11

For. lnform1tlon Clll Stlirlty Acltdllll--367·7250

--

eoor eo.

416-:f.li eo. •.

I~

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell 's Plumbing. 4~;;81)

BOB
LANE ' S Complete
Bookkeeping and Tax Set·
vice. 424'12 Fourth Ave ..
l&lt;anauga. Office hrs . 9 a .m.·l
243-tl
p.m . Ph. 446-1049 .
_
11

RICE'S

------

Phone 317-7579 or 367-7706.
146-h

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Slar Rt .. Gallipolis
Ph. 379-2133

1

·him-•

Backhoe and Oor:er ·service.
Septic tanks, la rm ditching,.
ponds . Free Estimate~ .

Healing

Free Eslimates
Stewa rt's Hardware

DEAD STOCK

1112 BATHS

446-3273

Services Offered

Services Offered

1:""

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

."Y\IY.

1972 GOLD
DUSTER, on~

- - -- -

:P·

.

EXAMPLE:

SER'fA &amp; Bemco Mattresses &amp;
box springs $29 up. 955 Second rnoved to home with bui lt -i n
line, good with ch ildren . Has
THOMAS FAIN
Ave. 446·1171 .
sho ls , Ph . 367-7205.
trailer. Call A-46-4602 .
ca n be seen 1902 Eastern
EXTERMI NATING CO.
range
.
Ph
.
446-2219.
10·11
Termite &amp; Pest Control
205-3 UPRIGHT Piano. never wet.
207-3 Ave., Gallipolis.
205·3
la ir condit ion. S25. 446-9700.
Wheelersburg, Ohio
207·3
T:::-W-1N--:-N,-:E,-::E,-:D::--L-::E-::-Se-w-;-1ng
AKC
REG.
English
bulldog
,
206-3
- - -- - New GMC
SI NGER Sewing Machine Sales
Machine 1972 Model In walnut
l
emale,
7
months
old.
all
Truck Hudquortors
&amp; Service . All models In
·stand. All features built In to
shots, housebroken $50. 446· PICKUP tru ck topper 5150 . '68 C&amp;S Electrical Service &amp;
1962 o;, ton GMC Pick up
stock.
Free delivery . Service
PIPES,
Pipes.
Pipes,
GBO,
Pontiac Bonneville, loaded.
1
make lanty designs and do
1944.
!966
/z
lon
GMC
Pi
ckup
Repairs . House wiring,
guaranteed . Models pr iced
C~eratan. ·BBB,
Jobey, 1969 CNds 88
Cattle rac ks. Phone 388-8740. electric heat, motor controls .
s~nlch sewing. Also but205-3
.
from $69.95. French City
Hilson. and others. Tawnev's ·For Sale
206'-3 Free est imates. Ph. 446-4561
tonholes, blind hems. etc.
Fabric Shoppe, Singer •P·
PI PI 111d Trophv Hou10, •22 '68 VW Red wllh blk. inl~rior .
$43.25 tash price or terms
or 675-3361.
proved dealer. 58 Court 51. LOT, rural water Installed,
Sec011d Ave.
available. Phone A-46-&lt;1578.
Radio, Good Shape with air
MAGNETIC car and true~
22-tf
!9'1-ff
Ph.
M6-9255.
20H
Plants
subdivision.
Ph.
446·
shocks with whl. adapters .
si~
ns
.
Available
6'/2"
x
18"
to
.
308-lf
3617'
20 • x U' . $12.50 to $30 pair.
BANKS TREE SERVICE
AU TYPES of building
Only $875. Al so Torqueflile
205-6
446·1397. Simmons Pig . &amp; FREE estimates, llabilily In·
VACUUM CLEANER. Electro
materials. blcick, brick, sewer· tr~n$. with Chevy adapter 1972 GMC Jimmy 4 wheel dr ive
Office Equip. Made to order, surance . Pruning, trimming
Hvglene New Demonstrator
pfpn, windows. llnt.ls, etc•. chup. 446-2416.
307-V8 1 four speed trans ., free DINETTE set, table and 4
Signs of all kinds.
and cavity work, tree and
has all cloning· altac:hmtrils
Claude Wlnten, Rio Grande, 1970 lnlernaflonal Dump Truck.
whee ling hubs, price for quick ' chairs. S2S; 4 section of living
plus the new Efeclro Suds for
1~
s
140·11
slump removal. Ph . 446·4953.
shampooing carpel . Only
0 . Phone 2-15-512 1 a '"' .
Exlrl clean.
sale. Call 245-5690.
room drapes, mint green, like
~---~--IJ.II
123
20/.6
S27.50 cash price or terms
'
·" '1969 2 T. GMC
new, leng th 84", total width
a•allable. Phone A-46-&lt;1571.
- .....: - - - - - - - : : · - · · ;HI Jeep Sfalion wagon
206" S25; 2 wigs, one human BOATforsale. 16ft. runabout 80 GILLENWATER'S septic tank
Mercury
eng ine,
1
1
20H ·
AT SPECIAL
1964"" T. GMC PU
U$ED FURNITURE ha ir S10, one synthetic S5. horse
trailer, Del Ginger ich . 628 cl~anlng and repa r, a so
1
7
388
8666
BUNK bed set comptele with med . brown . Ph .
· 205 _3
" Jtepster
------.
Fourth. Phone 446·3778.
house wrecking . Ph. 446·9499.
LOWER
PR ICES . 19il7
Yz ton Chevrolet pickup
ALL eleclrlc mobile home wllt1
.
Established In 1940.
202
6
spr ings and mattresses or can - - - - - - - - - add on, encloHd porch, 7
NEW I USED
19il7 ~ T. Chev. PU
169-11
be used as trundle bed - 3
Labor Day Specials
rooms,
w-w
urpeflng I-BEAMS, Channel, angle • ., . . Yz :T· GM ~U
real nice 2 pc. living room
1963 Nimrod , fold down camper. 1960 CHAMPION 10 x 50 trailer, 0. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
throughovt, furniture.
shHf and plale •'"1, rounds,
~ ~ ~~~~
suites - 2 couches - 2 en d good condition S299; 1972
new gas furnace, $2,000. Ph .
Delivery Service . Your
pllanct, draptJ, Inn rz
flats reinforcing bars end · 19il6 ~ T · GMC
tables - real nice desk with Apache Eagle, like new $619,
~77634.
.
patronage
will be ap.
roo111 wllt1 Mllvfll! washer
·r· GMC PU
chair - Speed Queen wringer . 1972 Apache solid slate Yuma ,
11111,; roll, pipe, culverll and
202 12 preclaled . Ph. 446-0463.
'ron
dryer In Rio Grande. $5,500.
equlpinent. Prompt drilling.
Ford
flat
.
washer
twln
site
box
Reg . $1399, $99'1 . Amsbary
]. If
Ph. 2-15-S..,..
:!07 If Nelma~ Co .• Nelsonville, 19il7 ·_ 1,1, Ton GMC Pi ckup
springs and mattress wit~ Apache
Trailer
Sales.
631
legs - old trunks - lawn
-----::-""':::--::'"-· ·
Ohio, P. 0. Box 291. Ph. 753· !964 _ CO 1600 International
Services O.ffere~
f.=~~~~~::;;-,
Fourth Ave .
mower - 7 pc . dinette set , In
1554. call coiled.
· t•uck
205-4 LAST
BID
home
irn
·
1'..
NHII Anollltr Bldg?
181·H '
good shape.
SEE our aluminum bldgs. - - - - - - - ·1967 \'&gt; T. GMC PU
provemenls . alumtnum ·
•
IF · you are building a new siding:
Huvy duty,. with flooring, IT 'S Inexpensive lo clun rugs 1?6.3 F*J'or~ Truck
~utters
,
roofing
·
home or remodeling, see us.
repairs, b1g or small. Pay
SS:OOServiceCharge
wired for e ectrlc. Also West
and upholsterv wllt1 Blue 19il6 'Ill T. GMC PU
only laborandmalerlal. Woo·k
Willremoveyourdead
We ;;re bui lders. Distributor
VIrginia chunk coal, drain
Luslre,
Rtnl
electric
SOMMER'S G.M.C.
NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE for Hotpoinl Appliances •. guaranteed, Free estimates .
horseandcows
tile, oell Ill e. ument &amp;
Sl. Central Supplv
rRUCKS,Ih-.:.
854 Second Ave., 446·9523
ortar
.
.
c;a111~11
Block
&amp;
•
,.......
113
Pine
St.
Ph. 388·8221.
l
Call Jackson 28(o.AS:)1
Allison Electric.
111
201 ·11
1s.f.lf
•
194-11
123\lt Pine.
202·6
w.un
1966 CAPRICE Chevrolet. 1• fl. SHETLAND ponv. 42 lnch01
boat with 40 HP motor &amp;· high, gentle wilh children,

.

BY OWNER

171 -tl GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Car l Winters, Rio

AKC REG . 3 mon ths old mal e
dachshund. excellent blood
ex.tras. Reasonable . Rece ntly

8 uy.

1639 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

For Sale
For Sale
electric range . 6 months old.
CORBIN &amp; SNYD~R 30"excellent
condition , many

Ma k~ Sure Yo~ 9Je.fk , With ,~~ . Before

207 -3

USED mobile home 10'x 40'
6-il
furnished , also air con ditioned. Pomeroy Motor Co .,
Pomeroy, Oh io . Chevrolet '67 FORD Pickup with lillie
Champ camper . 15 fl. boat
dealer .
with 80 HP Mercury engine
205-6
and trail er . 92 Chi llicothe
Road , Gallipol is, Ohio.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • GERMAN Shepherd puppy ,

Eastern Ave.

OVER COST'

BE ONE STEP AHEAD

tires, good

Datsun's aew
Ll1 Bustier.

00

204-11

· condition . 256-1385.
208-3
NEW 2 bedroom mobile homes.
Will lease or rent by week or 42 EWE S. good ones. Ph . 256month. Call ~46-0683 or 446·
6885.
0008.
208·3
190-11

PLYMOUTHS

Ave .. 446 -1171.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD

and

of free parking , 955 Second

DON WATTS V.W. INC.

PONTIAC Catalina V-8, '

ALL 1972
CHRYSLERS

sale . Open Friday 11118. plenty

AT

208-6.

standard, new

coppertone. Phi1co au t o.
washer, Maytag wringer
washer, l dinette sets, 7
pieces , good shape ; bedroom
suite, 3 pieces ; occasional
chair.
NEW: Lawn furn. now on

$1895
$1 695
$1795
$1995
$2595
$1495-$2195
$1595
$1995
$1795
$1595
$1288

SEE
DWIGHT SIEVERS. JOHN SANG OR STEVE ROACH

Ford fractor, plow disc,
mower, cultivator . 446· 1216.
Wallace Kemper .
196~

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE
USED: Like new Adm iral ref .•

Iires. good condition, 1950 :

1

2 BEDROOM trailer in city,
uti lities paid. Ph . «6-0893.

VOLKSWAGEN

1995

.
55 GALLON electr ic hoi water:;.

NOW ·Is THE TIME TO BUY llfAT NEW
M. F. TRACTOR OR M. F. HAY BALER
BEFORE THE PRICE GOES UP AGAIN. .

I

26,000 miles, radio, one owner.
Sharp.

'3995

With Air Cond .

69 CHEV. CAPRia

446-0278. 675-3796, call after 4;:
p.m.
•·
208-s ::

------

L--~~--------------------~

drive,

'795

4 dr . seda n, 6 cyl. engine. auto.
trans ., radio. Nice.

208 ·4!:

- - - - - - - - - - ,·

PAY ONLY ONE UTILITY

Phone : 446-1 044
Owner: Bill Wooldridge

VOLKSWAGEN

1970 MAVERICK

lustre way from carpets and :·

upholstery . Renl electric ;·
shampooer $1 . Mur phys
Lower Store.
•
108·6: '

------

Gallipolis. Ohio ·

SUPER VAN

50 State Street

65 CHEV.II

COMPLETE FARM

Upper Rl. 7-Kanauga

1970

1969 DODGE
CORONET 500

NEWPORT
4 DR. SEDAN

I

•

TRACTOR

1970 FORD

V-8 engine

1969 DiRYSLER

'3 195

TAKE SOIL away the Blue :

10:00 A.M.

r=-=~GALLIPOLIS

V-8 engine.
Auto .
Tran ·
smission

Eldorado. frl . wheel
vinyl lop . air. sharp.

71 MERCURY COUGAR

lank $35. Ph . 446-0418 after:•;
VERY n ice 3 MEN, Tired ot Holels and
5:30.
.
bedroom
home ,
full
restauran t food? A clean,
basement , large lot. You 'l l
208-3
qui et r oom with refrigerator
love the kitchen . Large
carpete:: living room . Edge
and cooki,ng tacll illes. S35 JD 350 dozer. 67 model with .
of town, $\6,500 buys It and
month . Ul•llti,H •!d. 44!\·ol416 ~· ~lade and wrench . 66 modelo
1t's tru e by W bar'g"alfl · - .;
\"I:' after 6 p ·m · · •;at• '- ~:nt:;:"??.,w 6oo ser ·•es Internat ional;.,
202-6
truck . Both in A-1 condition .'
Bui Iding Lots

2 Acres

1970 DODGE
1).100 1h TON
PICKUP TRUCK

'495

4 Door. 8 cyl. engine, auto. trans.

For Sale

1969 Cadillac

Long bed, V-8, cust . cab. worth
more.

come to owner over $250 per ~

HOUSE. 4 rooms &amp; bath , adults
FRI., SEPT. 15
WOULD CONSIOER
only. 446-1736.
TRADING
207-3
needs work, will discuss
price. Ph. 446·9286affer 2 p.m. 3 BR HOME. lull basement and
recently redecora t ed . TRAILER space, rrivale lot, on
204-4
Located at 27 Evans Heights.
Rl. 160. Evergreen . Call 446·
Would
consider trading for
3805.
39 ACRES, 7 room house with
farm or Mobile Home.
207-3
balh , other ou tbuilding s In
DISPERSAL
THIRD AVE. &amp;
Addison Township, $18.000.
SPRUCE ST.
105 Cattle, 4 horses. 3400
Ph. 367-7607.
FURN -ISHED aparlment.
207-3 2 FAMILY dwelling wllh 4 completely remodeled. new
boles hay, all machinery and
rooms each and bath each
household furnishings, 1910
furniture and appllancn. All
apt. Already rented. Buy
HOUSE for sale by owner . New
:~,~ T. truck.
·
ulllllln paid, adults 011ly.
today •nd start collecting
4 bedroom . Central air con Rice's New&amp; Used Furn., 446·
'
.
.
rent.
9523.
.
ditioner. colonial brtck. with
Office Phone 446-1694
lots of extras. Upper bracket.
20J.If
Evenings
Shown by apf&gt;?lnlment, Point
Charles M. Neol, 446-1546
Pleasant restdence.
Pf. P!usant
ONE nlte Iorge efficiency
J . Michael Neal, 446-1503
207-ff
JGIIn Mc,.lll, Auclion•r
room, teacher prelerred. Rio
Grande 245-5142.
Complete listing In next
NEW 3 bedroom home with' 205·3 Sundlr v•s edition.
brick front, 1 car garage 120
LOTS FOR SALE
II . frontage l V2 miles from · LOCATED on Raccoon Road,
new hospi tal on Rt. 160. Call
large home and garden plots,
367-7846 or 367-7481.
adjacent to large existing
1611 -fl
brick residence afso beautiful
mobile home sites. Roads.
"B-us' in
-e-ss...,O
"'"p-po- r-=-tu-nictic:-: es
ELECTRICITY
Electricity. Water Ma ins and
underground Telephone lines.
S/,200 annually growing Gin·
Wo furnish Woter • Sewage. Garbage COllection . Ample
Field Office open from Noon
seng Root for us I Market
Parking · TV Anlonno • Walf.to.Woll Carpeting .
until dark . Offered by Hobart
guaranteed . Fall planting .
Draperies
• Rongn · Rtlrlgoroton • Air Conditionl!l9 •
Dillon and Russel Bailey,
Send $2.00 (refundable) lor
Gar.boge
Olsposols
· Dishwashers- Hut Lamps . Priv1 t1 ·
Owners . P. 0 . Box 516,
seed, instructions. GC Herbs;
Pat1os
·
Swimming
Pool . ClubhouM.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
173 Pleasant St., Middleboro.
19J.ff
Mass. 02346.
,
207-3

M r-

All Going at September Prices.

VERY ,

446-1066

large livi ng room and · la rge
kitchen with nice cabinets,
stove and deep freeze .

•

'i

45 ACRES farm In Vinton
County. Good fences and
pond. Remodeled two story
farm home. Spanish decor.
Shag carpet. 4 bedrooms,
bath and part basement.

For Rent

REALTOR

At Northup, 2 b.r. house with

4 speed trans .. aqua color.

Headquarters for Gall fa County
Real Estate. Listings needed.

1 YEAR old 3 bedroom br ick

WOOD

4 BEDROOM home, 3 baths,
nice location, city sc hools,

69 DATSUN STATION
WAGON

452 Second Avenue
·;
446·3434 446-4775
.;
FOUR ROOMS IN CITY- Nicl!'

Owner Wants House
Sold This Week

RUSSELL

possession .

Rancho Company

Green Twp.

Basement

Neal Realty

books of stamps. Sell name

Only A Few 1972 Buicks Left.

69MUSTANG

OHIO RIVER
Realty

208·6

home, bath , basement, fen 5 BEDROOM RA NCH. This
ced. pines. Add ison Twp.,
very attract ive Redwood is
$14j500
.
priced in mid Twenties and
is located at edge of town in a
·quie t spot with no close ' 7 ACRE, 6 room two story
home, State Rl . 160. Only
neighbors. Very nice kit .
chen, living room, dining and
S11 .200.
hall al l carpeted . See this one
now .
LOTS and small acreage fo r
residential or business, 11f2
New Listingmile from Medica l Center .

!flm 1Atii&amp;JU

to help him,

Easily converted to one
family dwelling . Asking
$30,000 . Shown bv ap·
porntmenf. 4-46-0208.

2 ACRE. roomy 2 bedroom

and ready to use , road and
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
only $25.000.
creek frontage . Approx . l lh
163 A. 5 mi. from Cheshire, on
acres. $8,500.
West opened the king of
Ward Rd.. no bldgs.. un ·
hearts and continued with
Owner Anxious
der l aid with coal. Price
the ace. South ruffed; led a
reduced to $19,500.
FOR 519,900 her e's a real
trump to dummy 's ace and
fine 3 bedroom horne. nice
23
A.
Lincoln
Pike,
7
r
m
.
house,
played dummy's three of
kitctlen (range .oven J. large
barn and lob. ba se. Only living room, hardwood
diamonds. East took the
$11,500.
floors , flat lot, 1112 mile out
trick and led a club. South's
near new hospital. we sold 2
90
A.
plus.
30
A.
tilla
ble,
barn,
king lost to West's ace and
tn this ne ighborhood in 2
plenty wat er, good fences,
day!. Better Hurry .
a club return left South one
many young wa ln ut, fob. base
trick short.
and most underlaid with coal.
("'EWS P.A.PU ENTERPRISE .A.~SN )
"Cheapie"
$15.750.
"Not bad," chortled South.
OLD S room br ick on ex. .
Artfu l dress ing and a smooth
"My preempt shut East and ~z:
ANY HR. 446-1998
$2.60 per hour
ce llent lot. Edge of town .
paint job wi ll lake 20 years off
Lot s worth pri ce 55,400 .
West 9ut of a small slam in
a
woman's true age. But she
Ma ke offer .
hearts ."
The bidding has been:
BEAUTIFUL
suburban
country
can' t fool a long )light of
Immediate openings
estat e bui lding site. Peaceful ;
sta irs.
"Not bad, if you follow the West North East South
for
full
or
partlime
six acre l ot wit h pond . High
I
•
Dble
Pass
old saying that half a loaf is
clea r rolling land edged with
Three
blocks
from
City
School
Pass
2
.
Pass
help.
Call
Mr
.
Napier
9
?
better than none," said
trees . 1.000 feet off Route 160
just one cross street to cross.
a.m. to 9 p.m .,
PRICE REDUCED
North. "It's too bad you You, South , hold:
on good paved road at Kerr.
3 bedroom house fenced in
THE
PRICE of this 14 acres
didn't go all the way, make .8743 • 2 +AK943 .762
Oh io. Two miles from new
Tuesday only 446-0677.
back lot. ha s 1 balh and •;,
with
4 room bl ock home ha s
hospital.
Pl
enty
good
water
your contract, and have the
What do you do now?
bath. Very nice kitchen with
been
reduced Sl.OOO. Loca ted
avai
lable.
By
owner.
Building
lots
of
cabinets,
stove
and
whole loaf."
A-Pass, Your partner is
1'12
miles
from Vinton on
restri cted . Phone 446·0940 .
and also air
North was right. Just a showing a very good hand but HOUSEWIVES - Use spare refrigerator
Keystone Road, it Is fenced
204-6
conditioning,
has
util
ity
room
and most could be farmed or
little early planning would your singleton heart is not going time to earn checks plus and car port . Imm edia te

I.

furnace.
P 'r esent
arrangement, 2 •partments.

4 Bedroom ho!fle, large
&amp; · beautiful, with 1.8 ,
acre of land in city .
school district . 446·
4570.

trajter, along river below
Eureka Dam. Ph. 256-6540.

OWNER

modular home, utility rm .,

FOR SALE; ~; ·owo4-. 2 story
brick house at 452 1st Ave. 7
rooms, 2 baths, gas hot air

.~

.•

.

4 ACRES with 12x47 New Moon

Evening :
Ike Wi seman
. 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman
446-4500
We Need Listings

rentals $225 per mo. Price

air. large patio with awning .
ce llar and utility building EUREKA - River view, shady
$15,500
lot,6rms. lull dry base., H.W.
Two story , 10 room two bath, NEW LISTING, Route 141 close
fl oors, liv . rm . carpeted,
garage a nd plenty good
large kitchen and formal DR .
to t ow n, lovely home pri ced to
water. This house Is built of
located on corner lot S. 6th
sell. 2 BR, LR, modern kit51. , Middl eport . •
good materia ls and well
chen. large family rm ., utility
constructed. Price $17,500.
rm .. WW carpet, central air,
$24,000
5 ROOm s and bath, ranch sty le, NEIGHBORHOOD Rd .. 3 BR BABY FARM - 5 A. gentle

West wo,uld still be on
Full or Part Time
lead. His best continuation
would be a shift to a trump.
South would win this in eith· Applications now being
er hand and go after dia- taken for men and
monds. Eventually he would women . Immediate
set up dummy 's last diamond for a club discard, and opening , must be neat
wouldn't care where the ace and dependable . Call
personnel Dept., 9 a .m.
of clubs was.
This type play is known by to 9 p.m . Tuesday. 446·
two names . The loser-on- 0694.
loser and the avoidance
play. His diamond was a OPE NING for part lime reg .
sure loser and the discard nurse, must be curren tl y
was the play of a diamond registered In State of Ohio:
loser on a heart loser.
Able to drive, own car . Duty
The avoidance part of the hours flexible , sa lary
at interv iew . Wr ite
play was that South avoided discussed
Box 52, Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631.
the possibility of East gain20 5~ 11
ing the lead to play a club .

.KQJ,98632

North

l 1/ 2 lot in city. All

tami ly kitchen. formal DR.

ki tchen, porch , work shop,
well land scaped I acre in
Addison Township .

The Loser-on-Loser Play

West

LOTS OF LOTS
$14,750
WE HAVE lots In all di rection s.
3 BR. two story home, 1f:2
Some can be bought with a INVESTMENT - In clly. good
basement, family room, FA
business location, plus 2 Aprt .
very sma ll down payment.
g,as fur .. 2 car garage, 3 acres .
rentals (could be 3). Business
Whether bu ilding or buying a
bldg. incl udes grocery and
mobile home, ca ll today.
$18,800
meat processing equipment.
Potential income from Apt .
4 BR two story home located on 12x65 MOB ILE HOME on a 1 A.

$30,000
St .. Rio Grande. Ohio. 245·
NEW bri ck r ancher, J large BR ,
5048.
l aundr y room. deep pi le
180-ff
ca rp el throughout . luxury

WIN AT BRIDGE

SOUTH

Price $20,000.

·!

Real Estate For Sale'

208·1

Off. 446-3643

in base. with laundry and
work area . Located on near 2
acre lot with river frontage.

MERCERVILLE

Real Estate For ~ale

Real Estate For Sale

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

85

HOLLEY BRO. C\)NST ..
COMPLETE water li ne 1n ·
stailation. backhoe, bulldozer
and boring machine IOrvlces.
J . p , Holl ey ?45-5018 or D. R.
Holley 245-5006.
lll ·tf

Plumbing &amp;Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HE·ATING
Cor. Fourth&amp; Pine
Phone 446·3888or 446-4477
165·1f

- - - -- -

STANDARD
Plumb ing &amp; Heating
215 Third Ave .. 446-3782 '
187-11

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING&amp; HEATING
21 Gallla Ave. 416-4782
297-t

- DEWITT'S
- - - PLUMBING
--AND HEATING
Route t60 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735

__G_E_N_E_P_L_A_N_T_S_&amp;_ S_O_N_S187-t
PLUMBING _ Heating &amp; Air
' Condlllonfnn . 300 Fourth Ave.
•
Ph . 446-1637 . ( FormtriY
Brammer's

Healing.)

&amp;

Plumbi ng

4-t

------~r---

�•

•

'

•

-

21- The Swlday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, sept. 3; 1972 ·

New King of Chess Fischer Admires Defeated Boris Spassky

~~~§ ~~=~~ ;E?f.§~ :i~~~ ;§;~~1~ Fischer·Domineering;

I'

dethroned.
The 29-year-old American
won the world chess championship Friday when the Russian
champion resigned in the 21st
game by telephone to referee
lothar Sclunid. The win gave
Fischer a final12.5 to 8.5 score.
Chatting with aide Fred
Cramer Saturday. Fischer
smiled anq said: "Well, we
made it, but what a good player
and sportsman .Spassky is."
Then he grabbed a tape
recorder, a bundle of newspa-

I

villa.
Chess Federation (FIDE), "I
Cramer said Fischer's im- think the third or perhaps the
mediate future "was up in the fifth game was my best."
air."
In .both games Fischer
"Bobby is keeping the door played black. In the third,
open for a return ma,tch, but played in the back~tage ping
give the guy a chance to go pong room after forfeiting the
through some of the fantastic second, the challenger used a
offers that have come In," semi..Sicilian defense to ll'in in
Cramer said.
41 moves. 'He picked th~
"Don't forget his mind has Nimzo-Itxlian defense for the
been set solely on chess the last fifth, avoiding Spassky's early
coupleofmonths.Butthereare · thrust, and forced the chamenough offers to keep him busy pion to resign after only 'l1
for the rest of his life, some moves.

-Fischer said:
political asylum ''were pore
"Spassky improved so much speculation aoo the biggest
and was much harder to play piece of nonsense written so
against."
far."
Spassky was relaxing
One source said "Spassky is
Saturday with his wife, living a privileged life in
Larissa, and seconds Eyflm Moscow, he drives a Western
Geller and Nikolai Krogius, car and has a big apartment
before Sunday's closing and other privileges normally
ceremony, Russian sources reserved for the elite."
said.
cramer . said Saturday
Fischer might stay on as a
They said Bpassky took his tourist when the rest of the
wife and Geller to see an American party files home on
American western movie Fri- Monday.

...

Solo Minded on Chess
By United Preis lnlemallonal

Robert James (Bobby) Fischer's world Is a 64-square
chess board. As a child he
learned to master it and
dreamed of the day he would
become the world champion.
It came true Friday against
Russia's
mighty
Boris
Spassky. Fischer, 29, has
turned the serious and
majestic game into an in·
ternaUonal craze.
Obsession with becoming
absolute master of the world of
chess brought out the language
of the llllchallenged dictator.
Orders to his aides were
shouted - privately and
publicly- "! want this," "Do
that," and "Why is my phone
oot working."
"'Please' has nevever been
in Bobby's vocabulary," said a
friend.
The picture of Fischer which
has emerged from his·chase for
the championship is one of a
m(lft barking orders, complainJng about the playing hall, his
chair, noise and television
·Cameras.
He has had few interests
outside of chess since he first
Iea1"'ed the rudiments of the

game at the age of six from his
older sister, Joan. "What has
· that got to do with chess?" he
will often ask when a conversatiorl strays.
Fischer was born in Chicago
in 1943 and raised in a small
apartment above a candy store
in Brooklyn. His parents were
&lt;jlvorced when he was two
years old and his sister would
bring home games to keep him
occupied while his mother
worked. ,
One day, when he was six, his
sister &amp;ought home a chess set
and helped him play the game
with the help of a book of instruciions.
While still at school he toured
the New York chess clubs,
sometimes crying when he Ieist,
but always learning a little
more. He became the youngest
U.S. champion at the age of 14.
Two years later he quit school
to devote his life to chess.
Fischer's quick, nervous
style has became a hallmark of
his playing style. Hunched over
the chess board his head in his
hands, rocking gently back and
forth in the black swivel chair,
or rising to pace the stage, he
suddenly lunges forward to

ELBERFELD$ -

THE COAL TIPPLE at Rutland, above, that was bull! in
1925 and stood until it burned to the ground about three years
ago. Both pictures of the tipple were submitted by Dwight
Kennedy of Rutland.

make a move. Attack is his
battle cry with white or black
pieces,
·
·
He keeps his brain alert by
keeping his body healthy with
dally workouts on the tennill
court, bowling or swimming. In
Reykjavik, when everyone else
was going home to bed after a
championship match, Fischer
would telephone his Icelandic
policeman friend, saemon
(Sammy) Paalsson, togo to the
pool or the courts.
Born a Jew, Fischer Is now
a member of a California sect
known as the Church of God.
His politics are straight out of
the cold war era. "Damned
Commies," he wlll say about
Russians.
But Fischer and Spassky
respect one another.
When Spassky led the applause for the American's 6th
game victory, Fischer wept
and told his aides it was a

I

CHILL ICOTHE, Ohio
Atop Sugarloaf
(UP!) Mountain., isolated among
Jrehistoric Indian trails and
overlooking the site of a
Qlawnee village on the Scioto
River, sets a 1,600 seat amphitheater .
BuUt by the Scioto Scoeity of
Olillicothe , the amphitheater
will be formally dedicated
September 9 when the Cincinnati Symphony presents a
special full concert under the
trees .
But the amphitheater and its
seven outdoor stagesincluding an unprecedented
water stage allowing for the
use of canoes- was not built
just to stage a concert.
Beginning next June, it will
be used for productions of the

hailed for its uniqueness in the
outdoor drama field.
Taken from the pages of
Eckert's "The Frontiersmen,"
the drama is about Tecumseh,
the Qlawnee Indian chief who
came close to organizing a
drive by ail frontier Indian
tribes to sweep the white man
from the Northwest Territory.
The drama follows the struggle between white man and
Indian from Pennsylvania
through West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan
and Ontario, Canada. The battles of Tippecanoe and the
Thames, where Tecumseh was
killed are re-enacted in the
play.

Sugarloaf Mountain is part of
a range of hills four miles north
of here which is depicted in
Ohio's official state seal. Plans
are underway to create a Great
Seal State Park adjacent to the
amphitheater.
The seal was inspired by the
view from Adena, the mansion
estate of Ohio's sixth governor
Thomas Worthington.
Tecumseh once visited the
mansion to present the
governor with a gift
tomahawk.
Also scheduled on the September 9 dedication are oours,
historical displays, and an ox
roast.

Services Held For Mrs. Eblin

was "yes" .

Existing problems include, it
was pointed out :
A surplus of household
animals resulting in many
abandoned, possibly diseased
cats and dogs, or in a lack of
car e because many such
animals are llllwanted .
Cruelty toward domestic and
farm animals because or
ignorance or sadism .
Abusive exploitation on
farms and possibly at
stockyards
and
in

?~~~~~~~.~\~~~ b~r:'a~ POMEROY - Services were Springfield ; Mr. and Mrs. L. B.
Eckert, one of America's fore- held Saturday, Aug. 26, at the Knapper, Mr. and Mrs. Alien
m(/St authorities on frontier Hiland Chapel for Mrs. Steve Hammer, Kansas, Ohio ; and
history.
.
(Mary I Eblin of Pomeroy. Bennie and Homer Eblin,
. ·'.'Tecumseh!" .is the product . Pallbearers were Cia'rence Ljnwo9(l, Pa.
of two years' wort and plan- Spurrier Jr., Robert E.lia.rtim,
ningby the Scioto· Society. AI' Willis R. West, Gregory. · · -~------ready, nearly a year before its Grover, George Brickles Jr.,
LEGAL NOTICE
emier,
the
play
is
being
Henry
Eblin
Jr.,
and
Sonny
pr
LEGAL NOTICE
Hudson .
Sealed bids w ill be re cei ved
Relatives attending from b~ t.ne Meigs Local Sc hool
Dtstr~et Board ol Educat ion at
[.
out-&lt;Jf-town were Mr . and Mrs. lne;r
off ic e In I he Me;gs Jun ior
Artie .Eblin and family, Mr . High Schoo l b u i lding, M id , Oh io, for tw o {2)
and Mrs . Steve Spurrier, dleport
Passenger sctiOol buses until
NOTICE ON FILING
12 :00 o'cloc ~ on Septemb er ll
OF INVENTORY
George Moore , Randy Moore, 1972
,
according
to
th~
AND APPRAISE~ENT .
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Willis spec ifi cations of sa id Board of Th e State of OhtO , · Me tg s
Education . Separate and in - County . Probllt e Co urt .
· West, Mrs. Michael Goff and dependent
b ids wi ll be received
To the Admin istrat or, of the
Mike, Mrs. Warran Graham of with respec t to the chassis and estate ; to such of th e fo llowing
body type, and w!l l sta te that as _are J ~Sidents of the Sta.te. or
Powhatan Pl.; Mr. and Mrs. the
buses , when assembled and Oh10 , vtz : the s urv tvmg
Willis R. West and family, prior to de ttverr , comply with spou s~ .. the ne xt of kin , the
schoo
dis trict ben efi Ciari es under th e will ;
Berlin Center; Mrs. Virginia all
speclf!c~t i ons , &amp;nd all Sl!lfetv and to the ~ttornev or a11ornevs
West and children, Mr. and regulat ions . and current Ohio r epresent .m g any of the
m inimum standards for schoo l aforementioned pe r son s :
Mrs.
James Burrow, Athens; bus
fr~m State Farm protects boat,
construcflon
of
the
Hora c e M c E l hinney ,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Eblin, Oej:iartment of Educat ion Deceased , No . 2058L M id ·'
l}lotor, trailer on the water or on
t~e road. Can c.over liability
Mrs. Sam Conkle, Petersburg, adopted by and with the consent dleport. Ohio , Sali s bury
of the Di rector of Highway Township .
. .
!osses, 1oo. See me.
Va·. ; Mr. · and {drs. James Safety pursuant to Secti on You are her eby not1f1ed that
4511 .76 or the Revised Code and the
Inventory
and
AP ·
Hawley, "'r. and ·Mrs. Bob all
Carrol K.
other pertinent provisions of pra !ument Q( the estate ot the
aforement ioned, deceased . late
Roirilne~ ancj fa\riUy, George law .
Speclflcetlons
and
fft . of said Count'( , was f iled In ttl is
Brlckles Sr., Elaine, !\By ·and strucflons
to bidders may be Court. Sa id Inventory
George Jr.; Mr. and' Mrs. obtained from Assistant AJ'pr.!llatment will be
Superintendent Morr i son hear ing before this Court
Gerald Eblin, Mr. and Mrs. M
iddleport, Ohio .
' 131h d~y Of September ,
Harley W. Eblin and family, The aoard of Educa ti on 10 :00 o clock A.M.
reserves the right to re !ect any
Any per~on deslrlng to file
Crystal Lake, Dl.; H. H.119lin, end
all b ids .
exce.,tlons thertto must file
. Dorothy Bolin, Mr. and Mrs . · Bv orcler ol th e Board of 1hE~&gt;m l!lf lel!lst live days prior to
the date set for hearlno .
INIUU.NC
Melvin !!olin, Mr . and Mrs. Edu c.!lt lon '
L w M cC omas
G l-v~n under my hanct and
.
Edgar Craig and family,
Clerk .· Tr eas ur er seal of sa id Cou r t. th,ls ~ 1 st dey
of Auou SI, 1912 .
Cable, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs . 181 13, 20 . 21 191 3' At
Mann ing D. Webster
FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Claude Bowers, Urbana; Mr. . There are more. than 30,000
Judge
ond ••··otJ.lcio
Home Oflict: lloorillngton, lllinola
Clerk of sa ld court
and Mrs. Clarence Spurrier natural 1 a k e s in Florida,
By Ann B'. Wotson
and Dennis, Fairborn; Mr. and with 1,400 in Lake ·County
Deputy Clerk
P686Z ,
191 J, 11
"-.,..,...,...
Mro.
Wyatt
Gilbert, alone. ·

lrGAl NOTICE

Low cOst

Boatowners

Insurance

sno,mlen.

STATE FARM

•

.

..

..

,)'

'·

"beautiful gesture."

.·' '

Spassky has criticized Fischer's mercenary approach to
the world championship match
but said "I feel sorry for him.
He seems to have a persecution
complex. But the chess world
would be duU without him."

,.

'

'·'

. ·l
.,

'

POMEROY

a

Humane Society
'Tecumseh' Coming to
New Stage on Sugarloaf Mt.

'

...'

'•

slaughterhouses.
A problem exists also when
wild birds and animals are
kept in captivity. Even though
conditions have improved
recenlly, there is a problem in
a poorly formed, poorly
operated dog pound. Lack of
funds is partially responsible.
There are many existing laws
relating to these problems, but
in many instances they are
inadequate or seldom enforced, it was said .
One solution to these
problems lies in a public
education program . Prevention is the best cure, as
children can be taught kindness toward animals. Spaying
clinics conducted by licensed
veterinarians, where dogs and
cats may he spayed at a
reduced rate, can he held. New
methods of slaughtering may
he suggested If they are not
now used. Yet another solution
lies in pressing for enforcement and improvement of
existing laws, it was decided .
The group resolved that the
Gailia Collllty Hwnane Society
he formed and incorporated. A
committee consisting of Jennie
Holzer, chairman; · Jerry
McCreary, Shelly Price,
Marilyn Brllllner, and Julie
Webb was appointed to draw
up by-laws.
The next meeting will he held
September 12 at a place to be
announced. Everyone interested is urged to attend. For
further information they may
call Jenny Holzer at 446-1065
after 5 p.m. or Jerry McCreary
at 446-9310 after 4:30 p.m.

'

.. ,..,

Gallians to Form
GALUPOLIS - Temporary
officers, pending formal
organization , were elected by
the Gallia County citizens
in terested in formin g a
humane society .
Jeremy McCreary. elected
temporary chairman , presided
at the meeting in St. Peter's
Episcopal Church parish hall.
Wanda Parsons was elected
temporary secretary.
McCreary posed these
questions :
"Does Gailia County have an
animal problem, and can we,
as an incorporated humane
society accomplish enough to
make it worthwhile: "
Reports of stray and
abandoned dogs and cats, of a
starving horse, and of a wild
owl kept in captivity being
destroyed because it instin ctively killed a chicken,
made it quite evident that the
answer to part of the question

f

•
·t tnt5

IJ!!tloted To . The Greater Middle Ohio ValtP.V

Custom Made Draperies
2·0% OFF

RUTLAND COAL' TIPPLE, at left, that was built to
handle coal while the main tipple was being built.

'

,

{lllll
~

'

H\1 ll I
Utli(/1

•

·.

o.

THIS 15 KIND OF INTERE5TIN6.:.
WO,ODSTOCK 5A'&lt;S 'HE SORT OF
F16VREP IT WAS A SCARECROW..

?

•

l-IE . ~AI{$ ii-IAT HE KNEW ALL ALONG IT WASN'T
A f&lt;EAL HUMAN BEING BECAUSE. MOST HliMAN
t3EIN65 ARE NOT THAT FOND OF STANDIN6 FOR
SUCH A LEN61H OF TIME IN THE HOT SUN ...
' l

PROMt;LL( A
SCARECIWW

'~'

.

HE SA'&lt;S THE FACT

WOODSTOCK WOULD I-lAVE

THAT Tf.lE CLOTHES
ARE OUT OF 5WLE ALSO

MAPE ·A. 6000 CROW!

MADE HIM A LITTLE

'.· .~

·.,

" '
}

ELBERFEWS IN POMEROY
ARE OONTINUING THE 20% OFF SALE
OF DEOORATOR CUSTOt-1 MADE DRAPERIES.

I •

·. ~

'

Choose from hundreds of superb fabrics in the newest weaves, textures, patterns, colors!
Welcome the coming winter with a new look for your home at terrific savings.
You can achieve just the effect you want whether it be casual or formal with new Decorator
Custom Draperies.
Bring in your measurements and enjoy the savings!

-Gi'AN~st=E IF Yo.J CAN beT
YOUR· HAND? ON SOME HAGKsA'M5.
.

'

'rES,. WetL NEED

Ha:?E= 1REY Hf.E.~ $TAN!
YQIJ KNOW .WHAT To c;o .•• ·.

THE:M TdN16HT•••

Save now during our Custom Drapery Sale in the Drapery Deparirnent on the second floor .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

(

The New

MEIGS
. INN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. - 2 A.M.

The Amber Lounge Opens At' 11100 A.M. ,
LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNIRS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet luncheon ll:OOto 1:30, Mondaythru Saturday)

·37 GUfST ROOMS- NEW, ·MODERN, BY DAY.OR WEE(
.PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - . BY RESERYAnON

�•

•

'

•

-

21- The Swlday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, sept. 3; 1972 ·

New King of Chess Fischer Admires Defeated Boris Spassky

~~~§ ~~=~~ ;E?f.§~ :i~~~ ;§;~~1~ Fischer·Domineering;

I'

dethroned.
The 29-year-old American
won the world chess championship Friday when the Russian
champion resigned in the 21st
game by telephone to referee
lothar Sclunid. The win gave
Fischer a final12.5 to 8.5 score.
Chatting with aide Fred
Cramer Saturday. Fischer
smiled anq said: "Well, we
made it, but what a good player
and sportsman .Spassky is."
Then he grabbed a tape
recorder, a bundle of newspa-

I

villa.
Chess Federation (FIDE), "I
Cramer said Fischer's im- think the third or perhaps the
mediate future "was up in the fifth game was my best."
air."
In .both games Fischer
"Bobby is keeping the door played black. In the third,
open for a return ma,tch, but played in the back~tage ping
give the guy a chance to go pong room after forfeiting the
through some of the fantastic second, the challenger used a
offers that have come In," semi..Sicilian defense to ll'in in
Cramer said.
41 moves. 'He picked th~
"Don't forget his mind has Nimzo-Itxlian defense for the
been set solely on chess the last fifth, avoiding Spassky's early
coupleofmonths.Butthereare · thrust, and forced the chamenough offers to keep him busy pion to resign after only 'l1
for the rest of his life, some moves.

-Fischer said:
political asylum ''were pore
"Spassky improved so much speculation aoo the biggest
and was much harder to play piece of nonsense written so
against."
far."
Spassky was relaxing
One source said "Spassky is
Saturday with his wife, living a privileged life in
Larissa, and seconds Eyflm Moscow, he drives a Western
Geller and Nikolai Krogius, car and has a big apartment
before Sunday's closing and other privileges normally
ceremony, Russian sources reserved for the elite."
said.
cramer . said Saturday
Fischer might stay on as a
They said Bpassky took his tourist when the rest of the
wife and Geller to see an American party files home on
American western movie Fri- Monday.

...

Solo Minded on Chess
By United Preis lnlemallonal

Robert James (Bobby) Fischer's world Is a 64-square
chess board. As a child he
learned to master it and
dreamed of the day he would
become the world champion.
It came true Friday against
Russia's
mighty
Boris
Spassky. Fischer, 29, has
turned the serious and
majestic game into an in·
ternaUonal craze.
Obsession with becoming
absolute master of the world of
chess brought out the language
of the llllchallenged dictator.
Orders to his aides were
shouted - privately and
publicly- "! want this," "Do
that," and "Why is my phone
oot working."
"'Please' has nevever been
in Bobby's vocabulary," said a
friend.
The picture of Fischer which
has emerged from his·chase for
the championship is one of a
m(lft barking orders, complainJng about the playing hall, his
chair, noise and television
·Cameras.
He has had few interests
outside of chess since he first
Iea1"'ed the rudiments of the

game at the age of six from his
older sister, Joan. "What has
· that got to do with chess?" he
will often ask when a conversatiorl strays.
Fischer was born in Chicago
in 1943 and raised in a small
apartment above a candy store
in Brooklyn. His parents were
&lt;jlvorced when he was two
years old and his sister would
bring home games to keep him
occupied while his mother
worked. ,
One day, when he was six, his
sister &amp;ought home a chess set
and helped him play the game
with the help of a book of instruciions.
While still at school he toured
the New York chess clubs,
sometimes crying when he Ieist,
but always learning a little
more. He became the youngest
U.S. champion at the age of 14.
Two years later he quit school
to devote his life to chess.
Fischer's quick, nervous
style has became a hallmark of
his playing style. Hunched over
the chess board his head in his
hands, rocking gently back and
forth in the black swivel chair,
or rising to pace the stage, he
suddenly lunges forward to

ELBERFELD$ -

THE COAL TIPPLE at Rutland, above, that was bull! in
1925 and stood until it burned to the ground about three years
ago. Both pictures of the tipple were submitted by Dwight
Kennedy of Rutland.

make a move. Attack is his
battle cry with white or black
pieces,
·
·
He keeps his brain alert by
keeping his body healthy with
dally workouts on the tennill
court, bowling or swimming. In
Reykjavik, when everyone else
was going home to bed after a
championship match, Fischer
would telephone his Icelandic
policeman friend, saemon
(Sammy) Paalsson, togo to the
pool or the courts.
Born a Jew, Fischer Is now
a member of a California sect
known as the Church of God.
His politics are straight out of
the cold war era. "Damned
Commies," he wlll say about
Russians.
But Fischer and Spassky
respect one another.
When Spassky led the applause for the American's 6th
game victory, Fischer wept
and told his aides it was a

I

CHILL ICOTHE, Ohio
Atop Sugarloaf
(UP!) Mountain., isolated among
Jrehistoric Indian trails and
overlooking the site of a
Qlawnee village on the Scioto
River, sets a 1,600 seat amphitheater .
BuUt by the Scioto Scoeity of
Olillicothe , the amphitheater
will be formally dedicated
September 9 when the Cincinnati Symphony presents a
special full concert under the
trees .
But the amphitheater and its
seven outdoor stagesincluding an unprecedented
water stage allowing for the
use of canoes- was not built
just to stage a concert.
Beginning next June, it will
be used for productions of the

hailed for its uniqueness in the
outdoor drama field.
Taken from the pages of
Eckert's "The Frontiersmen,"
the drama is about Tecumseh,
the Qlawnee Indian chief who
came close to organizing a
drive by ail frontier Indian
tribes to sweep the white man
from the Northwest Territory.
The drama follows the struggle between white man and
Indian from Pennsylvania
through West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan
and Ontario, Canada. The battles of Tippecanoe and the
Thames, where Tecumseh was
killed are re-enacted in the
play.

Sugarloaf Mountain is part of
a range of hills four miles north
of here which is depicted in
Ohio's official state seal. Plans
are underway to create a Great
Seal State Park adjacent to the
amphitheater.
The seal was inspired by the
view from Adena, the mansion
estate of Ohio's sixth governor
Thomas Worthington.
Tecumseh once visited the
mansion to present the
governor with a gift
tomahawk.
Also scheduled on the September 9 dedication are oours,
historical displays, and an ox
roast.

Services Held For Mrs. Eblin

was "yes" .

Existing problems include, it
was pointed out :
A surplus of household
animals resulting in many
abandoned, possibly diseased
cats and dogs, or in a lack of
car e because many such
animals are llllwanted .
Cruelty toward domestic and
farm animals because or
ignorance or sadism .
Abusive exploitation on
farms and possibly at
stockyards
and
in

?~~~~~~~.~\~~~ b~r:'a~ POMEROY - Services were Springfield ; Mr. and Mrs. L. B.
Eckert, one of America's fore- held Saturday, Aug. 26, at the Knapper, Mr. and Mrs. Alien
m(/St authorities on frontier Hiland Chapel for Mrs. Steve Hammer, Kansas, Ohio ; and
history.
.
(Mary I Eblin of Pomeroy. Bennie and Homer Eblin,
. ·'.'Tecumseh!" .is the product . Pallbearers were Cia'rence Ljnwo9(l, Pa.
of two years' wort and plan- Spurrier Jr., Robert E.lia.rtim,
ningby the Scioto· Society. AI' Willis R. West, Gregory. · · -~------ready, nearly a year before its Grover, George Brickles Jr.,
LEGAL NOTICE
emier,
the
play
is
being
Henry
Eblin
Jr.,
and
Sonny
pr
LEGAL NOTICE
Hudson .
Sealed bids w ill be re cei ved
Relatives attending from b~ t.ne Meigs Local Sc hool
Dtstr~et Board ol Educat ion at
[.
out-&lt;Jf-town were Mr . and Mrs. lne;r
off ic e In I he Me;gs Jun ior
Artie .Eblin and family, Mr . High Schoo l b u i lding, M id , Oh io, for tw o {2)
and Mrs . Steve Spurrier, dleport
Passenger sctiOol buses until
NOTICE ON FILING
12 :00 o'cloc ~ on Septemb er ll
OF INVENTORY
George Moore , Randy Moore, 1972
,
according
to
th~
AND APPRAISE~ENT .
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Willis spec ifi cations of sa id Board of Th e State of OhtO , · Me tg s
Education . Separate and in - County . Probllt e Co urt .
· West, Mrs. Michael Goff and dependent
b ids wi ll be received
To the Admin istrat or, of the
Mike, Mrs. Warran Graham of with respec t to the chassis and estate ; to such of th e fo llowing
body type, and w!l l sta te that as _are J ~Sidents of the Sta.te. or
Powhatan Pl.; Mr. and Mrs. the
buses , when assembled and Oh10 , vtz : the s urv tvmg
Willis R. West and family, prior to de ttverr , comply with spou s~ .. the ne xt of kin , the
schoo
dis trict ben efi Ciari es under th e will ;
Berlin Center; Mrs. Virginia all
speclf!c~t i ons , &amp;nd all Sl!lfetv and to the ~ttornev or a11ornevs
West and children, Mr. and regulat ions . and current Ohio r epresent .m g any of the
m inimum standards for schoo l aforementioned pe r son s :
Mrs.
James Burrow, Athens; bus
fr~m State Farm protects boat,
construcflon
of
the
Hora c e M c E l hinney ,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Eblin, Oej:iartment of Educat ion Deceased , No . 2058L M id ·'
l}lotor, trailer on the water or on
t~e road. Can c.over liability
Mrs. Sam Conkle, Petersburg, adopted by and with the consent dleport. Ohio , Sali s bury
of the Di rector of Highway Township .
. .
!osses, 1oo. See me.
Va·. ; Mr. · and {drs. James Safety pursuant to Secti on You are her eby not1f1ed that
4511 .76 or the Revised Code and the
Inventory
and
AP ·
Hawley, "'r. and ·Mrs. Bob all
Carrol K.
other pertinent provisions of pra !ument Q( the estate ot the
aforement ioned, deceased . late
Roirilne~ ancj fa\riUy, George law .
Speclflcetlons
and
fft . of said Count'( , was f iled In ttl is
Brlckles Sr., Elaine, !\By ·and strucflons
to bidders may be Court. Sa id Inventory
George Jr.; Mr. and' Mrs. obtained from Assistant AJ'pr.!llatment will be
Superintendent Morr i son hear ing before this Court
Gerald Eblin, Mr. and Mrs. M
iddleport, Ohio .
' 131h d~y Of September ,
Harley W. Eblin and family, The aoard of Educa ti on 10 :00 o clock A.M.
reserves the right to re !ect any
Any per~on deslrlng to file
Crystal Lake, Dl.; H. H.119lin, end
all b ids .
exce.,tlons thertto must file
. Dorothy Bolin, Mr. and Mrs . · Bv orcler ol th e Board of 1hE~&gt;m l!lf lel!lst live days prior to
the date set for hearlno .
INIUU.NC
Melvin !!olin, Mr . and Mrs. Edu c.!lt lon '
L w M cC omas
G l-v~n under my hanct and
.
Edgar Craig and family,
Clerk .· Tr eas ur er seal of sa id Cou r t. th,ls ~ 1 st dey
of Auou SI, 1912 .
Cable, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs . 181 13, 20 . 21 191 3' At
Mann ing D. Webster
FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Claude Bowers, Urbana; Mr. . There are more. than 30,000
Judge
ond ••··otJ.lcio
Home Oflict: lloorillngton, lllinola
Clerk of sa ld court
and Mrs. Clarence Spurrier natural 1 a k e s in Florida,
By Ann B'. Wotson
and Dennis, Fairborn; Mr. and with 1,400 in Lake ·County
Deputy Clerk
P686Z ,
191 J, 11
"-.,..,...,...
Mro.
Wyatt
Gilbert, alone. ·

lrGAl NOTICE

Low cOst

Boatowners

Insurance

sno,mlen.

STATE FARM

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"beautiful gesture."

.·' '

Spassky has criticized Fischer's mercenary approach to
the world championship match
but said "I feel sorry for him.
He seems to have a persecution
complex. But the chess world
would be duU without him."

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POMEROY

a

Humane Society
'Tecumseh' Coming to
New Stage on Sugarloaf Mt.

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slaughterhouses.
A problem exists also when
wild birds and animals are
kept in captivity. Even though
conditions have improved
recenlly, there is a problem in
a poorly formed, poorly
operated dog pound. Lack of
funds is partially responsible.
There are many existing laws
relating to these problems, but
in many instances they are
inadequate or seldom enforced, it was said .
One solution to these
problems lies in a public
education program . Prevention is the best cure, as
children can be taught kindness toward animals. Spaying
clinics conducted by licensed
veterinarians, where dogs and
cats may he spayed at a
reduced rate, can he held. New
methods of slaughtering may
he suggested If they are not
now used. Yet another solution
lies in pressing for enforcement and improvement of
existing laws, it was decided .
The group resolved that the
Gailia Collllty Hwnane Society
he formed and incorporated. A
committee consisting of Jennie
Holzer, chairman; · Jerry
McCreary, Shelly Price,
Marilyn Brllllner, and Julie
Webb was appointed to draw
up by-laws.
The next meeting will he held
September 12 at a place to be
announced. Everyone interested is urged to attend. For
further information they may
call Jenny Holzer at 446-1065
after 5 p.m. or Jerry McCreary
at 446-9310 after 4:30 p.m.

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Gallians to Form
GALUPOLIS - Temporary
officers, pending formal
organization , were elected by
the Gallia County citizens
in terested in formin g a
humane society .
Jeremy McCreary. elected
temporary chairman , presided
at the meeting in St. Peter's
Episcopal Church parish hall.
Wanda Parsons was elected
temporary secretary.
McCreary posed these
questions :
"Does Gailia County have an
animal problem, and can we,
as an incorporated humane
society accomplish enough to
make it worthwhile: "
Reports of stray and
abandoned dogs and cats, of a
starving horse, and of a wild
owl kept in captivity being
destroyed because it instin ctively killed a chicken,
made it quite evident that the
answer to part of the question

f

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·t tnt5

IJ!!tloted To . The Greater Middle Ohio ValtP.V

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2·0% OFF

RUTLAND COAL' TIPPLE, at left, that was built to
handle coal while the main tipple was being built.

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H\1 ll I
Utli(/1

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THIS 15 KIND OF INTERE5TIN6.:.
WO,ODSTOCK 5A'&lt;S 'HE SORT OF
F16VREP IT WAS A SCARECROW..

?

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l-IE . ~AI{$ ii-IAT HE KNEW ALL ALONG IT WASN'T
A f&lt;EAL HUMAN BEING BECAUSE. MOST HliMAN
t3EIN65 ARE NOT THAT FOND OF STANDIN6 FOR
SUCH A LEN61H OF TIME IN THE HOT SUN ...
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PROMt;LL( A
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HE SA'&lt;S THE FACT

WOODSTOCK WOULD I-lAVE

THAT Tf.lE CLOTHES
ARE OUT OF 5WLE ALSO

MAPE ·A. 6000 CROW!

MADE HIM A LITTLE

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ELBERFEWS IN POMEROY
ARE OONTINUING THE 20% OFF SALE
OF DEOORATOR CUSTOt-1 MADE DRAPERIES.

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Save now during our Custom Drapery Sale in the Drapery Deparirnent on the second floor .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

(

The New

MEIGS
. INN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. - 2 A.M.

The Amber Lounge Opens At' 11100 A.M. ,
LUNCHES 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M., DINNIRS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet luncheon ll:OOto 1:30, Mondaythru Saturday)

·37 GUfST ROOMS- NEW, ·MODERN, BY DAY.OR WEE(
.PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - . BY RESERYAnON

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rALLBY OOP '
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by Dick Cavalli
.,
. GER!.v\6 ARE Df;:DICA: I ED 10 11-H: :
. O~ROW·Qf HUMANKIND,
. ..A(S W.E ·KNOW IT/ · .
·

WEU.,HERE WEARE, BACK TO
TH' PALA.CE AN' lHJ:R~~ NO
ONE HERE! WHO'S GONNA

RUN TH' COUNl]tY?

WHE:RE DID EVERYBODY GO?

'.
WELL, 0001-A, ALL'S
IN O~R FOR lH'
MOMENT]

.$EE? SOME MISGUIDED
SO'N'SO LEFT 'IM AN
ESCAPE LINE! -~

.

HOW CO C,.OLJ UKE 1HAT~
WALKEDbt.rrCN Mel

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TCQ. IF MY FCOT .
HADN'T C::ONE TO SLEE::P•

EVERYBODY EXCEPT' 'rOLl •.•ca:oD
OLD ~, f?A.ITHFLJL. CHIPB.

EVERT'BOOr'

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PBISCII.LA'S

POP ~

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by~~

·A.NDY CAPP

by Al Veru1eer

MY FATI-IER
JUST SAID TI-lE

. SURE .'fOU
t&gt;ONli MIND ME

··FUNNIEST

TAI&lt;IN1 ME

THING-//

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Gl~l. r:RIENO,

'PET?

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by Stoffel &amp; lle~JUdahl

BUNNY

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(;EfiN 11fi\E!
:X:\.1. TRY
i'~rect

YA!

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HE A150Ui TI-llS TALl. WITH . YEAH/ YEAH!
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.SOFI.r 0~ SHIFTY
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YOU ARI:
A iF.Ue

~II:ND/

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,.......,,,.. YOU SEEN A

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!-leADeD TI·II'S WAV/

THIS IS MY CUSTOM 500 SPORTSTU IY A PR!VIOUS

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l HAVEN'f SEEN HIM/

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BL£55 TI'IE .8/G

-DON'T
WALR'US 'IIEA~1T!-r ·
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DE.MON STRATE

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TOMORROW!

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1,ooo,ooo,

A.·

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000 000 0 6 1'HC: 1
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0 0 0 '1 0 oo'1 0 WRI1'1"e
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FOt..l.OWS:D
E!'Y A
HUND~EO

ze~ost

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... AND 1 1M 60Mii'f'IM!:6
CAl.l.5D A ~WIISN/1: OOG n
eeCAU6E? F'!?'OPL.!?' 1HINK
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REPO~T

I'VE IE!N
RISIARC!o\INIJ ANI&gt;
WRITING j

'fROM 'DOOLITTLE COLLE.G.E

btt.&amp;wt~
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ONE. VOU'VE llEEN

WORKING ON I=OR TH!LAST
Srl&lt; MONTHS 1

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V1D IT EVER CXGUR 1D ~OU TO

IT'S I&gt;Ui TOMQ~~W
ANI&gt; THI NOW~IiiUi
THING IS,..

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AND RESPONSI91l.IT'r'

READ lltE ~RE£.110~ BEFORE
~OJ ""'~W ~aJR BQJMER~~~~

IN i.\O~Ii~N· MAN" . / -

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�Scenes from Fire Department's Labor Day Parade in Pomeroy

tO

6E11 G~eEt-.1

HE:R~S

MIXING RED, '/Ett...OW
AND BLUE- W1LL. 61VE.
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WHA.i l'O''Oo ... ,

THE EA81'ERN HIGH saiOOL hind- 111o Clllwld

THE MAJORE'l'I'E CORPS rl. the Southern Hlgb Scmol band rl. Racine strutted to band numben as the Pomeroy
Labor Day p,Jrade moved down Main St., Pomeroy.

for Monday's Llbor !lily pu8de In Pcmeroy.

•

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BROWN f

Devoted To Tlie lntere.tl Of17ae Meigs·Mason Area
VOL. XXV NO. 991, ·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, SEPT. 5, 1972

•

•
ODIC
·Unwelcome
Wag.onBUT MAH YOKUM

BLOOD 15-oULP.'.'-

DIEPL'f
ASAAMED!!

SMOKEY THE BEAR dell&amp;hted crowds along the Labor
Day parade route Monday as he perched upon this fire
lighting vehicle from the !lltlter area.
••

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MUNICH (UP!) - The 20th
Olympic Games were temporarily suspended today alter
an Arab vengeance squad shot
Its way into the Israeli quarters
ol the Olympic Village, killed
two Israeli men and seized nine
lsr~eli hostages .
The guerrillas threatened to
kill their captives unless they
were allowed to fly them to an
Arab country.
A number of Israelis were
able to excape through the

.

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THIS BANNER INTRODUCED the Meigs Marauder
band along the parade route Monday when the annual Labor

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vv:ews
' "'·'.."' in.' 'Briefi
.'. " ":;)

.

By United Prell lldemallonal

A~D HELP

RULE MY Flt-.IANCIAI. EMPIRE!

B\.AZE~~LOOK~

(..IKE: McKE:E MAY
?OON BE MINU!'·

ONE ~ON·JN·LAW!

.-

sion of the games for 24 hours
or until the hostages were freed
- as had been demanded an
hour earlier by Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir who
summoned an emergency
session of the Israeli
Parliament to discuss the
situation.
West German Chancellor
Willy Brandt flew in from Bonn
to ~ead the negotiations with
the guerrillas personally. He
appeale,d to the world Arab
· -leod...,..._.,~"to·-try·'lo

seek the release of the Israelis.
The incident threatened the
future of the Olympic Games
themselves - and Egypt announced it was withdrawing
from the curreot games.
It was the first suspension of
the Olympics in modern times.
Witnesses said there were as
many as eight or nine
guerrillas. One policeman said
they climbed over a village
fence about 4;30 p.m. but
~~an l,echnicl!!,ns..§!I.&lt;L\Il»&gt;
thought t~e· group were

2 Hurt In Four
Holiday Wrecks

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ymp1c

heroism of two who died.
Wrestling coach Moshe
Weinberg, 33, fell in front of the
Israeli building when he apparenlly intercepted the
raiders . Referee Joseph
Gottfreund was said to have
leaned against the door
shouting an alann until he was
riddled by builets fired through
it.
Avery Brundage, president
ol the International Olympic
Committee, ordered suspen•

PHONE 992-2156

WASHINGTON - CONGRF38 ENDED its l~y recaa
today and was Immediately faced with such thorny issues as
revenue sharing and the U. S. • Soviet anna agreement.
President Nixon has warned that if Congress does not buckle
down to work on major legislation, it would run the rlak of being
labeled "Inept" Until now, he said, no Congress has ''talked as
much and did less."
Leaders in both houses have expressed hope of adjourning by
early October so memben up for rHiection could fi'Wing Into
campaigning. U work is not completed, the lllmHuck
Congreuman face a post-election session. '!be President has
died four areas of major Importance on which he said Congress
has not yet acted - revenue sharing, government
reorganization, health and wellare. He wants action on an of
these before.the end of the 92nd Congress In January.
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. -PRESIDENT Nixon Rles back
to Washington today with a stopover In San Franclaco to plug for
congreuional app~oval of "Gateway West,'' a propoeed new
park in the Bay Area. Wlndlng up a 12-day stay in California
following the Republlcan Convention, Nixon told newsmen at a
Jftll party at his Oce1111side vUJa that ~will make two or three
return campaign swings In his native State.
He a1ao wlll head back to California to wte on Nov. 7 and then
wend his way back to Washington in time to watch the returna at
the White House, he said.

OOLUMBUS - A'ITRACTED BY 11IE PROMISE ol free
rtdu tlcketa and performance~ by linger David Casaidy, a
record Labor Day crowd of 189,558 pei'IOIIII attended the l1nal day
of the Ohio State Fair.
'l11e fair this year had a lotll attendallce ol 2,:.»,9113, 27,•
more than 1&amp;11 year but not a record. Con!Jlderinl that the lJ.day
feltival - plagued by five rainy days, fair officlall were
pleued with the turnout. Eadl fairgoer waa given five free ride
tlctell Monday and Jerry Kaltenbach, president of Gooding
·Amu.lllllltnt Co., said all the, ridea ran at a fWl capacity
tiJrOUIIIOUI the day·
OOLUMBVS - KEITH McNAMARA, Orlalll&amp;atlonal

illrectDr ol tbe Qllo Oommlttee to IIMiecl the Pulldent, •
((U!I~•-1

I

C11 Pip lJ)

TEN CENTS

•
CtiOD " " "' t 0 p s
•

uerr1 a

IT '~ ?E:rne;o THE:No MY DARt.ltJGi
YOU ' ~ I.. FLY WITH MS TO MV HIDE:AWAY...

en tine

Two people were hospitalized
following lour accidents over
Labor Day Weekend, investigated by Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbaeh 's Dept.
Saturday at 6:40 p.m. on
county road 30 in Sutton Twp.
one mile east of SR 7, Edward
L. Sanders, 71, Charleston, W.
Va., was traveling northwest
when he lost control ol his car
which skidded 99 feet, went up
a bank on the right, and rolled
over In the middle ol the road.
Sanders and a passenger,
Dixie Baldwin, Racine, were
taken to Veterans Memorial

ames

athletes returning late to their
quarters.
The "Black Stptember"
guerrilla organization, a small
and militant organization
thought to have only about 100
members, said it carried out
the raid to Ioree Israel to treat
Palestinians more hwnanely.
The raid bloodied the
greatest and richest Olympics
in history and horrified
athletes .
"It is ·unbelievable," said
'-Sec Babacar';' a Se'nl!ga1"
basketball player. "War at the
Olympics!"
The games continued more
or less normally today before
the Brundage announcement
with competition in boxing,
canoe racing, horse jumping,

wrestling and other sports.
Tuvia Sokolsky, the Israeli
weightlilting coach, said he
managed to escape from the
Israeli complex as the
guerrillas burst in with guns
blazing.
He said another member of
the Israeli team was struck by
gunfire and apparenUy was
killed . Officials could not
confinn this.
The dead man, Israelis said,
w,aa wreatlln11 c;oaeh M&lt;llhe
Wlenberg, 33.·
He was struck by three
bullets outside the Israeli
complex, police said.
About 100 Israeli tourists
marched around the Olympic
Village, a huge sprawling
(Continued on Page 12)

Hospital by the Pomeroy E-R
squad where they were admitted.
Sanders was arrested for
intoxication and driving while
intoxicated. The car was
demolished.
Monday at 11:55 a.m. on
county road 26, about 50 feet
west or SR 7, Roger D.
Lanham, 23, Pomeroy Rt. 3,
pulled from the Five Points
JERUSALEM (UP!) -Israel Prime Minister Golda Weir
Market onto county road 26
today
demanded Olympic o,fficials suspend the swruner games in
when a car driven by Williwn
Day parade was staged by the Pomeroy Fire Department.
Munich
until the Arab guerrillas release the Israeli hostages.
B. Downie, Jr., Pineville, Ky.,
An Impressive dlspllly of fire and emergency equipment of
Mrs. Meir, speaking slowly, softly and finnly, gave her
crossed SR 7 from county road
the ar~a was featured in the parade.
govenunent's
first reaction to the Munich raid in a statement to a,.
53 and struck Lanham's
special
session
of the Knesset (parliament).
vehicle in the rear.
"We have instructed the politician said she was eonThere were no injuries,
chainnan
or the Israeli Olym- fident the German and
medium damage to both
[!ic
Conunlttee
and the Israeli Olympic authorities were
vehicles, and no arrest.
Monday at 11:15 a.m. at ambassador (to Germany) to doing everything they could to
Sixth and Vine Sts. in Racine, demand suspension of the free the Israeli athletes,
Margaret West, Racine, Olympic games and not to go coaches and Olympic official~.
"It is lncooceivable that the
traveling east on Vine, and through with them so long as
the
Israelis
are
not
released,''
Olympic
events should carry
Donald Crouch, 11, Racine,
on uninterrupted as if nothing
driving in the opposite she said.
Mrs
.
Melr
did
not
say
has happened while our
direction on a mini bike,
whether
Israel
was
willing
to
citizens
are under threats of
collided.
Young Crouch sustained an go along with the guerrilla murder inside the Olympic
injury to his left leg but was not demands 1111d free Imprisoned VU!age", she said.
People of Congressman Ohio."
Mn. Melr said she had
relations with Mainland immediately treated. No Arab&amp; in exchange for the lives
Clarence E. Miller's lOth
The results of the poll:
of
the
hostages.
However,
received
a message from West
China? .
.
citation was issued.
District overwhelmingly
Israeli
policy
has
been
never
to
German
Chancellor Wllly
- Do you support the
- Do you feel wage and price
support President Nixon's President's decision to mine controls have been effective in
give in to such tenns.
Brandt "expressing shock at
mining of North Vietnam the North Vietnam harbors? - curbing the rate ol inflation?
The 74--year-old grandmother, what has happened and
harbors and are solidly op-- Yes 87.2 pet. No }2.8 pet.
Yes 35.4 pet. No 64.6 pet.
promising to do anything
posed to the legalization or
possible to prevent further
- Should the federal
- What issue is of single
marijuana.
victims.' '
government relinquish more of most concern to you?- Crime
These were two of four issues its power and financial 21 pel.; Taxes 20.2 pet.; In·
that drew lopsided responses in resources to stales and local flation 11.4 pet.; Vietnam War
WOMEN TO MEET
the congressman's 1972 government? Yes 76.2 pet. No 11 pet.; Drug Abuse 9.4 pel.;
'!be
Meigs County Women's
dis\rict-wide public opinion 23.8 pet.
Unemployment 7.8pel.; Health
Democratic
Conunlttee wlll
survey reported today.
- Are you in favor of ex- Care 6.4 pet. ; Pollution 4.8
meet at 7:30 tonight at the
Questionnaires covering a wide panding diplomatic and trade pet.; Welfare 4.2 pel.; National
The
Labor
Day
holiday
home
of Lee Enoch in
range of national and InDefense 3.8 pet.
The Pomeroy E·R squad weekend is over and the final Syracuse.
ternational Issues were
- Should the use of answered a caU on old Route 33 traffic
today was expected
dlatributed to every household
marijuana be legalized? Yes for Harold King at 4:10 p.m. to show that amost 800 persons
or the 13 counties of the dlatrlct.
·8.4 pet. No 91.6 pet.
Monday. King, having dif· died in traffic accidents during
OAPSE TO MEET
The two other Issues that
Do
you
favor
the
use
of
llculty
breathing, was taken to the 78-hour period. The
The·
Eastern Local School
Variable
cloudiness
south
brought out sharply defined
school
busing
to
achieve
a
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
National
Safety
Council
DistriCt
O.apter of the Ohio
opinion was the school busing today, continued cool. Partly racial balance in schools? Yes where he was treated and
estimated that between 580 and Asaodatloo ri Public School
Issue (&amp;4.8 pet. against tQ 5.2 cloudy tonight and tomorrow. 5.2 pet. No. 94.8 pet.
released.
6110 persons would die in traffic Employees W,lU meet at atiU
Not
so
cool
in
the
north
tonight.
pc.t. for achievlnR racial
·At
5:47
p.m.
Monday
For
those
who
fled
the
balance by busing), and am- Lows in upper 4011 and 501. High country to avoid military Pomeroy firemen were caUed acddenta during !be holiday evening at the Eastern High
period that began at 8 p.m. School. Every member Ia
nesty for those who Ded the tomorrow in the 708.
service do you fa~_.Amnesty to the Kenneth Hartley home loc;al lime Friday and ended at urged to attend.
country to avoid military
3 pet.; CondltionaP' Amnesty on Bunker Hill where a shed midnight Monday.
·
service ( 4 pet. for, 38.8 pet. for
38.6 pet.; No Amnesty 58.4 pet. containing farm suppUes had
A
United
Press
International
INVITED TO CHINA
EXTENDED OliTLOOX
Conditional amnesty, and 58.4
caught fire. The shed was count at 9 a.m. EDT IIOOwed at
PARIS (UP!) - President
Olalo Exteaded Oatlook pet. for no amnesty) .
destroyed. Defective wiring least D75 peraona killed in
Pompldou said
Georges
'lbunday
lllnlqb
Satarday:
Rep. Miller thanks aU those
may have been the cause of the traffic accidents.
Partly cloudy '111anday
Monday he has received tn
participating In lhe survey and
lire, Pomeroy Fire Chief
A breakdown:
invitation
to vial! China. But .
commented that the poll 1!111 Sal1!rdlly ud a elwlce
LOCAL TEMPS,
Henry Werry said.
~affic
575 the French leader told
raulll "are m01t helpful in of dower~ rrtdaY- HIP Ill
The temperature in downThere was insurance
' 59 newsmen at e Ely~ee Palace
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113
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