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10-:!'he Daily Sentinel, Midc!leport..f'wlervy,O.,Oct ... tm

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Leading Creek project is .assured says Commissioner ,Clar~
.

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TCI11aiive ag.reemenl has
been reached which removes
the ' lasl obslable 10 lhe con·
sll·uclion .of lhe Leading Creek
· Wa1er System, Meigs C&lt;iU!IlY
Commissioner .Rober! Clark
said today.
Clark
and
counly
prosecul ing allorney . Bernard
V. Fultz Thursday met wilh
assistant allorney general
Robeo·t.Newman and agreedo~
a consen t order which il is
believed will meel ihe
requiremenls , of the Ohio
Water Pollu"tion Con(rol Board
whic,h neXI week will ' become
the new Environmental
Protec tion Agency .
Generally speaking, the
terms of lhe order will require

l

Let' s each of us

rememb9r

our veterans 'bt displaying
Our Flag on th)s October
23rd.

•

po··~·,~tuo·cs fur lhe inspeclion· ·.Hc&lt;Oldo Dcpahmerl.
uf ohe insoallaoion of sewage · The Meigs Coun1y Planning
treat ment regulalions for lhc Cu11ni1i:;:;ion will be asked to
insu;·e lnslallatlon of proper instaiJllliun &lt;If septic tanks.
·:expand its. planning program
sewage.faci\ilies, the adoption · • These· · rrguwliohs are fur the ·current yeat io include
of a resolution by ''"' counly presently under sludy by the a survey or. Ihe possible
commissioners to assume
ownership of and to operate
central sewase ayalems, or to
cause the same to , be owned
e
.
and operated by conservancy .
.
districts or regional water
districts, and to eslablish

buildin~ permil po·,""'iJurc unrl
sub~ivision regulations tu

rL'--1
\..oiUIC

e8

Logue

dies on Friday

6 Amencans
• . wm
N0 heI .top pn.•ze..
By SOREN FOGELBERG

STOCKHOLM. (UPI) - Six
American scientists scored a
clean sweep today of the Nobel
Prize Awards for Chemistry
and Physics., Three shared the
Chemlmy f.'rice and three
shared the Physics Prize, each
. worth $IOO,OOO.
'11\f! Physics Prize went 10
f'ioofs. John· Bardeen of the
University of Illinois- the ftrst
l1)an 10 win two Nobel Prizes
for Physics-and 10 Leon N.
Cooper of Brown Uruversity
and John Robert Schrieffer of

power

(Continued from page I)
structed near Port Clinton on
the Lake Erie shore.
Corbill said there is "no connectlon between the two plants"
and !hat their close proximity
would create no prob1ems.
"There are two plants within
25 or 30 miles of each other on
Lake Michigan, and there's no
real engineering or environmental problem involved," he
said.
The Davis-Besse plant is be·
ing financed by the Cleveland
~autiful
Electric Illuminating Co., and
Toledo Edison co. Its 450-foot
high cooling tower can be seen
from the Sandusky,Bay site.
The Sandusky site is the only
Vivid Colors
one in the state being studied
Select Yours Tod1y!
for Ohio Power, company officlals said. However, American
· Power, with subsidies in several other slateS', is studying sev·
59 N. Second St.
era! other potential nuclear
Middleport.
power plant sites across the
country.

FALL

ARRANGEMENTS
Dudley's fbist
o.

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.... ' '

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.: I' ''"

Call No. 483
J

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NIIIIOIIIIBukRe«lon No.4
REPORT OF OONDft'lON, OONSOLIDATJNG
DOMESTIC StlllimWUEII, OF 111E

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
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of Pomeroy In tbe State of Oblo, at the ciGH of ballael1 oa October 10 lfl2
.
published Ill responoe to call made 117 Ctmplroiler ollhe cu~Te~~cy, under Title
12, United States Code, Section 111.

ASsETS
Cash and due from banks • • • .• • ••• , • • • • - - • - • $1,195,263.97
,U.S. Treasury ~llritles • • - - •• - - - •••• - - • - • - 6,719,550.63
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations - • - - • - • - • • . • • 508,055.29
Obligations of State and poDtlcal subdlv~ons •••• - - - • 1,054,347.82
Other securities • - - ••• - .• • • • • • • • • • • . • • • 28,742.50
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • • - • • • •
• - - 825,000.00
Loans - - - . . .. .. .. .. - - - - .. .. .. .. • .. ..
• • - 5,892,7&amp;1.56
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premllea • - • •
- - • 222,958.70
Other assets • - . • • • • • • • • • • - - - . • • - •
TOTAL ASSETS - · - • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • !1614471141.56
LIAIID.Jl'IES
Demaoo deposits of Individuals, PlrlnenhiPI,
and corporations - • • •. • - - - • - • • • • • - • • $4,154,051.80
Time and savings deposil.!l ollndlvldlllla,
partnerships, and corwatlon&amp; • • • • • • - • • - - - • 9 609 995.56
Deposits of United States Govenment • •• - - - •••• ·' • \34;237.43
Deposits of States and polltlcal subdivision&amp; - - • - • - •••• 1173 804.24
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • - - • ·• - • • • • • _'. 47:?21.04
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • • • • - • • 115.1!!,310,07
(a) Total demand deposits - - - ••• .- • ! 4,841,590.16
(b) Total.t~e and savings deposits • • • • - . $10,2771719.91
Other llablltltes - - - - • • • • • • • • ,. • - • • • 161,49$.72"
TOTAL UABILITIES • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $15 12801801i.79
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECUIUI'IES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loan&amp;
(set up pursuant to IRS ruling~) •••• •••••• · •••.• ~.14&amp;.59
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS'AND SECURri'IES - - • • • $83 1148.59
CAPli'AL AOOOUNTS
Equity.capital-total . - - •. • • • • • • - - • • • • • • • $1,083,!§9Jf'
Common S!Ock-total par value
• - • • •
200,000.00
No. shares authorized 8,000 ·
No. shares outstanding a,ooo
Surplus • - • - - : • - - - • • • • • • • - - •
• • 7«),000.00
Undivided profits • - - • • • • : • •
• • • • • • 183,188,18
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS •
1,083,189,18
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAj&gt;lTAL ACCOUNTS • • • • • •
• $16,447,141.56
MEMO!WmA
Average of IOta! deposits for ihe 15 calendar
days e~dlng with call date· - - - .- c • • • • • • • . • • . f1U05,re2.40 .
Average of total loans for the 15 calendlr
days ending with call date • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • 5,906,530.95

m.09

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Mei~s Counly to establish a

Charles A. Logue, 65, Rt. 1,
Langsmille, a retired farver,
diecl at 7 a.m. today in
Veterans Memorll!l Hospital.
. He was born May 19, 1907 in
Morgan Twp.,. Gallia County,
SOol of lhe late TJmothy and
Nora Ralslon Logue. He
married Myrtle Marie Geotge
....~~~ · in 1924, who Sul'vlvea,,as do
1'1
rourchildren,Mrs.Dilmaf(lva
Lou) Lewis, Phoi!hix, ~··:
Archie, Rt. I, Bidwell: Her·
bert , Columbus, and Denver,
Gallipolis; a slater, Mrs. Mary
Harmon, Toledo and 13 grand
and six gre8111!'indchUdren.
He was preceded In death by
a sister and two brothers. Mr.
Logue was a .membo!r of the
Danville Wesleyan Chllrch.
Funeral service&amp; wlli be held
•-v from th·e
al 2 P..m. Sun""'
Danville Wesleyin Church
Wl.,h Rev. Lawren•• Sullivan
officiating. Bllrlal will be In
Pine Grove
Cemetery.
Visilatlon
will
be
held
a~ the
"V~terons Day reminds me •
McCoy·Moore Funeral Hoine
If we don't slond for some-'
thing • we may allow our•
In VInton from ~ and 7-9
sel"1u to fall for an.,thlng."'
Salurday.

lhe veteran has always
been t!le forgoHen man
when the fighting Is dope.

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' I, Maxine Griffith, ~shier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condlUon Ia true lind twltct to the beat of my knowiedge and
belief.
.
Mulae Griffith .
We, the undersigned dlrectori atlflt the c.Wrtctn11i of ihla report,/. con. clition lind declare that It haa been esamlned 117 111 arxl to the best of our
knowledge and belief Ia true and ctXiect.
- · ·- ·
Edllea Hal IJPtr
Alfnd It V rflld - Dlrtcton

lhmliii(D.'IM•• .

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the Univer$ity of Penn·
sylvarua. They share equal}y.
The Chemistry Prize went 10
Dr. Christian B. Anfinsen of the
National Institute of Healtll,
Bethesda, Md., an.d Drs.
StanfordM!)OreandWilliamH.
Stein of Rockefeller University
in New York. Anfinsen 'was
awarded half of the prize and
the other half was shared by
Moore and Stein.
The Physics Prize was
awarded 10 Bardeen, Cooper
and Schrieffer for their study
in the superconductivity of
metals cooled almost to absolute zero- studies of vast
importance to the electrlcSI
industry. Bardeen .ltJII shared
a previous Physics Prize in
1956 for inventing transistors.
Anflnsen won his.'Chemistry
Prize for his work on rlbonuclease, especially ~oncerning
th
cl'
b1
th
· e. conn~d ton e weend ,the
ammo act sequence
anf
e
.
11
biologica Y acttve con orma.
tion"--studies in!O the chemis·
try of the chromosome and the
gene, the factors which deter·
mine heredity.
Moore and Stein won their
award for "their contribution
10 the understanding of the
connection between chemical
structure and catalytic activity
of the active center of the
ribonuclease molecule," the
Swedish Academy of Sciences
annoitnced.
A spokesman at Rockefeller
University ssld this referred 10
"the genetic structure of the
chromosome and gene, impor·
tant links in unraveling the
molecular structure of the
genetic material which deter·
.mines her_edlty."

Alfred
Social Note.~
Sunday School attendance on
Oci. 15 was 46, the offering
$18.47. Attendance at worship
service was 15. Rev. Lehman
spoke from Col. I: I·H, "In·
lercessory Prayer".
Eddie Parker, who Is atlending Technological School
in Columbus spent a weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilber Parker.
A birthday dinner was
served at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Carr and Vicki
and Penni in honor of her
father, Robert White of Keno
on Sunday, Oct. 15. Attending
besides those above were Mrs .
Robert White of Keno, Mr. and
Mrs. Clair Woode and Conn!
Sue of Circleville and Charles
Saltz of Mason.
Mrs. Clara Follrod and Nina
Robi~son and their guest,
Clyde Reeder of Alabama look
Sunday dinner with Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Swartz at Shade.
Sunday evening visitors of
MJ:. and Mrs. Charles D. Woode
·were Mr. and Mrs. Clair Woode
and Conni Sue of Circleville.

I&lt;ICadcins fur central sewage
•ystcms in 1l)e county.
. Clark said the assistant
at.~&lt;.-ncy gc 0eral illlbCllted 1hat
this ~~recnu;nl would expedite
certification to the Fanners
Home Administration by the
Environmenlal Protection
Agency of I he acceplabilily of
the conslruclion of the new
l.eading Creek water system . .
This certification could come
as early as next week.
Also allending the meeting
were · Robert Cotterill and
Bernie 8owman, of the SQuth·
eaStern Ohio (}ffiee ollh• Ohio

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Dcparlmenl of Heallh; ·Robert
Wal1ers, of the Ohio 'Power
Company, and C)ifford Brid·
•sail, ~n. engineer .with Burge~
alld Niple, engineering · con·
suit ants ·for Ohio Ppwer
Coll!pany . .
Clark said he feels this
agrecmem Is a major step
forward in the continuing effor•s of ihe Meigs County
commissioners to Insure that
the counly will keep pace with
the !leeds and opportunities
presented by lhe development
of the Meigs Mine.

:========~
MEIGS lHrATD£
U\1 n
Tonight &amp; S.tvrdly
Octobtr 20-21
THE GOO FATHER
Marion Bral)do

IR)
,of . ,studlly
engrossing entertalnm•nl.
Adults Jl.SO, Children 7Sc.
3

~ours

Sun., Mon: &amp; TillS.
Oct. 22-U-24
Clint Eas!woOd

In
JOE KIOD
ITKhnlc.lorl

rC:1ttoons: .

lvHtr

Fly

~~~y=P•

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WASHINGTON (UPI I - Tile eolt ol llviDII'Oit i.t
pet. Ill October - - of tbe y.,'l blgeR jluDpa beea- o f - prlees for clotblDI, piO!IDe, ued eare,
port, ecJI, eoftee ud eollep lllltloll.
,
IIIII beef prieet cboppe~ foe tile 0nt lillie alllce May,
ud fnlb fndl ud veaelallle prieel allo deelllled, tile
Labor DepariiJ!eat'• Bure~~u of Labor SIIIU.tla (BLSI
aid 1n ID ft!MII'IIoda}' 011·tbe Coal~~~~~er Prlee llldes. Tile
oveMIU rloe 1111 m011tb - twice tile.U pet. illerene Ill
AIIC~~~t, biJi .matched tile U pet. jamp Ill JUly aad wu
esceedea thll year only by a 0.5 pet. advan&lt;e Ill Febl'lllr)'.

BY BOB HOEFLICH

Tutoring working News • . . in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
HARRISONVILLE
Such pairings were also made
Harrisonville Elementary in grades five and two. It is prepared 10 walk out of two other plants today.
The strike by members of UAW Local31 in the Ka11888 City'
School is experimenting with expected that the students'
an inter-class tutoring thinkingpatternwouldbemore suburb waa plotted by UAW leadership as the fourth of a recent
program in math Instruction in similar with this type of outbreak of "long wetkend" strikes dellsr.ul to hurl GM::
which the first step wu 'to rank arrangement. ·
production while keeping UAW economists smiUng.
.'
the classes In order of. math
The first sessions dealt.with
achievement through math addiUon facts which the
achievement tests and teacher . fifth and sixth graders had
;:
opinions.
memorized. It waa the fifth
The next step was to pair the ·and ·sixth graders' job to work
The Meigs County Sllei'iff's The car traveled 160 feet, wen&lt;
lop student In grade six with ,. with artd help the second and DeP.I. reported today It in- off the highway ori the lefl,';
the lOp student m grade three, lhlrd graders 10 learn these vesilgated two accidents, one went an additional 40 feet, ·:
an~ so on down the rankings facls. The tutors were given Wednesday afternoon and one tearing down 16 feet of fence ::
unltl the bot!Om student In suggestions from · their Thursday morning ,. There were and one fence post. There was ::
·grade six was paired with the teachers, but they were free 10 no personal inj11ries in either. light damage to the car. )llo . ~
At 2 p.m. Wednesday on cilation ·was issued.
:
bottom student In grade three. teach any way they wished.
Hobson
Road
at
Hobson
Yards
What was hoped would result
was a child .working with a Arnold W. Hayes, · 62, Mid·
hlld d h
c
an eac child receiving dleport, was t11rning his car
around· when the gas feed
Individual attention.
Th e Iearn 1ng objectJves were stuck, causing it to hit a door on
designed both for the tutor and a garage. Thwe was a medium
By Mrs. Francis Morrio
~is student. First it was hoped damage to the garage, light
Mr. Clifford Bryson of Pitts. that the student would learn his damage to the car.
burgh spent Saturday and facts. Second It was hqped that
Thursday at!O a.m. on SR 7,
Sunday with his parents, Mr. the tutor would review and two and six tenths miles north.
of Pomeroy, Harry D. Barton,
and Mrs. Hobart Bryson.
better remember his facts.
Thirteen roles have been ·
Mrs. Bessie Smith and Mrs.
All the staff .members ln- 33, ReedsviUe, was traveling
assigned
In the cast of the
Dewey Sines of Ft. Worth, volved apparently are pleased south when a lie rod broke,
Texas, visited Mr. and Mrs. with the program. Other areas causing him to lose control. Junior Class Play at Meigs ·
High School by Charles Corder;:
Floyd Farra recently. They In which It will be used this
direclor.
.·
were enroute to Michigan to year are subtraction and INJURY FATAL
The play, entitled "Rub-.
visit.
multiplication facts as well as
berneck,''
is a three·act ·
Mrs. Edna Hayman came other math concepts. After
MEAPE, Kan. (UPI)-A I$.
Wednesday from New MaJ'8h. further evaluation, this year~ld Meade High School comedy by Donald R. Slieper.
11 concerns the activities of a·
field where she has been program could be expanded junior Injured inb a
visiting friends to the hOme of into areas such as reading and game at Greens urg Fr Y family which discovers that it·
is perfectly legal to I'W1 a
Mrs. Crill Bradford and Mrs. spelilng.
~~~~~~~~~as Sluffed
dummy for mayor of
Eslher Piper.
Injured during the (ourth
the town.
Mr. and Mrs. BID Lake,
quarter when he threw a block
Sludents assigned parts are ·
Lori and Sean of Columbus
during an offellslve play and
Geneva King, Rod Pullins,.·
were dinner guests Saturday of
was· struck accidentally on the Ingrid Hawley, Dian Carsey,
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
beck of the head"'' a dele••ive Vicky Clelland, Rick Stobart,
Francis Morris.
player, 'offlciala ';.id. H;-:ras l';ll MllclleD, Mike Richards; .
Grella and Isabel Simpson • ...
taken to the Greensbura
~II!!,J»..~;rMJke ~Y~•. ·~~
and Mr · and Mrs. Bert Grimm
Siirtday SCH061 attendance ~t- Hospital· and trinsferred the SwW!tr,
Jw.bara Anth&lt;111y -~tl
returned'' 'from ·a. trlp '·' t6 Freedom Gospel Mission Oct: following day 10 St. Francis David Miller.
Gathnburg, . Tenn . Enroute 15 was 32 · and offering was Hospital in Wichita.
The play will be presented on
home they vistted Mr. and Mrs. $I0.30.
Funeral services will be
Nov. 17 at 8 p.m. in the high
Solon Butcher at Spencer, W.
Sunday School is held each conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday school auditorium.
Va.
,.
Sunday at 9:30 a. m. and at Meade High School. Burial
Mr · and Mrs . Thereon Sunday evening worship at 7:30 will be in Do&amp;tglas, Kan., where
Johnson returned home p. m. Prayermeeling is held on the auis was born.
Saturday from two weeks Tuesday evening at 7:30. A
TAXES RECEIVED
vac~tlon In Florida.
revival will start November 2
Meigs County villages
. M1sses Grace and Ruth Ellis with the Rev. George Housher Carroll and family.
received $5,186 in · gasoline
and Mr. Howard Bingman of as evangelist.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Haines taxes distributed in October
Columbus were. Saturday
Mrs. NonaLongpassedaway of Stiversville visited Mrs. according to State Treasurer
guests of Miss Edtth Hayman. at Veterans Memorial Hoapltal Sylvia Carpenter.
Joseph T. Ferguson. Amounts
Miss Shirley Stobart of Oct. 9. Funeral services were
Mrs. Elva Dalley, Mrs. Judy received Include Middlepor-t,
Columbuswasarecentguestof held Oct. 11 at the Freedom Pape and Kristen of Syracuse $1,90$; Pomeroy, . fl,978;
her aunt, Mrs. Grace Krider. Gospel Mission with burial in visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hacine, $398; Rutland, $432:
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley Bald Knobs Cemetery, Several Autherson.
Syracuse, $478. Each to~p
a?d Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill friends from '"'re attended the
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence received $1,200 and eacll
VISited Mr. and Mrs. Tom services.
Lipps and Toni of Little county, $30,000 In Ohio.
Eckersley and Doug at Han· , Mrs. Dessle Webb and Mrs. Hocking, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
nibal, N. Y. They then toured Betty Hickel of Spencer, w. Va. Birch and Randy of Waterford
through Pennslyvanla to attended the funeral of their and Mr. and Mrs. Frank . CLOSED MONDAY
AU banks, post offices and
Gettysburg and to Fairfax, Va. sister, Mrs. Nona Long. Also Wallace of Racine vlalted Clint
the
Meigs County Courthouse
where they visited Mr. and '"'re for the last rltea were Mr. Birch and Leota.
Mrs. Larry Badgley and toured and Mrs. William KrackomClint Birch and Leota visited will be closed Monday, Oct. 23,
Washington, D. C. and ' berger of New Jeney.
. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Upps and In observance of Veterans Day.
returned on the Skyline Drive.
Charles Carron baa returned family at Vincent..
•
Mrs. Sybil Miles and Mrs.- holile from Veterans Memorial
Leota Birch visited Mr. and
MARRIAGE
LICENSE
Lee Jackson of Plckerlng!On Hospital and 1$ Improving,
Mrs. Eugene Long and famlly
John Michael Thompson, rr,
were weekend guesta of Mrs.
Mrs. Wanda Donaldson and of Eagle Ridge, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy,
Rt. 4, and Judith
James SlmJ)6on. Mrs. Lavinia son, Steve o1 Findlay visited Richard Abela and Mr. and
Simpson accompanied them her, mother, Mrs. Minnie Mrs. Robert Byers and family. Nann Andersen, 23, Pop1eroy,
Rt. 4.
home 10 spend a week In ·
Columbwi with relatives.
'"tOIICI.-toiMI-IIODC:IOCIIOCIC"!!'::Mii-~IMI-~------M
Liabel and Grella Simpson
visited Mr. and · Mrs. Bert
Grimm at Letart FaUs Sunday.

Two accidents investigat¢

RaCI· ne
Social. Events

Roles assigned
in school play
at Meigs High

·•
LEIGH,17, eldest of the Bix adopted cblldren of Mr. arxl
••. Mrs. Darwin Enevoldsen loves horses. Here she.ls with her
Palomino, ''Princess."

:nJPPERS PLAINS - There
was the old woman who lived in
a shoe, and there is Mr. and ·
Mrs. Darwin . Enevoldsen ·or
.near ,Tuppers Plains, who are
here because of the Gavin
Power Plant at Cheshire.
In contrast , to the nur&amp;erJi
rhyme, Mr . . and Mrs .
Enevoldsen. don't have as
many, · children as the old
woman in the shoe but they DO
KNOW what to do. The
Enevoldsens, who this· month
adopted their sixth child,
provide a lovely home, an
aimosphere of affection and
warmth and wholesome ac.
tivities for their brood.
And you might say all of this
grew out of "love on a
Greyhound llils" where Peg
and Darwin Enevoldseri first
met.
Aveteran of 23 years' service
In the U. S. Navy, .Mr.
Enevoldsen met his wife, Peg,
when._they both were on a
Greyhound enroute to Florida.

VOL VII

philosophy that "there's
always room for one more,"
another youth, at the request or
an area welfare department, is
making his home with the
family . The department
workers had heard of the
Enevoldsens and thought their
home would be ideal for the
youngster. ·
Residing io Meigs County
only since last February, Mr.
and Mrs. Enevoldsen are
rearing their adopted children
in a beautiful new home which
they have built on what Is
known as Hoffman Lane near
Tuppers Plains. The five acres
on which the home Sets
provides plenty of room for
cats, dogs and horses ·- the
peis of the children. The family
hasa camper;a pool and a boat
to help round out activities for
recreation hours.
None· of the Enevoldsens'
adopted children are blood
relatives. Naturally - as with
any six youngsters- there are
moments of friction. However,

as with all families, they pass
over.' Discipline is apparenUy
no special problem.
Mrs. Enevoldsen said all or
the children are expected to
_assist with the work about the
home. This is a part of their
training. There's oo · hanky
pank about schQOl work either.
Each evening right after
supper is study time for all.
Enforcement is "rigid,'' Mrs.
Enevoldsen admitle!l.
Housing is no problem. The
Enevoldsens had th,e basement
of their new home finished to
include five bedrooms. With
four' upstairs, there are nine
bedrooms to accommodate the
family and two other adults
'rho also make their home with
the Enevoldsens:
Before 'coming to Meigs
County, the family resided at
New Haven, W. Va. for a year.
Mr. Enevoldsen is employed aschief of electrical construction
at the Gavin Power Plant in
Cheshire. Before coming to this
area, the Enevoldsens resided

at New Concord where he was
employed at l~e Muaklngum
River Plant· of the American
Electric Power Co. The family
expects to be here until 1975.
They may hold onto their new
home as a reUremimt place In
years 10 come when the day
rolls around for; them 10 leave
Meigs County.
Both Mr . and Mrs.
E11evoldseri are firm In their
belief thlit there Is no dlf·
ference between adopted
children and blood children. By
the same token, they fully
realize the individual dlf·
ferences of · each child - a
normal sihfallon In either
instance.
Two well-worn books In the
living room of' the Enevoldsen
home have serv~ the family
well. They are copies of "The
Chosen Baby" and "The
Family That Grew ." Both
books deal beautifully .with
explaining adoption to children
and these books have been
(Contl~lled . ~~ Page 111

+

· Weather
·. Cloudy Sunday and Sunday
·,rlight with showers or light rain
likely and slowly moderating
)emperatures. High Sunday
upper 50s north and 60s south.
Low Sunday night in the 50s.
High Monday in the 60s and
lower 70s.

'!'he . romance bloomed into
marriage. They had a son,
Charles, who is now an
Episcopal · pastor in Portsmouth, Va. Abit later they had
a stillborn h&amp;by which may
have encouraged them. to go
the adoption route.
The eldest or' the Enevoldsen
children, ·Leigh, no~ 17, joined
the household when she was
only s.ix days old. The second
daughter, Jo, now 16, was three
days old and'Tim, now 10, was
just two days old. These babies
all joined Mr. and Mrs.
Enevoldsen at Portsmouth, Va .
Steve, now six, was next to join
the growing family and then
came Melanie, now 14. Melanie
was ll when she came to the
family and was adopted by the
Enevoldsens at the request of
her father . after ' Melanie's
mother died. The si~th child 10
be adopted was Ken, now 12.
His final adoption was &lt;approved only this month in the
Meigs County Juvenile Court.
Apparently living with the

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MELANIE . ENEVOJ.D.
SEN flads that call are ller
'''thlna." Slle boldt 011e If tile
family's Slameoe call.

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7;.h.pn 11,500
Families

Devoled To The Grealer Middle Ohio Valley

PAGES

NO. 38

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Your Invited Gueat
Reaching More

tmts
3~

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FOUR SECTIONS
Pomeroy·Middleport

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1972

15 CENTs

Nixon to lead

foo:U

Bald Knob

N
' ews Notes

Laurel Cliff

Open Tonight Until 9 p.m.
Shop Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

News Notes
By Ml'l. Bertha Parter
Sabbath School attendance
on Oct. 15 at Freer Methodi.lt
'Church waa 117 wlw
'· offering
$201.40. Twenty choir IIIMibers
were
preeent.
Oct. 21,will
7 a.have
m.
the Men's
FeDowlhlp
prayer and pancake breakfut.
Rev, Buckley will be the ~.
. Charla Diehl remainl a
patient Iii University H01pital
In Columbus.
Mr. and Mra. Edward Bauer
Of Marlon apent a weekend
. with Mrs. Bauer'• parenta, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Charlea Karr Sr.
Mrs.·Doni Holley apent a few
daya with telatlves In Fin·
dlay..
M:. and Mra. Bill l'llrry, .
Mlli J&gt;.rl Slllmr ol Atbtns
and wyatt lld!Ner ol Mi.
Vern~~~~ vlli111d With Mr. and
u- N
...,,_..._
·
..,... orman ............ ·

Mrt. Goldie DIU and · Mi'a.
Nancy Walker called on ·Mn.
a.aiSiiihoiiiwiiSiiitailrb&gt;iiio7Pii'iiM.iilil._ _. .~rtha Parker recentlY,

Sa.ve Now During Our Sale
Of Women8 Slacks - Knit Tops .
Dres8es -... Coordinate Sportswear '

Jewelry - Men~ . ~ Leg Slacks Coats and Jackets
''· .
Flannel ShirtS ~ Ranlon SOcks,

' Fr" Customer·Ptrking on Stc:ond

·- StrHt and AI OUr Me chinle StrHt Wan1tou11

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·.
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SOlJ'I'HWESTERN IIOMI!:COMING QUEEN - Mils Kim Pope, daughter of
;:·Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pope, Rt. I, Patriot, was crowned homecoming queen at
·:::festivities Friday night at SoUthwestern High School. A seniOr, she was escorted
;: by Jerry Waters. More pictures on Page 28.
.;'

niURMON'l', Md. (UPI) - Prtlident
Nllon ·offered himli!lf S.turday N. .!be
leader ol a new ma)orlij of "lood, decent
peop)e" who oppose power·hungry
polltlcians' demanda for ligher taxes, job
quotas, Income redistribution and busing.
In his third weekend radio speech ol the
campaign, a 15-minute paid poliUcal
broadcast from his Camp David, Md.,
retreat, the President never mentimed
George S. McGo'lern or the Democratic
party by name.
But he rejected the "alien paternalism"
of those who he said "have more faith in
govenunent than th.ey have In people" and
believe that only an ever.atronger
bureaucracy In Washington knows' what is
best. .
"It is time that good, decent people
s~ped letting themselves be bulldozed by
anybody who presumes 10 be the self.
righteoua moral judge of our society,"
Nixon said.
Adviser Speaks Out
"There Ia no reason to feel guilty about
wanting to enjoy what you get and get
what · YO!! earn, about wanting your
children In good sclloola cloae to home, oc
about wanting to be Judged fairly on your
ability," he aald.
Nixon's Chief domestic affairs adviser,
John D. Ehrllchman, told reporters
meanwhile •hat the President almost

~-f.~ed car charged by
!::::.;.jhtdl on rural road Apology to
.

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certalnl)' waul!! veto a COIIIpi'Omile .jiEW·
.I,.Ibor Department aJIPI'OPI'iillonJ bill that
Ia rouahly a haH-bW!GP dollln above hla
budget reque.t,
Elrlichman 'alao called McGovern .a
"llar" for suuestlng In a political
broadcast Friday night that the economy
wu In worse lhape under the admlnf&amp;.
tratlm than when the Demoerall left offlee In 1189.
In a briefing at a snowcapped gateway to
the presidential compound, Ehrllchman
· also noted predictions by aome memben
of the Bjlslneas CouncU meeting at Hot
Springs, Va., that a tax Increase was
inevitable in the near futUre.
Not PesolmlaUc
He said Nixon was reviewing 132 bllll
passed in the dying days of the @Ill
Congress 10 detennlne "a list ol poulble
vew prospects" 10 keep federal spending
under control.
"I would by no mealls rule out the
possibility of being abil 10 avoid higher
taxes next year," Ehrllchman said. ·
"The President Ia determined to do
everything he can 10 avoid higher taxes
next year. We by no mean&amp;arepealmlatlc
by !hill review that ill going on right now."
Bills subject 10 ve!O would Include "ju.st
plain budget bulters," 111ch as the HEWLabor appropriations, ll1d othert that
"create lltUe klngdoma within the federal
bureaucracy," he said with1111t elabora·
tim.
The IIEW·Labor bill IOta! ill f30,5 bUUon,
ldentlcal!O one Nixm had vetoed earlier
aa lnftatlonary, but Includes provlal0111 for
dillcretlon&amp;ry White House cuts that could
trim the wtalw f2U billion. Thill still II
about tsOO mlllion above Nixon's request.
Aaotber Speeeb Saaday
AI for McGovern's criticism ol Nixon
econo'mlc pollcle~, Ebrllchman said,. "I
remember very well when I wu a kid that
the mlni.lter'sson was the biggest llar In
claall. I am afraid that maybe we've got
something ol that kind confronting ua In
thla political election." ·

·In other sheriff's department action
·:;; POMEROY - Moral of this story:
Sa.
t
urday,
a minor accl~ent and a hit-skip
•(\on't go riding in a red car if you expect 10
incident were Investigated. ·
:8ee a bull.
,
A! 2:43 p.m. at Broadway and Vine In
::: That will be sworn 10 by Peggy
: hoffitt, Rt. 2 Racine, who early Sat11rday Racine, Lynn Mallocy, 25, Racine, was
:ldternoon· was driving on Yellow Bush -driving west on VIne when Joseph W.
GALUPOIJS ~ Ralph McCormick,
Road in her red car. She came 10. a bull White, 36, MinersviUe, ·failed 10 yield right
illong side of the road. Mr. Bull saw red, of way in his auto which hit the side of the superintendent of the Wellston City
Mallory au!O. Damage was medium. Schools, on behalf of the WeUston ad·
.iind charged.
:::. Peggy Proffitt, who lives at Racine Rt. There was no charge and no personal ministration, has apologized 10 GaWpolis
fans for the episode which took place a
:'l, told sheriff's office department ln· injuries.
At4:20p.m.attheMonkLargentplace week ago Friday following the GAHS:~~sllgators the bull came at her car,
in
Syracuse,
an unidentified man drove a Welis!On football game at Welis!On.
:;Scraping paint off Its side, 'and kept on
1964 beige colored Chevy into Largent's
Supt. McCormick said, "We . at
: joing. '"
.
;:: · He was by no means done for the day, guardrail, ripped out two post. and a Wells!On In no way condone thla type ol
thing. We will do everything poeslble 10
:1ot down the road a piece he galloped up 10 garbage can.
-The driver was observed to get out, make sure that It won't happen again. We
a house occupied by Donnie Stobart who
look
over what had liappened, remount his' are sorry It hapPened."
was In his front yard with Carolyn ThompChevy, drive down the road toward the
The superintendent was referring 10
son.
.
11 took them no time at aD 10 scoot Ohio River.
an incident following the game on Penn·
lnsld41 when the bull came at them. Still he
Apparimtiy discovering that was no sylvania Ave., near the high school, In
· wasn't dOne. The bull got up en the porch,. way 10 escape, he turned around, got back which a gang beating took p~ce. A GAHS
: -~ hil h~ 10 open the acreen door, and on State Route I~ l!Jlaln, and headed student was the victim. . .
;{eft 'only when Mils Thompson beat him wward Racine.
McCormick added charges were filed
&lt;qver the head with a broom 1
The department was looking for him a against two juveniles and an adult Friday
· u thla amacke of a bit of bull, Sheriff ;short time later.
aftern00f1. The WeUston bOYa Involved
80b ltartenbach's deputies believe it,
were· not W~liswn High School atudenta,
which Ia no bull.
G8II"18
d •-1.
McCormick added.
·
The broom prov~ too much for the
squa UIAeS
"When IOII!ethlng like thla happens, .
,bull, who turned out to be owned by Plilllip
:
.
some tend 10 carry a grudge ov.. into the
.; :Fisher, Rt. 2, Racine, whci came to get him 2 em~ency runs
basketball sea11111. We hope the !ll)e peopi!l
':: when- nolllltd 01 tile acitement he .haL:. · _ • .
. •
.. ~-of Ga.lllpolinccep.l our apolOQ, and we
· Renerated on Yellow 8Ush road.
. GALUPpUS - Gl!llia'S' Volunteer hope the escellent relat!OIIIIdp between
·
1
Emergency Squad made a run ~t Ii:te p.m. the two .Choola wll1 bontinue In the future
Friday 10 the Marie Frederick rest~, as it has the paat 48 years!'
Rt. I, Bidwell. Mrs. Fredei:ick, ase 73,
TWO DIE IN CRASH '
suffered
a poulble fractured hlp In a faD.
·. DUBUQ~, Iowa (UPI)- Two men
.TUNE IN ON I
•.Ill a hUnting and campl"' Qpedltlon were 1!lJe wplrlllllferred to the Holzel' Medical ·
Center.
POMEROY - Sapl. Geerce ·
:.killed ~ ,.. their lllht plue
Squadlmen
were
called
at
,11:13
a.m.
Jlal1rlves
IDvllel Iaiit waldlen ·. to
· ~albad lnle tr.l .OOUt 1Z milea
: :~ Ill Dltbuqae. Alllborltlea llid the Saturday 10 Ubi!J Hollow RII., wbm lillie ill Cltluell eallle TV • II 'wJ,
7p.a. feu .,ulll llltiJ'IIII
&gt;-ylctima ... "
IUcMrd rt.e1, .. 01 em. 01ar1e1 Eblin, a, wu taken to the Oct.
Pleulnt
Valley
Haaplt.l
~
a
medical
.
•
lite
......
IMal ' ... ..,,
..
llld Gltnn

fans given

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GAHS HOMECOMING QUEEN AND OOURT- Mill Lori Mllllr, c:.nllr wu
crowned 19'12 HomeComing ~een at GaDipolls Friday nlaht prior to the A~
GAHS football game. Attendant.s are Beclly Nukey, left, and Lila Alklnl. See
Story on Page 2.

Reed chairs bankers for Nixon
POMEROY - Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
president of Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Pomeroy, has been named state chairman
of.the Ohio Bankers Committee to Re-elect
lhe President.
In announcing Reed's appolnirnent,
Charles D. RoSs, President Nixon's ohio
campaign director, sald 1 "We are pleased
to have a man with Mr. Reed's outstanding
background to head thla effort In support
ol the Prealdent In Ohio"'

Reed, a member ol the Ohio Blnlln
Asan. Council of Admlnlatration, Is ac!t~Yf
In civic aQd charitable oralllizltllllll and Ia
well known In Ohio benldrig clrcla.

In hla campaign role, Retct will be Ill
charge of a campaign aimed at ruJ II j
all bankers in Ohio. Reed will urce them to
support the President and to help recruit
hundred&amp; of volunteer~ throUihollt lbt
alate 10 join in the campa'&amp;r!.

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Gavin f8mily adoptS 6th child

.Cost .of living jumps

ELBERFELDS 'IN POMEROY

Tonight, Sit. &amp; SUn.
Oct. 20.21-22
Double Feature
FROGS
Ray Mill and
Sam EllloH
!Color)
(PG)
Also
"THE CONQUEROR
WORM"
!Color&gt;
VIncent
Price
tan Ogllvy

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IIIII DI:BBJI PAYMB, C...,- erowned lt'12North
Gtllil "'-'&gt;' I I'll diJI'q halftime Dll'llllllllles of
the North Galli a Rata•• Tract BV II: football pme at
llldftll.VIntGn Frida)' aiPI, Mill PaYne wu IPOIIIOfed by
the Beta a.tl.
tannpCIIIIeft II~ llalctab,
,, who

-~by lite Pip atdl. 8tc!lod 14

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I &amp;pOll rtpt II
4,

au. s ..:

cathy Queen. lpOIIICired 11r !hi Llliv7
rienta "'" lpCiilland by tile Nwib . Gdll Plnll

dieerleaden lllldlr the dladuu olll1~ Nlll. .
the Plralll JH will, I duct Ill lbt Mtltl
G'IL(Idtonlitllttlo).

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22,1172

. . '-Immunity

;.. ne ~Times ·Senllnel, Sunday, !Xi, 22, 1m
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.Mill
. n
er ·q ueen
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GAWPOUS - Miss Lori
Jrllller, Jeniot, and daughter of
Mr. lmdMi's. Russell Q. MOler,

RL I, TbaiUran, (Shelton Rd.)
waa crowned 27th annual
Gallla Academy High School
homecoming queen priOI' to
Friday JI\Bht's GAIJS.Athena
footbaU game on Memorial
Field.
.. Mi$8 Mjller was . sponsored
by the Juni91' Intensive Office
Education. She is an active
member of ·the .science and
photo Clubs, Gallian Yearbook
business staff, Thespian Club,
Gallia Script (schqol newspaper) salesman, and a
cheerleader for tbe Blue Devils
football and basketball team.
Attendants were Becky
Naaki!y, sponsored , by the
Gallipolis Future Farmers of
Americ11, al)d Lisa Atkins,
spQRsor:ed by the GAHS Photo
Club. ,
.
. The pre-game ceremonies,
held in chilly 38-aegree temperature, began wJth a parade
or the 18 queen candida~Als who

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wer·c transporll'&lt;i around Ute
gridiron in convertibles.
After reachin~ the visitors
side of Memorial Field, 18
membel'll of the Blue Devil
football team escorted the
candirlales to the mid-field
stripe, facing the GABS siands.
With members of the GABS
marching band, under the
direction of Charles Rowe
presenting the homecoming
,selections, each .candidate was
introduced l!y Mrs. Anne Fis!J..
cer, GAHS vocal music instructbr.
.
After the wmners were
announced, Topper Orr, vice
president of the GABS student
body presented trophies, and
Alan Kemp, student body
. president, crowned the QIJI!CD.
Vljrsity gridders serving as
escorls were . Danny Wood·
ward, John Walter, Dave
Kerns, Dave Di·yan, Dean
Epling, Dave Graham, Dave
Brown; Steve Rose, Leon
Smith, Pat Boster, Tom
Daniels, Matt Epling, Mike

·.

Ber·rid~e. Rick Grymes, Bob

Niberl, Kcv Sheets, Ken New
and Mike Wolle.
Automobiles were dri,ven by
Dave Thomas, Randy Gilliam,
Dana Mink, Alan Gardner, Bob
Adams, Fox Grant, and.Randy
Watts. Vehicles were furnished
by Keith Brown, Rex Car~Alr,
Fox Grant, Ike Wt.eman, !)on
Hemsworth and Bob Adams.
l)uring the halftime shol",
Director Rowe's . musicians
took fans on a short musical
tour of TV land.
' The Gl\HS birnd opened the
sh9W with a driU routine to the.
theme from the popular Flip
Wilson Show "Geraldine
Honey."
'
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The theme from the situation
comedy sh9W !'All in the
Family," provi!led the music
for the Majorettes, who per·
formed a fire baton routine to
"Those Were the Days!'
The closing number featured
the band in a·slow step drill to
the music to Hawaii Five.().

COmer By Charlene HoefliCh 1. ' MID~~.EPORT-An

_____________..,. __ .,..,_________ .,
.

. 1I . l.etlen of oplaloa are wekomed. Tirey ....S be leu I
I tll8a*wordstotig(urbestr!IJ&lt;\~to~ioebytbe&lt;*oft I
·. 8lid must be siped Wltb the slgnee'u~ll- Names llll'Y be

I
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willlbeld. upoe publlcalioll,' however, oa l'efllltSt.
ihotrlil be io @ood lasle, addresolng Issues, !Itt pe~les.

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28 named for training

GAI.IJPOJJS _Names of 24 •
individllllis .elected to attend
the first Emergency Medical
Training Course were an'
nounced Saturday ·by . o. H.
I Kocplin, ~irector of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
I · Medical Sj!rvice. Athens.

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urgf!s vote for President Nixon

· Classes will bPgln 1 p:rn.
Wednesday, OcL 25, in the old
Ho!Zer'Medical Center building
in GaJUpolis, on the second
floor, next to Room 206.
Individuals 1\iive been asked
to enter the building through .
the door- next to the loadina
·
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dock, on F~t Ave.
George Ilruce will Mrve u
the course inllruclllr:
This Ia the flrlt EMT school
in the region. Another e.._, or
possibly two,' will open Ill' In
Jackson lot the applicanq who
were not considered for the
first class.
A training lnairuelllr ~ehool

:fm~~=:jn::d~

Spelling imp·roves

Dear Edi.lor:
· graduates 'Ollhat clue wiU be
It seems t~ me that any honest, straight-thinking An!erican
POMEROY - For !he first materials. free of charge ·for available to teach ciuRiat all
voter, regardless of party affiliation, ctm readily see why the time a pilot project is un: one year. ,
other area locations.
•
Vietnam War continues.
Salisbury ' Pupils of. all grades are
derway . at
Selected for tbe flnt class
Looking back over the ;rears of the previous administration, I Elementary ill the subject area participating in the program were:
.
honestly believ~ now that President JolmSQII really lnteJXIed to of Spelling. This project, which emphasizes word attack
Kenny· Deckard, Charles
win \he war, but at that lime there was so much· opposiUon, f!!ceived through SRA (Science skills: They are . placed In McQrmlck, Gene EWott, Nell
sympall'retic to the CommuniBt cause on our campuses and In . Research Associates of graduated levels. Teachers McMahon, Tim Mllll, Gary
Congress, especially in the Democratic party, thai' President Chicago, Illinois) is a non- seem pleased with the progress Wallace, William Ileal, Daniel
Johnson virtually had his han&lt;!s lied when:lt came to tile conduct graded program. Clifton Queen made to date. Evaluation is Young, Jbn .Boster, Rkliard
of the war·.
·
of North Canton, Ohio Is done week by week.
..
Long; sam Hamilton, R1clllrd
are
invited
to
Parenis
responsible
for
It
as
he
is
tbe
Pr.esldent Nixon, wbo Inherited · this war . from the
Moore, Olive Wickline, VirtU
Democrats, has had t)lis 'same Communist aPJieasl,ng lnOuence SRA repreS.ntatlve of ·tliis discuss their .child's p~:ogn;s5 · Blaker, Ernest Thomplon, Jell
with which to deal during hislldministrat,ion. Not only has he had ar:ea. This program is one in In this new program at the Fulkerson, James Seolt, Da\'ld
Cole~ John Johnaon,' John
this same kind of opposition to dear with In the House IUld Senate, which SRA ·has supplied all scheduled conferences.
Sager, Jim Shalo, Jllllel A.
but he has been confronted since 1ast spring with a CommuniBt
Northup, Robert MacKenzie,
appeasing senator by the name of George McGovern, rrmnfng for
Andy
Leinley, Jerry Malllie,
President on the Democrat ticket, who from the beginning has
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
Gary RflsseU, Ken Riffle and
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
promised the North Vietnam"'!!=- Communlsts that if elected
October
23.
October
29,
1972
·
Tom Evans, aU of Galllpnlla.
President, he would end aU American Involvement within 90 o.t.-Gymnuium
Pool
days, virtually leaving the South Vlelnamese and our prisoners Ocl. 23-7-9: 30 p.m. College Recreation 7-8:30 p.m. College Swim
1-9 p.m. Coaches Cltnlc-203
of war at the mercy of the Communists.
Oct
2&lt;1--7-9:30
College Rec.
7-8:30p,rn. College Swim
BLOOD FOR FELTON
So the war goes on. The North Vietnamese are patiently Ocl. 25-7-9:30 p.m.
p.m. Colle. ae Rec.
7-8:30p.m: College Swim
POMEROY - Donors
Closed-Concert
waiting to see if this candidate, George McGovern, is elecwd on Ott. 26-Closed-Muddy Waters Concert·
POMEROY -Judges of, the
Oct. 27-Ciosed-Soutlleastern Ohio
Closed-Meeting
giving blood at tbe Pomeroy
November 7.
'·
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,
.
Teachers
Meeting
some
150 essays prepared on
Elementary School 1&lt;4 p,m,.
In the past we have heard a lot about our national sickness. Oct. 28-2-4 p.m. Open Recreation
2·4
p.m.
Open
Swim
the topic "I'm Glad I'm an
Monday 1o tbe Americaa
In my opinion the degree of support given George McGovern on Oct. 211-2-4 p.m. qpen Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swim American" prepared by
7-9 p.m. COllege Recreation
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
POMEROY _ Tbe Gallia- Red Cross bloodmobile are
GALLIPOLIS
Tony November 7, will be a clear indication just how serloos this
fourth, fifth and alxth graders
Open
Recreation
and
Open
SwimCollege
&amp; Community.
Meigs Community Action Invited to &amp;Jve It IIi the aame
Stephens, 26, Gallipolis, was national sickness is.
NOTE-Gym and Pool wilt be closed during the Muddy of Meigs County schools In a
Program is seeking a new of Louis Felton, Rutland,
cited to Municipal Court for
Without a doubt George McGovern was nominated by ·!he Waters Concert. Gym and Pool wilt be closed during the South·
whe
haa
had
surgery
at
failure
to regis~Alr, and for political trash of the Democrat party at Miami Beach. For this eastern Ohio Teachers Meeting. No classes on Friday, Oct. 21 . contest have been named.
Ia
Mrs .
Edith
Fox,
aecutive director to rep ce
1 "having no operator's license
Gym reserved from 4-7 weekdays for a!hteflc practices only.
Richard Sayre who resigned Holur M..Uea .,.oter.
reailon millions of responsible'Dernocrals will vote for President
Americanism chairman of tbe
recenUy.
He Is lbe baabruld of lbe
following a traffic accident on
Nixon Election Pay.
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
The executive director is former Kallleyrl Lois Smltb
Portsmouth Rd. City police
I
caunot
see
how
any
loyal,
patriotic
American
can
vote
for
a
Webster Poet 39, which. Ia
CAMPAIGN EXPENSES
of Middleport."
reported Stephens lost control
responsible for organization
o1 his car which struck a ditch. candidate for president, who to many American seems to have
SACRAMENTO, Calif. sponsoring the eontest, anend management pf the total ::::::::::~:~;:;:=::;;:;~:::w:~·.;:;x;;;s::t4*
defected to the enemy, as George McGovern has done. This
(UP!) -A Peace and Freedom nounced that judges are Mn.
program through directBl
A second accident occurred according to !Janoi has without a doubt, given aid and comfort
party candidate for a seat In W. P. Lochary, Pomeroy,
lllperYillon and !he clelegatlon
on Second Ave. at 3:15 p.m.
the state legislature reported active member ot' the
of reapol111J)tlitles. The
where Juanita M. Easloq, 41, to the enemy, and in my opinion should be tried for treason.
The only hoPe for ourcountryi.s that the voters .on November 7
his $22.50 in campaign ex· Daughtera of tbe American
executive dlreclllr 1s respOn·
·
Rt. 1, Vinton, ~tremptlng to
wlU repudiate the influence of George McGovern and re-elect
penses were spent on photo Revolution; ·Kenneth Harril,
atble for making and approving
back Into a parkilll! space and President
Nixon,
and
also
elect
for
him
a
working
majoring
In
copying, printing, postage and comma11der of Drew Webster
plans and Implementation of
struck a parked auto owned by
October
Poet 39, and Robert Wingett,
our Congress.
tbe prlorllill. 111e executive
GALUI'()IJS _ Due ICJ a Carroll Baker, ~!riot, Rt. 1.
(Exhibit : Walter Sein· "wild bird seed." "J promised Edilllr of the Point Plealant
MarshaUM. Burnett, Gallipolis. sheimer, Cincinnati, my feathered friends that I
director hu chief respon· schedule conflict at Grace Tber~ was ~lnor damage.
would not let them go hungry Register. Mrs. Fox said she
albllity lor development and United Methodist Clwrch, the
A !mal acCident occurred on
Photographer).
wm hold a slmilar conlelt at
quality ·eontrol of the total Huntington Regional Btood· the Pennyfare parking lot Batey changes heart
Sunday, Oct. 22 - Famill just to pay the price of a the high school level in the near
political campaign," Slocum
program and wW be the 1lason mobile will be at tbe St. Peter's where an · auto dnven by
.
future. Cash prizes · will be
Middleport: Ohio Work D!IY 1 p.m.
between the board, the wlal Episcopal Churc.h on TJ!urs- Delbert H. Black, 33: Rt. 1, Dear Sir:
Tuesday, Oct. 24 - F.A.C. said.
awarded.
Jll'(lgraDI and tbe state federal day, Oct. 26, from 12 noon until
Thurman, struck ·a parked car
Trustees Meeting.
Haven't written you for a long while, but I feel it's my duty In
owned by Jam~s Hanson.
offices ' funding various 6 p.m.
Srmday, Oct. 29 - ParentMiddleport to say what I think about it down this way.
Chtld
Workshop (and rain daw
.
.
prograni!a.
The bloodmobDe's regular
When Nixon was elecle!j,,l thought h~ w.ould be jh~ ppqr~t .for work•day). ,
COURT POURED
,., " "' .. ·
,
!'The e{~tl'lffe director slbpover IIi ~8flip'b1fj Grace •
iii' I)
SALEM CENTER - A preslden( we could have. But you see he fooled me. He w1s the
Friday,
Nov.
3
.
Reception
·
should have a degree from an United Methodist Chiarch, only
HIT,
KILLED
concrete outdOQr basketQ&amp;ll most J?eaceful-maklng president I think we have had. So I think for ·Katherine Burnside,
~~i.Uld college.er a relare~ a fewt ~et aw_:ay from the
MOUNT GILEAD, Ohio
Tonight, Mon. 1 Tues •. ,,
court has been poured at the · the best way for us to do down this way is to get the hatred out of Parkersburg,
W.
V. a.,
freld experience In tlie Episcopal Church on the 500
Oct. 22·23-24 .
(
UPI)
Edward
E.
Coles,.
39,
Salem Center School by O;Ur system. I think it is time for us all to join hands and show the November Exhibitor.
supervision o! personnel and block of Second Ave,
Dayton, was struck and killed
Clint Eastwood
Wllllam Willford and sons, Van public of Middleport people we get along together.
the management of poverty
Local Red Cross offiCials
In
STRIKE
IS
ON
by
a
vehicle
early
Saturday
as
and Hay, and Robert Dugan,
Now what! am tryiog to get at is !his: I never voted for Mr.
JOE
KIDD
programs and must possess a Saturday pointed out there will
CLEVELAND (UPI)
he walked along Ohio 61, about
and sons, Ronnie and Buddy, Zerkle as lllllYOr. But just as I say, he has fooled me and a lot of
!Technlcolor)
knowledge of human behavior be ample parking space at the
and Larry Barr. The com· others. He sure is trying 'to improve the looks of the town, and Some 200 members of Local 1 six miles south of this Morrow
nGP"
and be dedicated to the prln- Episcopal Church.
of
the
Newspaper
Guild
struck
County
community.
The
State
~olorcarteoM:
•
mit tee is now making plans for also trying to make our streets something to be proud of.
ciples and philosophy of the
A spokesman said the need
BuHer Fly
the Cleveland Plain Dealer Highway Patrol said no
i
installing .the backboards and
They have holes here In some of these streets that if you hit
program. The position pays fo~ blood Is great Thursday.
H-y
tt.yrldo
Saturday,
baiting
publication
charges
has
been
filed
in
!he
is contemplating the In· them it would throw your car out of line, for which It costs several
leo Crum Htlps
$10,000 annually.
Several communities in the
stallation of poe\&amp; on each side dollars lo correct, or maybe ruin a tire, or maybe have a bad of Ohio's largest newspaper. · accident.
Applications may be secured area have f~lled t~ meet their
Show Starts 7 P.M.
of !he court for conversion of accident.
·
by calllng Pomeroy 99Z:7400 quotas in recent months. Gallla
attend school. The court defined temporary residency as "a
the area to a volleyball court.
from 8:30a.m·: to 1:30 . p.m.~ did not reach Its quota In
We have all kinds of levies to vote on this time. Why oot say
residence which Is acquired for a temporary period of time Is
~ at other times or ,
August. Several replacements
"yes," I want to make Middleport a better town to ride In without
sufficiently permanent to ju.ltify It u a vot~ residence If the
wri ling the Meigs United are due the Holzer Medical
fear of tearing your car to pieces?
According
to
IDdlan
legend,
applicant for reglstraUon baa no present lntenUon 'Ol making
Methodist · Ministers' Office, Cenwr, the·' spokesman added. the Amazon River was
I will also say I see this mayor on the road Inspecting It more . another place of residence hla perinanent place of abode.'' .
257 Mill St., Middleport, 45760.
Blood programs may be In formed when the moon wept than any mayor we have had.
In accordance with the law a college student has e:vriy rlgbt
Applications musi be in by jeopardy If quotas are not met because sile could not marSo let us all pray the "Lorjl" wUI change people's mlnda on
Taa~~t~~,Ocl.22
to
~later to vote In the area fl. that college In which he or ahe Ia
Friday, Nov. 10.
In future area vislls.
ry the sun.
our road·condition and vote for the $5license plate money.
enrolled. The question Ia, Why have Rio Grande College atudenll
OoubJoFeaturo
,.
Yours truly and May God bless our city govemment (The Lord been dllcrlrnlnated 81Jainlt In their effort to register In Gallla
FROGS
changes things) ~ Ben Batey.
Ray
Mllland
county wllen students at Ohio University and Ohio State
Sam Elliott
University have been registering without any problem?
(Color)
!PGI
Some students dlr:i get reglatered becaUH they defended and
Sanitation, what for?
AIH
demanded their legal rl8ht to be registered. Others got the runCONQUEROR
I' read. in th'e daily paper where our conunlssloners have around, became dlacouraged and refused to put up with the · "THE WORM"
POMEROY - Fourteen Dye, Ravenswood, $10 and six days ·confinement, costs purchased a sanitation truck. What will this do for the cities?
petty, chlldlah harassment handed out by. the GaWa County
(Color!
only,llcense suspended lor one
defend~nts were fined, 13 cosls each, left of center;
VIncent
Price
I am speaking of the Village of Syracuse. I have raised Board of Elections.
others forfeited bonds and one Harold G. Mays, Little year, driving while in· "Hell" with the mayor, Sanitation board, and Health Dept,
l•nOallvy
It Is popular theae days ro criticize college students wlio
was assesaed costs only in Hocking, $150 and costs, three toxlcated.
concerning the "City Dump" in my back yard here.
llland .., for what they believe Ia rlgbt, u In the case of the
Forfeiting bonds were Mark
Meigs County Court Friday days confinement, llcense
Qoo, It isn't on my property, tlut directly behind my p!operly reglatraUonfl. the R.G .C. students. Many people have crlticiRd
morning.
suspended for six months, B. Williams, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
which I own and pay taxes on. I118ve to pay f2.50 a month to have COllege IIUdenll for deiiiOilllrlllng for what they think Ia ju.at.
Fined by Judge Frank W. driving while lnlo~cated; John Martha Ann Slater, Midmy garbage taken away, yeti have to look at a city dwnp In my . However, tbe tharge hu been that deiiiOilllrlllons are not the
Porrer were ' Mary F. Halley, E. Holley, Pomeroy,. Rt. 4, dleport, Robert Taucher,
DeuiOCratic way of clolng lblnp. Pleale note lhatlhere wu no
Tuppet'll Plains, BIUy B. Orr, Blapch K. Biggs, Racine and Youngstown, Leonard R. back door.
Nothing has been done about this even !hough our 80-C&amp;Ded · dellllllistraUon by RGC studenll, j1lll coacemed citizens wanUng
ReedsviUe, and David A. Reed, John R, Philson, Syracuse, $10 Azbell, Lancaster, Roy Parker,
officials
know about this.
their rights upbe1d by being regillered 10 they would be able to
~vi,Ue, $10 and costs each, and · costs each, slop sign Pomeroy, Rt. 3, Kenneth
And on top of this I am buying rat polson dally to keep the wte w!tliin !he designated ~~ In Gallla County. When
apeeding; Kenneth A. Sexton, violation; Okey Kiser, Racine, Wh~eler, Huntington, and
Sun.
-~
COIIIdentlOUI, youns voters are taara.d, Ia not the DemocraUc
Belpre, $10 and costs, palling Rl. 2, ft20 and costs, siX dafs . William J . Moore, Franklin rats from eating my property,
Oct.23
They ~y they hllve rules that all containers must be cioled. III'OC ••• we value 10 mudl being llllfled?
~
•I Intersection; William Stout, confinement, license Furnace,
$27.50
each,
Yet
they
have
closed
their
eyes
to
this
dmnp
In
town.
OUr
· The people working at the Board of Elections llllgg!!llled to
Rt. 3, Albany, $10 and costs, suspended for six months, speeding; Sharon Newell,
r:.,
Elaine Gittos
failure to yield; John Warfield, drivlngwhjleintoiicated; June Cheshire, $17.50, parking In no President has put up money to beauUfy America. Does this mean the RGC arludentl who Hve In Cleveland, Colurllbua, and Dayton,
••
, In
Ohio, etc., that they should drive there on elecUon day to vote.
Greensboro; Pa., $10 and costs, Opal WIU, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10 . parking zone; Donald A. part of it?
:•
How about cleaning up the clUes, or does this mean j1lll This Ia not only inlpiKUcal butWII'eUOIIIble and ridiculous.
•:'•
following too close; Jack D. and costs, no operators llcense. Ferrari, W. Warwick, R. I.,
Smith, Charleston, and Hubert Orton -Parsons, Parkersburg,. $42.50, speeding; Burwell some?
Of coune, there are those who wiD be voting by ablentee
:j'',
McKenney, Middleport, $25,
A Tax payer, SyriCille, Oblo baDol, w111ch Ia an ~·• personal daclalon. Howewr, tbe
.
R ,.•
disturbing
the
peace;
(Name withheld on request). • nrllng by the Third Dlfllrlct Cwrt 'Ol Appells llllk111 !he ablenlee
,.
Raymond Priddy, Middleport,
baDol outmoded. After all, In ,our blghiJ ledmologlw world
\'
and
Rt. 1, f25, disturbing the peace,
coavenilllce bu b.ec!me a paramom~t demand of our cllilenl.
••
,•
Wants
cred•t
for
the
unsung
~.assault.
· 11an111 mab It convenilllt for !heir~ ro get to !he banb
·l
Tuppers Plains, Ohio by h!JidlqJ li'IIICbellniUIICI town. Many retail merehlnta mike
.,
Dear Ediror:
,
livallable plenty of parldng lfiiBce 101' .their CUII.omera for oon~ "'
We have very much respect for the entire Eastern football wnlenc!e'a lllte.
:-•
I
R
team. But when writing sports articles c:oncern1JC Ealllern
•
no-'t It llland to ~ that thla Ia the way vollng and
Postoffice will
games, the Sentinel always fails to mel)llon one wry bnportant recJrlllatlon abou1d be .carried out u clelip'-1 by tile Third ·
'•
member of the teem. AI loyal Eutern fMI, we feel that IIIII ~ o-t fl. Appea!aforcoan.-ce In vollnc' '1'1111 tnablel
atblete deserves more credit for 1U outiiMtllnC wort "011
~(
be closed Monday senior
IIIOI'e peaple lo " " u • rellllt of - · - - and In the llul
•
the Une." AI one of the C~H:atuins fl. our football team, he Ia a IIIAipia,our poiltlcaiQIIIRI wiD be lllrqlbenecl jull U I
:•
Paater·IV.....HstTOIII lurlr!e AT FAPTH : ·
football player that Eastern can ceria~ be proud of.
~ II~ ac-ilwDI' by lfi'09Idlnl convenlenl
•
•
BAPTIST .
•
GALLJPOLIS - Richard
In luture articles about tbe Eutam team, p.., sive credit lhoppiJII and ~*tin~ fw tbelr callctnen.
.(Dick) Bane, Galllpolls Poet to ALL Of the players -not julia select lew.
l'llltirOrtaln Mlrrt.la-cedtoday lllat Eva..tUstlc
'
Thn Ia 1 Jl'll"'t!''ty thet the 'Ol i:GIIItci lludenll who
llrvic• -~~ lit lllld at 7oJO p.m. nllhHy--et FalHI
•
Muter, announced Saturday
'l'bank You. (namea witNield by r,quiiltt. hne "ll'll•td t10 9eltln Gallla 011111&amp;7 1111111 not be Millo !he
.t!f!aatllt Cllurdl. lloglllnl.. lo!llday. Oct. 22, ·~d - ·
that the poet office will be
deaipallldlfl'acinct.W,Ibe R.G.C.IIudlntl w.kl vote. lf IIIII
·'
Jttilln1111 Frllllly, Oct. 17th.
.
c!OIMCI all day Monday · to
lhoilld OON',II WOIId be a "Nr:Y imiiGall uli
to be
Election proce~~s criticised
Jlilrmit. ~loyees to observe
•
'flill'*"'llat lor 111e1t speclat wvtc.1 will be Dr. Tom
talrn
by the bolnllll tlactlw .
•
Veterans Day.
l'lllr P..,_ af the llrown St. 'Baplllt Orurch of Alton,
l'1lr H II* doll hiiiP'!I,IIIIa dlar 1iCD 'Olan aalbarltarlaa
Bane said 'there wW be no Dear Editor:
. • Whir lurkt II a
01 Ton~••" Temple
at, .JII:.Jlll'al 011 n c~eJ~Ytr¥~.
October 10, 18'72 wu the last day ro ntiltlr for lhll fall'a adillll b.f the llllr![ rl 111 II ww, ul IIIII, I . . add, II not .
t
Ia Olr .llldlt) 1111117
•
'11llre will be nCtrmalltek bo:l ·. eiactloiii, Manijeople got JWiatered wliboaiiiiJIIOIIble. lllllle, wdiJtl wiiiiiD the = • u Pk .., tl
•
.._.. .. U.Jtil W Pilat ''H :rtD wwkwlllliD !be llnr IIIII
and apaclal de'"-7
on the otll.- band, got reel heed with modi nrbll c.doallllall
•
A etty-wlde collecllon wiD be by the people wilD are In cbarse of U. Gallla Olllnt, !laird fl. lblln wlllwwk I'll' ,.allf,. ..t aplnll the In, then the
••
•
In
wiD
wwtt
as
:
1
,..
••
made on a holiday IICIIet?ule. Elecllona. I am nflrrlng In !he 1at11r alalaullll to 11M Rio
1
Normal weekday diiPit• Grinde Calill' atudenll wilD tried to tePter.
1111 R.G.C. II h .. art - - wllldD lhlln • I •
ching of meU wiD be provided. .
Two reeent lepl chftel put 1 arr.ttnl g..tnJ 011 1111
c Slllllllilll thelnwlll wwttllrllllm. 'II at 111e Ill!'' aftjce lobby .will be rulta and ftlllllllona
l1li*'lnJ to VQit 211 (llllll ,._nt1, 1 11 1 111IIU11In tr ..., will 1a1 Ifill&amp; Gf I I II .I II
.open from 8 a.m., Willi I 11.m. One II lite rJcbt at the ta.year.old to wte In Mu-1, liMe _. to"*IIJIIII
bllli lhlllpalaLO.•' 5 IIIUIII
1
II was alao announnd locallleetiilni.AiarelllltofiiiiiiCiton,lt..._il 1 Ul lllt«llll
lllalm II •111111.,
saturday lhlt.U office~ In the thtnumblraft'Oitl'leUI'Netol'lllvllltil au •·
· county cOIII'IIIOIIJe will ~
1111 l1llt ....
U. TNnl D' 1 II&amp; o.t II
ebed Monda,y.
'

CAP needs

Driver cited

director

on 2 cormts

Judges selected

man,

. 0 biJe
00dm

place moved

\

.

.

MEIGS lHEATRE

'

14 defendants fined by court

·arch- . ceremony.
Music
was
:,:. way decorated with green- pr·esen~Ald by Mrs . Chesler
ery and white, yellow and Erwin, organist, and her
· POMEROY- Three longtime friends·of Mrs. Garen Stans- purple fl•isics, with baskels of selection include? "Wedding
i!urY ~a diuppOinting day ioto one to be remembered. . white glapioli ·and purple , Prayer," "A Time for Us,"
Wednesday was Mrs. StansWI'y's 88th birthday aruriversary and · mums flanked by seven-branch "Summer of '72,'' "One Hand,
she had expected some members of her family who were candelabra decorated the altar One Heart," and "Love Story."
rmavoidably detained,
of the Middleport Church of
The bride was given in
Mrs. Crary Davia, Mrs. Edward Tewksbary, and Mrs. Chrjst !or the wedding or Miss · marriage by her eldest
Malcobn Roller SUI')X'ised ber with a birthday cake decorated Mary Anna Long to Mr. James . brother, Mr. Roger Long. For
with arUficial rosebuds and a single candle, however, and the Michael. O'Brien.
her Wedding she wore a full
four along with Mrs. Stansbury's COmpanion had quite an enThe bride is the daughwr of length gown of white nylon
. joyable afternoon.
Mrs. Harold Long, Middleport, organza. The tightly molded
. IncidentaUy,Mrs. Stansbury will be leaving soon for Florida and ihe late Mr. Long, and the bodice with high neckline and
where she will spend the wlnwr wiih her son William and bridegroom is the son of Mr. sheer bishop sleeves had a)r
family.
·
•
•
and Mrs. James B. O'Brien of pliques of lace. ~.e soft flaring
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
skirt featured·the same lace as
The weddirtg vias an event of the gown and the train was
. SO .PRONE WE ARE to complain, and so often we really Saturday, July 8, at 3 p.m. with detachable. A Juliette cap of
have so lltUe about which to complain.
the Rev. Raullin V, Moyer lace held her three tiered veil
Our best wishes for healthier days certainly go to the Mr. and officiating at . the double ring of illusion, and she carried a
Mrs. Earl Kes!erson and sons of Hami!to)l. His father, Dale
Kesterson of Pomeroy, has returned from there after spending
some time assisting the family.
Earl Kesterson is a victim of multiple sclerosis, his wife has
serious visual problems, and both sons,. Kevin, three, and Dale,
five months, have had encepbalis. 'Tbe two children are now
home af~AJr exte,nsive treatment at area hospitals.

AN ALk,DAY PROGRAM is being planned for the 98th
anniversary observance of !he Enterprise Unlwd Methodist ·
Church. The homecoming wiD be held on Nov. 5 with a basket
dinner and afternoon program. Regular services wiD lie beld In
the morning.
TilE FIRST NEWSLETI'ER of the Meigs County Council of
Aging was put out this past week by Eleaoor Tbomas, project
director.
.
Eleaoor indicates that the newsletrer to keep senior citizens
up 911 what's new for tbem wiD be published on a regular basis.
It's quite infonruilive - telling of whl!t's" happenlng •In the
project, services that can save money, and activities that have
taken place along with those' that are In the plarming stage.
This past week !he first Senior.Citizens' Club In the county
was organized at Harrisonville. There's some Interest in getting
a band together. Interesred? Contact Mrs. Thomas. Also d0f1't
forget that on Thursday there wlU be a covered dish dinner In the
Rutland Elementary School gymnasium; 4 to 7 p.m. The group
will eat at 5:30, Everyone attending is to lake a covered dish and
their own table service. There will be enrertalnment and some
proj~ts to discuss.
.
'r
Remember wbat Andre Maurois said: ''Growing old is no more
than a bad babit whiclla busymanhasnotimetoform."

MIDDLEPORT
A
hwnorous program, election of
officers and presentation of
gifts to the teacher and the
assistant teacher were
highlights of the annual

~

NURSES .

The Oledleled

flll·

,,

.,,,
.,

'

..,
.

.
.
...

..

racHc.l-.,

t.

.
.

..mcea.

acr-«

......

.

Sherry Workman to wed Stephen Oikr
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Mr· and Mrs. Gyle Workman,
310 Fourth St., New tHaven, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sherry, to Mr.
Stephen Michael Oiler, son of !4rs..Hoy Oiler•.&gt;50 Broad)llay
St., and Mr. Richard Oiler, Locust and Third Sts., Mid·
die port.
· . Miss Workman a '1970 graduaw of Wahama High School,
is employed by Red Carpet Irm of Point Pleasant. Mr. Oiler, a
1970 graduate of Meigs High Scbool, is attending Hocking
State College, Nelsonville, · studying hotel, motel and
restaurant management, and is employed parttirne by
Oiler's Sohio Station In Middleport. The wedding will take
place at 2:30 p.m. on Nov. 4 at the Middleport Church of
Christ, 437 Main St. The gracious custom of open church will
be observed. Areception will be held following the ceremony
in the social room of the church. Mr. Eugene Carroll of
Hanoverton will be the officiating minister.

HELP WANTED
BRADBURY
Contributions are being sought for
a Bradbury ·community
Halloween party to be held at 7
p.m. on Monday, Oct. 30, at the
Bradbury Church of Christ in
lieu of the annual observance
of trick or treat night. Those
wishing to help with the party
are asked to call 993-5886, 9925187 or 992-S!JM.

Marriage Licenses
POMEROY
Roscoe
Myers, 40, Rl. 2, Racine and
Joyce Lynn Williams, 21, Rt. 2,
Racine; William · Sleven
Hoback, 20, Racine , and
Michaela Carol Wolfe, 19,
Racine.
The largest natural harbor
in the world is San Francis·
co bay.

•

MIDDLEPORT - In a
private ceremony at the
Bradford Church of Christ on
Thursday, Oct. 12, Miss
Martha Jean Nicholson
became the bride of Mr. Gary
Ray Haynes .
The ceremony was per ~
formed by Mr .. Bill Carter,
pastor of the church . AtIAJ ndants for the couple were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Haynes,
brother and sls~Alr-in-law of the
groom .
The new Mrs. Haynes is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
NicholsOn of Middleport. She is
employed by Remington Rand
in Marietta as a compuwr
operator.
Mr. Haynes is the son of
Basil Haynes of Rutland. He is
currently serving as a sergeant
with the UniiAJd Slaws Air
Force in Weisbaden, Germany .
Mrs. Haynes will soon join her
husband there.
Immediately following the
wedding, a reception was held

•

for the couple at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Redmond
in New Haven. Those attending
the reception were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Molden, Mr. and
Mrs. Basil Haynes, Randy
Haynes, Tammy Stanley, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
Carolyn Shrimplin and sons,
Wayne and Patrick, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Haynes and
daugh~Alr , Krisli,.&lt;~nd Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Redmond.
f't

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SUNllAY

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BATON TWIRLING CLASSES
STARTING
IN THREE AREAS • EASTERN, SYRACUSE &amp; RACINE

TAUGHT BY

JUDY RIGGS

,.

PHILCO®
STEREO SOUND
CENTER

•.

GAWA-MEIGS COMMUNITY ACTION

.,

lHE SllJOENT

Rice and ·Milton Houdashelt.
Mrs. Erwin was the narrator.
The program closed with a

guitar selection by Rice and
the friendship ~rcle with the
group singing "Blest Be the
banquet of the Homebuilders Tie" and the R M M
Class of the Middleport Church closing with ev. r. oyer
of Christ.
. prayer.
'
w 1
of
Attendmg were Mr. and Mrs
h
~~~.~~ J;i ~''~Af ~ Erwin_, Mr. and Mrs. Herma~
emonie; for the banguet Klncatd, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart,
·-·ed
~"
···bY mem.bers ·· of ·· th e Mr.
· and Mrs.. Leonord
'""' · Van
.! th
soc1e· 1y. Mrs. Meter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach,
Ph
· 1 a ea
Mrs. an d Mrs. Russe II W'J
.
.
Ste
t
th
I son
Lawrence
war gave e Mrs. Dav1'd Bumgardner, Mrs •
I histor yan d her husan
b d N
cass
y
·
ted ifts to. Mr D .d orman eauger, Mr. and
presen g
s. avt Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr. and
Bumgardner and Denver Rice, Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mr. and
teachers of the class, and Mrs. Mrs. Moyer, Mrs. Wallace
Leo~ard Van Merer, the class ' Bradford, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
ptest~ent.
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Officers electedV for 1972-73 Houdashelt, Mr . and Mrs .
an Meter, Denver Rice , Mrs . Osby
were Mrs.
president; Mrs. Herman Martin, and Mrs. Roach.
Kincaid, vice president; Mrs.
Carl Roach, secretary; Mrs.
Raymond Cole, assistant
secretary ; and Mrs. Stewart, Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Jack
treasurer.
Teaford,
Racine;
Jerry
Snider,
jlt Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Mrs. Roach, Pomeroy; David Dobbins ,
and Denver Rice had charge of Bidwell; Richard Hanni, Stone
tlie program which opened Creek.
DISCHARGED - Jerry
with a welcome by Mrs. Roach.
Mrs. Erwin had charge of Aleshire, Barbara McDaniel,
group singing and conductor of Lovie Watson, Stacy Kuhn,
the hiUbiUy band was Mrs. Beth Cassell.
Rice with Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mrs. Van Meter, Mrs.
TAKEN TO HOLZER
Houdashelt, Mrs. Norman
MIDDLEPORT The
Yeauger, Mrs. Stewart and Middleport E·R squad was
Mrs. Roach taking part.
called to Old Kyger on Route
Mr. and Mrs. Rice read "I'll 554 at 1:39 p.m. Friday where
Call the llo!:tor," and Mrs. Anderson Spaereding 71, had
Yeauger read "Mrs. Buzy been injured in a lraffic ac·
News DisPenser .1' ModeUng in cident. He was taken to the
..StYle Revue '73 · were Willard Holzer Medical Cen~Alr by the
Boyer, Raullln Moyer, Denver squad.

bouqu~t.of s~Alphanolis .whi~AJ

white
wore
accessories . Both
and ~arnations centcr·ed with a mothers had white gardenia
purple orchid. She wore a corsages.
heart-shaped necklace conA reception honoring the
laining a pearl, a gift of the · couple was .held in the church
groom, and white pearl socia l room immediately.
earrings.
following the ceremon~. The
Miss Sandy Johnson was the bride's table featured a three
bride's maid of honor, and the tiered wedding cake trilll!lled
bride~maids were Miss P~ggy in purple and lilac and topped
O'Brien , sister of the groom, with the traditional miniature ·
Miss ..Becki Long and . Miss bride and groom. WhiiAJ tapers
Mindy Long, nieces of the were used at either side of the
bride. The maid of honor was cake. Guests were registered
attired in a floor-length purple · 'by Mrs . Sandra Smith,
gown of polyester featuring an Jackson, roommate of the
empire waistline lrin\med with bride.
white lace. and purple velvet
Hostesses for the reeeption
ribbon ·. The gown was were Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
fashioned with a . scoop Mrs. Pam McClanahan, Miss·
neckline, bell shaped sleeves Mary Bradbury, Miss Cynthia
and large ruffles around the Mills, and Miss Nancy
bottom. The bridesmaids •were Thompson.
in lilac gowns of ·identical . For a wedding trip to
styling.
..
Columbus the bride changed
All the attendants wore whiiAJ into a two piece outfit congloves with white picture hats sis ling of a purple knit top with
trimmed with velvet ribbon to purple and white checkered
match their dresses and choker skirt over white holpants. The
necklaces, gifts of the bride . couple now resides at Bulaville
·They carried fireside baskets Rd., Gallipolis.
of white, lilac and yellow
The bride is a graduate of
daisies trimmed with purple Meigs High School, 1969 class,
and lilac streamers.
and the Holzer Medical Center
Master Ricky -Long of School of Nursing, class of 1972.
Columbus, nephew of the bride, She is employed as a staff
was the ringbearer. Mr. Pat nurse at the hospitaL Mr.
O'Brien of Pomeroy, brother of O'Brien graduated from
the groom, was best man, and Pomeroy High School in 1968,
Mr. and Mrs. James M. 0 'Brien
the ushers were Mr. Roy Long, attended Rio Grande College
Columbus, and Mr. Richard two years, .and is now em·
Long, Middleport, brothers of ployed in the purchasing Frank Haskins, Joan Haskins,
Miss Jay Kimble, Jackson;
the bride. The male attendants department at the Holzer Mr. and Mrs. Paul Clifford, Miss Teresa Montavon, Gary
all wore brown Prince Charles Medical Cenwr.
Mr . .and Mrs . James H. Lute, . Porlsrnouth; Mr. and
suits with black satin edging.
Out-of-town guests at the Walker, Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs. Rom Williamson, Mason,
For her daughter's wedding, wedding wer.e Mr. and Mrs. D. Walker, Mr. and ·Mrs. W. Va.; Miss Nancy Harris,
Mrs . Long wore a blue crepe A-. Brian Smith, Rio Grande; Mr. Cha~les Adkins, Jr., Mr. and Columbus.
line dress with sheer sleeves, and Mrs. James Lewis, Mrs. Robert Cornwell, Miss
Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien,
matching blue shoes, and whiiAJ Westerville; Mr . . and Mrs. Martha Cornwell, Mrs. Mike ' . parents of the groom, enaccessories. Mrs. O'Brien was William Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Allen, Mr. and · Mrs. C. R. IAlrtained with a buffet dinner
in an aqua organza ensemble John Brown, Mrs. Roy Long, McGinniss, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. honoring the bride and groom
embroidered with while and Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Cherrington, Miss Bonnie ·a t the Orchid Room in
Long, Miss Kathy Zudars, all Pomeroy following the wed·
of Gallipolis.
ding.

Wedding private ceremony

Teachers honored

..

rw

'Cou le· wed in

A.. NOUNCEMENT

)with buflf.ln: .
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
• 4-SPEED AUTDMA TIC
RECORD CHANGER
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
RADIO

Opening for Executive Director
The EKecutive Director will be responsible for the
organlz"afion and management of fhe total program
through direct supervision and delegation of responsibilities; . making and approving plans and Implementation of the priorities. He-She will have chief
responslblllfy for development and quality control of the
total program. He-She wilt be ltason between the board,
the total progum, •net fhe state and federal offices fun ding various programs .

•

Applications Must Be' In By
Friday, November 10, 1972
QUALIFICATIONS
·

,The Executive Director should have a degree from ·on
accredited colloge or a related field experience In
suP..vtsor of personnel and the monagement of poverty
programs. H•Stre must possess a knowledge of humon
behevlor and · be dedicated to the principles and
philosoph~ of file program ..

Salary: S10.000
For Appli(ation:
Call-8:30A.M. to 1 .:~0 P.M. 992-7400
. or Other Thnij f92-SOSS
WrlttMtigs United Mtthoclist-Minister-'s-Offilie
257 Mill Street '
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Mtcllterreneen Armoire
Pecan veheer top and ·base.
deep molded doors.
·

•
ALL FOR ONLY

$39995

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

.

.

FORMER STATE &amp; NATIONAL BATON CHAMPION. CERTIFIED BATON
TEACHER AND JUDGE WITH THE NATIONAL BATON lWIRLiNG ASSOC.

Enroll Now--

Phone .985-3595

MIDDLIPOIT, 0.
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22,1172

. . '-Immunity

;.. ne ~Times ·Senllnel, Sunday, !Xi, 22, 1m
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2

.Mill
. n
er ·q ueen
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··

GAWPOUS - Miss Lori
Jrllller, Jeniot, and daughter of
Mr. lmdMi's. Russell Q. MOler,

RL I, TbaiUran, (Shelton Rd.)
waa crowned 27th annual
Gallla Academy High School
homecoming queen priOI' to
Friday JI\Bht's GAIJS.Athena
footbaU game on Memorial
Field.
.. Mi$8 Mjller was . sponsored
by the Juni91' Intensive Office
Education. She is an active
member of ·the .science and
photo Clubs, Gallian Yearbook
business staff, Thespian Club,
Gallia Script (schqol newspaper) salesman, and a
cheerleader for tbe Blue Devils
football and basketball team.
Attendants were Becky
Naaki!y, sponsored , by the
Gallipolis Future Farmers of
Americ11, al)d Lisa Atkins,
spQRsor:ed by the GAHS Photo
Club. ,
.
. The pre-game ceremonies,
held in chilly 38-aegree temperature, began wJth a parade
or the 18 queen candida~Als who

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·

. ·

· .

wer·c transporll'&lt;i around Ute
gridiron in convertibles.
After reachin~ the visitors
side of Memorial Field, 18
membel'll of the Blue Devil
football team escorted the
candirlales to the mid-field
stripe, facing the GABS siands.
With members of the GABS
marching band, under the
direction of Charles Rowe
presenting the homecoming
,selections, each .candidate was
introduced l!y Mrs. Anne Fis!J..
cer, GAHS vocal music instructbr.
.
After the wmners were
announced, Topper Orr, vice
president of the GABS student
body presented trophies, and
Alan Kemp, student body
. president, crowned the QIJI!CD.
Vljrsity gridders serving as
escorls were . Danny Wood·
ward, John Walter, Dave
Kerns, Dave Di·yan, Dean
Epling, Dave Graham, Dave
Brown; Steve Rose, Leon
Smith, Pat Boster, Tom
Daniels, Matt Epling, Mike

·.

Ber·rid~e. Rick Grymes, Bob

Niberl, Kcv Sheets, Ken New
and Mike Wolle.
Automobiles were dri,ven by
Dave Thomas, Randy Gilliam,
Dana Mink, Alan Gardner, Bob
Adams, Fox Grant, and.Randy
Watts. Vehicles were furnished
by Keith Brown, Rex Car~Alr,
Fox Grant, Ike Wt.eman, !)on
Hemsworth and Bob Adams.
l)uring the halftime shol",
Director Rowe's . musicians
took fans on a short musical
tour of TV land.
' The Gl\HS birnd opened the
sh9W with a driU routine to the.
theme from the popular Flip
Wilson Show "Geraldine
Honey."
'
·
The theme from the situation
comedy sh9W !'All in the
Family," provi!led the music
for the Majorettes, who per·
formed a fire baton routine to
"Those Were the Days!'
The closing number featured
the band in a·slow step drill to
the music to Hawaii Five.().

COmer By Charlene HoefliCh 1. ' MID~~.EPORT-An

_____________..,. __ .,..,_________ .,
.

. 1I . l.etlen of oplaloa are wekomed. Tirey ....S be leu I
I tll8a*wordstotig(urbestr!IJ&lt;\~to~ioebytbe&lt;*oft I
·. 8lid must be siped Wltb the slgnee'u~ll- Names llll'Y be

I
Lf:'"

willlbeld. upoe publlcalioll,' however, oa l'efllltSt.
ihotrlil be io @ood lasle, addresolng Issues, !Itt pe~les.

f)~ .

"Z:...I..!./::6_.
• • • '-'vt· ~·

28 named for training

GAI.IJPOJJS _Names of 24 •
individllllis .elected to attend
the first Emergency Medical
Training Course were an'
nounced Saturday ·by . o. H.
I Kocplin, ~irector of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
I · Medical Sj!rvice. Athens.

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urgf!s vote for President Nixon

· Classes will bPgln 1 p:rn.
Wednesday, OcL 25, in the old
Ho!Zer'Medical Center building
in GaJUpolis, on the second
floor, next to Room 206.
Individuals 1\iive been asked
to enter the building through .
the door- next to the loadina
·
'

dock, on F~t Ave.
George Ilruce will Mrve u
the course inllruclllr:
This Ia the flrlt EMT school
in the region. Another e.._, or
possibly two,' will open Ill' In
Jackson lot the applicanq who
were not considered for the
first class.
A training lnairuelllr ~ehool

:fm~~=:jn::d~

Spelling imp·roves

Dear Edi.lor:
· graduates 'Ollhat clue wiU be
It seems t~ me that any honest, straight-thinking An!erican
POMEROY - For !he first materials. free of charge ·for available to teach ciuRiat all
voter, regardless of party affiliation, ctm readily see why the time a pilot project is un: one year. ,
other area locations.
•
Vietnam War continues.
Salisbury ' Pupils of. all grades are
derway . at
Selected for tbe flnt class
Looking back over the ;rears of the previous administration, I Elementary ill the subject area participating in the program were:
.
honestly believ~ now that President JolmSQII really lnteJXIed to of Spelling. This project, which emphasizes word attack
Kenny· Deckard, Charles
win \he war, but at that lime there was so much· opposiUon, f!!ceived through SRA (Science skills: They are . placed In McQrmlck, Gene EWott, Nell
sympall'retic to the CommuniBt cause on our campuses and In . Research Associates of graduated levels. Teachers McMahon, Tim Mllll, Gary
Congress, especially in the Democratic party, thai' President Chicago, Illinois) is a non- seem pleased with the progress Wallace, William Ileal, Daniel
Johnson virtually had his han&lt;!s lied when:lt came to tile conduct graded program. Clifton Queen made to date. Evaluation is Young, Jbn .Boster, Rkliard
of the war·.
·
of North Canton, Ohio Is done week by week.
..
Long; sam Hamilton, R1clllrd
are
invited
to
Parenis
responsible
for
It
as
he
is
tbe
Pr.esldent Nixon, wbo Inherited · this war . from the
Moore, Olive Wickline, VirtU
Democrats, has had t)lis 'same Communist aPJieasl,ng lnOuence SRA repreS.ntatlve of ·tliis discuss their .child's p~:ogn;s5 · Blaker, Ernest Thomplon, Jell
with which to deal during hislldministrat,ion. Not only has he had ar:ea. This program is one in In this new program at the Fulkerson, James Seolt, Da\'ld
Cole~ John Johnaon,' John
this same kind of opposition to dear with In the House IUld Senate, which SRA ·has supplied all scheduled conferences.
Sager, Jim Shalo, Jllllel A.
but he has been confronted since 1ast spring with a CommuniBt
Northup, Robert MacKenzie,
appeasing senator by the name of George McGovern, rrmnfng for
Andy
Leinley, Jerry Malllie,
President on the Democrat ticket, who from the beginning has
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
Gary RflsseU, Ken Riffle and
LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
promised the North Vietnam"'!!=- Communlsts that if elected
October
23.
October
29,
1972
·
Tom Evans, aU of Galllpnlla.
President, he would end aU American Involvement within 90 o.t.-Gymnuium
Pool
days, virtually leaving the South Vlelnamese and our prisoners Ocl. 23-7-9: 30 p.m. College Recreation 7-8:30 p.m. College Swim
1-9 p.m. Coaches Cltnlc-203
of war at the mercy of the Communists.
Oct
2&lt;1--7-9:30
College Rec.
7-8:30p,rn. College Swim
BLOOD FOR FELTON
So the war goes on. The North Vietnamese are patiently Ocl. 25-7-9:30 p.m.
p.m. Colle. ae Rec.
7-8:30p.m: College Swim
POMEROY - Donors
Closed-Concert
waiting to see if this candidate, George McGovern, is elecwd on Ott. 26-Closed-Muddy Waters Concert·
POMEROY -Judges of, the
Oct. 27-Ciosed-Soutlleastern Ohio
Closed-Meeting
giving blood at tbe Pomeroy
November 7.
'·
' ·
,
.
Teachers
Meeting
some
150 essays prepared on
Elementary School 1&lt;4 p,m,.
In the past we have heard a lot about our national sickness. Oct. 28-2-4 p.m. Open Recreation
2·4
p.m.
Open
Swim
the topic "I'm Glad I'm an
Monday 1o tbe Americaa
In my opinion the degree of support given George McGovern on Oct. 211-2-4 p.m. qpen Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swim American" prepared by
7-9 p.m. COllege Recreation
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
POMEROY _ Tbe Gallia- Red Cross bloodmobile are
GALLIPOLIS
Tony November 7, will be a clear indication just how serloos this
fourth, fifth and alxth graders
Open
Recreation
and
Open
SwimCollege
&amp; Community.
Meigs Community Action Invited to &amp;Jve It IIi the aame
Stephens, 26, Gallipolis, was national sickness is.
NOTE-Gym and Pool wilt be closed during the Muddy of Meigs County schools In a
Program is seeking a new of Louis Felton, Rutland,
cited to Municipal Court for
Without a doubt George McGovern was nominated by ·!he Waters Concert. Gym and Pool wilt be closed during the South·
whe
haa
had
surgery
at
failure
to regis~Alr, and for political trash of the Democrat party at Miami Beach. For this eastern Ohio Teachers Meeting. No classes on Friday, Oct. 21 . contest have been named.
Ia
Mrs .
Edith
Fox,
aecutive director to rep ce
1 "having no operator's license
Gym reserved from 4-7 weekdays for a!hteflc practices only.
Richard Sayre who resigned Holur M..Uea .,.oter.
reailon millions of responsible'Dernocrals will vote for President
Americanism chairman of tbe
recenUy.
He Is lbe baabruld of lbe
following a traffic accident on
Nixon Election Pay.
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
The executive director is former Kallleyrl Lois Smltb
Portsmouth Rd. City police
I
caunot
see
how
any
loyal,
patriotic
American
can
vote
for
a
Webster Poet 39, which. Ia
CAMPAIGN EXPENSES
of Middleport."
reported Stephens lost control
responsible for organization
o1 his car which struck a ditch. candidate for president, who to many American seems to have
SACRAMENTO, Calif. sponsoring the eontest, anend management pf the total ::::::::::~:~;:;:=::;;:;~:::w:~·.;:;x;;;s::t4*
defected to the enemy, as George McGovern has done. This
(UP!) -A Peace and Freedom nounced that judges are Mn.
program through directBl
A second accident occurred according to !Janoi has without a doubt, given aid and comfort
party candidate for a seat In W. P. Lochary, Pomeroy,
lllperYillon and !he clelegatlon
on Second Ave. at 3:15 p.m.
the state legislature reported active member ot' the
of reapol111J)tlitles. The
where Juanita M. Easloq, 41, to the enemy, and in my opinion should be tried for treason.
The only hoPe for ourcountryi.s that the voters .on November 7
his $22.50 in campaign ex· Daughtera of tbe American
executive dlreclllr 1s respOn·
·
Rt. 1, Vinton, ~tremptlng to
wlU repudiate the influence of George McGovern and re-elect
penses were spent on photo Revolution; ·Kenneth Harril,
atble for making and approving
back Into a parkilll! space and President
Nixon,
and
also
elect
for
him
a
working
majoring
In
copying, printing, postage and comma11der of Drew Webster
plans and Implementation of
struck a parked auto owned by
October
Poet 39, and Robert Wingett,
our Congress.
tbe prlorllill. 111e executive
GALUI'()IJS _ Due ICJ a Carroll Baker, ~!riot, Rt. 1.
(Exhibit : Walter Sein· "wild bird seed." "J promised Edilllr of the Point Plealant
MarshaUM. Burnett, Gallipolis. sheimer, Cincinnati, my feathered friends that I
director hu chief respon· schedule conflict at Grace Tber~ was ~lnor damage.
would not let them go hungry Register. Mrs. Fox said she
albllity lor development and United Methodist Clwrch, the
A !mal acCident occurred on
Photographer).
wm hold a slmilar conlelt at
quality ·eontrol of the total Huntington Regional Btood· the Pennyfare parking lot Batey changes heart
Sunday, Oct. 22 - Famill just to pay the price of a the high school level in the near
political campaign," Slocum
program and wW be the 1lason mobile will be at tbe St. Peter's where an · auto dnven by
.
future. Cash prizes · will be
Middleport: Ohio Work D!IY 1 p.m.
between the board, the wlal Episcopal Churc.h on TJ!urs- Delbert H. Black, 33: Rt. 1, Dear Sir:
Tuesday, Oct. 24 - F.A.C. said.
awarded.
Jll'(lgraDI and tbe state federal day, Oct. 26, from 12 noon until
Thurman, struck ·a parked car
Trustees Meeting.
Haven't written you for a long while, but I feel it's my duty In
owned by Jam~s Hanson.
offices ' funding various 6 p.m.
Srmday, Oct. 29 - ParentMiddleport to say what I think about it down this way.
Chtld
Workshop (and rain daw
.
.
prograni!a.
The bloodmobDe's regular
When Nixon was elecle!j,,l thought h~ w.ould be jh~ ppqr~t .for work•day). ,
COURT POURED
,., " "' .. ·
,
!'The e{~tl'lffe director slbpover IIi ~8flip'b1fj Grace •
iii' I)
SALEM CENTER - A preslden( we could have. But you see he fooled me. He w1s the
Friday,
Nov.
3
.
Reception
·
should have a degree from an United Methodist Chiarch, only
HIT,
KILLED
concrete outdOQr basketQ&amp;ll most J?eaceful-maklng president I think we have had. So I think for ·Katherine Burnside,
~~i.Uld college.er a relare~ a fewt ~et aw_:ay from the
MOUNT GILEAD, Ohio
Tonight, Mon. 1 Tues •. ,,
court has been poured at the · the best way for us to do down this way is to get the hatred out of Parkersburg,
W.
V. a.,
freld experience In tlie Episcopal Church on the 500
Oct. 22·23-24 .
(
UPI)
Edward
E.
Coles,.
39,
Salem Center School by O;Ur system. I think it is time for us all to join hands and show the November Exhibitor.
supervision o! personnel and block of Second Ave,
Dayton, was struck and killed
Clint Eastwood
Wllllam Willford and sons, Van public of Middleport people we get along together.
the management of poverty
Local Red Cross offiCials
In
STRIKE
IS
ON
by
a
vehicle
early
Saturday
as
and Hay, and Robert Dugan,
Now what! am tryiog to get at is !his: I never voted for Mr.
JOE
KIDD
programs and must possess a Saturday pointed out there will
CLEVELAND (UPI)
he walked along Ohio 61, about
and sons, Ronnie and Buddy, Zerkle as lllllYOr. But just as I say, he has fooled me and a lot of
!Technlcolor)
knowledge of human behavior be ample parking space at the
and Larry Barr. The com· others. He sure is trying 'to improve the looks of the town, and Some 200 members of Local 1 six miles south of this Morrow
nGP"
and be dedicated to the prln- Episcopal Church.
of
the
Newspaper
Guild
struck
County
community.
The
State
~olorcarteoM:
•
mit tee is now making plans for also trying to make our streets something to be proud of.
ciples and philosophy of the
A spokesman said the need
BuHer Fly
the Cleveland Plain Dealer Highway Patrol said no
i
installing .the backboards and
They have holes here In some of these streets that if you hit
program. The position pays fo~ blood Is great Thursday.
H-y
tt.yrldo
Saturday,
baiting
publication
charges
has
been
filed
in
!he
is contemplating the In· them it would throw your car out of line, for which It costs several
leo Crum Htlps
$10,000 annually.
Several communities in the
stallation of poe\&amp; on each side dollars lo correct, or maybe ruin a tire, or maybe have a bad of Ohio's largest newspaper. · accident.
Applications may be secured area have f~lled t~ meet their
Show Starts 7 P.M.
of !he court for conversion of accident.
·
by calllng Pomeroy 99Z:7400 quotas in recent months. Gallla
attend school. The court defined temporary residency as "a
the area to a volleyball court.
from 8:30a.m·: to 1:30 . p.m.~ did not reach Its quota In
We have all kinds of levies to vote on this time. Why oot say
residence which Is acquired for a temporary period of time Is
~ at other times or ,
August. Several replacements
"yes," I want to make Middleport a better town to ride In without
sufficiently permanent to ju.ltify It u a vot~ residence If the
wri ling the Meigs United are due the Holzer Medical
fear of tearing your car to pieces?
According
to
IDdlan
legend,
applicant for reglstraUon baa no present lntenUon 'Ol making
Methodist · Ministers' Office, Cenwr, the·' spokesman added. the Amazon River was
I will also say I see this mayor on the road Inspecting It more . another place of residence hla perinanent place of abode.'' .
257 Mill St., Middleport, 45760.
Blood programs may be In formed when the moon wept than any mayor we have had.
In accordance with the law a college student has e:vriy rlgbt
Applications musi be in by jeopardy If quotas are not met because sile could not marSo let us all pray the "Lorjl" wUI change people's mlnda on
Taa~~t~~,Ocl.22
to
~later to vote In the area fl. that college In which he or ahe Ia
Friday, Nov. 10.
In future area vislls.
ry the sun.
our road·condition and vote for the $5license plate money.
enrolled. The question Ia, Why have Rio Grande College atudenll
OoubJoFeaturo
,.
Yours truly and May God bless our city govemment (The Lord been dllcrlrnlnated 81Jainlt In their effort to register In Gallla
FROGS
changes things) ~ Ben Batey.
Ray
Mllland
county wllen students at Ohio University and Ohio State
Sam Elliott
University have been registering without any problem?
(Color)
!PGI
Some students dlr:i get reglatered becaUH they defended and
Sanitation, what for?
AIH
demanded their legal rl8ht to be registered. Others got the runCONQUEROR
I' read. in th'e daily paper where our conunlssloners have around, became dlacouraged and refused to put up with the · "THE WORM"
POMEROY - Fourteen Dye, Ravenswood, $10 and six days ·confinement, costs purchased a sanitation truck. What will this do for the cities?
petty, chlldlah harassment handed out by. the GaWa County
(Color!
only,llcense suspended lor one
defend~nts were fined, 13 cosls each, left of center;
VIncent
Price
I am speaking of the Village of Syracuse. I have raised Board of Elections.
others forfeited bonds and one Harold G. Mays, Little year, driving while in· "Hell" with the mayor, Sanitation board, and Health Dept,
l•nOallvy
It Is popular theae days ro criticize college students wlio
was assesaed costs only in Hocking, $150 and costs, three toxlcated.
concerning the "City Dump" in my back yard here.
llland .., for what they believe Ia rlgbt, u In the case of the
Forfeiting bonds were Mark
Meigs County Court Friday days confinement, llcense
Qoo, It isn't on my property, tlut directly behind my p!operly reglatraUonfl. the R.G .C. students. Many people have crlticiRd
morning.
suspended for six months, B. Williams, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
which I own and pay taxes on. I118ve to pay f2.50 a month to have COllege IIUdenll for deiiiOilllrlllng for what they think Ia ju.at.
Fined by Judge Frank W. driving while lnlo~cated; John Martha Ann Slater, Midmy garbage taken away, yeti have to look at a city dwnp In my . However, tbe tharge hu been that deiiiOilllrlllons are not the
Porrer were ' Mary F. Halley, E. Holley, Pomeroy,. Rt. 4, dleport, Robert Taucher,
DeuiOCratic way of clolng lblnp. Pleale note lhatlhere wu no
Tuppet'll Plains, BIUy B. Orr, Blapch K. Biggs, Racine and Youngstown, Leonard R. back door.
Nothing has been done about this even !hough our 80-C&amp;Ded · dellllllistraUon by RGC studenll, j1lll coacemed citizens wanUng
ReedsviUe, and David A. Reed, John R, Philson, Syracuse, $10 Azbell, Lancaster, Roy Parker,
officials
know about this.
their rights upbe1d by being regillered 10 they would be able to
~vi,Ue, $10 and costs each, and · costs each, slop sign Pomeroy, Rt. 3, Kenneth
And on top of this I am buying rat polson dally to keep the wte w!tliin !he designated ~~ In Gallla County. When
apeeding; Kenneth A. Sexton, violation; Okey Kiser, Racine, Wh~eler, Huntington, and
Sun.
-~
COIIIdentlOUI, youns voters are taara.d, Ia not the DemocraUc
Belpre, $10 and costs, palling Rl. 2, ft20 and costs, siX dafs . William J . Moore, Franklin rats from eating my property,
Oct.23
They ~y they hllve rules that all containers must be cioled. III'OC ••• we value 10 mudl being llllfled?
~
•I Intersection; William Stout, confinement, license Furnace,
$27.50
each,
Yet
they
have
closed
their
eyes
to
this
dmnp
In
town.
OUr
· The people working at the Board of Elections llllgg!!llled to
Rt. 3, Albany, $10 and costs, suspended for six months, speeding; Sharon Newell,
r:.,
Elaine Gittos
failure to yield; John Warfield, drivlngwhjleintoiicated; June Cheshire, $17.50, parking In no President has put up money to beauUfy America. Does this mean the RGC arludentl who Hve In Cleveland, Colurllbua, and Dayton,
••
, In
Ohio, etc., that they should drive there on elecUon day to vote.
Greensboro; Pa., $10 and costs, Opal WIU, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $10 . parking zone; Donald A. part of it?
:•
How about cleaning up the clUes, or does this mean j1lll This Ia not only inlpiKUcal butWII'eUOIIIble and ridiculous.
•:'•
following too close; Jack D. and costs, no operators llcense. Ferrari, W. Warwick, R. I.,
Smith, Charleston, and Hubert Orton -Parsons, Parkersburg,. $42.50, speeding; Burwell some?
Of coune, there are those who wiD be voting by ablentee
:j'',
McKenney, Middleport, $25,
A Tax payer, SyriCille, Oblo baDol, w111ch Ia an ~·• personal daclalon. Howewr, tbe
.
R ,.•
disturbing
the
peace;
(Name withheld on request). • nrllng by the Third Dlfllrlct Cwrt 'Ol Appells llllk111 !he ablenlee
,.
Raymond Priddy, Middleport,
baDol outmoded. After all, In ,our blghiJ ledmologlw world
\'
and
Rt. 1, f25, disturbing the peace,
coavenilllce bu b.ec!me a paramom~t demand of our cllilenl.
••
,•
Wants
cred•t
for
the
unsung
~.assault.
· 11an111 mab It convenilllt for !heir~ ro get to !he banb
·l
Tuppers Plains, Ohio by h!JidlqJ li'IIICbellniUIICI town. Many retail merehlnta mike
.,
Dear Ediror:
,
livallable plenty of parldng lfiiBce 101' .their CUII.omera for oon~ "'
We have very much respect for the entire Eastern football wnlenc!e'a lllte.
:-•
I
R
team. But when writing sports articles c:oncern1JC Ealllern
•
no-'t It llland to ~ that thla Ia the way vollng and
Postoffice will
games, the Sentinel always fails to mel)llon one wry bnportant recJrlllatlon abou1d be .carried out u clelip'-1 by tile Third ·
'•
member of the teem. AI loyal Eutern fMI, we feel that IIIII ~ o-t fl. Appea!aforcoan.-ce In vollnc' '1'1111 tnablel
atblete deserves more credit for 1U outiiMtllnC wort "011
~(
be closed Monday senior
IIIOI'e peaple lo " " u • rellllt of - · - - and In the llul
•
the Une." AI one of the C~H:atuins fl. our football team, he Ia a IIIAipia,our poiltlcaiQIIIRI wiD be lllrqlbenecl jull U I
:•
Paater·IV.....HstTOIII lurlr!e AT FAPTH : ·
football player that Eastern can ceria~ be proud of.
~ II~ ac-ilwDI' by lfi'09Idlnl convenlenl
•
•
BAPTIST .
•
GALLJPOLIS - Richard
In luture articles about tbe Eutam team, p.., sive credit lhoppiJII and ~*tin~ fw tbelr callctnen.
.(Dick) Bane, Galllpolls Poet to ALL Of the players -not julia select lew.
l'llltirOrtaln Mlrrt.la-cedtoday lllat Eva..tUstlc
'
Thn Ia 1 Jl'll"'t!''ty thet the 'Ol i:GIIItci lludenll who
llrvic• -~~ lit lllld at 7oJO p.m. nllhHy--et FalHI
•
Muter, announced Saturday
'l'bank You. (namea witNield by r,quiiltt. hne "ll'll•td t10 9eltln Gallla 011111&amp;7 1111111 not be Millo !he
.t!f!aatllt Cllurdl. lloglllnl.. lo!llday. Oct. 22, ·~d - ·
that the poet office will be
deaipallldlfl'acinct.W,Ibe R.G.C.IIudlntl w.kl vote. lf IIIII
·'
Jttilln1111 Frllllly, Oct. 17th.
.
c!OIMCI all day Monday · to
lhoilld OON',II WOIId be a "Nr:Y imiiGall uli
to be
Election proce~~s criticised
Jlilrmit. ~loyees to observe
•
'flill'*"'llat lor 111e1t speclat wvtc.1 will be Dr. Tom
talrn
by the bolnllll tlactlw .
•
Veterans Day.
l'lllr P..,_ af the llrown St. 'Baplllt Orurch of Alton,
l'1lr H II* doll hiiiP'!I,IIIIa dlar 1iCD 'Olan aalbarltarlaa
Bane said 'there wW be no Dear Editor:
. • Whir lurkt II a
01 Ton~••" Temple
at, .JII:.Jlll'al 011 n c~eJ~Ytr¥~.
October 10, 18'72 wu the last day ro ntiltlr for lhll fall'a adillll b.f the llllr![ rl 111 II ww, ul IIIII, I . . add, II not .
t
Ia Olr .llldlt) 1111117
•
'11llre will be nCtrmalltek bo:l ·. eiactloiii, Manijeople got JWiatered wliboaiiiiJIIOIIble. lllllle, wdiJtl wiiiiiD the = • u Pk .., tl
•
.._.. .. U.Jtil W Pilat ''H :rtD wwkwlllliD !be llnr IIIII
and apaclal de'"-7
on the otll.- band, got reel heed with modi nrbll c.doallllall
•
A etty-wlde collecllon wiD be by the people wilD are In cbarse of U. Gallla Olllnt, !laird fl. lblln wlllwwk I'll' ,.allf,. ..t aplnll the In, then the
••
•
In
wiD
wwtt
as
:
1
,..
••
made on a holiday IICIIet?ule. Elecllona. I am nflrrlng In !he 1at11r alalaullll to 11M Rio
1
Normal weekday diiPit• Grinde Calill' atudenll wilD tried to tePter.
1111 R.G.C. II h .. art - - wllldD lhlln • I •
ching of meU wiD be provided. .
Two reeent lepl chftel put 1 arr.ttnl g..tnJ 011 1111
c Slllllllilll thelnwlll wwttllrllllm. 'II at 111e Ill!'' aftjce lobby .will be rulta and ftlllllllona
l1li*'lnJ to VQit 211 (llllll ,._nt1, 1 11 1 111IIU11In tr ..., will 1a1 Ifill&amp; Gf I I II .I II
.open from 8 a.m., Willi I 11.m. One II lite rJcbt at the ta.year.old to wte In Mu-1, liMe _. to"*IIJIIII
bllli lhlllpalaLO.•' 5 IIIUIII
1
II was alao announnd locallleetiilni.AiarelllltofiiiiiiCiton,lt..._il 1 Ul lllt«llll
lllalm II •111111.,
saturday lhlt.U office~ In the thtnumblraft'Oitl'leUI'Netol'lllvllltil au •·
· county cOIII'IIIOIIJe will ~
1111 l1llt ....
U. TNnl D' 1 II&amp; o.t II
ebed Monda,y.
'

CAP needs

Driver cited

director

on 2 cormts

Judges selected

man,

. 0 biJe
00dm

place moved

\

.

.

MEIGS lHEATRE

'

14 defendants fined by court

·arch- . ceremony.
Music
was
:,:. way decorated with green- pr·esen~Ald by Mrs . Chesler
ery and white, yellow and Erwin, organist, and her
· POMEROY- Three longtime friends·of Mrs. Garen Stans- purple fl•isics, with baskels of selection include? "Wedding
i!urY ~a diuppOinting day ioto one to be remembered. . white glapioli ·and purple , Prayer," "A Time for Us,"
Wednesday was Mrs. StansWI'y's 88th birthday aruriversary and · mums flanked by seven-branch "Summer of '72,'' "One Hand,
she had expected some members of her family who were candelabra decorated the altar One Heart," and "Love Story."
rmavoidably detained,
of the Middleport Church of
The bride was given in
Mrs. Crary Davia, Mrs. Edward Tewksbary, and Mrs. Chrjst !or the wedding or Miss · marriage by her eldest
Malcobn Roller SUI')X'ised ber with a birthday cake decorated Mary Anna Long to Mr. James . brother, Mr. Roger Long. For
with arUficial rosebuds and a single candle, however, and the Michael. O'Brien.
her Wedding she wore a full
four along with Mrs. Stansbury's COmpanion had quite an enThe bride is the daughwr of length gown of white nylon
. joyable afternoon.
Mrs. Harold Long, Middleport, organza. The tightly molded
. IncidentaUy,Mrs. Stansbury will be leaving soon for Florida and ihe late Mr. Long, and the bodice with high neckline and
where she will spend the wlnwr wiih her son William and bridegroom is the son of Mr. sheer bishop sleeves had a)r
family.
·
•
•
and Mrs. James B. O'Brien of pliques of lace. ~.e soft flaring
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
skirt featured·the same lace as
The weddirtg vias an event of the gown and the train was
. SO .PRONE WE ARE to complain, and so often we really Saturday, July 8, at 3 p.m. with detachable. A Juliette cap of
have so lltUe about which to complain.
the Rev. Raullin V, Moyer lace held her three tiered veil
Our best wishes for healthier days certainly go to the Mr. and officiating at . the double ring of illusion, and she carried a
Mrs. Earl Kes!erson and sons of Hami!to)l. His father, Dale
Kesterson of Pomeroy, has returned from there after spending
some time assisting the family.
Earl Kesterson is a victim of multiple sclerosis, his wife has
serious visual problems, and both sons,. Kevin, three, and Dale,
five months, have had encepbalis. 'Tbe two children are now
home af~AJr exte,nsive treatment at area hospitals.

AN ALk,DAY PROGRAM is being planned for the 98th
anniversary observance of !he Enterprise Unlwd Methodist ·
Church. The homecoming wiD be held on Nov. 5 with a basket
dinner and afternoon program. Regular services wiD lie beld In
the morning.
TilE FIRST NEWSLETI'ER of the Meigs County Council of
Aging was put out this past week by Eleaoor Tbomas, project
director.
.
Eleaoor indicates that the newsletrer to keep senior citizens
up 911 what's new for tbem wiD be published on a regular basis.
It's quite infonruilive - telling of whl!t's" happenlng •In the
project, services that can save money, and activities that have
taken place along with those' that are In the plarming stage.
This past week !he first Senior.Citizens' Club In the county
was organized at Harrisonville. There's some Interest in getting
a band together. Interesred? Contact Mrs. Thomas. Also d0f1't
forget that on Thursday there wlU be a covered dish dinner In the
Rutland Elementary School gymnasium; 4 to 7 p.m. The group
will eat at 5:30, Everyone attending is to lake a covered dish and
their own table service. There will be enrertalnment and some
proj~ts to discuss.
.
'r
Remember wbat Andre Maurois said: ''Growing old is no more
than a bad babit whiclla busymanhasnotimetoform."

MIDDLEPORT
A
hwnorous program, election of
officers and presentation of
gifts to the teacher and the
assistant teacher were
highlights of the annual

~

NURSES .

The Oledleled

flll·

,,

.,,,
.,

'

..,
.

.
.
...

..

racHc.l-.,

t.

.
.

..mcea.

acr-«

......

.

Sherry Workman to wed Stephen Oikr
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Mr· and Mrs. Gyle Workman,
310 Fourth St., New tHaven, are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sherry, to Mr.
Stephen Michael Oiler, son of !4rs..Hoy Oiler•.&gt;50 Broad)llay
St., and Mr. Richard Oiler, Locust and Third Sts., Mid·
die port.
· . Miss Workman a '1970 graduaw of Wahama High School,
is employed by Red Carpet Irm of Point Pleasant. Mr. Oiler, a
1970 graduate of Meigs High Scbool, is attending Hocking
State College, Nelsonville, · studying hotel, motel and
restaurant management, and is employed parttirne by
Oiler's Sohio Station In Middleport. The wedding will take
place at 2:30 p.m. on Nov. 4 at the Middleport Church of
Christ, 437 Main St. The gracious custom of open church will
be observed. Areception will be held following the ceremony
in the social room of the church. Mr. Eugene Carroll of
Hanoverton will be the officiating minister.

HELP WANTED
BRADBURY
Contributions are being sought for
a Bradbury ·community
Halloween party to be held at 7
p.m. on Monday, Oct. 30, at the
Bradbury Church of Christ in
lieu of the annual observance
of trick or treat night. Those
wishing to help with the party
are asked to call 993-5886, 9925187 or 992-S!JM.

Marriage Licenses
POMEROY
Roscoe
Myers, 40, Rl. 2, Racine and
Joyce Lynn Williams, 21, Rt. 2,
Racine; William · Sleven
Hoback, 20, Racine , and
Michaela Carol Wolfe, 19,
Racine.
The largest natural harbor
in the world is San Francis·
co bay.

•

MIDDLEPORT - In a
private ceremony at the
Bradford Church of Christ on
Thursday, Oct. 12, Miss
Martha Jean Nicholson
became the bride of Mr. Gary
Ray Haynes .
The ceremony was per ~
formed by Mr .. Bill Carter,
pastor of the church . AtIAJ ndants for the couple were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Haynes,
brother and sls~Alr-in-law of the
groom .
The new Mrs. Haynes is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
NicholsOn of Middleport. She is
employed by Remington Rand
in Marietta as a compuwr
operator.
Mr. Haynes is the son of
Basil Haynes of Rutland. He is
currently serving as a sergeant
with the UniiAJd Slaws Air
Force in Weisbaden, Germany .
Mrs. Haynes will soon join her
husband there.
Immediately following the
wedding, a reception was held

•

for the couple at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Redmond
in New Haven. Those attending
the reception were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Molden, Mr. and
Mrs. Basil Haynes, Randy
Haynes, Tammy Stanley, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
Carolyn Shrimplin and sons,
Wayne and Patrick, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Haynes and
daugh~Alr , Krisli,.&lt;~nd Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Redmond.
f't

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

SUNllAY

1

! ' Tl~1 ES·SENTI!"El
1
I
I
1

P"b ' ·~~fG "~"' ~ .. ~~•) l&gt;r 1.,. 0 ~ .~

lilll'y Pub l o,~ l n~ C:a
C. Alli,.Olt\ DA ILY Hlll!oUNl;
17)
O ao h pol '' · Oh•o . ~Sill

'""a .,..,

Put&lt;l•\~td t•ln week 11 1~ "~ " '"Q uu~ t

h t ~ r &lt;ltt SPt 0"0 ~l l\1 PO\IIgt l'tooj 11
Ylll ooolll . o~ . o •:06ll
I'
111E. D AI L Y ~ 1;- llt ll~l'L
I Ill Co urt St Pa m r. ra~ . 0 . •H••
PuDhi~Pa •~• r , "'tf •Uv •un ont fi ctlll
~llu&lt;dlv E~''"&lt;lll u cond cia .. mtHonQ
'I m1 111r II Pcmoro y O~ •a. Pol l OU ic•
IE li M) 0' S l!A S( II JPTIO N
I l!o~ Clft ••• llloll l n d ~unO I ¥ , ) 0.: Pf'

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Tnt lhll lpolll T10DuM In Onlo tnd Wnl I
\l .~rv t n l a on~ v~•r liJ OC In mo"'hl l l , 1
I lhrtr moniM ' ' ~0 tii~'I'Mra , one vur 1
j 51 ) . I ••. moMhl tl . IMf't MIHIIhl I !~
1 Tn • 01.1o St"' "l •l. ono ~~., tllOO . ,,~ I
m Onlhl I' 1.1 In rtf mOolhl U I~
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Tht Un o l~d 1'1 • 11 lntl&lt;n a i&lt;D••• I 11 1• 1
1

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tM oloea to 111ft u u tor Pvbllc" lon
Ill ~fWI d•I~II ( ~U C•U oiM tO lhil

1al
I

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POMEROY ·o.

I

L----- ~- -----------~

BATON TWIRLING CLASSES
STARTING
IN THREE AREAS • EASTERN, SYRACUSE &amp; RACINE

TAUGHT BY

JUDY RIGGS

,.

PHILCO®
STEREO SOUND
CENTER

•.

GAWA-MEIGS COMMUNITY ACTION

.,

lHE SllJOENT

Rice and ·Milton Houdashelt.
Mrs. Erwin was the narrator.
The program closed with a

guitar selection by Rice and
the friendship ~rcle with the
group singing "Blest Be the
banquet of the Homebuilders Tie" and the R M M
Class of the Middleport Church closing with ev. r. oyer
of Christ.
. prayer.
'
w 1
of
Attendmg were Mr. and Mrs
h
~~~.~~ J;i ~''~Af ~ Erwin_, Mr. and Mrs. Herma~
emonie; for the banguet Klncatd, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart,
·-·ed
~"
···bY mem.bers ·· of ·· th e Mr.
· and Mrs.. Leonord
'""' · Van
.! th
soc1e· 1y. Mrs. Meter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach,
Ph
· 1 a ea
Mrs. an d Mrs. Russe II W'J
.
.
Ste
t
th
I son
Lawrence
war gave e Mrs. Dav1'd Bumgardner, Mrs •
I histor yan d her husan
b d N
cass
y
·
ted ifts to. Mr D .d orman eauger, Mr. and
presen g
s. avt Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr. and
Bumgardner and Denver Rice, Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mr. and
teachers of the class, and Mrs. Mrs. Moyer, Mrs. Wallace
Leo~ard Van Merer, the class ' Bradford, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
ptest~ent.
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Officers electedV for 1972-73 Houdashelt, Mr . and Mrs .
an Meter, Denver Rice , Mrs . Osby
were Mrs.
president; Mrs. Herman Martin, and Mrs. Roach.
Kincaid, vice president; Mrs.
Carl Roach, secretary; Mrs.
Raymond Cole, assistant
secretary ; and Mrs. Stewart, Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Jack
treasurer.
Teaford,
Racine;
Jerry
Snider,
jlt Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
Chester Erwin, Mrs. Roach, Pomeroy; David Dobbins ,
and Denver Rice had charge of Bidwell; Richard Hanni, Stone
tlie program which opened Creek.
DISCHARGED - Jerry
with a welcome by Mrs. Roach.
Mrs. Erwin had charge of Aleshire, Barbara McDaniel,
group singing and conductor of Lovie Watson, Stacy Kuhn,
the hiUbiUy band was Mrs. Beth Cassell.
Rice with Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mrs. Van Meter, Mrs.
TAKEN TO HOLZER
Houdashelt, Mrs. Norman
MIDDLEPORT The
Yeauger, Mrs. Stewart and Middleport E·R squad was
Mrs. Roach taking part.
called to Old Kyger on Route
Mr. and Mrs. Rice read "I'll 554 at 1:39 p.m. Friday where
Call the llo!:tor," and Mrs. Anderson Spaereding 71, had
Yeauger read "Mrs. Buzy been injured in a lraffic ac·
News DisPenser .1' ModeUng in cident. He was taken to the
..StYle Revue '73 · were Willard Holzer Medical Cen~Alr by the
Boyer, Raullln Moyer, Denver squad.

bouqu~t.of s~Alphanolis .whi~AJ

white
wore
accessories . Both
and ~arnations centcr·ed with a mothers had white gardenia
purple orchid. She wore a corsages.
heart-shaped necklace conA reception honoring the
laining a pearl, a gift of the · couple was .held in the church
groom, and white pearl socia l room immediately.
earrings.
following the ceremon~. The
Miss Sandy Johnson was the bride's table featured a three
bride's maid of honor, and the tiered wedding cake trilll!lled
bride~maids were Miss P~ggy in purple and lilac and topped
O'Brien , sister of the groom, with the traditional miniature ·
Miss ..Becki Long and . Miss bride and groom. WhiiAJ tapers
Mindy Long, nieces of the were used at either side of the
bride. The maid of honor was cake. Guests were registered
attired in a floor-length purple · 'by Mrs . Sandra Smith,
gown of polyester featuring an Jackson, roommate of the
empire waistline lrin\med with bride.
white lace. and purple velvet
Hostesses for the reeeption
ribbon ·. The gown was were Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
fashioned with a . scoop Mrs. Pam McClanahan, Miss·
neckline, bell shaped sleeves Mary Bradbury, Miss Cynthia
and large ruffles around the Mills, and Miss Nancy
bottom. The bridesmaids •were Thompson.
in lilac gowns of ·identical . For a wedding trip to
styling.
..
Columbus the bride changed
All the attendants wore whiiAJ into a two piece outfit congloves with white picture hats sis ling of a purple knit top with
trimmed with velvet ribbon to purple and white checkered
match their dresses and choker skirt over white holpants. The
necklaces, gifts of the bride . couple now resides at Bulaville
·They carried fireside baskets Rd., Gallipolis.
of white, lilac and yellow
The bride is a graduate of
daisies trimmed with purple Meigs High School, 1969 class,
and lilac streamers.
and the Holzer Medical Center
Master Ricky -Long of School of Nursing, class of 1972.
Columbus, nephew of the bride, She is employed as a staff
was the ringbearer. Mr. Pat nurse at the hospitaL Mr.
O'Brien of Pomeroy, brother of O'Brien graduated from
the groom, was best man, and Pomeroy High School in 1968,
Mr. and Mrs. James M. 0 'Brien
the ushers were Mr. Roy Long, attended Rio Grande College
Columbus, and Mr. Richard two years, .and is now em·
Long, Middleport, brothers of ployed in the purchasing Frank Haskins, Joan Haskins,
Miss Jay Kimble, Jackson;
the bride. The male attendants department at the Holzer Mr. and Mrs. Paul Clifford, Miss Teresa Montavon, Gary
all wore brown Prince Charles Medical Cenwr.
Mr . .and Mrs . James H. Lute, . Porlsrnouth; Mr. and
suits with black satin edging.
Out-of-town guests at the Walker, Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs. Rom Williamson, Mason,
For her daughter's wedding, wedding wer.e Mr. and Mrs. D. Walker, Mr. and ·Mrs. W. Va.; Miss Nancy Harris,
Mrs . Long wore a blue crepe A-. Brian Smith, Rio Grande; Mr. Cha~les Adkins, Jr., Mr. and Columbus.
line dress with sheer sleeves, and Mrs. James Lewis, Mrs. Robert Cornwell, Miss
Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien,
matching blue shoes, and whiiAJ Westerville; Mr . . and Mrs. Martha Cornwell, Mrs. Mike ' . parents of the groom, enaccessories. Mrs. O'Brien was William Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Allen, Mr. and · Mrs. C. R. IAlrtained with a buffet dinner
in an aqua organza ensemble John Brown, Mrs. Roy Long, McGinniss, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. honoring the bride and groom
embroidered with while and Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Cherrington, Miss Bonnie ·a t the Orchid Room in
Long, Miss Kathy Zudars, all Pomeroy following the wed·
of Gallipolis.
ding.

Wedding private ceremony

Teachers honored

..

rw

'Cou le· wed in

A.. NOUNCEMENT

)with buflf.ln: .
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
• 4-SPEED AUTDMA TIC
RECORD CHANGER
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
RADIO

Opening for Executive Director
The EKecutive Director will be responsible for the
organlz"afion and management of fhe total program
through direct supervision and delegation of responsibilities; . making and approving plans and Implementation of the priorities. He-She will have chief
responslblllfy for development and quality control of the
total program. He-She wilt be ltason between the board,
the total progum, •net fhe state and federal offices fun ding various programs .

•

Applications Must Be' In By
Friday, November 10, 1972
QUALIFICATIONS
·

,The Executive Director should have a degree from ·on
accredited colloge or a related field experience In
suP..vtsor of personnel and the monagement of poverty
programs. H•Stre must possess a knowledge of humon
behevlor and · be dedicated to the principles and
philosoph~ of file program ..

Salary: S10.000
For Appli(ation:
Call-8:30A.M. to 1 .:~0 P.M. 992-7400
. or Other Thnij f92-SOSS
WrlttMtigs United Mtthoclist-Minister-'s-Offilie
257 Mill Street '
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Mtcllterreneen Armoire
Pecan veheer top and ·base.
deep molded doors.
·

•
ALL FOR ONLY

$39995

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

.

.

FORMER STATE &amp; NATIONAL BATON CHAMPION. CERTIFIED BATON
TEACHER AND JUDGE WITH THE NATIONAL BATON lWIRLiNG ASSOC.

Enroll Now--

Phone .985-3595

MIDDLIPOIT, 0.
I

~

I

�t -Tilt I . 3 ;

n...s

...

'be!, 8w "', Oc.i. a, 1m

Show dates are sel

Katie's Korner
By .Katie Crow
'

J'()MERO'I:; - The meeting schedulfd tor Monday night to
IIIIIH fllllil plaiu! for the Syt'acuse Halloween party hall been
c:blnCed to Monday at 2:30 p.m.at Syracuse Grade Schoo).
·
'lblil iar total of over $200 has been received. Mrs. Robert
(Emma ~filii) Holstein has worked dlligenlly solictllng the town
for contributions.
·

a

MEIGS HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, Charles Chancey, used
to kid me and call me an irate mother. Now I am (for real) an
Irate citizen. ·
'
1'1" reu111 is ovel' Veterans Day. Veterans Day (Annistice
Dey, u ~know til!&amp; Nov. 11 ~nd no one can change Illy niind.
1can well reinember ala child my father, who long ago left
this world, ~ at attention ilo maller where he was at II
a.m. on .NOV.ll, with tears streamlng down his face.
·
He iras a veterall ol World War I who saw ·an!l went throUgh
·- ~lble ordeall ,ln Fl'811Ce flgliting for his country. He was
awarde!l the blghe8t medal given by the government of France,
the "Crail: De Guerrier" for bravery beyond the eall of duty.
Nov. 11 waa declMed Al:mistice Day In 1919 aJI(I remained
rArmistice Day until changed to Veterans day just a few years
ago.
My husband gave his all in the second World War living in the
jungles of the South Pacific for two and one-half years and
contracted a lrllj&gt;ical ~aae that piagues him to this day. I also
lost a very dear cOUiin In the second W~rld War. These are just
three incidents (mine) and there are thousands of such that could
be relayed; for biatance, ~dgar Vanlnwagen who survived the
Bataan death march·
Nov, 11 waaset aside for the honorable men who fought and
died for our country, Changing the date of such a historical
moment was .in bad taste but tO change the month is almost
beyond belief.
Personally I don't Intend to recognize Monday as Veterans
Day. Tome it is just plain old Oct. 23,andalwayswill be.
MRS. AND MRS. ROY BUCK, Early Roush, Mrs. Cora Buck
and Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buc;k, aU of Racine, Rt. 2, have really
j)een enjoying the fall weather. They traveled 1,540 miles
recently In the slate of West Virginia going to Elkins where as
Mrs. Coca-Buck slated the trees looked llkea huge bouquet. The
trees were a sight to behold.
·
Fall is truly beautiful season of the year.

a

POMEROY - " It Happens
Every Chrislmas" will be the
tilelll(l of the annual holiday
. flower show to be staged at the
Pomeroy Elementary building
on Dec. 2 and 3. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter · and · Mrs. Horner
Parker are ca&lt;hairmen for
the show.
The chairmen ~nnounce that
the.show will follow the Ohio
Association -of Garden- Club
rules as stated ' in the 1971
edition of the Exhibitors and
Judges Handboo~ . They report
tl)at th~ show will feature a
class not formerly appearing in
a show here- the stabiiP. ·

It may be free-sianding or
three sided, but must have
depth. The dominance of
weight is at the top but the line

';i;i~::::::::;:::::::::::::~::~::::::-:::-t.!:~::::::::.;.:::i:::;:=::-;:::::::~:::~:::::~:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,
I '

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Social Calendar

Founders honored ANNUA~ND:;LIGJous MEIGSTU~o~~;
POMEROY - The 25th
-anniversary of Alpha Delta
Kappa was celebrated with a
candlelight ceremony at a
recent meeting of Alpha Epsilon Chapter held at the home
of Mrs. Eileen Buck.
Participating in the founder's day program conducted
by Mrs. Maxine Wingett were
Mrs. Bernice Hoffman, Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee, Mrs .. Lucllle
Swackhamer, and Mrs. Edna
Price. Mrs. Jean Alkire,
program chalrman,lnlroduced
~s. Wingett.
""
,
, Committees -'appointed
,during the meeling were Mrs.
iAJklre and Mrs. Hoffman; Mrs.
Murlene Fisher, Mrs. Ida
Diehl, Mrs . Leah Ord,
altruistic; Mrs. Buck, Mrs.
Ann Welsh, Mrs. Blakeslee,
publicity; Mrs. Alkire, Miss

Helen Smith, telephone;- Mrs.
Ferne Gaul, Mrs. Ruth Stern,
and Mrs. Frances Roberts,
ways and means; · Mrs.
Wingett, Mrs. June Lee, Mrs.
Goldie Story, pledge of
membership.
A report was given on the
South-!i:astem Central District
meeting held at Chillicothe
which was attended by Miss
Smith, Mrs. Swackhamer •
Mrs. Nonga Roberts and Mrs.
Alkire.
Miss Smith, president,
reported .on th~~hllghts ot
the State Presiaii~l1s Council
and lhe State convention at
Columbus.Mrs. Swackhamer, chaplain,
read poems, "Slow Me Up,
Lord/' and "An Autumn

Prayer.'' Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Buck.
•

·Terrie Miller ·honored
RUTLAND - Miss Nina
Stiles, Mrs. Betty Teaford and
Mrs. Bessie Oliver entertained
Monday night at the Rutland
United Methodist Church with
.a bridal shower hon~r_ing Miss
Terrie Mlller, bride-elect of
Mr. Delbert Teaford, Jr.
Games were played with
prize~ going to Mrs. Barbara
Fry, Mrs. Arthur Miller, and
Mrs. Elsie Sutherland. The
door prize went to Miss Brenda
Sayre.
. · The gift table was centered
willl a bride replica and the
ref~11hment table featured

.Birthday party
was a surprise
MIDDLEPORT - - Mrs .
Robert&amp; Maynard was surprised recently with a birthday
party at her home.
She was presented birthday
cakes by her daughter, Mrs.
Ann Zirkle, and her son, Paul.
Ice cream and soft drinks were
served with the cakes. Gifts
were presented to her by her
~hlldren and grandchildren
and she also received a gift
from her mother, Mrs. Vina
Preece of Inez, Ky. A call of
congratulations was also
received from her sister, Mrs.
~Y Allen of Inez.
Attending the party were Mr.
and Mra. Rusaell Maynard and
Ssinantha; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Maynard, Point Pleaaant, and
Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle,

l='"'"""'•.
IGlrden Clall will-Them,et

CWBTOMEBT

POMEROY

Wildwood
at 7:30
PJD. Jl..m'ayat-tbe home 0!
1 Mn, Fred N - with Mrs.
llavld Nease aa asal1tlng

Affirmation Day, 2 p.m.
Su~day at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal. Arch
Masons. Speaker and program
by Job's D~ughters and
DeMolay. Refreshments.
DESCENDANTS of Allen
and Mary Eblin will have a'
reunion Sunday at the west
roadside park on Route 33,
three miles north of Pomeroy.
A basket dinner will be held at
1 p. m.
MONDAY
IZAAK WALTON Monday ·at
club h~use,' 7 p.m. · · ·
THE SUNBONNET Junior
Garden Club- Monday 3 p.m.
home of Elaine Barnhart.
Everyone to bring grocery
sack and cutters.
BEND 0' The River Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday home
of Mrs . Edward Simpson,
Racine, with Mrs. Clifford
Morris, co-hostess. New
program books lor year to be
distributed.

Rock Snring.·"

white ' wedding bells. Cake, .
0
mints, coffee and cola were
'I:"
serve&lt;!.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs . Candy
By Mrs. Opha Offutt
Brothers, Mrs.
Gladys · Mark Tannehill attended the
Brothers, Mrs. Ruth Ann World Series game in CinGraham, Mrs ..' Bessie Oliver, cinnali with his father, Chet
Ruth Ann and Sue Ellen Fry, Tannehlll, on Sunday.
Mrs . Matty Teaford, Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
Betty Teaford, Mrs. H. attended', the celebration at the
Erlewine, Miss Brenda Sayre, Bob Jones Farm, Gallipolla on
Mrs. Ed Stiles, Mrs. Helen Ssaturday and Sunday. While
Milhoan, Mrs. Sharon Kincaid, In Gallltiolls they visited their
Mrs. Marge Schoonover, Mrlt. son, Roger Hines and family .
Homer Parker, Mrs. Bruce
Sunday dinner guests at the
May, Mrs. Thelma Walters and home of Mrs. Grace Glaze in
Mrs. Fannie Miller. ·
Middleport were Mr. and Mrs.
Others presenting gifts to William Radford.
Miss Miller were Mrs. Mildred
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Betzlng and Jan, Mrs. Merle Mrs. Leonard Lyons were Mr.
Johnson and Mona, Mrs. Jessie and Mrs. Ralph Fruth ·of
Reeves, Mrs. Wanda Eblin, Mason, W. Va .
Mr, and Mrs. Ernie Wells, Miss . Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt
Becky Eblin, Mrs. Herman were Sunday afternoon vlsiWrs
Grate, Mrs . .:\vis Bailey, Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Offutt of
Kay Platter, Mrs. Susie Car- - Long Bottom. The elder Mr.
penter, and an uncle of the Offutt flew to Alabama on
bride-elect, Grover Oliver.
Monday where he will spend a

News Notes

i:

Churc::·
Women United , planning
meeting for World Community
Day, I p.m. Tuesday at Grace
Episcopal Church. Key women
of churches urged to attend.
World Community Day will be
observed on Nov. 3 at Grace
Church. Mrs. Campbell Harper
is president.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at hall. Mrs.
Russell Moore, education ·and
scholarship chairman in
charge of program.
•
PAST MA'FRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter . 186, OES, Tuesday
evening, home of Mrs.Norma
Parker.
SOUTHERN
BAND
Boosters, 7p.m. Tuesday at the
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
WEDNESDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knight Templars,
staled conclave, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy .Masonic
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. All Sir Knights requested
to wear their uniforms.
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, United Methodist
Church.

week.
Mrs. James Weber of Mid·
dleporl and Mrs. Opha Offut~
visited on Monday with Mr.
and Mr~ . John Sayre of
Gallipillls.
A delicious ·turkey dinner
was enjoyed on Sunday in
honor of Mr. Kenneth Grover,
Chester in observance of his
birthday. The hostess was his
mother, Mrs. Belva Sloan .
Guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Grover and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan and family, Ehner and
Noah Haskins, Middleport,
Eddie .Young, Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Lambert and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Opha
· Offutt, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Hines, Danny Abbott and Keith
Whaley.
Mr . Charles Woode of

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe, Chester, will ceiebrate their golden wedding '
anniversary with an open house at the Chester fire house on Sunday, Oct. 29 from 1 to 5 p.m.
Married on Nov. 1, 1922, the couple ·are the parents of five chUdren, Uoyd of Akron, Mrs:
Marl~ne Thom)l80n of Columbus, Howard of Belpre, Mrs. Donna Van Meter of Granville, and
. Mrs. Nara Hartman, Chester. They have nine grandchildren ard one great-grandchild.
Relative and friends are invited.
"
·
1

men advise. Some material
may be abstracted but all does
not have to be. Materials are
non-representational and do
not always relate to
something that grows.
Howe.ver, abstracted material
is the foremost characteristic
in an abstract design, ·Mrs.
Carpenter and Mrs. Parker
explam.
COCKER MUST LEAVE
CANBERRA (UPI)- Immi·
gralion Minister Alexander
Forbes announced today that
Australia has decided to deport
British pop star Joe Cocker and
six members of his group
unless Ihey leave willingly.
They were fined Tuesday on
drugs charges.
Forbes said he signed the
deportation order after considering the court!ierdict. He
said unless the seven left
Australia voluntarily, authori·
ties would expel them forcibly.
"I have done this tecause
this government takes a very
serious view of such offenses,"
Forbes said. "This is especially
so when the offenses are
committed by persons who are
in a position to have a profound
influence on many young
Australians.,,

POMEROY- Meigs County
United Methodist Churches
were well represented at the
Athens District fall workshop
Wednesday at Camp Francis
Asbury, Rio Grande.
· Mrs . Beulah Ballard
presided at the workshop with
Mrs. Marjorie Coakley as the
song leader. Goal sheets were
distributed outlining the
program for the year, and at
the morning session the ap,.
p~oximately 8&amp; women were
divided· into responsibility
groups for discussion and in·
struction.
Speaker was the Rev. Paul.

tUITION RAISI':D
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
(UP! ) - An increase of $65 a
semester for tuition, room and
board at Muskingum College
here has been approved by the ·
school's board of trustees.
Chesler, father of Mrs. Willard
Hines, was admilled to
Velerans Memorial Hospital on
Monday following a possible
stroke at his home.
,.

NATIONAL
FLOWER

WEEK
da'l thi'U ~~
su~ .tt"O
Ot-tll"rta 'Y

· :te,
SPECIAL ·

Cymbidium Orchid
Floating In A

BRANDY SNIFTER
Only

2.49

1

Dudley's Florist
Strvlng: Golllpolll.
Pomeroy, Midd Itport, 0.
&amp; Moson Co., W. Yo.

Hawks, director of evangelism
in the Athens District and
pastor of· the Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis.
His topic was "Key 73" and
pertained to evangelism of the
world which he said will
depend on commilments of
pastors and laymen who are
willing to invest their talents
and themselves. l{e listed the
six phases involved as a calling
to repentance and prayer, to
the world of God, to the
resurrection, to the new life, to
the proclamation, and to total
corrunitment.
There was group singing of

. familiar choruses and hymns.
Among those attending were
Mrs. Helen Teaford, Mrs.
Grace Weese, Miss Marcia
Karr ,
Mrs.
Margaret
Eichinger, ·Mrs. Christina
Grimm, and Mrs. Linda
Ferrell of the Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse;
Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs. Hazel
Fox, Mrs. Barbara Dugan and
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman of !he
East Letart Church; and Mrs.
Frank Cheesebrew, wife of the
senior pastor of the Racine·
Letart area churches.
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
We' ve Put Together A
stunning

LEVY ENDORSED
RUTLAND - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Rutland Fire
Dept. have endorsed the Me!gs
Local School District operating
levy. This levy will be on the
November 7 ballot. Members
of the organization are encouragt!d to work for and vote
for this levy.

LEVY SUPPORTED
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Fire Dept. has
endorsed the Meigs Local
School District operating levy.
This levy will be on the
November 7 ballot. Members
of the organization are en·
couraged to work for and vote
for this levy.

Collection ·of
Fashions For You
lOlA'S
Shop .
Pomeroy
CuMPARE OUR PRICES

Dre~s

, Renrve DlslrlctNo. t
state No. 2Z4.X
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDtr):ON OF

·' ,' l

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, a member of tbe
Federal Reserve System, at the close of business on ~Iober 10, 1972, published
In accordance with a call made by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this dlslrlct
pursoanl to the provisions of tbe Federai Reserve Act.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • - • • - • • • • • • • • • • - • $1,455,586.96
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - • • • • • • - • • 1,600,739.32
Obligations of oth« U.S. Government
: • 303,731.88
agencies and corporations • • • • • • •
1,653,343.38 .
Obligations of States and political subdivisions •
•
• 21,000.00
Othersecurities • • - - - • • • - - - - - - - - • •
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
- • •
• - 700,000.00
under agreements to resell • • • • • •
•
•
• 7,113,002.26
Otherloana - • • • • • - ' - • • - Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
• m,MI.82
other assets representing bank premises • •
- - 1,898.90
Other assets • • • - · • • • • - • • • • • $13,306,944.52
TOTAL ASSETS • • - - • .- - - • • • • •
LIABR.ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
- $3,0I9,527 .60
and corporations - - - • - • • • • • • Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - • • • • - 8,352,659.84
Deposits of United States Government • • • - • • • • • • • $7Z,9I5.37
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - • • • • • • • 616,946.89 ·
Deposits of commercial banks • • - • • • • - • • • • • - - 1,656.63
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • • • - - • - - • • - - 50,744.23
TOTAL DEPOSITS · - • • • • • • • • $12,114,450.56
(a) Total demand deposits - -· - • • • • . $ 3,761,7p!!.72
(b) Total ~ and savings deposits -· - • • • $ 8;352,659.84
,.
Other llablllties • • - - • •· • • • • - • • • • - •
356,961?&amp;
TOTAL UABIUTIES • - • • - - - • - • • • • • • $12,471,418.84
RESERVE ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve lor bad debt losses on loans
$12,021. 'Ill
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - • • • • • • -. - - - - $12.021.79
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • •
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$823,503.89
Equity capite!, total • • • • • • - - - ' - · ., 300,000.00
Common stock-total par value •
• - • •
No shares autblll'ized 12,000
No. shares outstanding 12,000
SUrplus - .. - .. ... .. .. .. ~ •"' ·..
- 400,000.00
..
12,1p,p
Undivided profits - - • • • • • - • •
. . $823,503. 89
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• .. • • $13,3!1'944..£
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • MEMORANDA ·
AVI!l'&amp;ge ol total deposita fiJI' the 15 calendar
daya ending with call date - • ' - - • • ' •• - - ••: • • $1:!,017,1131.93
Avera1e ol toll! loans for !he 15 calendar
.
daya ending with call date • • • • - - • . - • - • - • • • • 8,227,511.52

..

The New

MEIGS
INN
SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. • 2 A.M. ·

The Amber Lounge Opens At .11&amp;00 A.M.

·Lu~CHES ,, .A"".

Open House schedukd 'oct. 29

R
•
L,
1l - .
~i!~e~:~ ~:~~~ ~.·~~tr~~~~ :. io worf(sboll
we_J,f, attend_ed
1:'

•

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992:3629

WSCS election held

that anch.ors should be thin and
airy in former color. Balance
may be- formal or informal.
Stabiles are always attached Ill
an immobile base, They do not
have t;nQving parts." ·
Abstract · arrang~menls
which will be featured In
another , class are the ex·
pression in pure design the
arranger's ideas and, feelings
using plant material in an
unnatural, wirealistic or' abstracted way.. The chairmen
repOrt that no one unit is more
important than another in the
design with more than on~
center of interest. Removed
from nature, materials !lfe
used for the quality they alone
,, possess, not necessarily as a
Oower or leaf.
·
The chairmen explain that
there _are varying degrees of
abstraction. They may be
·abstracted as a fr~k of nature,
something an artist has done to
alter material, or abstracted
byplacement.lt is advised that
materials ·.not be abstracted
just for the sake of abstraction.
It is not a traditional design

oc•·

TO 2 P.M., DINNIRS s TO 10 P~.

l Buffet
Luncheon
-11 :00 to 1:30.
Monday lhru Saturday) ·
.
.
/

~7. GUEST ROOMS ·- NEW,
BY DAY OR wEEK
. - MODERN,·
.
-PARTY AND_BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION

l

5- The SUnday Times. Stnttnel,Swxlay. Oc.i. 22, 1971

.
·
.
d
name

following the service.
ll was, reported that pecans
to be sold ~&lt;ill soon be
available. A gift has been sent
to Mrs. Nancy Reed, a patient
at the Hol~r Medical Center.
Members worked on church
banners at the conclusion of the
meeting.
Preceding . the meeting a
luncheon was served by Mrs.
Charles Gibbs, Miss Marie
Bichman, Mrs, Paul Chapman,
Mrs. James Bailey, Mrs.
Everett Hayes, and Mrs.
Kenneth Affisbary. Acake was
presented lo Mrs. J. E. D.
Hartinger in observance of her
birthday anniversary. Mrs.
Everett Hayes presented·
devotions using excerpts from
Proverbs apropos to the limes.

•.

.

•.

The stabile, they say ts
defined in the handbook as
follows : "Sculptured form s
suspended in air, yet anchored
from below. They remain
motionless an.d sllll , yet are not ·
sialic, but look as il they coUld
walk, take off in flight or move
in some direction. It. is a
composition portraying ·
arrested, imminent or implied
motion . 'The· base stem or
pedestal is a pari of the design.

Committee
POMEROY .- Mrs . Ted
Reed, Mrs. · Frank Seth and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary were
appointed to a committee
which will work with the youth
of the church and assist in their
activity plans and with any
problems during a meeting
Thursday of the Episcopal
Church Women at Grace
Church.
Mrs. Harry Moore presided
at the business meeting d~ring
which time sewing for the
Cincinnati Children's Hospital
was discussed. Plans were also
noted for the observance of
World Community Day
sponsored by Church Women
United of Meigs County on Nov.
3 at Grace Church. The host
church women will serve a tea

'

.,

,,

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cash!«, of the above-named bank do hereby declare,
that thll report of condltlmls true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·,
Rae• W.ll)'sell
We, the undntgned directora, attest the ccrrectneu of Ilia report of
condition and declare that it haa been examined by ua and to the beat ol our
~ knowledp IIIII bellif II tnut-11111-1.
ftnbre T. Reed, Jr.
Fred R. ClneJ, Jr. - Dlncton ·
R.C.Follrod

he•• ],

'

..

POJifEROY·- Al-e Randy Becker has returned to his duty .
stalion after spending a three week leave here with relatives.
·Upon n;turnlng to his base at Lajes Field, Azores, Portugal, he
willhaveanewaddresswhichiBAI-cRandy B. Becker, PSC Box
159, APO, New York, 09406.
·
. $-Sgt. and Mrs. WUUam M. Ohlinger and family are spending
a leave wi~ his· family, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger in
Pomeroy. They wlll be going to Sou)h Dalrote on Nov,, a.

APPLE GROVE, Ohio - The
Apple G•ove United Methodist
Wom": s Society of Christian
Service mel at the church
Tuesday evening.
·•
Inslallation of officers was
held witil Mrs. Eleen Buck as
installing officer. The song, .
"l'U Live for Him" was played
with Mrs. Florence Smith at
the piano as officers took their
plaee at the altar. Candles
were
used to light the sanc.
.

FOJJRTEEN MEJifBERS of XrGiunma Mu Chapter of the
Beta Sigina Phi Sorority li\lt!~!ded the Mountaineer Dinner
Theater near Wlilfleld, W, Va., Thursday night. Following dinner, they saw the cm:rent play, "Butterflies Are Free".

tuary as Mrs. Buck led the
service.
Installed were Mrs. Dallas
Hill, president; Mrs: Herschel
Norris, vice president; Mrs.

ANOT!IER WEEK OF ''holidays" coming up.
Banks, the courthouse, post offices and so on will be closed
ali day Monday due to the official observance of Veterans Day.
This observance was set by Congress. H you know why the
holiday was set for the month of October, you're fortunate. There
must have been a reason. . ·
0!1. Thursday at noon achooll of the Meigs Local School
District will close aDd that evening teachers wiD ~ In their
classrooms to confer with parents who visit ·from .7 to 9:30p.m.
'I'IlLq iS the second such conference night held In the di.strict,"The
first, last month, was a smashing success and school ad·
minlltrators and teachers are hoping fiJI' even a greater response
'from parents this time.
·
·
On Friday, all schools ol Meigs County will close so that
teachers can attend the Southeastern Ohio Teachers' Assn.
meeting which, this year,ls being held at Rio Grande College, a
SWitch from Athens.
.
TEEN DANCERS OF THE Big Bend Minstrel Association's
"Fall Follies" will meet at 7 p.m. ort Monday and Wednesday
next week at tht Pomeroy Elementary School while soloists for
the show will meet at 7p.m. on Tuesday In the music room of the
school.
Audiences should be pleaaed with a tiny pony chorus line
made up of fourth graders of the Pomeroy Elementery School.
With five weeks remaining before the show on Nov. 24 at Meigs
High School, the line has Its routine down pat. Made up of real
workers the line Is composed of Unda Eason, Linda Kovalchik,
Kenda Braun, Lori Rupe, Andrea JUggs, Sue 'l'aylor, Beth Perrin
and Jayne Hoeflich. The group will be among those who will ·
appear on the program of the annual dinner meeting of the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation Unit to be held at the Salisbury
School on Nov. 9.

minor adjustments, of cour·

Another world in
artist's workshop
By Wilma R. Brown
GALLIPOLIS - Walking
into the artist-in-residence's
workshop_ ih Washington
School is walking into another
world. Those of us who have no
talent at all are really in awe.
There sits a loom, spinning.
wheel and all types of yarn,
plus clay ready to be molded
into every imaginable design.

se! )?

The walls are covered with
wall hangings, the loom has
material being woven and on
tile shelves are all the in·
terestin g tools of several
trades . On one shelf were small
looms which children are
making; one is made o£ popside sticks. Did you know you
can wind thread on your
portable mixer (with a few

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD WALKER, New Haven, traveled
to Fairland for the Fairland-Malcolm Springs football game at
Ona, W. Va., to watch their grandson, CUrry Haggerty, a
member of the Malcohn Springs team play. Curry is also the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Haggerty of Middleport.
·
Besides the Walkers, Curry also had his own ch\lCI'Ing section
In Susan Wald, Tom Ham~her and Glen Ferguson of New Haven.
Curry made all three of the Malcolm Springs TO's but his team
did lose. Curry Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Haggerty of
M,llton, formerly of New Haven. Jim was a forme_r Middleport
High School football great.
.

I

.

.

.

• OUT EASTERN mGH SCHOOL way, the Band Bo.Sters are
,sponsoring a membership contest among band siudents, Band
Bo&lt;lste,rs are asking tha! the publlc get behind the contest as a
way of expressing that they are aware of the good in today's
young people. Barid Boosters look upon band participation as a
step towerds becoming good .citlzens.

'

Fall Festival in ·November
SALEM CENTER -

treasurer ; Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
spiritual growth; Mrs. Robert
Rhodes, missionary education;
Mrs. Robert Smith, mem·
bership; Mrs. Arnold Hupp; .
chairman of tile nominating
committee, and Mrs. Bertha
Robinson, Christian Social
Relations .
Mrs. Buck read a poem, "My
Need" with the closing hymn,
"Take My
and Let It·Be".
The business meeling was in
charge of Mrs. Dallas Hill.

Life

Presbyte,- is

opposing Ohio
tax repeal

PORTSMOUTH - Sirong
opposition to repeal of Ohio's
state income tax was voiced by
the General Council of Scioto
Presbytery meeting Thursday
night in Portsmouth.
Moder a tor Janies Sherman
Porter, Gallipolis, said the !()..
person General Council
· unanimously passed . a
resolution on behalf of Scioto
Presbyte~y
condemning
current efforts to repeal the
tax , and urging Presbyterians
lo "VOTE NO ON ISSUE
TWO."
Porter, an early advocate of
a state income tax, said that
the General Council was ad·
dressed by B. I. Griffith
representing ·tile Council on
Public Education of the United
Presbyterian Church,
Woodmere, Ohio. Mr. Griffith
spoke on
CAPE attitude,
~ while Porter added his own
~ feelings on the subject.

The

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes rn

TESTING COMPlETED -

GalllpoUs City Health
Nurses have completed a tuberculin skin testing progrmnln
the district's four elementary buildings and at Gallia
Academy High School. Wesley Mullins, a first grade student,
gets "the needle" from Mrs, Jean Clark. Other nurses ad·
ministering t.ests were Mrs. Polly Wetherholt and Mrs.
Jeanine Cunnmgham.

The Salem Center PTA wlll sponsor
a fall festival on Nov. ·4
beginning at 7. p.m. at the
LONDON (UPI ) - The ct'rug in Britain, to "face up to
school. Games will Include
plight
or hundreds of deformed their moral responsibilities ''
darts, basketball throw, fish
pond, wheel of chance, jail, children born In Britain during towards the children.
The move followed a series of
other games. There will be a the Thalidomide scare a
'sweet shop, candy store, a decade ago came back to haunt articles in a London newspaper
and a telev.ision program
pocket lady, fortune teller and the nation Saturday.
A
!Jlember
of
parliament
publicizing the children's
a surprise package booth. Bob·.
introduced
a
motion
Friday
in
plight. The artlcles said most
Swick wlll serve as auctioneer
-the.
House
of
Conunons
calling
of
tile 430 deformed children
for an auction.
THE SECRETRAF
Rooms have chosen can· on Distillers (Biochemicals whose mothers said they took
PRUNii ENERGY DIET
didates for prince tnd princess Ltd.;) which distributed the the West German-&lt;leveloped
LOS ANGELES tSpociall sedative during pregnancy
and king and queen, Nominees
Tht most imporrant sou ret of
have yet to receive com.
htahh ~i"ing food kno.,•n ro
from the first, second and third
m.n. V1ramin A, Thiamin, R.i .
pensation from the firm.
gradeS for prince and prlneess
DINNER SET
bonaVin. Niacin, Iron. I oor.;.
are Jeff Gilkey, Terina
di&amp;eslible for all •8••- Thi• RAf
POINT ROCK - The
Plan works for mtn, women
Johnston, first; Steven Games, ChrisUan Church at Point Rock
childreon witho\.11 piiiJ. drugs or
Tammy Ward, second, and will hold !Ia annual dinner on
rKrcise.
Curtiss Smith and Karen Saturday, Oct. 28, beginning at
ID L..t.I•10Der•
Barrett, third grade. The king 5 p.m. The church ls loc~ted on
Thosr who follow the simpleplan C"r.acrly as direcrtJ. reporr a
and queen nominees are John Route 689, midway between
loi• of 10 pounJ• in 10 Jap,
Van Meter, Sheila Fetty, fourth Albany and Wilkesv.ille. A
startinJ from the Ja~· rhey btgin
grade;
David Thornton, Anna freewill offering will be ac·
rht dit'r. Thrrr is usualiJ' no
weis:hrlos~Jor rhe first 4 I)' S,
Bryant, fifth, and Gary cepted with proceeds to go to ·
bur su~t.lcnh• on tht 'th Jay )'OU
Holliday and Clnda Davis, the building fund. A basement
can txptcr ro drop 11 much as 5
sixth.
pounds, anJ concinue' ro lose
for the church is being·planned.
about a pound ada}' up until the
The public Is Invited to at· The public is invited (() attend
lOth day. Th~reaf(tr, !'ou'lllose a
tend the carnival.
the dinner.
·
pound anJ 1 htJf C'VC'f)' (\1'0 Ja}' l '

Thalidomide to haunt England

PRUNE
·ENERGY

DIET

Mrs . Earl Carter of
Wapakoneta is visiting here
with her sister, Mrs. Ellen
·Wilson and other relatives.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Seth F. Nicholson, Route
I, Rutland, were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Chase of Groveport, Mr.
· and Mrs. Kennard Forrest,
Columbus; and Mrs . Max
Smith of Knoxville, Tenn., all
· former residents of western
Meigs (;oun ty.
·
Guests of Mrs. Roy
Winebrenner Sunday were Mr.
and Mrs. Garry French and
son, Colwnbus; Mrs. Harold
Weaver.and Michael,' St. Louts.
ville, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs .
Wllliam Gordon Winebrenner,
Paula, Mary Ann and Becky,
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Weaver,
and Mrs. William Houdashelt
and Marie, local.
Miss Elizabeth Merritt Is
visiting in Chesapeake with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Day and
Connie, and in Milton, W. Va.
with other relatives .

notJeri

Betty
RDse.

tlie

A HOME EYE TEST KIT enabling parents to do a vision
screening of their pre-schoolers at home is now available free of
charge from the National Society for the Prevention of Blind·
ness. Simple Instructions are Included. Just write NSPB Home
Eye Test, 79MadisonAve.,NewYork,N. Y.,l0016.
MRS. CHLORUS GRIMM, who retired after 32 years of
teaching, was honored Thursday night when the Southern Local
School District Education Assn. met at the high school in Racine.
Each teacher presented some outstanding recollection ol
Mrs. Grlnun, or a humorous event and the president of the
association, Mrs. Dele McClurg, on behalf ol the group presented
Mrs. Grlnun a gift. A hlghllght of tbe program was the com·
menta of Jim Adam8, pi-lncipal ol Southern High Scbool, and a
former student of Mrs. Grlnun.

The day I arrived, Kati
Meek had just stepped out. In
walked two junior high girls;
one, Kim Saunders, proceeded
to explain the workings of all
the material and machines. It
was quite obvious Kim has
been there before. She told me
she is making her own loom.
She bubbled with enthuasiasm.
Kati appeared; looking like
one of her students. She is a
tiny lady with a large talent.
Since Kim had explained the
shop we discussed the ParentChild workshop Kati is
holding at Riverby Sunday,
Oct. 29 al2 p.m. This workshop
is open to the public and is free .
If you don 'I have a child,
borrow one and spend the
afternoon learning to spin and
getting to know this delightful
lady.
You also have the op·
portunity to visit the shop in the
old kindergarten room In the
old building at Washington
School. Every Saturday Kall
is there, eager to meet tile
parents of interested children .
Don't forget, learn to spin with
your child, Sunday, Oct. 29,
from 2 to 4 at Riverby located
on First Ave., next to the old
Holzer Medical Center.

The birthdays of Mrs. Jame.
Hupp, 'Mrs. Dallas HJU · Mrs.;.,
Alex Wheeler and Mrs,
Smith were celebrated durin&amp;
the mon·th of October.
Meetings wlll be held
Monday and Thursday nights
to sew carpet rags.
Mrs . Hill closed the service
by repeating the Lord's Prayer
'" · unison . Others attending
were Mrs. Shirley ·Ables and
Vicki Ables. . .

p••----------------..

Dorsey Parsons, secretary ..

KATIE MEEK at her loom

More napkins were 'ordered as
riwney-inaking project. Mrs.
Linda Dee! attended . the
meeting and plans were made
to have a hQuseware party at
the Letart Falls Community .
building with Mrs . Dee! as
demonstrator Nov. 16 at 7:30
o'clock.
The family dinner sponsored
by the WSCS w1ll be held Nov. 4
at the [..etart Community Hall
to start at 6 o'clock.

JJ.

look of

••

OLD ENGLISH TWEED

CUDDLING BANNED •
CLACTON, England (UP!)
- J{eadmaster Ralph Smith
has banned boys and girls at
Claclon County high school
from kissing, cuddling and
holding hands together while
wearing the school onlform ,
"It's ridiculous," said one Illyear-old student. "It seems we
are old enough to get married
but not to hold hands.
"I don't see why we should
behave like strangers just
because we are wearing our
uniforms."

... 'but marvelou&amp;ly modern In light-yet-warm Verona
polyester double knit I The tailored woman's delight, 11'1
styled with easy raglan sleeves end back wit. Fun-frH ·
because It's machine weshable end Zepel treated tu Iough
et rain and stains. Grey, for misses.

ONE OF OUR MANY STYLES BY BErrY ROSE

$6000,
BAHR CLOTHIERS
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

LET'S GET·TOGETHERVIII dleptay of
mwchandlat • , . ~~~-•
lflfllllllllls from ~II OYtr ·

5H _oUr

tilt'

nation

groupod

1ugtllltr at- location lor

v••r

The University of Montreal
Is the I a r g est French-language university ' o~tsi!le or
France.

siiOIIIIllll
conveniiiiCtl T1kt acl¥ani~tt
of tilt m1ny lflt(lll nluea
. S.ktrl offtr:.

THEI! NfYEt,WA5 , . lfiJtt liM! TO I!AUU lUXURY AND UAUTY

1

LADI~S

BOOTS FOR THE

IN ftN£ u'Hotsrmp •u•~o~•iuu n FI.,EXSTEEI~.

.

.;....,,.
a..ll.., fi!IMI-.

By

unril rou rc--.ch your
wriPtr.

fOOds like urd, thickm, Iohner.
AnJ you ,·ill continue ti.&gt; l\liC'
wight. Full l"'pne~· back ~uaran·
USC' o( prpntl u prr·

Kribtd b~· ftat plan, will. rhruu~~:h
nacu.nl•ttlon, acno help ~· our

bcklr rtlnH c~teu far anJ boJ~·
.8..... tllow\03-IOU-"'-krcp_f.OUL _

,...

weiJ;Iu dow" and fi&amp;utt in firm

coauul.
.

,.~.

To ceca topr of rhis highlu
IUCtmf•lllAF Plan onJ IIIM&lt;'f·
rd "'"""" ~end 1~.00 10 CI\Lif.
P.UNE ASS'N., 1224 Mrl·
rott A"#taut~ Ws Anp:lts. (alit'.
~Nail 12.00

cuh. chock"'

M.O. No COO ol&lt;,...

n.PP..~.!
..

pr~lpcor

.., AIMett All T•• W••t
Better y~t. you r•n nill C'lt
tlmost as much u you "'anr oi

....The

Hush

Black or Brown leather
and .Brushed Pig Skin

EAGLES ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
'
· . "!!lits Aerie No. 2171 frlltrnal
Order of Eogles,
Pllmtf9y, Olllo; will etltllrolt lb Thir1y-Eighlh An•
niYtrHr-t Sttuntay, Oc- 21 ohd Sunday, Oc~r 22 •.

· 9/8 HEEL

. 1972.

SATURDAY,. OCTOBER 21st

11:DIA.M.- Clullop..,i . ,
l:M P~M-=1!-IHIII l'r-t ~ .
10: ...Till- ~net (LIYI Muslcl

SUNDAY, OCTOIER.22nd ·

II :II A.M.- Clull O!itns
4:10P.M.- Frtt Cllkktft Dinner
.
S:ot· t:ll- ~net (Live Mustd
· WELCOME
WELCOME
. WELCOME
The Offlcon of Meigs Aerlt No. 2171 welcomes all
Elgie Mitmbtrs, Families, 1nd Guests to , jol~ t~en'l In
celellratfng our Thirty-Eighth Anniversary.
,

..

THE SHOE -BOX .-

-AKER ·F.URNITUR
MIDDLEPORT

Wllwe Sllotl Arw ......., Priced I

.

MIDDI.EPollt, O.

·,

·

The Home of Fine Funilshln i

�t -Tilt I . 3 ;

n...s

...

'be!, 8w "', Oc.i. a, 1m

Show dates are sel

Katie's Korner
By .Katie Crow
'

J'()MERO'I:; - The meeting schedulfd tor Monday night to
IIIIIH fllllil plaiu! for the Syt'acuse Halloween party hall been
c:blnCed to Monday at 2:30 p.m.at Syracuse Grade Schoo).
·
'lblil iar total of over $200 has been received. Mrs. Robert
(Emma ~filii) Holstein has worked dlligenlly solictllng the town
for contributions.
·

a

MEIGS HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, Charles Chancey, used
to kid me and call me an irate mother. Now I am (for real) an
Irate citizen. ·
'
1'1" reu111 is ovel' Veterans Day. Veterans Day (Annistice
Dey, u ~know til!&amp; Nov. 11 ~nd no one can change Illy niind.
1can well reinember ala child my father, who long ago left
this world, ~ at attention ilo maller where he was at II
a.m. on .NOV.ll, with tears streamlng down his face.
·
He iras a veterall ol World War I who saw ·an!l went throUgh
·- ~lble ordeall ,ln Fl'811Ce flgliting for his country. He was
awarde!l the blghe8t medal given by the government of France,
the "Crail: De Guerrier" for bravery beyond the eall of duty.
Nov. 11 waa declMed Al:mistice Day In 1919 aJI(I remained
rArmistice Day until changed to Veterans day just a few years
ago.
My husband gave his all in the second World War living in the
jungles of the South Pacific for two and one-half years and
contracted a lrllj&gt;ical ~aae that piagues him to this day. I also
lost a very dear cOUiin In the second W~rld War. These are just
three incidents (mine) and there are thousands of such that could
be relayed; for biatance, ~dgar Vanlnwagen who survived the
Bataan death march·
Nov, 11 waaset aside for the honorable men who fought and
died for our country, Changing the date of such a historical
moment was .in bad taste but tO change the month is almost
beyond belief.
Personally I don't Intend to recognize Monday as Veterans
Day. Tome it is just plain old Oct. 23,andalwayswill be.
MRS. AND MRS. ROY BUCK, Early Roush, Mrs. Cora Buck
and Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Buc;k, aU of Racine, Rt. 2, have really
j)een enjoying the fall weather. They traveled 1,540 miles
recently In the slate of West Virginia going to Elkins where as
Mrs. Coca-Buck slated the trees looked llkea huge bouquet. The
trees were a sight to behold.
·
Fall is truly beautiful season of the year.

a

POMEROY - " It Happens
Every Chrislmas" will be the
tilelll(l of the annual holiday
. flower show to be staged at the
Pomeroy Elementary building
on Dec. 2 and 3. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter · and · Mrs. Horner
Parker are ca&lt;hairmen for
the show.
The chairmen ~nnounce that
the.show will follow the Ohio
Association -of Garden- Club
rules as stated ' in the 1971
edition of the Exhibitors and
Judges Handboo~ . They report
tl)at th~ show will feature a
class not formerly appearing in
a show here- the stabiiP. ·

It may be free-sianding or
three sided, but must have
depth. The dominance of
weight is at the top but the line

';i;i~::::::::;:::::::::::::~::~::::::-:::-t.!:~::::::::.;.:::i:::;:=::-;:::::::~:::~:::::~:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,
I '

I

•'

Social Calendar

Founders honored ANNUA~ND:;LIGJous MEIGSTU~o~~;
POMEROY - The 25th
-anniversary of Alpha Delta
Kappa was celebrated with a
candlelight ceremony at a
recent meeting of Alpha Epsilon Chapter held at the home
of Mrs. Eileen Buck.
Participating in the founder's day program conducted
by Mrs. Maxine Wingett were
Mrs. Bernice Hoffman, Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee, Mrs .. Lucllle
Swackhamer, and Mrs. Edna
Price. Mrs. Jean Alkire,
program chalrman,lnlroduced
~s. Wingett.
""
,
, Committees -'appointed
,during the meeling were Mrs.
iAJklre and Mrs. Hoffman; Mrs.
Murlene Fisher, Mrs. Ida
Diehl, Mrs . Leah Ord,
altruistic; Mrs. Buck, Mrs.
Ann Welsh, Mrs. Blakeslee,
publicity; Mrs. Alkire, Miss

Helen Smith, telephone;- Mrs.
Ferne Gaul, Mrs. Ruth Stern,
and Mrs. Frances Roberts,
ways and means; · Mrs.
Wingett, Mrs. June Lee, Mrs.
Goldie Story, pledge of
membership.
A report was given on the
South-!i:astem Central District
meeting held at Chillicothe
which was attended by Miss
Smith, Mrs. Swackhamer •
Mrs. Nonga Roberts and Mrs.
Alkire.
Miss Smith, president,
reported .on th~~hllghts ot
the State Presiaii~l1s Council
and lhe State convention at
Columbus.Mrs. Swackhamer, chaplain,
read poems, "Slow Me Up,
Lord/' and "An Autumn

Prayer.'' Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Buck.
•

·Terrie Miller ·honored
RUTLAND - Miss Nina
Stiles, Mrs. Betty Teaford and
Mrs. Bessie Oliver entertained
Monday night at the Rutland
United Methodist Church with
.a bridal shower hon~r_ing Miss
Terrie Mlller, bride-elect of
Mr. Delbert Teaford, Jr.
Games were played with
prize~ going to Mrs. Barbara
Fry, Mrs. Arthur Miller, and
Mrs. Elsie Sutherland. The
door prize went to Miss Brenda
Sayre.
. · The gift table was centered
willl a bride replica and the
ref~11hment table featured

.Birthday party
was a surprise
MIDDLEPORT - - Mrs .
Robert&amp; Maynard was surprised recently with a birthday
party at her home.
She was presented birthday
cakes by her daughter, Mrs.
Ann Zirkle, and her son, Paul.
Ice cream and soft drinks were
served with the cakes. Gifts
were presented to her by her
~hlldren and grandchildren
and she also received a gift
from her mother, Mrs. Vina
Preece of Inez, Ky. A call of
congratulations was also
received from her sister, Mrs.
~Y Allen of Inez.
Attending the party were Mr.
and Mra. Rusaell Maynard and
Ssinantha; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Maynard, Point Pleaaant, and
Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle,

l='"'"""'•.
IGlrden Clall will-Them,et

CWBTOMEBT

POMEROY

Wildwood
at 7:30
PJD. Jl..m'ayat-tbe home 0!
1 Mn, Fred N - with Mrs.
llavld Nease aa asal1tlng

Affirmation Day, 2 p.m.
Su~day at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal. Arch
Masons. Speaker and program
by Job's D~ughters and
DeMolay. Refreshments.
DESCENDANTS of Allen
and Mary Eblin will have a'
reunion Sunday at the west
roadside park on Route 33,
three miles north of Pomeroy.
A basket dinner will be held at
1 p. m.
MONDAY
IZAAK WALTON Monday ·at
club h~use,' 7 p.m. · · ·
THE SUNBONNET Junior
Garden Club- Monday 3 p.m.
home of Elaine Barnhart.
Everyone to bring grocery
sack and cutters.
BEND 0' The River Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday home
of Mrs . Edward Simpson,
Racine, with Mrs. Clifford
Morris, co-hostess. New
program books lor year to be
distributed.

Rock Snring.·"

white ' wedding bells. Cake, .
0
mints, coffee and cola were
'I:"
serve&lt;!.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs . Candy
By Mrs. Opha Offutt
Brothers, Mrs.
Gladys · Mark Tannehill attended the
Brothers, Mrs. Ruth Ann World Series game in CinGraham, Mrs ..' Bessie Oliver, cinnali with his father, Chet
Ruth Ann and Sue Ellen Fry, Tannehlll, on Sunday.
Mrs . Matty Teaford, Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
Betty Teaford, Mrs. H. attended', the celebration at the
Erlewine, Miss Brenda Sayre, Bob Jones Farm, Gallipolla on
Mrs. Ed Stiles, Mrs. Helen Ssaturday and Sunday. While
Milhoan, Mrs. Sharon Kincaid, In Gallltiolls they visited their
Mrs. Marge Schoonover, Mrlt. son, Roger Hines and family .
Homer Parker, Mrs. Bruce
Sunday dinner guests at the
May, Mrs. Thelma Walters and home of Mrs. Grace Glaze in
Mrs. Fannie Miller. ·
Middleport were Mr. and Mrs.
Others presenting gifts to William Radford.
Miss Miller were Mrs. Mildred
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Betzlng and Jan, Mrs. Merle Mrs. Leonard Lyons were Mr.
Johnson and Mona, Mrs. Jessie and Mrs. Ralph Fruth ·of
Reeves, Mrs. Wanda Eblin, Mason, W. Va .
Mr, and Mrs. Ernie Wells, Miss . Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt
Becky Eblin, Mrs. Herman were Sunday afternoon vlsiWrs
Grate, Mrs . .:\vis Bailey, Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Offutt of
Kay Platter, Mrs. Susie Car- - Long Bottom. The elder Mr.
penter, and an uncle of the Offutt flew to Alabama on
bride-elect, Grover Oliver.
Monday where he will spend a

News Notes

i:

Churc::·
Women United , planning
meeting for World Community
Day, I p.m. Tuesday at Grace
Episcopal Church. Key women
of churches urged to attend.
World Community Day will be
observed on Nov. 3 at Grace
Church. Mrs. Campbell Harper
is president.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at hall. Mrs.
Russell Moore, education ·and
scholarship chairman in
charge of program.
•
PAST MA'FRONS, Pomeroy
Chapter . 186, OES, Tuesday
evening, home of Mrs.Norma
Parker.
SOUTHERN
BAND
Boosters, 7p.m. Tuesday at the
high schooL All members
asked to attend.
WEDNESDAY
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knight Templars,
staled conclave, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy .Masonic
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. All Sir Knights requested
to wear their uniforms.
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, United Methodist
Church.

week.
Mrs. James Weber of Mid·
dleporl and Mrs. Opha Offut~
visited on Monday with Mr.
and Mr~ . John Sayre of
Gallipillls.
A delicious ·turkey dinner
was enjoyed on Sunday in
honor of Mr. Kenneth Grover,
Chester in observance of his
birthday. The hostess was his
mother, Mrs. Belva Sloan .
Guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Grover and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sloan and family, Ehner and
Noah Haskins, Middleport,
Eddie .Young, Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Lambert and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Opha
· Offutt, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Hines, Danny Abbott and Keith
Whaley.
Mr . Charles Woode of

CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe, Chester, will ceiebrate their golden wedding '
anniversary with an open house at the Chester fire house on Sunday, Oct. 29 from 1 to 5 p.m.
Married on Nov. 1, 1922, the couple ·are the parents of five chUdren, Uoyd of Akron, Mrs:
Marl~ne Thom)l80n of Columbus, Howard of Belpre, Mrs. Donna Van Meter of Granville, and
. Mrs. Nara Hartman, Chester. They have nine grandchildren ard one great-grandchild.
Relative and friends are invited.
"
·
1

men advise. Some material
may be abstracted but all does
not have to be. Materials are
non-representational and do
not always relate to
something that grows.
Howe.ver, abstracted material
is the foremost characteristic
in an abstract design, ·Mrs.
Carpenter and Mrs. Parker
explam.
COCKER MUST LEAVE
CANBERRA (UPI)- Immi·
gralion Minister Alexander
Forbes announced today that
Australia has decided to deport
British pop star Joe Cocker and
six members of his group
unless Ihey leave willingly.
They were fined Tuesday on
drugs charges.
Forbes said he signed the
deportation order after considering the court!ierdict. He
said unless the seven left
Australia voluntarily, authori·
ties would expel them forcibly.
"I have done this tecause
this government takes a very
serious view of such offenses,"
Forbes said. "This is especially
so when the offenses are
committed by persons who are
in a position to have a profound
influence on many young
Australians.,,

POMEROY- Meigs County
United Methodist Churches
were well represented at the
Athens District fall workshop
Wednesday at Camp Francis
Asbury, Rio Grande.
· Mrs . Beulah Ballard
presided at the workshop with
Mrs. Marjorie Coakley as the
song leader. Goal sheets were
distributed outlining the
program for the year, and at
the morning session the ap,.
p~oximately 8&amp; women were
divided· into responsibility
groups for discussion and in·
struction.
Speaker was the Rev. Paul.

tUITION RAISI':D
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
(UP! ) - An increase of $65 a
semester for tuition, room and
board at Muskingum College
here has been approved by the ·
school's board of trustees.
Chesler, father of Mrs. Willard
Hines, was admilled to
Velerans Memorial Hospital on
Monday following a possible
stroke at his home.
,.

NATIONAL
FLOWER

WEEK
da'l thi'U ~~
su~ .tt"O
Ot-tll"rta 'Y

· :te,
SPECIAL ·

Cymbidium Orchid
Floating In A

BRANDY SNIFTER
Only

2.49

1

Dudley's Florist
Strvlng: Golllpolll.
Pomeroy, Midd Itport, 0.
&amp; Moson Co., W. Yo.

Hawks, director of evangelism
in the Athens District and
pastor of· the Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis.
His topic was "Key 73" and
pertained to evangelism of the
world which he said will
depend on commilments of
pastors and laymen who are
willing to invest their talents
and themselves. l{e listed the
six phases involved as a calling
to repentance and prayer, to
the world of God, to the
resurrection, to the new life, to
the proclamation, and to total
corrunitment.
There was group singing of

. familiar choruses and hymns.
Among those attending were
Mrs. Helen Teaford, Mrs.
Grace Weese, Miss Marcia
Karr ,
Mrs.
Margaret
Eichinger, ·Mrs. Christina
Grimm, and Mrs. Linda
Ferrell of the Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse;
Mrs. Mabel Shields, Mrs. Hazel
Fox, Mrs. Barbara Dugan and
Mrs. Ferne B. Hayman of !he
East Letart Church; and Mrs.
Frank Cheesebrew, wife of the
senior pastor of the Racine·
Letart area churches.
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
We' ve Put Together A
stunning

LEVY ENDORSED
RUTLAND - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Rutland Fire
Dept. have endorsed the Me!gs
Local School District operating
levy. This levy will be on the
November 7 ballot. Members
of the organization are encouragt!d to work for and vote
for this levy.

LEVY SUPPORTED
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Fire Dept. has
endorsed the Meigs Local
School District operating levy.
This levy will be on the
November 7 ballot. Members
of the organization are en·
couraged to work for and vote
for this levy.

Collection ·of
Fashions For You
lOlA'S
Shop .
Pomeroy
CuMPARE OUR PRICES

Dre~s

, Renrve DlslrlctNo. t
state No. 2Z4.X
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDtr):ON OF

·' ,' l

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, a member of tbe
Federal Reserve System, at the close of business on ~Iober 10, 1972, published
In accordance with a call made by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this dlslrlct
pursoanl to the provisions of tbe Federai Reserve Act.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • - • • - • • • • • • • • • • - • $1,455,586.96
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - • • • • • • - • • 1,600,739.32
Obligations of oth« U.S. Government
: • 303,731.88
agencies and corporations • • • • • • •
1,653,343.38 .
Obligations of States and political subdivisions •
•
• 21,000.00
Othersecurities • • - - - • • • - - - - - - - - • •
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
- • •
• - 700,000.00
under agreements to resell • • • • • •
•
•
• 7,113,002.26
Otherloana - • • • • • - ' - • • - Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
• m,MI.82
other assets representing bank premises • •
- - 1,898.90
Other assets • • • - · • • • • - • • • • • $13,306,944.52
TOTAL ASSETS • • - - • .- - - • • • • •
LIABR.ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
- $3,0I9,527 .60
and corporations - - - • - • • • • • • Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - • • • • - 8,352,659.84
Deposits of United States Government • • • - • • • • • • • $7Z,9I5.37
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - • • • • • • • 616,946.89 ·
Deposits of commercial banks • • - • • • • - • • • • • - - 1,656.63
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • • • - - • - - • • - - 50,744.23
TOTAL DEPOSITS · - • • • • • • • • $12,114,450.56
(a) Total demand deposits - -· - • • • • . $ 3,761,7p!!.72
(b) Total ~ and savings deposits -· - • • • $ 8;352,659.84
,.
Other llablllties • • - - • •· • • • • - • • • • - •
356,961?&amp;
TOTAL UABIUTIES • - • • - - - • - • • • • • • $12,471,418.84
RESERVE ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve lor bad debt losses on loans
$12,021. 'Ill
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - • • • • • • -. - - - - $12.021.79
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • •
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$823,503.89
Equity capite!, total • • • • • • - - - ' - · ., 300,000.00
Common stock-total par value •
• - • •
No shares autblll'ized 12,000
No. shares outstanding 12,000
SUrplus - .. - .. ... .. .. .. ~ •"' ·..
- 400,000.00
..
12,1p,p
Undivided profits - - • • • • • - • •
. . $823,503. 89
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
• .. • • $13,3!1'944..£
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • MEMORANDA ·
AVI!l'&amp;ge ol total deposita fiJI' the 15 calendar
daya ending with call date - • ' - - • • ' •• - - ••: • • $1:!,017,1131.93
Avera1e ol toll! loans for !he 15 calendar
.
daya ending with call date • • • • - - • . - • - • - • • • • 8,227,511.52

..

The New

MEIGS
INN
SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. • 2 A.M. ·

The Amber Lounge Opens At .11&amp;00 A.M.

·Lu~CHES ,, .A"".

Open House schedukd 'oct. 29

R
•
L,
1l - .
~i!~e~:~ ~:~~~ ~.·~~tr~~~~ :. io worf(sboll
we_J,f, attend_ed
1:'

•

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992:3629

WSCS election held

that anch.ors should be thin and
airy in former color. Balance
may be- formal or informal.
Stabiles are always attached Ill
an immobile base, They do not
have t;nQving parts." ·
Abstract · arrang~menls
which will be featured In
another , class are the ex·
pression in pure design the
arranger's ideas and, feelings
using plant material in an
unnatural, wirealistic or' abstracted way.. The chairmen
repOrt that no one unit is more
important than another in the
design with more than on~
center of interest. Removed
from nature, materials !lfe
used for the quality they alone
,, possess, not necessarily as a
Oower or leaf.
·
The chairmen explain that
there _are varying degrees of
abstraction. They may be
·abstracted as a fr~k of nature,
something an artist has done to
alter material, or abstracted
byplacement.lt is advised that
materials ·.not be abstracted
just for the sake of abstraction.
It is not a traditional design

oc•·

TO 2 P.M., DINNIRS s TO 10 P~.

l Buffet
Luncheon
-11 :00 to 1:30.
Monday lhru Saturday) ·
.
.
/

~7. GUEST ROOMS ·- NEW,
BY DAY OR wEEK
. - MODERN,·
.
-PARTY AND_BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION

l

5- The SUnday Times. Stnttnel,Swxlay. Oc.i. 22, 1971

.
·
.
d
name

following the service.
ll was, reported that pecans
to be sold ~&lt;ill soon be
available. A gift has been sent
to Mrs. Nancy Reed, a patient
at the Hol~r Medical Center.
Members worked on church
banners at the conclusion of the
meeting.
Preceding . the meeting a
luncheon was served by Mrs.
Charles Gibbs, Miss Marie
Bichman, Mrs, Paul Chapman,
Mrs. James Bailey, Mrs.
Everett Hayes, and Mrs.
Kenneth Affisbary. Acake was
presented lo Mrs. J. E. D.
Hartinger in observance of her
birthday anniversary. Mrs.
Everett Hayes presented·
devotions using excerpts from
Proverbs apropos to the limes.

•.

.

•.

The stabile, they say ts
defined in the handbook as
follows : "Sculptured form s
suspended in air, yet anchored
from below. They remain
motionless an.d sllll , yet are not ·
sialic, but look as il they coUld
walk, take off in flight or move
in some direction. It. is a
composition portraying ·
arrested, imminent or implied
motion . 'The· base stem or
pedestal is a pari of the design.

Committee
POMEROY .- Mrs . Ted
Reed, Mrs. · Frank Seth and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary were
appointed to a committee
which will work with the youth
of the church and assist in their
activity plans and with any
problems during a meeting
Thursday of the Episcopal
Church Women at Grace
Church.
Mrs. Harry Moore presided
at the business meeting d~ring
which time sewing for the
Cincinnati Children's Hospital
was discussed. Plans were also
noted for the observance of
World Community Day
sponsored by Church Women
United of Meigs County on Nov.
3 at Grace Church. The host
church women will serve a tea

'

.,

,,

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cash!«, of the above-named bank do hereby declare,
that thll report of condltlmls true to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·,
Rae• W.ll)'sell
We, the undntgned directora, attest the ccrrectneu of Ilia report of
condition and declare that it haa been examined by ua and to the beat ol our
~ knowledp IIIII bellif II tnut-11111-1.
ftnbre T. Reed, Jr.
Fred R. ClneJ, Jr. - Dlncton ·
R.C.Follrod

he•• ],

'

..

POJifEROY·- Al-e Randy Becker has returned to his duty .
stalion after spending a three week leave here with relatives.
·Upon n;turnlng to his base at Lajes Field, Azores, Portugal, he
willhaveanewaddresswhichiBAI-cRandy B. Becker, PSC Box
159, APO, New York, 09406.
·
. $-Sgt. and Mrs. WUUam M. Ohlinger and family are spending
a leave wi~ his· family, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger in
Pomeroy. They wlll be going to Sou)h Dalrote on Nov,, a.

APPLE GROVE, Ohio - The
Apple G•ove United Methodist
Wom": s Society of Christian
Service mel at the church
Tuesday evening.
·•
Inslallation of officers was
held witil Mrs. Eleen Buck as
installing officer. The song, .
"l'U Live for Him" was played
with Mrs. Florence Smith at
the piano as officers took their
plaee at the altar. Candles
were
used to light the sanc.
.

FOJJRTEEN MEJifBERS of XrGiunma Mu Chapter of the
Beta Sigina Phi Sorority li\lt!~!ded the Mountaineer Dinner
Theater near Wlilfleld, W, Va., Thursday night. Following dinner, they saw the cm:rent play, "Butterflies Are Free".

tuary as Mrs. Buck led the
service.
Installed were Mrs. Dallas
Hill, president; Mrs: Herschel
Norris, vice president; Mrs.

ANOT!IER WEEK OF ''holidays" coming up.
Banks, the courthouse, post offices and so on will be closed
ali day Monday due to the official observance of Veterans Day.
This observance was set by Congress. H you know why the
holiday was set for the month of October, you're fortunate. There
must have been a reason. . ·
0!1. Thursday at noon achooll of the Meigs Local School
District will close aDd that evening teachers wiD ~ In their
classrooms to confer with parents who visit ·from .7 to 9:30p.m.
'I'IlLq iS the second such conference night held In the di.strict,"The
first, last month, was a smashing success and school ad·
minlltrators and teachers are hoping fiJI' even a greater response
'from parents this time.
·
·
On Friday, all schools ol Meigs County will close so that
teachers can attend the Southeastern Ohio Teachers' Assn.
meeting which, this year,ls being held at Rio Grande College, a
SWitch from Athens.
.
TEEN DANCERS OF THE Big Bend Minstrel Association's
"Fall Follies" will meet at 7 p.m. ort Monday and Wednesday
next week at tht Pomeroy Elementary School while soloists for
the show will meet at 7p.m. on Tuesday In the music room of the
school.
Audiences should be pleaaed with a tiny pony chorus line
made up of fourth graders of the Pomeroy Elementery School.
With five weeks remaining before the show on Nov. 24 at Meigs
High School, the line has Its routine down pat. Made up of real
workers the line Is composed of Unda Eason, Linda Kovalchik,
Kenda Braun, Lori Rupe, Andrea JUggs, Sue 'l'aylor, Beth Perrin
and Jayne Hoeflich. The group will be among those who will ·
appear on the program of the annual dinner meeting of the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation Unit to be held at the Salisbury
School on Nov. 9.

minor adjustments, of cour·

Another world in
artist's workshop
By Wilma R. Brown
GALLIPOLIS - Walking
into the artist-in-residence's
workshop_ ih Washington
School is walking into another
world. Those of us who have no
talent at all are really in awe.
There sits a loom, spinning.
wheel and all types of yarn,
plus clay ready to be molded
into every imaginable design.

se! )?

The walls are covered with
wall hangings, the loom has
material being woven and on
tile shelves are all the in·
terestin g tools of several
trades . On one shelf were small
looms which children are
making; one is made o£ popside sticks. Did you know you
can wind thread on your
portable mixer (with a few

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD WALKER, New Haven, traveled
to Fairland for the Fairland-Malcolm Springs football game at
Ona, W. Va., to watch their grandson, CUrry Haggerty, a
member of the Malcohn Springs team play. Curry is also the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Haggerty of Middleport.
·
Besides the Walkers, Curry also had his own ch\lCI'Ing section
In Susan Wald, Tom Ham~her and Glen Ferguson of New Haven.
Curry made all three of the Malcolm Springs TO's but his team
did lose. Curry Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Haggerty of
M,llton, formerly of New Haven. Jim was a forme_r Middleport
High School football great.
.

I

.

.

.

• OUT EASTERN mGH SCHOOL way, the Band Bo.Sters are
,sponsoring a membership contest among band siudents, Band
Bo&lt;lste,rs are asking tha! the publlc get behind the contest as a
way of expressing that they are aware of the good in today's
young people. Barid Boosters look upon band participation as a
step towerds becoming good .citlzens.

'

Fall Festival in ·November
SALEM CENTER -

treasurer ; Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
spiritual growth; Mrs. Robert
Rhodes, missionary education;
Mrs. Robert Smith, mem·
bership; Mrs. Arnold Hupp; .
chairman of tile nominating
committee, and Mrs. Bertha
Robinson, Christian Social
Relations .
Mrs. Buck read a poem, "My
Need" with the closing hymn,
"Take My
and Let It·Be".
The business meeling was in
charge of Mrs. Dallas Hill.

Life

Presbyte,- is

opposing Ohio
tax repeal

PORTSMOUTH - Sirong
opposition to repeal of Ohio's
state income tax was voiced by
the General Council of Scioto
Presbytery meeting Thursday
night in Portsmouth.
Moder a tor Janies Sherman
Porter, Gallipolis, said the !()..
person General Council
· unanimously passed . a
resolution on behalf of Scioto
Presbyte~y
condemning
current efforts to repeal the
tax , and urging Presbyterians
lo "VOTE NO ON ISSUE
TWO."
Porter, an early advocate of
a state income tax, said that
the General Council was ad·
dressed by B. I. Griffith
representing ·tile Council on
Public Education of the United
Presbyterian Church,
Woodmere, Ohio. Mr. Griffith
spoke on
CAPE attitude,
~ while Porter added his own
~ feelings on the subject.

The

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes rn

TESTING COMPlETED -

GalllpoUs City Health
Nurses have completed a tuberculin skin testing progrmnln
the district's four elementary buildings and at Gallia
Academy High School. Wesley Mullins, a first grade student,
gets "the needle" from Mrs, Jean Clark. Other nurses ad·
ministering t.ests were Mrs. Polly Wetherholt and Mrs.
Jeanine Cunnmgham.

The Salem Center PTA wlll sponsor
a fall festival on Nov. ·4
beginning at 7. p.m. at the
LONDON (UPI ) - The ct'rug in Britain, to "face up to
school. Games will Include
plight
or hundreds of deformed their moral responsibilities ''
darts, basketball throw, fish
pond, wheel of chance, jail, children born In Britain during towards the children.
The move followed a series of
other games. There will be a the Thalidomide scare a
'sweet shop, candy store, a decade ago came back to haunt articles in a London newspaper
and a telev.ision program
pocket lady, fortune teller and the nation Saturday.
A
!Jlember
of
parliament
publicizing the children's
a surprise package booth. Bob·.
introduced
a
motion
Friday
in
plight. The artlcles said most
Swick wlll serve as auctioneer
-the.
House
of
Conunons
calling
of
tile 430 deformed children
for an auction.
THE SECRETRAF
Rooms have chosen can· on Distillers (Biochemicals whose mothers said they took
PRUNii ENERGY DIET
didates for prince tnd princess Ltd.;) which distributed the the West German-&lt;leveloped
LOS ANGELES tSpociall sedative during pregnancy
and king and queen, Nominees
Tht most imporrant sou ret of
have yet to receive com.
htahh ~i"ing food kno.,•n ro
from the first, second and third
m.n. V1ramin A, Thiamin, R.i .
pensation from the firm.
gradeS for prince and prlneess
DINNER SET
bonaVin. Niacin, Iron. I oor.;.
are Jeff Gilkey, Terina
di&amp;eslible for all •8••- Thi• RAf
POINT ROCK - The
Plan works for mtn, women
Johnston, first; Steven Games, ChrisUan Church at Point Rock
childreon witho\.11 piiiJ. drugs or
Tammy Ward, second, and will hold !Ia annual dinner on
rKrcise.
Curtiss Smith and Karen Saturday, Oct. 28, beginning at
ID L..t.I•10Der•
Barrett, third grade. The king 5 p.m. The church ls loc~ted on
Thosr who follow the simpleplan C"r.acrly as direcrtJ. reporr a
and queen nominees are John Route 689, midway between
loi• of 10 pounJ• in 10 Jap,
Van Meter, Sheila Fetty, fourth Albany and Wilkesv.ille. A
startinJ from the Ja~· rhey btgin
grade;
David Thornton, Anna freewill offering will be ac·
rht dit'r. Thrrr is usualiJ' no
weis:hrlos~Jor rhe first 4 I)' S,
Bryant, fifth, and Gary cepted with proceeds to go to ·
bur su~t.lcnh• on tht 'th Jay )'OU
Holliday and Clnda Davis, the building fund. A basement
can txptcr ro drop 11 much as 5
sixth.
pounds, anJ concinue' ro lose
for the church is being·planned.
about a pound ada}' up until the
The public Is Invited to at· The public is invited (() attend
lOth day. Th~reaf(tr, !'ou'lllose a
tend the carnival.
the dinner.
·
pound anJ 1 htJf C'VC'f)' (\1'0 Ja}' l '

Thalidomide to haunt England

PRUNE
·ENERGY

DIET

Mrs . Earl Carter of
Wapakoneta is visiting here
with her sister, Mrs. Ellen
·Wilson and other relatives.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Seth F. Nicholson, Route
I, Rutland, were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Chase of Groveport, Mr.
· and Mrs. Kennard Forrest,
Columbus; and Mrs . Max
Smith of Knoxville, Tenn., all
· former residents of western
Meigs (;oun ty.
·
Guests of Mrs. Roy
Winebrenner Sunday were Mr.
and Mrs. Garry French and
son, Colwnbus; Mrs. Harold
Weaver.and Michael,' St. Louts.
ville, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs .
Wllliam Gordon Winebrenner,
Paula, Mary Ann and Becky,
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Weaver,
and Mrs. William Houdashelt
and Marie, local.
Miss Elizabeth Merritt Is
visiting in Chesapeake with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Day and
Connie, and in Milton, W. Va.
with other relatives .

notJeri

Betty
RDse.

tlie

A HOME EYE TEST KIT enabling parents to do a vision
screening of their pre-schoolers at home is now available free of
charge from the National Society for the Prevention of Blind·
ness. Simple Instructions are Included. Just write NSPB Home
Eye Test, 79MadisonAve.,NewYork,N. Y.,l0016.
MRS. CHLORUS GRIMM, who retired after 32 years of
teaching, was honored Thursday night when the Southern Local
School District Education Assn. met at the high school in Racine.
Each teacher presented some outstanding recollection ol
Mrs. Grlnun, or a humorous event and the president of the
association, Mrs. Dele McClurg, on behalf ol the group presented
Mrs. Grlnun a gift. A hlghllght of tbe program was the com·
menta of Jim Adam8, pi-lncipal ol Southern High Scbool, and a
former student of Mrs. Grlnun.

The day I arrived, Kati
Meek had just stepped out. In
walked two junior high girls;
one, Kim Saunders, proceeded
to explain the workings of all
the material and machines. It
was quite obvious Kim has
been there before. She told me
she is making her own loom.
She bubbled with enthuasiasm.
Kati appeared; looking like
one of her students. She is a
tiny lady with a large talent.
Since Kim had explained the
shop we discussed the ParentChild workshop Kati is
holding at Riverby Sunday,
Oct. 29 al2 p.m. This workshop
is open to the public and is free .
If you don 'I have a child,
borrow one and spend the
afternoon learning to spin and
getting to know this delightful
lady.
You also have the op·
portunity to visit the shop in the
old kindergarten room In the
old building at Washington
School. Every Saturday Kall
is there, eager to meet tile
parents of interested children .
Don't forget, learn to spin with
your child, Sunday, Oct. 29,
from 2 to 4 at Riverby located
on First Ave., next to the old
Holzer Medical Center.

The birthdays of Mrs. Jame.
Hupp, 'Mrs. Dallas HJU · Mrs.;.,
Alex Wheeler and Mrs,
Smith were celebrated durin&amp;
the mon·th of October.
Meetings wlll be held
Monday and Thursday nights
to sew carpet rags.
Mrs . Hill closed the service
by repeating the Lord's Prayer
'" · unison . Others attending
were Mrs. Shirley ·Ables and
Vicki Ables. . .

p••----------------..

Dorsey Parsons, secretary ..

KATIE MEEK at her loom

More napkins were 'ordered as
riwney-inaking project. Mrs.
Linda Dee! attended . the
meeting and plans were made
to have a hQuseware party at
the Letart Falls Community .
building with Mrs . Dee! as
demonstrator Nov. 16 at 7:30
o'clock.
The family dinner sponsored
by the WSCS w1ll be held Nov. 4
at the [..etart Community Hall
to start at 6 o'clock.

JJ.

look of

••

OLD ENGLISH TWEED

CUDDLING BANNED •
CLACTON, England (UP!)
- J{eadmaster Ralph Smith
has banned boys and girls at
Claclon County high school
from kissing, cuddling and
holding hands together while
wearing the school onlform ,
"It's ridiculous," said one Illyear-old student. "It seems we
are old enough to get married
but not to hold hands.
"I don't see why we should
behave like strangers just
because we are wearing our
uniforms."

... 'but marvelou&amp;ly modern In light-yet-warm Verona
polyester double knit I The tailored woman's delight, 11'1
styled with easy raglan sleeves end back wit. Fun-frH ·
because It's machine weshable end Zepel treated tu Iough
et rain and stains. Grey, for misses.

ONE OF OUR MANY STYLES BY BErrY ROSE

$6000,
BAHR CLOTHIERS
. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

LET'S GET·TOGETHERVIII dleptay of
mwchandlat • , . ~~~-•
lflfllllllllls from ~II OYtr ·

5H _oUr

tilt'

nation

groupod

1ugtllltr at- location lor

v••r

The University of Montreal
Is the I a r g est French-language university ' o~tsi!le or
France.

siiOIIIIllll
conveniiiiCtl T1kt acl¥ani~tt
of tilt m1ny lflt(lll nluea
. S.ktrl offtr:.

THEI! NfYEt,WA5 , . lfiJtt liM! TO I!AUU lUXURY AND UAUTY

1

LADI~S

BOOTS FOR THE

IN ftN£ u'Hotsrmp •u•~o~•iuu n FI.,EXSTEEI~.

.

.;....,,.
a..ll.., fi!IMI-.

By

unril rou rc--.ch your
wriPtr.

fOOds like urd, thickm, Iohner.
AnJ you ,·ill continue ti.&gt; l\liC'
wight. Full l"'pne~· back ~uaran·
USC' o( prpntl u prr·

Kribtd b~· ftat plan, will. rhruu~~:h
nacu.nl•ttlon, acno help ~· our

bcklr rtlnH c~teu far anJ boJ~·
.8..... tllow\03-IOU-"'-krcp_f.OUL _

,...

weiJ;Iu dow" and fi&amp;utt in firm

coauul.
.

,.~.

To ceca topr of rhis highlu
IUCtmf•lllAF Plan onJ IIIM&lt;'f·
rd "'"""" ~end 1~.00 10 CI\Lif.
P.UNE ASS'N., 1224 Mrl·
rott A"#taut~ Ws Anp:lts. (alit'.
~Nail 12.00

cuh. chock"'

M.O. No COO ol&lt;,...

n.PP..~.!
..

pr~lpcor

.., AIMett All T•• W••t
Better y~t. you r•n nill C'lt
tlmost as much u you "'anr oi

....The

Hush

Black or Brown leather
and .Brushed Pig Skin

EAGLES ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
'
· . "!!lits Aerie No. 2171 frlltrnal
Order of Eogles,
Pllmtf9y, Olllo; will etltllrolt lb Thir1y-Eighlh An•
niYtrHr-t Sttuntay, Oc- 21 ohd Sunday, Oc~r 22 •.

· 9/8 HEEL

. 1972.

SATURDAY,. OCTOBER 21st

11:DIA.M.- Clullop..,i . ,
l:M P~M-=1!-IHIII l'r-t ~ .
10: ...Till- ~net (LIYI Muslcl

SUNDAY, OCTOIER.22nd ·

II :II A.M.- Clull O!itns
4:10P.M.- Frtt Cllkktft Dinner
.
S:ot· t:ll- ~net (Live Mustd
· WELCOME
WELCOME
. WELCOME
The Offlcon of Meigs Aerlt No. 2171 welcomes all
Elgie Mitmbtrs, Families, 1nd Guests to , jol~ t~en'l In
celellratfng our Thirty-Eighth Anniversary.
,

..

THE SHOE -BOX .-

-AKER ·F.URNITUR
MIDDLEPORT

Wllwe Sllotl Arw ......., Priced I

.

MIDDI.EPollt, O.

·,

·

The Home of Fine Funilshln i

�'
'• ,_;,,
.

.. ,

\
.
• ..:. The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 22,
'

'•''•: '

,972'

'

'

)

'

'

...

.

•

.

'

-e--... ""\)'ooi'

.

~
c . rl

7- TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday,Oct. 22, i972

'

.'
·j·····
"...

,l(j &gt;• I

·

'
~~~

UIID

at,

. mac

-·

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Ill."

- 1

CHEF
.. . BOY .ARDEE . . ·

~~c.&gt;·

I

.~N$TAtCXiJtOA-- .

.CHEESE:PIZZA

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COFFEE

2-LB.

BOX

WIT H
CO UPQN

1 COUPON PER CUSTOM ER
M&amp;R I()A. FOOO LIN ER

WINDSHIELD . "

e : .· WASHER .• ·. GALLON

'

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,·MIX .15% Ol BOX '

!

.MAXWELL HOUSE ·. ·. ·

WITH
COUPON

"i0/28

EXP IR ES

: ANTI~FREEZE
AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION.
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LUB-0-LENE

WE HAVE AIJ.

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HALLOWEEN
·CANDIES
.
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ETC. ·
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SLICED
CHEESE

12 oz.

¢ 12 oz.

CRACKERS

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P.op

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CRISP, GOOD .

I.G.A.

·A

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BOX

--1MGTOR

CHEER lOS

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18 OZ. BOX
I COUPON PE R CUSTOMER
M&amp;R IGA FOOOLIN ER

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: OIL

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FLU. ID'·

20 WT•

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·PlUMR

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GLAD
LAWN LEAF

COLD · ·BAGS
HOLDERS
PKG. OF 5
.FITS ON IRONING BOARDS

HOLDS

'BAG

.·: APPLES

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

WINDSHIELD WASHER '

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BAG

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LIMIT 2
1 COUPON PER .CUSTOM ER
M&amp;R IGA FOOOLINER
· '

CAN

.

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WITH
COUPON

EXriR ES

}0/28

.
IT

'

GENERAL MILbS

'

GAL

RUB·BER MAID '.
DISH.
·
D
:
R
At.NER
; NOW ONLY:·· . ·- REG~ PRICE ~2

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WITH COUPON

CAND~

FRUIT·
,
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-'ANTI-FREEZE

COF EE ~~:

DELICIOUS
WINESAP .
WOLFE RIVER

6 BUSHELS

REG. '1.19

MAGNETIC

98

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LIMIT 2

18 oz.
. PKG.

•

WITH .
· COUPON ·

"BUCKET 0 CHICKEN
,16 BEST PIECES

4 THIGHS

4 DRUMSTICKS

4 WINGS

4 BREASTS .

0

. ·

ERS

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EA.
5 COLORS

FAMILY PACK FRYER .

PARTS . ·
3 BREASTS PORTION
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(~O GIBLETS)

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3 LEG PORTIONS
3WINGS

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"BEST OF THE FRYERS" .
2 BREASTS
2 DRUMSTICKS
2WINGS ·
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a
...... ...

ELM ·HILL

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· 12 oz. VAC PACK 59.~

'

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. CUT UP FRYERS....~........... ~~. 33 ~
. CHICK~N LEGS ..:............... ~59~
'

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STOKELY'S : ·

OATSU p.

.

••••••••••••

•

a
I

14 Oi .
BOTTLE
.

BAG

1

LIVER . CARTON

10-lB.

,

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11

NO.1
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MARSHMALLOW

JAR
I .

rM

BUY

-sTORE &amp; SEE
SET
GOURMET
·SKIUETS

. VIENNI~ .SAUSAGE
50Z.

PRICE
A
REAL

'

.A

KRAFT'S

'

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BLUE MIXING
BOWL
SET,
,
CASSEROLES
.
OVEN SETS

SLICED
lACON

LB.

SUCED'' . ·

·LIMITED AMOUNTS OF 6 ITEMS-

POP

CORN .

2-LB.
.I

MISS IT

&amp;R SHOPPING
OPEN M EVERY DAY SUNDAY 12-6

··

•

�IIJ UIIHed Preu '*'-"-' Uazt wal bam

.. ....

Today is,SUnday, Oct. 22, the
298lh day of 1972 with 70 to
follow.
The moon Is in its full phase.
The m&lt;H"ning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The eveninc stars are Mereury and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of J.(bra,

• ., •• •w'll

'
·-TIIISio 't)'Tina·Semlnel,Sunday,Oct. 22,1972

I

'

WSCS ofjice~s .eleoied

ASSIGNED _; Pvl. I
~ · Donald B. Spirel, Jr., HD of
-; Mn. Betty J. Sp~. ,m
Bumette Road, baa beea
aniJIIed to . Fori Hood,
Teus, after completing his
basic tnlnlng at Fori Knox,
Ky. He bas been alalped .to
Fori Hood lor 'JitCfa~ed
· InlaiD&amp; In meeballlca. Pvt.
Spires attended Kyger Creek
· High S~bool before Ctl!li Into
the Ualted staee. Army. The
lather,,Donald B.' Spires, Sr.
aile mldes In GaWpOUa.

4:_H Club

GALUPOUS - The Gra~ Donald Moore; hospitality,
United Melhodlst WSCS met Mrs. Arden Dobson and
Wednead&amp;y evening with 24 historian, Mrs, 0. L. While.
IIM!Illbers present.· Mrs. Keith . The nl1ll)jnating COOJmitlee is
'lbomaa was in charge oi Mrs. T. .A. ThOiltas, , Mrs.
opening . d'evotionii ,with Geneva Howell, Mrs. Arden
readings of "I Uke Autumn" Dobson, Mrs, L. H. Wickline,
and "Candle in the Night." A and Mrs. Alan Scott. Circle
brief · buaineu meeting was leaders are: Mrs. William P.
conducted by the president, Smith, Mrs. Dovel Myers, Mrs.
Mrs. Howell Edwards. The · Hiram Stutes, Mrs. Wayne
proposed budget for the Davis and l4rs. Howard Neal.
eomlng year was submitted The new officers will be in, and approved.
stalled at the December
Mrs. Uoyd Blazer presented general meeting with the Rev.
the nominating committee Paul Hawks as inslaUing Of·
report !or the coml.ng year and fleer.
.
newl)' elected officers are:
Mrs , Douglas Mullineau~
president, Mn. Earl Durhl!lll; from Circle On~ was in charge
vice-president, Mrs, James of the program. She reviewed
Gilliam; honorary vice- the history of the Methodist
president, Mrs. Paul Hawks; Church from its beginning and
secretary, Mrs. Hiram Stutes; gave facls about its founder,
treasurer, Mrs. Charles John W~sley. She staled that
Webster; Missionary June 17 will be the 270th aneducation, Mrs. Howell Ed- niversary of the birth of this
wards; spiritual growth, Mn. great man, whose stern rules of
Keith Thomas; Cbrlstian !IOCial upright conduct earned his
relatloni, Mrs. Silas Hamilton;' followers the once derisive
membership, Mrs. George name of "Methodists." As a
Grace; local Christian circuit rider; Wesley spent 52
respooslbllltles, Mn. Everette ·years in the saddle, sloughing
McMahon; publicity, Mrs. through thousands of miles of

o-

.

.

Baptist planning fall evangelistic crusade

POLLY'S POINTERS
Locked Church Doors
Basis For Pet Peeve

..

·: I'

Ic

•
O I g.

muck and mire to preach from ~-~~.
tree stumps, in open fields,
~
from slag piles near moutl~ {)f
mines and from boxes on street · *.·.•~. . . ·m
n
corners. With faith aflame; he ''
rode on to accomplish his ~
·
_~
.
~
at the age of 25,
-.~
•..
Wesley was ordained a priest ~~

pur~~.

Events

EMBLEM CLUB AOCEPI'S NEW MEMBERS ..._Front
row left to right, Kitty FerreU, Judy Isaacs, Jan Robbison,
. Bonnie Campbell, Pat. Mariln, Becky . Lane and Karen
Taylo~. Back row left to right, Bette Null; Emblem Club

WIO

Everything Is
Guaranteed

Jreaident; Wllma Broim, marshal; Rita Roach, Debby
Guinlh~, · Caryl BuUock, Bonlta Oliver, Doris Holderby,
Macy.Ann Woolf, Janet Rees; second assistant Marshal and "
Carol Nibert, first assistant Marshal. '

Emblem Club initiates twelve new members
•

SPLIT

GALLIPOLIS - Regul~r Sievers and committee Ruth Hood, Virginia Guinther,
meeting ol the G~llipoiis
members, . Dorothy Frazier, Judy McCully and Karen
.Emblem Club No. 199 was held
· at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at
the Elks Hall.
Initiation of twelve new
.
members was observed by
NJSS BARTEE TO WED ~ Paul Bartee of BidweU is
officers and sister members.
proUd to announce the engagement . and ap]lroaching
Also member Doris Holderby
rneriiage of his daughter, Helen Florence, of Mt. Gilead,
was reinstated. Lovely corOhio, to Rodney Brobeck, also of Mt. Gilead. Misa Bartee is a
sages were presented to the
graduate of North Gallla High School and spent one year at
new members by the Emblem
Rio Grande College, She is employed-by Cosmo Plastics of
Club.
By BETTY CANAHY
Mt. Glead. 'The open.church wedding wiD be an event of Oct.
Refreshments were served
Experience says that with children, honesty is the
28 at 2 p.m. at the United Methodist Church of Calodonia,
following the meeting, hosted best policy. I'm not sure all psychiatrists will agre~ with
Ohio.
by Initiation Chairman, Hope me , but, so far, I've gotten good results with it.
For example, if sounds that are curiously like Hannibal crossing the Alps with his elephants are emanating
lrQm an upstairs bedroom , I don't coyly ask , " What are
you ·doing up there- imitating Hanoibal crossing the
Alps?" Instead, I scream , "Stop that! You're driving me
crazy! "
I am constantly being amazed at how some mothers
control tongue and blood pressure ·when "kids are being
k!tls ."
.
.
·
I keep remembering the young woman I once saw in
a department store. Her little boy ran between the
counters, grabbing at lamp cords, and she followed him ,
asking sweetly, " Now, honey, you don't want to play
with the lamps, do you? "
Of course he wanted to play with the lamps. The real
question here was whether or not she wanted to pay for
broken ones.
·
Many mothers feel that only a stream of explanations
is acceptable when a child is acting in an unacceptable
way.
.
The woman, lor example, whose child keeps moaning
monotonously , "Gimme a quarter, Mom , gimme a quar·
PALMER BARCUS
ter, why won't you gimme a quarter?"
The ·woman who gives him a stream of reasons, inIIJrs· Freda Barcus bas
cluding such facls as, " I haven 't a quarter until I get
received word from her son,
change for this 10-dollar·bili,' ' and, "You've already
Sp-6 Palmer Barcuo, lbal be
spent 50 cents on hotdogs," and, " We're going home in
bas arrived In Germany, He
a minute and you'll spoil your appetite," is copping out.
will be there one year and Is
Probably the real reason she won't give him a quarter
stalloaed cloile tO the lillie
is that she has to save the money to pay her analyst
town of Pruem. His addreos
in order to lind out why she has" these miserable recur·
is Sp.5 Palmer Barcus, 283rent dreams about kids standing over her whining for
quarters .
41-!1415, Co. B. Sig ..Spt. GP
Don't misunderstand me . I give my children explana·
MR.
AND
Ml!S
..
EARL
E.
HAYMAN
will
observe
their
1111, USASTRATCOM • EUR,
tions.
But, I try to make them honest explanations.
forty-third anniversary on Monday, Oct. 23. They were
APO N. Y. 09«12.
Jus\
.yesterday It told my son he had to get his hair
I married in 1928 in Pt.· ~t, W.Va. aRJI bav~ realdiid at trimmed.
And I to d him why. Because I'm tired of ex.
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, throughout their marriage: The Haymans
piaining to the animal shelter people why I don't have
HAU.OWEEN PARTY
have four children: Mrs. Fred Stewart (EUa Blanch),
to buy him a license, that's why,
·
· GALUPOLIS - Triedstone
Middleport; Mrs. Joe Harrison (Emma), Rt. I, Gallipolis;
Baptist Church will have a
Early Hayman, Rt. I Gallipolis; and Mrs. Wllllam L. Dell
halloween party · from 7 to 9
(Edith Frances), Henurtead, Md: They also have 18 grand·
p.m. on Monday, sponsored by
In 1962, President John
children and eight..great~randchlldren.
the Sunday School.
Kennedy announced an arms .
blockade of Cuba after Soviet
Fibrosis Fund on Nov. 8. missiles were discovered on the
Money-making projects were Communist island.
discussed and plans" were
In 1968, the three Apolld 7
tabled until a later dale. The astronauts splashed down alter
meeting was adjourned with an 11-day earth orbital flight,
the club prayer led by the
president, Delores Shockey.
A thought for the day:
RIO GRANDE - The Rio reports were read and ap- Refreshments were served by German poet Rainer Maria
Grande Mothers' League held proved. A motion was made the host,.Margaret Bryant and · Hilke said, "A good marriage is
Its October meeting on and carried that the club co-hostesses, Cheryl Vanco and that in which each appoints the
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. will collect for the Cystic Joann Nibert.
other guardian of his solitude."
Gary Bryant. The meeting was
opened with a reading by Sue
Brandeberry entitled "Teach
Him Gently .. , If You Can!'
Roll call was answered by nine
members and orie guest ex·
plainlng "my way of curing the
bluei."
The guest speaker for the
evening was Mr. Kenton
Adkins, psychologist for the
Gallipolis City Schools. Mr.
Adkins began his diScussion by
e~plalnlng
th~
different
learning processes of in·
dividual children. Other points
of interest included: the
"reward treatment," slow
re~ders,
Individualized
classroom training, student
ltsting, preschool education,
and grade .retention. The·
dl!cuaslon was concluded by
the grilup asking Mr, Adkins .
his professional opinion of
some problems faced by
parents in dealing with their,
children.
The secretary and treasury

.

FRYERS

BETTY CANARY

With Children,
Tell It Like It Is

·----------JIFFY
NTREES

'

FOR
CHRISTMAS
NOW!

(l ,t ,IIIIOC"

CLARK'S

•Recliners
•Gun Cabinets
eDesks, etc.

JEWELRY STORE

AT A•••

Ga Iii polis, Ohio

342 Second Ave. , . ·

..

SAVINGS

Perm Press

Per Pound

.DOUBlE-KNIT

SHI.RTS

G.8t Grad&amp; Get
n, 'Better Jobll!

LONG .SLEEVE DOUBLE BUTTON
SLEEVE WITH HERRINGBONE
PATTERN IN SQLIO COLORS ..
•BURGUNDY
•TAN
eNAVY
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'1210

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S.M-l-XL

Yes, Your Weight Is Worth
1~ (One Cent) Per·Pound All
Day ·Monday,.Ocl 23, 1972
.On An) Purchase Of sur- or More

DAN. THOMAS &amp;SON

.'.'.SER'II.NG YOU SIN.CE 1936~· -·324 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO •

OPEN MON. ;. FRL 'TIL 8 P.M.

crocbetinl them toeether. Any

Ulld for fhls top but I like it a
a chain one or two and · double
-~ waa frOm a pink bottle aKd the
· which made a very pretty hat.

--.
"

I

OTHER
FAKE
FURS
FROM

Beat-the-Cold

Price.
Agreat look'- ·a great feel I Pony· look
SS02g-D"p Su 0/"',
waltr ttlttd, Instant date chinp
Stelnlttlltllll Mlf-wlnd, 4SI2 ft.

Cllendar, externet rotet ln1

eltPied llmtna bezel, lock type
crown for mtltlmum protectlon
l umlnout~omderweter, "Hardtex1•
mer-resist crystel1,_1:1rllsure venttd
strep. '915.00

See our complete line of
Selko Watches for' Ladles &amp;
Gents.

TAWNEY
.·JEWELERS:, .

In cotton backed rayon pile laminated
to Poly·urlthane foam. Trimmed In
magnificent seal Imitation on collar cuffs • border,
Colors: Sliver c;,...v. Black, Brown.
Sizes:
MONDAY
STORE
HOURS , .

Ull OUR
CONVINIINT
LAY~WAY

' :10 to I ,,m.

422 Second A¥e.
Golllpolls, Ohio

"

Your Weilht
Is Worth

Prints

corner holn Hold pieces fot. crown
WfOII&amp; aides out and slnJie crochet
~le wilb plecea for brim, Put crown and
IIDII manner. To make lolL for the
ct11ttr il for a dolly and~mereailna
lie 88t l!ld work until large
lle"dlllnd. Do not mate ·too
clrelt to the plaatk: headband

WATCHES

Monday Special!

DEAR POLLY-How can one get rid of rdaches in
a gas range? I have read the list of contents on the
labels of the sprays and all are composed of combustible ingiedlents. I really need help.-MARY M.

r

COAT

SEIKO

Mrs. G. Bryant hosts
Rio Mothers ' League

LAY~AWAY

I·

Alderigi.
During the Thursday night
meeting, members voted YES,
on two very important lsaues;
donations to the Free T.V:
Fund lor Holzer Medical
Center's Pediatrics Unit, and
The Gallia County Emergency
Squad,

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT 'TIL 81

Polly's Problem

" eight piects for the crown and eight pieces for the brim,
Those for the crown headband are reetaneles with one
side not too much longer than the other and with rounded
comers. Those lor the brim are shaped somewhat like a
f; chair seat that is narrower
at the back than the front
• &gt;tr· where the c o r II e r s are
·'
rounded. The . narrow ends ·
of the ·brim piece&amp; fit the
longer sides of .the rectan·
, if. .J)el. Holes are .made all
around the pieces with a
_ p a p e r p u n c b. Ctochet
.., 1t01111d all • tbeae places
with the desired color of.
.
In
_

LUSH.·
PLUSH
.PHONY
PONY·
PANT
•

Keepsake Bridal sets . .. for her,
stunniflg diamond engagement
and wedding rings . For him, a
mat ching wedding ring . Quality
C(afted and guaranteed. ·..~&lt;

DEAR POLLY-1 have made several hats from plastic
· Ill" bleach bottles and hope my directions make it possible
,, for M.n. J. B. to make one succesafully, For mine, I cut

""

~.

' - The Harris
BIDWELL
McCoy; news reporter, Steve
Harvesters met Oct. 14 at the Wellington; health chairman,
, humc of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Denise Denney;
safety
Morris. Daniel Morris presided . dli.irman, Sandra Wellington ;
and'-Mts . Emma Morris led the recreation chairmen, Paula
devotions. Mrs. Ervin Morris Morris and Jimmy Morris;
was host for a · hayride to devotion-al leader , Wanda
Tycoon Lake followed by a Morris, and song leader, Sonja
wiener roast.
Elders.
Officers elec ted are as
'Committees lor a H;rlloween
follows: president, Daniel parJy: Richard Morris, Paula
Mor{." is ; vlce-pre sident,a Morris, Tonya McCoy, Sandra
Richard Morris ; secretacy , Wellington and Denise Denney.
Mike Casey; treasurer, Tony a . Committee lor program :
Laura ·Armstrong, Scott
· Robinson, Debbie Denney,
.111!!! HONO.I flliGIWII!S
- - - -- -- - - Karen Jarrell and Richard
Morris. The next meeting will
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club will be held at the home of Mr .,and
meet at the home of Mrs. M. T. Mrs. Ervin Morris on· No~, 2.
. Present were the advisors,
To 'l.ntictv.
Epling, Sr., I p.m.
Mrs,
Ervin
Morris,
Mrs.
Sandy
PEMBROKE CLUB with Mrs.
McCoy and Mrs. Wanda
Thomas Price, 8 p.m.
ANN JUDSON Bible Class of Morris. Also present were the
the First Baptist Church will following club members :
meet in the Fellowship Room Paula Morris, Ric.hard Morris,
Danny Morris, Jimmy Morris,
'
a1 7: 30p .m.
Timmy Morris, Cathy Morris,
WEDNESDAY
Wanda Morris, · Rox 1nn e
ADDISON Freewill Baptist Morris, Shirley Morris, Dianne '
lb. 29~
Ladies Aid will have a com- Morris, ·Steve Wellington ,
munity auction at the Addison , Sandra Wellington·, Laura
Town House at 7:30p.m.
Wellington, Sherry Weflington,
R
.
WIO ,GRCAI NbDEH Faculty Jan Jarrell, Marsha JarreD,
omen s u , earl Saver Karen Jarrell, Preston Jarrell,
E
Program, Oct.' 25, 7:30 p.m., Tanya
McCoy,
Tanya · IGro.-•v - Sliced Turkey
College Dining Hall.
. Spaghetti
Robin son , Scott Robinson,
THURSDAY
Debbie Denney , Denise
Balls.
GALLIA County Council on Denney, Loria Eider, Dianne
2 lb. pkg. 98~
Aging, I p.m., Centenary Elder, Lija Shockley, Laura
United Methodist Church.
Armstrong , Roger Stout,
--

Triple
Treat

GALLIPOLIS
The month coast to coast campaign stays together."
"Young singing teams are
members Of the First Baptist in an effort to bring revival to
America.
springing
up daily . all across
Church are busy making plans
for their forthcoming Fall '· Pastor Wilson Wahl of the our nation," continues Pastor
Evangeilatic Crusade, Oct. 29 church, believes that today's Wahl, "but the Ufe A.ction
• throu Nov. 3. This year, the family traditions and values Singers are no mere enBaptists have encaged the . are beln~ questioned on all tertainment group, Their
ministry of the "Ufe Action spiritual, social and economic music and appearance emCrusade," which Is coniposed levels, by those who intend to phasize their message :
of Evangelist Del Fehsenleld, bring disunity to, the land. genuine commitment to Christ
Jr., dlrectot, and Dr. Ed "That's why," continues and clear-cut separation from
Hindson, associate director, Pastor Wahl, "it's mighty · the world."
The Life Action Singers and
.· plus 15 college students refreshing to know that there is
representing seven different sUII a group of energetic young sound engineers combine their
: states, The group Is on a nine Americans doing . everything talents to produce the lin~t in
they can to see.that the family quality Christian music today ,
The Life Action Crusade
personnel has performed on
radio and television and is
scheduled to be on nation-wide
television again this fall. They
are uniquely.prooAmerica, prochurch, prooleens and proparents. The Singers and
By POLLY CRAMER
Evangelist Del Fehsenfeld, Jr:
combine to present a positive
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve Is wit~ the many locked
message· of
dynami~
churches throughout our nation. I have seen such beautiful
Christianity that moves young
·•' churches in strange cities and have longed to go inside.
and
old alike. Further In·
I know the ,exterior beauty only mildly reflects the absoformation regarding the time
lute beauty of the interior but most of the time I find them
locked. t;:an you imagine the satisfaction of being known
of the services will be an·
as a nation of churches, above all other things?~RUBY
nounced.
I ~:!;"

I'

SUNDAY
l39TH ANNIVERSARY of the
Paint Creek Regular Baptist
Church. Guest speaker at both
the II a. m. and the 3 p. m.
services. Covered dish
fellowship dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
REV. JESSIE Jeffers will be
the guestspeakerallhe Walnut
Ridge Church at 7:30 p, m.
Rev. Billie Payne, pastor, ·and
the members invite everyone.
MONDAY
POMONA Grange Officers'
Conference will meet at the
Harris Grange Hall at 7:30
p.m. Members are asked to
bring elder and dont¢s.
.,
OCSEA Halloween party,
Cos1urne and mask" is optionaL
Prizes given . Free bingo with
prizes awarded . Refresh·
ments,
TRIEDSTONE BAPTIST
Church will have a Halloween
party from 7-9 sponsored by the
. Sunday School.
Yellowstone, made· a na- TUESDAY
ttohal park in 1872, is the AMERICAN Legion Au.&lt;iliary
nation's largest and oldest will meet at Legion Hall, 7:30
national park.
"'
l"m.

Ga!Ua l'lmmt)"'~~lll till World's Children," saidMrs.M~Mahon. ''They need UNICEF
and UNICEF needs you."
.

'

FIVE GENEKATIONS - Mrs. Nora Cremeens of
Gallipolis in front is 91 years old; her daughter, Mrs. Weldon
Straight (right); her granddaughter, Mrs, Willard Sheets of
Crown City, (center back); great-grandson, Tom Sheets,
Crown Cil)i, and on great~reat-grandmother's lap, Joanna
Marla _Sheets, daughter of Tom Sheets.

of the Church of England 'and to
~pand his work, went to
London where an abandoned
cannon factory was turned into
a tabernacle and the first
service drew .5,000 people.
Wesley did not plan to establish
a new church, but through his
concern, first to preach the
gospel to the needy who were
not being reached by the
Established Church and its
clergy, and 'second, to care lor
those who were .won to the
Christian life the Methodist
Church was born ,
The meeting closed with
prayer and sincing the hymn
"The Church's One Foundation" written by John S.
Wesley. Refreshments In
keeping with the Halloween
season were served by Circle
Two. The next general meeting
will be Nov. 15 with program
topic "Struggle Against
Poverty."

PREPARE JI'()R tJIIII&lt;Er- Sellllld are Mrs. Everett McMahon, left, County Chairman
for UNICEF Trick or Treat program, and Mrs. Wllllam J. Brown, newspaper Publicity
Chairman. Standing are Mn. Harold Black, left, president of Church Women United in Gallia
County, and Mrl. JIIJilel Beverly, Radio Publicity. They are preparing to hand out packets for
area chalnnen. The UNic;EJi' Trick or 'l'relt program Is sponsored by Church Women United in
.
Gallla Counl)', u they join with groupe to raile funds for the United Nations Children's Fund,
,., ~'!:
an agency ,devoted to welfare of children in developlni! countries. Children In Gallia County will
'
be prlvtlepd to lbare the Joy of helpq to inaka a better future for other children by par·
lf'-···" lictpi·~CQ.'I'tlollf'~l Jllogrlln here. "J-et's fU ,g~Hogelher. and prov~ that ,

.

Valoris Campbell, Conny
Fillinger Cathy Fillinler, Milte
Casey·, ThereSa Griffith, Edwin
Smith.
Bill and James Howard were
also present as guests and they
dr ove the.· tractor lor the .
hayride,

On this day In hiallll7:
·· In 111311, Gen. Sam Hfu t
was sworn 'in u the fllat
president ol the Rep•hllt fl
Texas.
· In 1183 the Metropalllall
Opera' H~ In New Yorll QIJ
celebrated 'ita grand Ofi""''W
with a performance of "FaUll."
'
·

20'off

Unbonded Wools

$398

Pllld &amp;
Solid

.suo

from

yd.

LMiy Polyestels
For Fall Sewing

Solids

t

Like the picture, fabrics are
deceiving. But you can always be
sure of the fabrics at French City
Fabric Shoppe. You'll find only the
leading textile names on our
shelves and at popular prices.
Knits, wools, perm. press, all our
fi!brlcs are top name· brands.
• Burlington
t Landau
"Quorum
•:Skinner
• Berlin
••Cohall]a

Many
Plaids &amp;

How.good is your
·fabric
perception?

•.Milliken
·.Abbott
• Concord
• Belding Hemlnway ·
, Elnlgler
, Heller

Outing flannel
45" &amp; 36"
Print on~

Sweater Knits

15!

45" to
54"

15"

. OFF

Sleepwear Fabrics

Many .
Holiday Fabrics
Now In Stock

Quilt &amp;
Plain

10iOFF

Singer SBle-a-Thon Still in Progress!

ENCH CITY FABRIC SHORRE~
..'

'

'

'

OPEN TIL&amp; P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS .
2 Complete Floors of;Fabrlcs &amp; Notions

Phone
446-9255

SIMPliCITY, McCALL$, BUTT ERICK, VOGUE PATTERNS
..Wi..OO CUSTOM DRESS MAKING . · SINGEIUALES&amp; SERVICE

Court Sf.

GallipoliS

�IIJ UIIHed Preu '*'-"-' Uazt wal bam

.. ....

Today is,SUnday, Oct. 22, the
298lh day of 1972 with 70 to
follow.
The moon Is in its full phase.
The m&lt;H"ning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The eveninc stars are Mereury and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of J.(bra,

• ., •• •w'll

'
·-TIIISio 't)'Tina·Semlnel,Sunday,Oct. 22,1972

I

'

WSCS ofjice~s .eleoied

ASSIGNED _; Pvl. I
~ · Donald B. Spirel, Jr., HD of
-; Mn. Betty J. Sp~. ,m
Bumette Road, baa beea
aniJIIed to . Fori Hood,
Teus, after completing his
basic tnlnlng at Fori Knox,
Ky. He bas been alalped .to
Fori Hood lor 'JitCfa~ed
· InlaiD&amp; In meeballlca. Pvt.
Spires attended Kyger Creek
· High S~bool before Ctl!li Into
the Ualted staee. Army. The
lather,,Donald B.' Spires, Sr.
aile mldes In GaWpOUa.

4:_H Club

GALUPOUS - The Gra~ Donald Moore; hospitality,
United Melhodlst WSCS met Mrs. Arden Dobson and
Wednead&amp;y evening with 24 historian, Mrs, 0. L. While.
IIM!Illbers present.· Mrs. Keith . The nl1ll)jnating COOJmitlee is
'lbomaa was in charge oi Mrs. T. .A. ThOiltas, , Mrs.
opening . d'evotionii ,with Geneva Howell, Mrs. Arden
readings of "I Uke Autumn" Dobson, Mrs, L. H. Wickline,
and "Candle in the Night." A and Mrs. Alan Scott. Circle
brief · buaineu meeting was leaders are: Mrs. William P.
conducted by the president, Smith, Mrs. Dovel Myers, Mrs.
Mrs. Howell Edwards. The · Hiram Stutes, Mrs. Wayne
proposed budget for the Davis and l4rs. Howard Neal.
eomlng year was submitted The new officers will be in, and approved.
stalled at the December
Mrs. Uoyd Blazer presented general meeting with the Rev.
the nominating committee Paul Hawks as inslaUing Of·
report !or the coml.ng year and fleer.
.
newl)' elected officers are:
Mrs , Douglas Mullineau~
president, Mn. Earl Durhl!lll; from Circle On~ was in charge
vice-president, Mrs, James of the program. She reviewed
Gilliam; honorary vice- the history of the Methodist
president, Mrs. Paul Hawks; Church from its beginning and
secretary, Mrs. Hiram Stutes; gave facls about its founder,
treasurer, Mrs. Charles John W~sley. She staled that
Webster; Missionary June 17 will be the 270th aneducation, Mrs. Howell Ed- niversary of the birth of this
wards; spiritual growth, Mn. great man, whose stern rules of
Keith Thomas; Cbrlstian !IOCial upright conduct earned his
relatloni, Mrs. Silas Hamilton;' followers the once derisive
membership, Mrs. George name of "Methodists." As a
Grace; local Christian circuit rider; Wesley spent 52
respooslbllltles, Mn. Everette ·years in the saddle, sloughing
McMahon; publicity, Mrs. through thousands of miles of

o-

.

.

Baptist planning fall evangelistic crusade

POLLY'S POINTERS
Locked Church Doors
Basis For Pet Peeve

..

·: I'

Ic

•
O I g.

muck and mire to preach from ~-~~.
tree stumps, in open fields,
~
from slag piles near moutl~ {)f
mines and from boxes on street · *.·.•~. . . ·m
n
corners. With faith aflame; he ''
rode on to accomplish his ~
·
_~
.
~
at the age of 25,
-.~
•..
Wesley was ordained a priest ~~

pur~~.

Events

EMBLEM CLUB AOCEPI'S NEW MEMBERS ..._Front
row left to right, Kitty FerreU, Judy Isaacs, Jan Robbison,
. Bonnie Campbell, Pat. Mariln, Becky . Lane and Karen
Taylo~. Back row left to right, Bette Null; Emblem Club

WIO

Everything Is
Guaranteed

Jreaident; Wllma Broim, marshal; Rita Roach, Debby
Guinlh~, · Caryl BuUock, Bonlta Oliver, Doris Holderby,
Macy.Ann Woolf, Janet Rees; second assistant Marshal and "
Carol Nibert, first assistant Marshal. '

Emblem Club initiates twelve new members
•

SPLIT

GALLIPOLIS - Regul~r Sievers and committee Ruth Hood, Virginia Guinther,
meeting ol the G~llipoiis
members, . Dorothy Frazier, Judy McCully and Karen
.Emblem Club No. 199 was held
· at 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at
the Elks Hall.
Initiation of twelve new
.
members was observed by
NJSS BARTEE TO WED ~ Paul Bartee of BidweU is
officers and sister members.
proUd to announce the engagement . and ap]lroaching
Also member Doris Holderby
rneriiage of his daughter, Helen Florence, of Mt. Gilead,
was reinstated. Lovely corOhio, to Rodney Brobeck, also of Mt. Gilead. Misa Bartee is a
sages were presented to the
graduate of North Gallla High School and spent one year at
new members by the Emblem
Rio Grande College, She is employed-by Cosmo Plastics of
Club.
By BETTY CANAHY
Mt. Glead. 'The open.church wedding wiD be an event of Oct.
Refreshments were served
Experience says that with children, honesty is the
28 at 2 p.m. at the United Methodist Church of Calodonia,
following the meeting, hosted best policy. I'm not sure all psychiatrists will agre~ with
Ohio.
by Initiation Chairman, Hope me , but, so far, I've gotten good results with it.
For example, if sounds that are curiously like Hannibal crossing the Alps with his elephants are emanating
lrQm an upstairs bedroom , I don't coyly ask , " What are
you ·doing up there- imitating Hanoibal crossing the
Alps?" Instead, I scream , "Stop that! You're driving me
crazy! "
I am constantly being amazed at how some mothers
control tongue and blood pressure ·when "kids are being
k!tls ."
.
.
·
I keep remembering the young woman I once saw in
a department store. Her little boy ran between the
counters, grabbing at lamp cords, and she followed him ,
asking sweetly, " Now, honey, you don't want to play
with the lamps, do you? "
Of course he wanted to play with the lamps. The real
question here was whether or not she wanted to pay for
broken ones.
·
Many mothers feel that only a stream of explanations
is acceptable when a child is acting in an unacceptable
way.
.
The woman, lor example, whose child keeps moaning
monotonously , "Gimme a quarter, Mom , gimme a quar·
PALMER BARCUS
ter, why won't you gimme a quarter?"
The ·woman who gives him a stream of reasons, inIIJrs· Freda Barcus bas
cluding such facls as, " I haven 't a quarter until I get
received word from her son,
change for this 10-dollar·bili,' ' and, "You've already
Sp-6 Palmer Barcuo, lbal be
spent 50 cents on hotdogs," and, " We're going home in
bas arrived In Germany, He
a minute and you'll spoil your appetite," is copping out.
will be there one year and Is
Probably the real reason she won't give him a quarter
stalloaed cloile tO the lillie
is that she has to save the money to pay her analyst
town of Pruem. His addreos
in order to lind out why she has" these miserable recur·
is Sp.5 Palmer Barcus, 283rent dreams about kids standing over her whining for
quarters .
41-!1415, Co. B. Sig ..Spt. GP
Don't misunderstand me . I give my children explana·
MR.
AND
Ml!S
..
EARL
E.
HAYMAN
will
observe
their
1111, USASTRATCOM • EUR,
tions.
But, I try to make them honest explanations.
forty-third anniversary on Monday, Oct. 23. They were
APO N. Y. 09«12.
Jus\
.yesterday It told my son he had to get his hair
I married in 1928 in Pt.· ~t, W.Va. aRJI bav~ realdiid at trimmed.
And I to d him why. Because I'm tired of ex.
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, throughout their marriage: The Haymans
piaining to the animal shelter people why I don't have
HAU.OWEEN PARTY
have four children: Mrs. Fred Stewart (EUa Blanch),
to buy him a license, that's why,
·
· GALUPOLIS - Triedstone
Middleport; Mrs. Joe Harrison (Emma), Rt. I, Gallipolis;
Baptist Church will have a
Early Hayman, Rt. I Gallipolis; and Mrs. Wllllam L. Dell
halloween party · from 7 to 9
(Edith Frances), Henurtead, Md: They also have 18 grand·
p.m. on Monday, sponsored by
In 1962, President John
children and eight..great~randchlldren.
the Sunday School.
Kennedy announced an arms .
blockade of Cuba after Soviet
Fibrosis Fund on Nov. 8. missiles were discovered on the
Money-making projects were Communist island.
discussed and plans" were
In 1968, the three Apolld 7
tabled until a later dale. The astronauts splashed down alter
meeting was adjourned with an 11-day earth orbital flight,
the club prayer led by the
president, Delores Shockey.
A thought for the day:
RIO GRANDE - The Rio reports were read and ap- Refreshments were served by German poet Rainer Maria
Grande Mothers' League held proved. A motion was made the host,.Margaret Bryant and · Hilke said, "A good marriage is
Its October meeting on and carried that the club co-hostesses, Cheryl Vanco and that in which each appoints the
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. will collect for the Cystic Joann Nibert.
other guardian of his solitude."
Gary Bryant. The meeting was
opened with a reading by Sue
Brandeberry entitled "Teach
Him Gently .. , If You Can!'
Roll call was answered by nine
members and orie guest ex·
plainlng "my way of curing the
bluei."
The guest speaker for the
evening was Mr. Kenton
Adkins, psychologist for the
Gallipolis City Schools. Mr.
Adkins began his diScussion by
e~plalnlng
th~
different
learning processes of in·
dividual children. Other points
of interest included: the
"reward treatment," slow
re~ders,
Individualized
classroom training, student
ltsting, preschool education,
and grade .retention. The·
dl!cuaslon was concluded by
the grilup asking Mr, Adkins .
his professional opinion of
some problems faced by
parents in dealing with their,
children.
The secretary and treasury

.

FRYERS

BETTY CANARY

With Children,
Tell It Like It Is

·----------JIFFY
NTREES

'

FOR
CHRISTMAS
NOW!

(l ,t ,IIIIOC"

CLARK'S

•Recliners
•Gun Cabinets
eDesks, etc.

JEWELRY STORE

AT A•••

Ga Iii polis, Ohio

342 Second Ave. , . ·

..

SAVINGS

Perm Press

Per Pound

.DOUBlE-KNIT

SHI.RTS

G.8t Grad&amp; Get
n, 'Better Jobll!

LONG .SLEEVE DOUBLE BUTTON
SLEEVE WITH HERRINGBONE
PATTERN IN SQLIO COLORS ..
•BURGUNDY
•TAN
eNAVY
•OLIVE

•

~

'1210

•· ..

,I

S.M-l-XL

Yes, Your Weight Is Worth
1~ (One Cent) Per·Pound All
Day ·Monday,.Ocl 23, 1972
.On An) Purchase Of sur- or More

DAN. THOMAS &amp;SON

.'.'.SER'II.NG YOU SIN.CE 1936~· -·324 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO •

OPEN MON. ;. FRL 'TIL 8 P.M.

crocbetinl them toeether. Any

Ulld for fhls top but I like it a
a chain one or two and · double
-~ waa frOm a pink bottle aKd the
· which made a very pretty hat.

--.
"

I

OTHER
FAKE
FURS
FROM

Beat-the-Cold

Price.
Agreat look'- ·a great feel I Pony· look
SS02g-D"p Su 0/"',
waltr ttlttd, Instant date chinp
Stelnlttlltllll Mlf-wlnd, 4SI2 ft.

Cllendar, externet rotet ln1

eltPied llmtna bezel, lock type
crown for mtltlmum protectlon
l umlnout~omderweter, "Hardtex1•
mer-resist crystel1,_1:1rllsure venttd
strep. '915.00

See our complete line of
Selko Watches for' Ladles &amp;
Gents.

TAWNEY
.·JEWELERS:, .

In cotton backed rayon pile laminated
to Poly·urlthane foam. Trimmed In
magnificent seal Imitation on collar cuffs • border,
Colors: Sliver c;,...v. Black, Brown.
Sizes:
MONDAY
STORE
HOURS , .

Ull OUR
CONVINIINT
LAY~WAY

' :10 to I ,,m.

422 Second A¥e.
Golllpolls, Ohio

"

Your Weilht
Is Worth

Prints

corner holn Hold pieces fot. crown
WfOII&amp; aides out and slnJie crochet
~le wilb plecea for brim, Put crown and
IIDII manner. To make lolL for the
ct11ttr il for a dolly and~mereailna
lie 88t l!ld work until large
lle"dlllnd. Do not mate ·too
clrelt to the plaatk: headband

WATCHES

Monday Special!

DEAR POLLY-How can one get rid of rdaches in
a gas range? I have read the list of contents on the
labels of the sprays and all are composed of combustible ingiedlents. I really need help.-MARY M.

r

COAT

SEIKO

Mrs. G. Bryant hosts
Rio Mothers ' League

LAY~AWAY

I·

Alderigi.
During the Thursday night
meeting, members voted YES,
on two very important lsaues;
donations to the Free T.V:
Fund lor Holzer Medical
Center's Pediatrics Unit, and
The Gallia County Emergency
Squad,

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT 'TIL 81

Polly's Problem

" eight piects for the crown and eight pieces for the brim,
Those for the crown headband are reetaneles with one
side not too much longer than the other and with rounded
comers. Those lor the brim are shaped somewhat like a
f; chair seat that is narrower
at the back than the front
• &gt;tr· where the c o r II e r s are
·'
rounded. The . narrow ends ·
of the ·brim piece&amp; fit the
longer sides of .the rectan·
, if. .J)el. Holes are .made all
around the pieces with a
_ p a p e r p u n c b. Ctochet
.., 1t01111d all • tbeae places
with the desired color of.
.
In
_

LUSH.·
PLUSH
.PHONY
PONY·
PANT
•

Keepsake Bridal sets . .. for her,
stunniflg diamond engagement
and wedding rings . For him, a
mat ching wedding ring . Quality
C(afted and guaranteed. ·..~&lt;

DEAR POLLY-1 have made several hats from plastic
· Ill" bleach bottles and hope my directions make it possible
,, for M.n. J. B. to make one succesafully, For mine, I cut

""

~.

' - The Harris
BIDWELL
McCoy; news reporter, Steve
Harvesters met Oct. 14 at the Wellington; health chairman,
, humc of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Denise Denney;
safety
Morris. Daniel Morris presided . dli.irman, Sandra Wellington ;
and'-Mts . Emma Morris led the recreation chairmen, Paula
devotions. Mrs. Ervin Morris Morris and Jimmy Morris;
was host for a · hayride to devotion-al leader , Wanda
Tycoon Lake followed by a Morris, and song leader, Sonja
wiener roast.
Elders.
Officers elec ted are as
'Committees lor a H;rlloween
follows: president, Daniel parJy: Richard Morris, Paula
Mor{." is ; vlce-pre sident,a Morris, Tonya McCoy, Sandra
Richard Morris ; secretacy , Wellington and Denise Denney.
Mike Casey; treasurer, Tony a . Committee lor program :
Laura ·Armstrong, Scott
· Robinson, Debbie Denney,
.111!!! HONO.I flliGIWII!S
- - - -- -- - - Karen Jarrell and Richard
Morris. The next meeting will
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club will be held at the home of Mr .,and
meet at the home of Mrs. M. T. Mrs. Ervin Morris on· No~, 2.
. Present were the advisors,
To 'l.ntictv.
Epling, Sr., I p.m.
Mrs,
Ervin
Morris,
Mrs.
Sandy
PEMBROKE CLUB with Mrs.
McCoy and Mrs. Wanda
Thomas Price, 8 p.m.
ANN JUDSON Bible Class of Morris. Also present were the
the First Baptist Church will following club members :
meet in the Fellowship Room Paula Morris, Ric.hard Morris,
Danny Morris, Jimmy Morris,
'
a1 7: 30p .m.
Timmy Morris, Cathy Morris,
WEDNESDAY
Wanda Morris, · Rox 1nn e
ADDISON Freewill Baptist Morris, Shirley Morris, Dianne '
lb. 29~
Ladies Aid will have a com- Morris, ·Steve Wellington ,
munity auction at the Addison , Sandra Wellington·, Laura
Town House at 7:30p.m.
Wellington, Sherry Weflington,
R
.
WIO ,GRCAI NbDEH Faculty Jan Jarrell, Marsha JarreD,
omen s u , earl Saver Karen Jarrell, Preston Jarrell,
E
Program, Oct.' 25, 7:30 p.m., Tanya
McCoy,
Tanya · IGro.-•v - Sliced Turkey
College Dining Hall.
. Spaghetti
Robin son , Scott Robinson,
THURSDAY
Debbie Denney , Denise
Balls.
GALLIA County Council on Denney, Loria Eider, Dianne
2 lb. pkg. 98~
Aging, I p.m., Centenary Elder, Lija Shockley, Laura
United Methodist Church.
Armstrong , Roger Stout,
--

Triple
Treat

GALLIPOLIS
The month coast to coast campaign stays together."
"Young singing teams are
members Of the First Baptist in an effort to bring revival to
America.
springing
up daily . all across
Church are busy making plans
for their forthcoming Fall '· Pastor Wilson Wahl of the our nation," continues Pastor
Evangeilatic Crusade, Oct. 29 church, believes that today's Wahl, "but the Ufe A.ction
• throu Nov. 3. This year, the family traditions and values Singers are no mere enBaptists have encaged the . are beln~ questioned on all tertainment group, Their
ministry of the "Ufe Action spiritual, social and economic music and appearance emCrusade," which Is coniposed levels, by those who intend to phasize their message :
of Evangelist Del Fehsenleld, bring disunity to, the land. genuine commitment to Christ
Jr., dlrectot, and Dr. Ed "That's why," continues and clear-cut separation from
Hindson, associate director, Pastor Wahl, "it's mighty · the world."
The Life Action Singers and
.· plus 15 college students refreshing to know that there is
representing seven different sUII a group of energetic young sound engineers combine their
: states, The group Is on a nine Americans doing . everything talents to produce the lin~t in
they can to see.that the family quality Christian music today ,
The Life Action Crusade
personnel has performed on
radio and television and is
scheduled to be on nation-wide
television again this fall. They
are uniquely.prooAmerica, prochurch, prooleens and proparents. The Singers and
By POLLY CRAMER
Evangelist Del Fehsenfeld, Jr:
combine to present a positive
DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve Is wit~ the many locked
message· of
dynami~
churches throughout our nation. I have seen such beautiful
Christianity that moves young
·•' churches in strange cities and have longed to go inside.
and
old alike. Further In·
I know the ,exterior beauty only mildly reflects the absoformation regarding the time
lute beauty of the interior but most of the time I find them
locked. t;:an you imagine the satisfaction of being known
of the services will be an·
as a nation of churches, above all other things?~RUBY
nounced.
I ~:!;"

I'

SUNDAY
l39TH ANNIVERSARY of the
Paint Creek Regular Baptist
Church. Guest speaker at both
the II a. m. and the 3 p. m.
services. Covered dish
fellowship dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
REV. JESSIE Jeffers will be
the guestspeakerallhe Walnut
Ridge Church at 7:30 p, m.
Rev. Billie Payne, pastor, ·and
the members invite everyone.
MONDAY
POMONA Grange Officers'
Conference will meet at the
Harris Grange Hall at 7:30
p.m. Members are asked to
bring elder and dont¢s.
.,
OCSEA Halloween party,
Cos1urne and mask" is optionaL
Prizes given . Free bingo with
prizes awarded . Refresh·
ments,
TRIEDSTONE BAPTIST
Church will have a Halloween
party from 7-9 sponsored by the
. Sunday School.
Yellowstone, made· a na- TUESDAY
ttohal park in 1872, is the AMERICAN Legion Au.&lt;iliary
nation's largest and oldest will meet at Legion Hall, 7:30
national park.
"'
l"m.

Ga!Ua l'lmmt)"'~~lll till World's Children," saidMrs.M~Mahon. ''They need UNICEF
and UNICEF needs you."
.

'

FIVE GENEKATIONS - Mrs. Nora Cremeens of
Gallipolis in front is 91 years old; her daughter, Mrs. Weldon
Straight (right); her granddaughter, Mrs, Willard Sheets of
Crown City, (center back); great-grandson, Tom Sheets,
Crown Cil)i, and on great~reat-grandmother's lap, Joanna
Marla _Sheets, daughter of Tom Sheets.

of the Church of England 'and to
~pand his work, went to
London where an abandoned
cannon factory was turned into
a tabernacle and the first
service drew .5,000 people.
Wesley did not plan to establish
a new church, but through his
concern, first to preach the
gospel to the needy who were
not being reached by the
Established Church and its
clergy, and 'second, to care lor
those who were .won to the
Christian life the Methodist
Church was born ,
The meeting closed with
prayer and sincing the hymn
"The Church's One Foundation" written by John S.
Wesley. Refreshments In
keeping with the Halloween
season were served by Circle
Two. The next general meeting
will be Nov. 15 with program
topic "Struggle Against
Poverty."

PREPARE JI'()R tJIIII&lt;Er- Sellllld are Mrs. Everett McMahon, left, County Chairman
for UNICEF Trick or Treat program, and Mrs. Wllllam J. Brown, newspaper Publicity
Chairman. Standing are Mn. Harold Black, left, president of Church Women United in Gallia
County, and Mrl. JIIJilel Beverly, Radio Publicity. They are preparing to hand out packets for
area chalnnen. The UNic;EJi' Trick or 'l'relt program Is sponsored by Church Women United in
.
Gallla Counl)', u they join with groupe to raile funds for the United Nations Children's Fund,
,., ~'!:
an agency ,devoted to welfare of children in developlni! countries. Children In Gallia County will
'
be prlvtlepd to lbare the Joy of helpq to inaka a better future for other children by par·
lf'-···" lictpi·~CQ.'I'tlollf'~l Jllogrlln here. "J-et's fU ,g~Hogelher. and prov~ that ,

.

Valoris Campbell, Conny
Fillinger Cathy Fillinler, Milte
Casey·, ThereSa Griffith, Edwin
Smith.
Bill and James Howard were
also present as guests and they
dr ove the.· tractor lor the .
hayride,

On this day In hiallll7:
·· In 111311, Gen. Sam Hfu t
was sworn 'in u the fllat
president ol the Rep•hllt fl
Texas.
· In 1183 the Metropalllall
Opera' H~ In New Yorll QIJ
celebrated 'ita grand Ofi""''W
with a performance of "FaUll."
'
·

20'off

Unbonded Wools

$398

Pllld &amp;
Solid

.suo

from

yd.

LMiy Polyestels
For Fall Sewing

Solids

t

Like the picture, fabrics are
deceiving. But you can always be
sure of the fabrics at French City
Fabric Shoppe. You'll find only the
leading textile names on our
shelves and at popular prices.
Knits, wools, perm. press, all our
fi!brlcs are top name· brands.
• Burlington
t Landau
"Quorum
•:Skinner
• Berlin
••Cohall]a

Many
Plaids &amp;

How.good is your
·fabric
perception?

•.Milliken
·.Abbott
• Concord
• Belding Hemlnway ·
, Elnlgler
, Heller

Outing flannel
45" &amp; 36"
Print on~

Sweater Knits

15!

45" to
54"

15"

. OFF

Sleepwear Fabrics

Many .
Holiday Fabrics
Now In Stock

Quilt &amp;
Plain

10iOFF

Singer SBle-a-Thon Still in Progress!

ENCH CITY FABRIC SHORRE~
..'

'

'

'

OPEN TIL&amp; P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS .
2 Complete Floors of;Fabrlcs &amp; Notions

Phone
446-9255

SIMPliCITY, McCALL$, BUTT ERICK, VOGUE PATTERNS
..Wi..OO CUSTOM DRESS MAKING . · SINGEIUALES&amp; SERVICE

Court Sf.

GallipoliS

�•
11-Tbl......,'l'imee • Senllnel, Sunday, Oct 22, 1rt2

'

Democrat candidates review platforms
POMEROY - Local and
district candidates reviewed
their positions on public issues
Thursday nigh! )!ere to an
estimated 70 Democrats at the
regularly scheduled meeting of
th~ · County
Democratic
Committee; E. · A. Wingett,
chairman, presiding.
First to spe;~k was Bill
Snouffer, candidate for County

Commis.&lt;;ioner. Bill stated that
in addition to his fivei'Oint
platform, he wishes to bring
about a better understanding
between township trustees,
citizens, and the commlssioners. , He said that the
people· have been in lhe dark
for too long about county expenditures, and he plans "to
keep lhe citizenry informed as

SAVE SU NOW AT •••
·BRUNICARDI HOUSE OF MUSIC
)(ODElJNG, LEn' TO RIGHT- Scindra Koby, Shirley Grubb, Miriain Persinger, Bess Weinburger, Merle ShiM
and Dortha Suiter.

Newcomers Club
has '72 fashion show

••

NEWOOMERS CLUB, liOndra Koby was one of the
lovely models seen at the Fashion Show on Thursday.

""'

'H

::

! eart sav.er program
~'

b
d
e presente ··. ·

'l1

&gt;il'

1

~ ··wtu

.

!:

GALLIPOLIS
The Rio
: Grande Faculty Women's Club
:; will be presenting a Heart
; Saver Program sponsored by
"' the .Central Ohio Heart
: Association on Wednesday
: Oct. 25, at 7:30 p.m. in th~
:; College Dining Hall. Jean
'! Airey, program chairman of
:_ the association, Is scheduled to
.. be guest speaker for the
:;: evening.
:,e The program will consist of
lecture, demonstration,, film,
;r questlQns and answers, and a
~ practice session for those who
,. are interested in getting a first: degree certificate. Those In:;: terested may continue later to
.,.. ,phase two, three and four of
%:' this program. There will be
: three Resusci-Annies and two
:::! baby models for demonstration
.. and practice.
In general, the Heart Saver
~ Program deals with mouth-to:. mouth resuscitation first aid,
: coronary warning signals, and
:t emergency procedures •other

i:

+

i
~

Also onlstanding was the fulllength brown suede coat with
shaggie lamb trim worn by Sue
Kithcart. She had chosen
perfectly matched boots to
accommodate the coal. ·
Another coat, worn by
Michael Hand, also was very
attractive. It was a red and
oronge, fit and flare check with
a removable dyed fox fur
collar.
Dress.fd in lounging ,attire
were Dorlha Suiter as
"Madam Butterfly" in a pale
yellow, bell sleeved pajama
outfit, and Dene Wagner in a
long black negligee and
matching gown. Dene chose a
large pink rose to wear with the
outfit which she playfully
threw into the audience before
leaving the stage.
Betsy Simpson served as
Mrs. Beverly's assistant and
was in charge of the gift
drawing. Also helping with the
drawing was ·Jane Daniels,
president of the Newcomers
Club. Gifts were presented to
Billie Miller and Helen Bush.
Hoyt Mullins was taken 'by
surprise with the. presentation
of a bottle of Cold Duck as a
birthday gift.

s~~~i~~ain ~~rni. ;:~~d s~~:;

topped with~ matching yellow,
, Jurtl~ ~ck top and .a hunter

~:~;h,ng ~~~~ ~~~:!·' &lt;&gt;:~

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL

'POMEROY - The Pomeroy
'
.

emergency squad answered a
Sattler was stunning in a long, call to Depot St. in Rutland .at
black, sleek dress with lace- 10 :50 p.m. Friday for Doris
tri mm ed white collar and Haynes, who was ill. She was
cuffs. Her slippers were old- taken to Veterans Memorial
fashioned looking and very Hospital where she was treated
becoming .
and released.

WIN AT BRIDGE
18

NORTH
• 9876

¥AQJ
EASt\ .

·-Hand

• - Hand

¥ - not
+-shown

¥-not
t -shown

.....

.....

SOUTH (D)

.AKQH32

¥9

· • A6

... AKQ

North-South vulnerable
West North East South

z•

Pass 4 N.T .

Pass 3.
Pass · 5 +
Pass 6"'
Pass

Pass

Pass

5 N.T.
6 N.T.

Pass

Pass
Opening lead- • Q

By Oswald. &amp; James Jacoby
Her ·e is a Jeff 'Rubens
match point problem. You
are playing in the finals of
the blue ribbon pairs and
have reached six no-trump.
Never mind how you go
there. There were as many
ways to bid the hand as
there were players in the
event and the one thing you
can be sure of is that everyone is in six or seven spades
or no-trump.
You win the queen of diamonds lead and run of! your
spades and clubs to leave
ilummy with the ace-queen
of hearts.
Yo u have watched your
opponents' discards ahd are
still missing the king of dia·
monds and king-lO·eight of
hearts.
You lead a heart and West
plays the 10. If his other
card is the king of d!amonds .
1he might well have led the
queen !rom kiilg-queen·iack)
it doesn't matter what you
play . You are going to make
exactly six. If his other card
is the king of hearts a' finesse
gives you an overtrick; if it
is the eight of hearts East
will have blanked the king
early In the defense and if

P·IANO

First Baptist lac!i~s rneet

• 54 3
... J lOS

WEST

lEW

''

you finesse you will go down
one at your slam contract.
What do you do?
The answer is that you
rise with dummy's ace and .
insure your contract.
If W.est holds the heart
king you have chucked a
trick but the loss won't
translate into many match
points. All spade declarers
will have played a backward spade finesse against
the king in the East hand
and · will have been held to
'12 tricks . Six no-trump will
beat all of them.
Seven no-trump bidders
will have played Wes.t for
the heart king and made
their contract to beat you

in any event.
(NEWSPAPER IHTi"llll AISH.)

'
The bidding hu been:
West North
East
Pass
Pass

1¥
3¥
5.

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

You, South, hold:

.AK86 ¥Al02 +KS ... AJU
What do you do now?

A-Your partner is obowl111
the ace of 41am&lt;~nds and lrfllll
for a slam. Maybe thoro Is
seven. Bid eix dlamon411 to
show !!lecond round diamond

controL

'

SPE.CIALS

.members attended including:
Mrs. Harry Cole, Mrs. Wilson,
Mrs. Wahl, Miss Hazel Halley,
and Mrs. Don Teal.
After singing "It Is Well With
My Soul," led by Mrs. Dorothy
McDivitt, Mrs. John Taylor,
c~hainnan, was in charge of
the meeting. Mrs. Mae
Thlvener gave devotions from
Luke 8:22-39 inclusive. A piano
solo was played by Jina Wahl.
The program theme was
"Demons and Satan.;, Hazel
Halley reviewed the book,
"Are Demons for Seal?", by
Robert Peterson, a missionary
to West Borneo. .The book
pictures dramatic Incidents of
spirit of Phenomena In conflict
with the Power of Jesus Christ.
Committee for the evening
was Mrs. John Taylor and Mrs.
Paul Pullins, c~hairmen; the
other members were Mrs.
Luelle Brannon, Mrs. Goldie
Johnson, Mrs. Louise Saunders, Mrs. Earl Saunders ahd
Mrs. Mae Thivener. There wW
be no meeting in November.
Co-chairmen for the November
• December meeting will be
Bea.Evans and Mary Burner.

A rare opportunity tp own a fine plano
at TR~MENDOUS SAVINGS. Full 88 ·
·note keyboar.d, threl! working pedals,
13 ply laminated pin olock, fine Spruce
sound hoard, full '-ctorv warrantr

SAVE
.AS MUCH AS

$200
ON ONE OF lHESE
FINE PIANOS lHIS WEEK.
'

BENOI mMATat INQJJDED
TIRMS TO SUIT UP TO

'

.

Sunday - MondJJy - TuesdJJy - Wednesday
ant:# Thursday Only!

DINNER BOX SPECIAL

COURT NEWS
Val ·Jenkins, 35, Rt. 2,
Lucasville, was granted a
continuance this mornjng in
Gallipolis Municipal Court .
Jenkins was transferred to
Gallia County from Scioto
County to face a false pretense
charge on a warrant filed by
· David Laufer.
• Jenkins said he is being
wrongfully detained. He says
officials have arrested the
wrong man. Jenkins was
released on his own
recognizance.
In other court action,
Woodrow R. Chapman, address not listed, was fined $30
and costs for intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were
Donald Talarsky, Elyria, $33

to call 99U40il bo!t-n 1 p.m.
and 9 p.m. Preceding the talks,
Wingett swore in two new
committee rnem(lers, Dave
Brickles and Mrs. Elizabeth
Smith, and Paul Gerard spoke
briefly on the usefulness of the
Headquarters.

112 CHICKEN
(4·PIECES)
$

NO
SUBT.

29

ROLL, POTATOES AND SLAW
FOR QUICK PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 44?·2682

.ibakt ·iltoppt
'THAT OLD-FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO .

5 YEARS JO PA \"
SM Us For All Your

MUSICAL NEEDS

eBAJID INsntUMEIITS • ACrJ.SSO~IES
· e $AI ES llld REIITM.
eMUSIC REPAIR SERVICE
.. ~ 'I " '

'

,,

HOUSE
OF
MUSIC
'1{ ' I'"'
.

Sl~epwear

.~4 Stl'e st., Gallipolis

'

'46·068) '

LOSES HIS PANTS
LONDON niP!) .:.. Cornet
player Charlie Silcock gave his
all in a celebration soloincluding his pants. At a party
celebrating his band's victory
'{n the National Brass Band
O...mpionship, the 82-year-old
musician lnhaltec£\ deeply to.
.blast .out the final note of
"Bless This House." Down
went his pants.
·:
"Next time he plays in pubUc
I;lj "'ake sur~ ' he wears
silspenaers,'' said his wife
Margaret.

GOWNS

with loving warm for winter '"""t•

WEIGHT WATCHERS DAY
Is COming to Gallipolis

Senior citizens
tO haVe meeting
. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Council on Aging will
conduct a meeting for all interested senior citizens on
Tuesday, Oct. 2t, beginning at
' I p.m., in the Centenary United
Methodist Church off Rt. HI.
Every senior citizen who is 55
or over is invited to attend.
Following the program, a
fellowship hour will be held,
and refreshments will be
served.
·
Cislunar space is a term
that designates the area• of
space between earth and the

Featured speaker of the ·
rvening was Sam Smith, h.ead
or Social Sciences at Rio
'f;t·a!ldc and on the Jackson
County Democratic Com·
miuee. His main point was U\e
slale income 'tax·. ,
"In the last year," Smith
said, ···Meigs Counlians paid
$160,000 in on the slate tax~ But
Meigs County received back
from the stale $811,000, a
$651,000 profit !"
In order to raise this money
in other ways, Smith said,
property taxes would have to
be raised 22mills, or sales .tax
anoiher 3 pel,
"Tax repeal, as of thjs dale,
is favored only by rich in- .
divlduals,.and even Republican
lea der~dot openly support
repeal hio is still 46th in its
level f taxation, and the only
fair means of taxation is where
the man who earns the most
pays lhe most,"' Smith said.
Concerni~g the nalion,ai
ticket ,· Smith said Democrats
should fight Republicans, not
each other. He admitted there
are things about McGovern
some ne'mocrats did not agree
wilh, but said McGOvern is a
no PUCO tax decal ; Joe "God-fearing, good, and honest
Charles McComas, GalliP!JiiS man ."
In a humorous aside, Smith
Ferry, $33 no PUCO permit ;
Okey fl . Henry, 78, Gallipolis, recalled when it was '
$18 speed; Rober! A. Leeper,
36 Rt. 1 Beverly, $18 speed;
Sylvia Mooney, 50, Rt. I,
Cheshire, $18 slop sign; Robert
J . Lewis, Jr., 34, Covington,
Ky., $23 ·speed; Randall
Denney , 23, Rl. 1, Vinton,
speed; B. Lewis Jones,
I, Thurman , $28 im roper
backing; William C. Bennett,
DAN THOMAS
116, Rt. I, Cheshire, $33 reckles.&lt;;
AND SON
operation and Gregory S.
1936"
Woodward, 18, Patriot Star Rl.,
$33 reckles.&lt;; operation.
L-~::::=~=:..-J

On this note, he closed, loan
ovation from · the stanlling
room only crowd. The meeting
was adjpurned and refresh-·
ments served. flll ipersons
wishing more information are
to · visit
the
invited
Headquarters on E. Main St. or

Great Falls
$2.50

Pordand
$2~

BOise
$2.50

THURSDAY, OCT. 26
San Francisco
$2.60

Come To Our Public Meeting

FREEl

Los Angeles
$2.60

7:30P.M. Washington School
I

4th and Locust St.,

moon.

Salt Lake City
$250

Las\egas

•

~ I

Bismarck.
$2.10

$2.50

Des Moines
Pittsbulgh
$2.05
Grand Island
'
$1~
$2.10
Denver
St.Louis
$2.10
$2.00 Louisville
$1.60 .
Tulsa
$2.05

Phoenix
$250

Galllpo~ls

Lubbock
$2.10

Dallas
$2.10

. '

Atlanta
$2.00

I

-

...:;: r

-;-·

' ,.
, than closed h.eart procedures.
The Heart Saver Program
will be open to the public with
no charge.

GALLIPOLIS ~ · Lovely,
delightful and charming
describes the .12 gorgeous gals
who modeled for the annual
Newcomers Club Fashion
Sh,ow on Thursday. The show at
the Elks Hall was attended by
approximately 100 ladies.
Patriotic colors of red, white
and blue decorated the stage
and dining tables. Prior to the
style show, a lovely luncheon
was served by the Gallipolis
Emblem Club, under the
direction of Mary Ann Dille.
The tables, covered with white
and decorated with the red,
white and blue streamers ·also
bo;lsled a matcmrlg centerpiece.
Sue Beverly, chairman of the
'72 Newcomers Fashion Show,
gave the welcome speech and
in traduced Ann Bowers wlio
served as Master of
ceremonies. Barbara Epling
was · the pianist and Max
Tawney was the photographer.
Sponsors for the show were:
Bernad.ine's, Carl's Shoe Store
and My Sister's Closet. The
selections presented were very
lovely, and exceptionally wellmatched with the models. Both
the colors and styles were
varied and in good taste even in
the footwear and accessories.

Cerem«rte.; Cuty Pndt!t, Gaby Satiler, nene Wignet, am
Sue lGthcart.

. NEWCOMERS LADIES MOD1i)UNG- Left to rl!lhl, are
Michael Hand, Gwen carter, Ann Blowers, Master of

to all his actions."
nor's office , Ron Humphrey
Mary Martin, running for and Mike Appl·:lon, spoke on
Clerk of Courts, said she has ~ehalf ~&gt;f John Halliday,
cut a tape for local TV, has her · candidate .for the 92nd House
newspaper ads mapped out , Dislrict State Representative .
an!l is goi~g to wQrk on radio Main points in their presenspots. She suggesl~d that ., tation .· concerned Oakley
sample ballotS be printed ·for CQIIins' (HallidaY's opponent)
distribution before the eleelion . apparent involvement in the
The committee adople&lt;l this stripping of 32.6 acres of
Wayne National ~'orest, valued
proposaI . .
Joe Denison, also . a can- at $600,000, and the removal of
ilidale for County Com- the experimental station from
missioner, commented on the near Carpenter into Jackson
fact lhat the present Com- County.
Mrs. Robert Whealey spoke
missioners have spent a
considerable sum on a land!W on behalf of husband, Bob,
dump which· is unapproved by challenger for iOth District
The state.
.
· Congres.&lt;;man .. Main topics of
"The money' already spent her talk were charges that the
on this dump," said Denison, incumbent has an anti-labor
"may be lost if !he state finds voting reco~d. and that large
the dump unsatisfactory.''
donations from big business
All three candidates com- . ·and special interest groups
menled upon the over- have been accepted by
whelmingly good response they Clarence Miller . She once
have. received throughout the again stressed Bob Whealey's
county.
• ·
main campaign slqgan, "Put
Two men from the Gover- the money back into the hands
of ihe people. "

discovered that Nixon in 1952
had a "slush" fund placed by
California special interest
gro ups. When this was leaked,
Smi1h said, Nixon "jumped on
TV. pelled his dog, cried, and
lried to convince the people he
was really an· all-right . guy."
·

_

n

~-

n

e

n

I

n

- "-' --- - - ~--=- -~

I
I

!.....

The next best thing to suede 'n' leather
.. . Sued ine teamed with man· made
lea ther. So smartly styled. you'd never
know 'twas fake. Dark Brown , .
"

.....

:r

f -.I

I

1

•

•

i

[I

II

ltltrt thellmlly •i!oP• tor•lll•

321 Socond ~" ·

Galtl1101ts, 0.

.

ALSO:

Awards to Major ·Losers
From The Gallipolis Area
•Free Recipes

•'

.,

•

.'

•DoorPmes

· •Everyone Weloome

•'

\} ~.

Mon. &amp; Fri. t:30totp.m.
Tues., Wtd., S.t. t:3Dto5p.m.
Thundllr t: 311o 12 Noon

FOR BIG DISCOUNT ·SAVINGS!

· · Oumdler, who lost 200 lb~.

BUY FOR
. WEARIN.G,
FOR GIFTING!.

L
. . . . . . :;J
. ,-....____,

"-"'

·.
(::_ /;-----

eMeet and hear the stQry of Barbara

$800

I

... '

1
·'•'

Brushed fleece tricot acetate and
nylon. Wonderful warmth without ,
weight I Machine wash 'n .dry
ready to wear.
Petal . Pink, SQmethlng Blue,
Lilac, Vanilla.
long and short styles.
Sizes 5-M-L-X.

f

$17.95

•Meet Area Director Adrianne Levine

l'

for Cla$5 Information .

t111 Toll-free 8582·7026
~

•

A 10-minute out-ofstatl= call to anywhere
in the United States
(except Alaska and
Hawaii) never costs
more than $2.60, plus
tax. Provided you follow a few simple rules.
. Just dial, long dis- ·
tance calls yourself,
'

without operator assistance. And make your
calls between 5- 11
P.M,, Sunday through
.Friday. (Rates are even
lower .after ll:oo P.M.
and on weeke'nds.)
That's· all it takes to

have amazingly inexpensive long distance
calls.
And if you know
the cost is low, you'll
probably enjoy the
·calls more. Because
you can spend more

.@Ohk&gt;Bell

of the call talking and
less' of it looking at .
the dock.
So the next time you
call long distance, call
the inexpensive V'ay.
· That way you can be
a lot more relaxed
while you're spending
time ~n ~he country.

UseYour
Phone
.
. For AU It's Worth .
'

~
- IJial·it-YPJlrself rates apply on ·our-of-srare dialt!d calls (without operato! il$Sis~an.c.e) fro~ ~esidence a.nd ~usineu p~nes anyvihere
--_...;·,n-thr--~cxcc-pr-Aiaska-.nd-Hawaii}-til)d--on~c._llt-placed~w ilh~an opeta[Or~ whero.:-d•rtct-d •alln8 lac•htles...are-not..analable.-D•al~t_,.y.ou.rselUa~-do not apply
·
·to pe:rson-~o.person, coin;. hocel i:uen, credi[
card, .collttt calls and .o.n calls charsed to
anQthC"r ~umber. ·
·
.
.

.- __,__...,..
Ga.....,Uipolis, b

412·414 Second ·Ave.

.

800-582·7026
---~-

I

• .• •If 1'11111'11-SI'IIIin&lt;'I,SWlday, Od. 22, 1972
~

.

... .,..

... - .............----··. ~·---......"' ..''--~

.

,

'

.'

'

-·

�•
11-Tbl......,'l'imee • Senllnel, Sunday, Oct 22, 1rt2

'

Democrat candidates review platforms
POMEROY - Local and
district candidates reviewed
their positions on public issues
Thursday nigh! )!ere to an
estimated 70 Democrats at the
regularly scheduled meeting of
th~ · County
Democratic
Committee; E. · A. Wingett,
chairman, presiding.
First to spe;~k was Bill
Snouffer, candidate for County

Commis.&lt;;ioner. Bill stated that
in addition to his fivei'Oint
platform, he wishes to bring
about a better understanding
between township trustees,
citizens, and the commlssioners. , He said that the
people· have been in lhe dark
for too long about county expenditures, and he plans "to
keep lhe citizenry informed as

SAVE SU NOW AT •••
·BRUNICARDI HOUSE OF MUSIC
)(ODElJNG, LEn' TO RIGHT- Scindra Koby, Shirley Grubb, Miriain Persinger, Bess Weinburger, Merle ShiM
and Dortha Suiter.

Newcomers Club
has '72 fashion show

••

NEWOOMERS CLUB, liOndra Koby was one of the
lovely models seen at the Fashion Show on Thursday.

""'

'H

::

! eart sav.er program
~'

b
d
e presente ··. ·

'l1

&gt;il'

1

~ ··wtu

.

!:

GALLIPOLIS
The Rio
: Grande Faculty Women's Club
:; will be presenting a Heart
; Saver Program sponsored by
"' the .Central Ohio Heart
: Association on Wednesday
: Oct. 25, at 7:30 p.m. in th~
:; College Dining Hall. Jean
'! Airey, program chairman of
:_ the association, Is scheduled to
.. be guest speaker for the
:;: evening.
:,e The program will consist of
lecture, demonstration,, film,
;r questlQns and answers, and a
~ practice session for those who
,. are interested in getting a first: degree certificate. Those In:;: terested may continue later to
.,.. ,phase two, three and four of
%:' this program. There will be
: three Resusci-Annies and two
:::! baby models for demonstration
.. and practice.
In general, the Heart Saver
~ Program deals with mouth-to:. mouth resuscitation first aid,
: coronary warning signals, and
:t emergency procedures •other

i:

+

i
~

Also onlstanding was the fulllength brown suede coat with
shaggie lamb trim worn by Sue
Kithcart. She had chosen
perfectly matched boots to
accommodate the coal. ·
Another coat, worn by
Michael Hand, also was very
attractive. It was a red and
oronge, fit and flare check with
a removable dyed fox fur
collar.
Dress.fd in lounging ,attire
were Dorlha Suiter as
"Madam Butterfly" in a pale
yellow, bell sleeved pajama
outfit, and Dene Wagner in a
long black negligee and
matching gown. Dene chose a
large pink rose to wear with the
outfit which she playfully
threw into the audience before
leaving the stage.
Betsy Simpson served as
Mrs. Beverly's assistant and
was in charge of the gift
drawing. Also helping with the
drawing was ·Jane Daniels,
president of the Newcomers
Club. Gifts were presented to
Billie Miller and Helen Bush.
Hoyt Mullins was taken 'by
surprise with the. presentation
of a bottle of Cold Duck as a
birthday gift.

s~~~i~~ain ~~rni. ;:~~d s~~:;

topped with~ matching yellow,
, Jurtl~ ~ck top and .a hunter

~:~;h,ng ~~~~ ~~~:!·' &lt;&gt;:~

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL

'POMEROY - The Pomeroy
'
.

emergency squad answered a
Sattler was stunning in a long, call to Depot St. in Rutland .at
black, sleek dress with lace- 10 :50 p.m. Friday for Doris
tri mm ed white collar and Haynes, who was ill. She was
cuffs. Her slippers were old- taken to Veterans Memorial
fashioned looking and very Hospital where she was treated
becoming .
and released.

WIN AT BRIDGE
18

NORTH
• 9876

¥AQJ
EASt\ .

·-Hand

• - Hand

¥ - not
+-shown

¥-not
t -shown

.....

.....

SOUTH (D)

.AKQH32

¥9

· • A6

... AKQ

North-South vulnerable
West North East South

z•

Pass 4 N.T .

Pass 3.
Pass · 5 +
Pass 6"'
Pass

Pass

Pass

5 N.T.
6 N.T.

Pass

Pass
Opening lead- • Q

By Oswald. &amp; James Jacoby
Her ·e is a Jeff 'Rubens
match point problem. You
are playing in the finals of
the blue ribbon pairs and
have reached six no-trump.
Never mind how you go
there. There were as many
ways to bid the hand as
there were players in the
event and the one thing you
can be sure of is that everyone is in six or seven spades
or no-trump.
You win the queen of diamonds lead and run of! your
spades and clubs to leave
ilummy with the ace-queen
of hearts.
Yo u have watched your
opponents' discards ahd are
still missing the king of dia·
monds and king-lO·eight of
hearts.
You lead a heart and West
plays the 10. If his other
card is the king of d!amonds .
1he might well have led the
queen !rom kiilg-queen·iack)
it doesn't matter what you
play . You are going to make
exactly six. If his other card
is the king of hearts a' finesse
gives you an overtrick; if it
is the eight of hearts East
will have blanked the king
early In the defense and if

P·IANO

First Baptist lac!i~s rneet

• 54 3
... J lOS

WEST

lEW

''

you finesse you will go down
one at your slam contract.
What do you do?
The answer is that you
rise with dummy's ace and .
insure your contract.
If W.est holds the heart
king you have chucked a
trick but the loss won't
translate into many match
points. All spade declarers
will have played a backward spade finesse against
the king in the East hand
and · will have been held to
'12 tricks . Six no-trump will
beat all of them.
Seven no-trump bidders
will have played Wes.t for
the heart king and made
their contract to beat you

in any event.
(NEWSPAPER IHTi"llll AISH.)

'
The bidding hu been:
West North
East
Pass
Pass

1¥
3¥
5.

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

You, South, hold:

.AK86 ¥Al02 +KS ... AJU
What do you do now?

A-Your partner is obowl111
the ace of 41am&lt;~nds and lrfllll
for a slam. Maybe thoro Is
seven. Bid eix dlamon411 to
show !!lecond round diamond

controL

'

SPE.CIALS

.members attended including:
Mrs. Harry Cole, Mrs. Wilson,
Mrs. Wahl, Miss Hazel Halley,
and Mrs. Don Teal.
After singing "It Is Well With
My Soul," led by Mrs. Dorothy
McDivitt, Mrs. John Taylor,
c~hainnan, was in charge of
the meeting. Mrs. Mae
Thlvener gave devotions from
Luke 8:22-39 inclusive. A piano
solo was played by Jina Wahl.
The program theme was
"Demons and Satan.;, Hazel
Halley reviewed the book,
"Are Demons for Seal?", by
Robert Peterson, a missionary
to West Borneo. .The book
pictures dramatic Incidents of
spirit of Phenomena In conflict
with the Power of Jesus Christ.
Committee for the evening
was Mrs. John Taylor and Mrs.
Paul Pullins, c~hairmen; the
other members were Mrs.
Luelle Brannon, Mrs. Goldie
Johnson, Mrs. Louise Saunders, Mrs. Earl Saunders ahd
Mrs. Mae Thivener. There wW
be no meeting in November.
Co-chairmen for the November
• December meeting will be
Bea.Evans and Mary Burner.

A rare opportunity tp own a fine plano
at TR~MENDOUS SAVINGS. Full 88 ·
·note keyboar.d, threl! working pedals,
13 ply laminated pin olock, fine Spruce
sound hoard, full '-ctorv warrantr

SAVE
.AS MUCH AS

$200
ON ONE OF lHESE
FINE PIANOS lHIS WEEK.
'

BENOI mMATat INQJJDED
TIRMS TO SUIT UP TO

'

.

Sunday - MondJJy - TuesdJJy - Wednesday
ant:# Thursday Only!

DINNER BOX SPECIAL

COURT NEWS
Val ·Jenkins, 35, Rt. 2,
Lucasville, was granted a
continuance this mornjng in
Gallipolis Municipal Court .
Jenkins was transferred to
Gallia County from Scioto
County to face a false pretense
charge on a warrant filed by
· David Laufer.
• Jenkins said he is being
wrongfully detained. He says
officials have arrested the
wrong man. Jenkins was
released on his own
recognizance.
In other court action,
Woodrow R. Chapman, address not listed, was fined $30
and costs for intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were
Donald Talarsky, Elyria, $33

to call 99U40il bo!t-n 1 p.m.
and 9 p.m. Preceding the talks,
Wingett swore in two new
committee rnem(lers, Dave
Brickles and Mrs. Elizabeth
Smith, and Paul Gerard spoke
briefly on the usefulness of the
Headquarters.

112 CHICKEN
(4·PIECES)
$

NO
SUBT.

29

ROLL, POTATOES AND SLAW
FOR QUICK PICKUP SERVICE PHONE 44?·2682

.ibakt ·iltoppt
'THAT OLD-FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO .

5 YEARS JO PA \"
SM Us For All Your

MUSICAL NEEDS

eBAJID INsntUMEIITS • ACrJ.SSO~IES
· e $AI ES llld REIITM.
eMUSIC REPAIR SERVICE
.. ~ 'I " '

'

,,

HOUSE
OF
MUSIC
'1{ ' I'"'
.

Sl~epwear

.~4 Stl'e st., Gallipolis

'

'46·068) '

LOSES HIS PANTS
LONDON niP!) .:.. Cornet
player Charlie Silcock gave his
all in a celebration soloincluding his pants. At a party
celebrating his band's victory
'{n the National Brass Band
O...mpionship, the 82-year-old
musician lnhaltec£\ deeply to.
.blast .out the final note of
"Bless This House." Down
went his pants.
·:
"Next time he plays in pubUc
I;lj "'ake sur~ ' he wears
silspenaers,'' said his wife
Margaret.

GOWNS

with loving warm for winter '"""t•

WEIGHT WATCHERS DAY
Is COming to Gallipolis

Senior citizens
tO haVe meeting
. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Council on Aging will
conduct a meeting for all interested senior citizens on
Tuesday, Oct. 2t, beginning at
' I p.m., in the Centenary United
Methodist Church off Rt. HI.
Every senior citizen who is 55
or over is invited to attend.
Following the program, a
fellowship hour will be held,
and refreshments will be
served.
·
Cislunar space is a term
that designates the area• of
space between earth and the

Featured speaker of the ·
rvening was Sam Smith, h.ead
or Social Sciences at Rio
'f;t·a!ldc and on the Jackson
County Democratic Com·
miuee. His main point was U\e
slale income 'tax·. ,
"In the last year," Smith
said, ···Meigs Counlians paid
$160,000 in on the slate tax~ But
Meigs County received back
from the stale $811,000, a
$651,000 profit !"
In order to raise this money
in other ways, Smith said,
property taxes would have to
be raised 22mills, or sales .tax
anoiher 3 pel,
"Tax repeal, as of thjs dale,
is favored only by rich in- .
divlduals,.and even Republican
lea der~dot openly support
repeal hio is still 46th in its
level f taxation, and the only
fair means of taxation is where
the man who earns the most
pays lhe most,"' Smith said.
Concerni~g the nalion,ai
ticket ,· Smith said Democrats
should fight Republicans, not
each other. He admitted there
are things about McGovern
some ne'mocrats did not agree
wilh, but said McGOvern is a
no PUCO tax decal ; Joe "God-fearing, good, and honest
Charles McComas, GalliP!JiiS man ."
In a humorous aside, Smith
Ferry, $33 no PUCO permit ;
Okey fl . Henry, 78, Gallipolis, recalled when it was '
$18 speed; Rober! A. Leeper,
36 Rt. 1 Beverly, $18 speed;
Sylvia Mooney, 50, Rt. I,
Cheshire, $18 slop sign; Robert
J . Lewis, Jr., 34, Covington,
Ky., $23 ·speed; Randall
Denney , 23, Rl. 1, Vinton,
speed; B. Lewis Jones,
I, Thurman , $28 im roper
backing; William C. Bennett,
DAN THOMAS
116, Rt. I, Cheshire, $33 reckles.&lt;;
AND SON
operation and Gregory S.
1936"
Woodward, 18, Patriot Star Rl.,
$33 reckles.&lt;; operation.
L-~::::=~=:..-J

On this note, he closed, loan
ovation from · the stanlling
room only crowd. The meeting
was adjpurned and refresh-·
ments served. flll ipersons
wishing more information are
to · visit
the
invited
Headquarters on E. Main St. or

Great Falls
$2.50

Pordand
$2~

BOise
$2.50

THURSDAY, OCT. 26
San Francisco
$2.60

Come To Our Public Meeting

FREEl

Los Angeles
$2.60

7:30P.M. Washington School
I

4th and Locust St.,

moon.

Salt Lake City
$250

Las\egas

•

~ I

Bismarck.
$2.10

$2.50

Des Moines
Pittsbulgh
$2.05
Grand Island
'
$1~
$2.10
Denver
St.Louis
$2.10
$2.00 Louisville
$1.60 .
Tulsa
$2.05

Phoenix
$250

Galllpo~ls

Lubbock
$2.10

Dallas
$2.10

. '

Atlanta
$2.00

I

-

...:;: r

-;-·

' ,.
, than closed h.eart procedures.
The Heart Saver Program
will be open to the public with
no charge.

GALLIPOLIS ~ · Lovely,
delightful and charming
describes the .12 gorgeous gals
who modeled for the annual
Newcomers Club Fashion
Sh,ow on Thursday. The show at
the Elks Hall was attended by
approximately 100 ladies.
Patriotic colors of red, white
and blue decorated the stage
and dining tables. Prior to the
style show, a lovely luncheon
was served by the Gallipolis
Emblem Club, under the
direction of Mary Ann Dille.
The tables, covered with white
and decorated with the red,
white and blue streamers ·also
bo;lsled a matcmrlg centerpiece.
Sue Beverly, chairman of the
'72 Newcomers Fashion Show,
gave the welcome speech and
in traduced Ann Bowers wlio
served as Master of
ceremonies. Barbara Epling
was · the pianist and Max
Tawney was the photographer.
Sponsors for the show were:
Bernad.ine's, Carl's Shoe Store
and My Sister's Closet. The
selections presented were very
lovely, and exceptionally wellmatched with the models. Both
the colors and styles were
varied and in good taste even in
the footwear and accessories.

Cerem«rte.; Cuty Pndt!t, Gaby Satiler, nene Wignet, am
Sue lGthcart.

. NEWCOMERS LADIES MOD1i)UNG- Left to rl!lhl, are
Michael Hand, Gwen carter, Ann Blowers, Master of

to all his actions."
nor's office , Ron Humphrey
Mary Martin, running for and Mike Appl·:lon, spoke on
Clerk of Courts, said she has ~ehalf ~&gt;f John Halliday,
cut a tape for local TV, has her · candidate .for the 92nd House
newspaper ads mapped out , Dislrict State Representative .
an!l is goi~g to wQrk on radio Main points in their presenspots. She suggesl~d that ., tation .· concerned Oakley
sample ballotS be printed ·for CQIIins' (HallidaY's opponent)
distribution before the eleelion . apparent involvement in the
The committee adople&lt;l this stripping of 32.6 acres of
Wayne National ~'orest, valued
proposaI . .
Joe Denison, also . a can- at $600,000, and the removal of
ilidale for County Com- the experimental station from
missioner, commented on the near Carpenter into Jackson
fact lhat the present Com- County.
Mrs. Robert Whealey spoke
missioners have spent a
considerable sum on a land!W on behalf of husband, Bob,
dump which· is unapproved by challenger for iOth District
The state.
.
· Congres.&lt;;man .. Main topics of
"The money' already spent her talk were charges that the
on this dump," said Denison, incumbent has an anti-labor
"may be lost if !he state finds voting reco~d. and that large
the dump unsatisfactory.''
donations from big business
All three candidates com- . ·and special interest groups
menled upon the over- have been accepted by
whelmingly good response they Clarence Miller . She once
have. received throughout the again stressed Bob Whealey's
county.
• ·
main campaign slqgan, "Put
Two men from the Gover- the money back into the hands
of ihe people. "

discovered that Nixon in 1952
had a "slush" fund placed by
California special interest
gro ups. When this was leaked,
Smi1h said, Nixon "jumped on
TV. pelled his dog, cried, and
lried to convince the people he
was really an· all-right . guy."
·

_

n

~-

n

e

n

I

n

- "-' --- - - ~--=- -~

I
I

!.....

The next best thing to suede 'n' leather
.. . Sued ine teamed with man· made
lea ther. So smartly styled. you'd never
know 'twas fake. Dark Brown , .
"

.....

:r

f -.I

I

1

•

•

i

[I

II

ltltrt thellmlly •i!oP• tor•lll•

321 Socond ~" ·

Galtl1101ts, 0.

.

ALSO:

Awards to Major ·Losers
From The Gallipolis Area
•Free Recipes

•'

.,

•

.'

•DoorPmes

· •Everyone Weloome

•'

\} ~.

Mon. &amp; Fri. t:30totp.m.
Tues., Wtd., S.t. t:3Dto5p.m.
Thundllr t: 311o 12 Noon

FOR BIG DISCOUNT ·SAVINGS!

· · Oumdler, who lost 200 lb~.

BUY FOR
. WEARIN.G,
FOR GIFTING!.

L
. . . . . . :;J
. ,-....____,

"-"'

·.
(::_ /;-----

eMeet and hear the stQry of Barbara

$800

I

... '

1
·'•'

Brushed fleece tricot acetate and
nylon. Wonderful warmth without ,
weight I Machine wash 'n .dry
ready to wear.
Petal . Pink, SQmethlng Blue,
Lilac, Vanilla.
long and short styles.
Sizes 5-M-L-X.

f

$17.95

•Meet Area Director Adrianne Levine

l'

for Cla$5 Information .

t111 Toll-free 8582·7026
~

•

A 10-minute out-ofstatl= call to anywhere
in the United States
(except Alaska and
Hawaii) never costs
more than $2.60, plus
tax. Provided you follow a few simple rules.
. Just dial, long dis- ·
tance calls yourself,
'

without operator assistance. And make your
calls between 5- 11
P.M,, Sunday through
.Friday. (Rates are even
lower .after ll:oo P.M.
and on weeke'nds.)
That's· all it takes to

have amazingly inexpensive long distance
calls.
And if you know
the cost is low, you'll
probably enjoy the
·calls more. Because
you can spend more

.@Ohk&gt;Bell

of the call talking and
less' of it looking at .
the dock.
So the next time you
call long distance, call
the inexpensive V'ay.
· That way you can be
a lot more relaxed
while you're spending
time ~n ~he country.

UseYour
Phone
.
. For AU It's Worth .
'

~
- IJial·it-YPJlrself rates apply on ·our-of-srare dialt!d calls (without operato! il$Sis~an.c.e) fro~ ~esidence a.nd ~usineu p~nes anyvihere
--_...;·,n-thr--~cxcc-pr-Aiaska-.nd-Hawaii}-til)d--on~c._llt-placed~w ilh~an opeta[Or~ whero.:-d•rtct-d •alln8 lac•htles...are-not..analable.-D•al~t_,.y.ou.rselUa~-do not apply
·
·to pe:rson-~o.person, coin;. hocel i:uen, credi[
card, .collttt calls and .o.n calls charsed to
anQthC"r ~umber. ·
·
.
.

.- __,__...,..
Ga.....,Uipolis, b

412·414 Second ·Ave.

.

800-582·7026
---~-

I

• .• •If 1'11111'11-SI'IIIin&lt;'I,SWlday, Od. 22, 1972
~

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... - .............----··. ~·---......"' ..''--~

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generate
sessions

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THIS STORE OPEN

-- DAILY
9 ·TO 9
CLOSED
SUNDAY

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...

252 THIRD AVENUE

R* STAR-U.S.
GOVT.. .INSPECTED
.
U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
'

ROUND
c

USDA

I.

CHOICE

Wt rnervt the rltht
limit qutnlltl•s on
ltuns In this 1d. Prices
.,IKIIVt ttlrl.l S1t., Oct. .
~

u, m2. None hiCI to

lb•.

BONELESS RUMP ROAST ••••• 111. ' .1.19

dtlltrt·. .

GALLIPOLIS ~ Ad rianne members of "Weight WatLeville, area director, Weight chers," too. Twelve novice
Watchers . Inc.. Cincinnati, a lecturers are preparing to lead
former
"fat"
Detroit new Classes soon.
housewife, will be the main
Adrianne devotes much time
speaker here during Thursday · to her two children, Juii.e, five
night's Weight Watchers open years, and Jonathan, seven
house program.
months. Adrianne is proud of
C harles Forsythe, the fac t thai during her recent
Chillicothe, southern Ohio area pregnancy with Jonathan she
supervisor fa( WW Inc., said ga ined only 18 pounds- a far
the program will be given in · cry from her pre•" Weight'
Washington School auditorium, Walchers " .da ys when she
beginning at 7:30 p.m. There gained over 50 pounds while
will be no admission . The carrying Julie.
public is invited.
Adri anne has led area
Theme of the Weight Wal- "Weight Watchers" members
. chers program is. "Goodbye toa cumulative loss of over 231
Fat, Hello Fashion." Local tons. Forty local members
Weight Watchers will iake part have shed more than 100
in the show.
pounds each. A lecturer has
Mrs. Levine joined Weight dropped 200 pounds.
· Watchers in 1966. She shed 37'h
pounds, and has main.U.ined
Four human blood types
her slim figure the past six
are
recognized- A, B, AB
years.
and 0.
It was on May 8, 19G7, the
. first "weight Watchers" ~ l ass
in Greater Cincinnati was
opened on Tennessee Ave., in
Bond Hill. Considering the size
and success o( Detroit classes,
Adrianne and Joe expected a
deluge of applicants, but only
40 fatties came to the 100 seals
Joe had set up. By the second·
week, the group had dwindled
to 28.
'
Despite pessimism by those
who said "! can't eat so much
and lose weight," members did
begin to shed pounds. The
visual proof of their success
in c1·cased the membership,
and two additional classes
were opened at the !lond Hi ll
location.
" Wdigh l Watc hers"
currently operates 120 weekly
clilsscs in . southern Ohio,
northW"estern Ohio, northem .
Kentucky .and Dearborn
County, Indiana. Current area
mc.mbership. ·including both
active and Lijetime Mem'bers
(those who already have
reached a proper weig~li,
. C X&lt;'~e d • JO.OOO. Twe.nty-,t)VO .
mo re areu classes. are
s~hedu lcd to open in May and
June.
The "Weight Watchers" surf!
has grown from a single lecturer; Adriall)ll!;"tO" 4G&lt;I'iilnell
•
. 'lecturers and over 200 ciEirks
312
6TH
ST.
and weighers.' There are Jour
full-time' ,upervisors, ' all

.-e

Wayne National .F oresf .· ~:.~~~

Voice along Br'Way

.....

a.

-·

~:a~~n n~=~: :~:enlallves

~~~~ ~:v~~vlronmenlal ~lloo

:.!~•.I ~WJ":on

b ·n 7 - n
·.' .,.·. . ~· . . ·.•.~ ...... , ··· ·,·t'
i!l!:!!i!-!!l!!!!l!,.!!i!U!!!.I!I.!!!-!!!!:l.-!!l!!!!U!I!-!!!is~-!!!-!!!i!!!!!!!iS~!!!!!!!!_!!!!!!!!!!iS~!!!!!!!-!!i=2i=!:!~...~=~·!!l!"~=·~-~R!.!l_i!!'"~~Ci!!:!!!!_!=:!!l!!!!!!~z:!!!l!!!!!!!!...,.!=:!!!!!!!!!!!iz!!l!!=:Z:!!!:!!!iz~i!!!!!!!!!=:_!,!l-!!!i-!!l!~'!:!!!!i-~'"~-!l!*~!:!~!.!l"~-~·~-!.!l!!!!~-~-~~-~:~s!.!ll!!!!!!!l"~~!lii=OI!!S~..:!!!!es=•~=il!_!!l!-ib!l"''I!!C~-I!Sil'IllS!.~l!ltdqi$ ·a)riiNiJIZJbsiftftt
. ,;&lt;. , •. · . · · · ( ;·

.

.... ......f.lll.
:
lllllllit'
.

FRESH
.•.•••••• \•.•••.
HOME-GROWN CABBAGE ....•••. lb. 10c
FRESH GREEN ONIONS ••••••••• Bunch ·10C
RED BUnON RADISHES • • • • • , ••• 6-oz. Pkg.1Oc
CRISP GREEN PEPPERS ••••.....•• each 10c
FANCY LONG GREEN CUCUft\BERS each 10c

.. ""J

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. ;~·"'·
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50 Mile Radius)

•

Budget Ts 1m Available.
STATE FARE

STOKELY

WIEIIER OR SIIIDWICH

Pkgs. of 8

SHOWBOAT

FRUIT
DRI

75

ONLY t

5PACK

PRE-SOJI - f'lct..

- -

2·1b. Pkg.

99°

SUNSHINE FIG lARS • , ..•..•••.... ,
. ,..,,
"'"· 39c
SUNSHINI ....
"""""CKIRS

..............

MRS. FILBERT'S
FAMILY SIZE

.ClEF DELIGIIT

Soft Margarine

CHEESE LOAF

1-tb.
Bowl

SOAP l5.~~z.l $12 5
liZ . . . ~b; · $119

·zEST

7 YCI!rletles

'

18 DEOORATOR CXlORS 10 atOOSE FROM.

49c

• PEEP

-··
~~49C

~• -1.....,. _....

. POINT PI WANT .

::: 69C.
· KRAFT
SAUSAGE

EACH MD EVElY I'MtPET TO BE 1H£ HIGHES:r QUAUTY AVAILABlf. WE OFFER EXPERT WAlL TO .WAlL INSTAllATION.

JOUa fARI'Er W11 8E INSTAll m USING THE lATEST MID MOST MODERN METHODS.
'

SO .VISIT US OR tAU. 992·7590 MD S£E lHE FINE VALUES WE HAVE TO OFFER - FOR YOU ~S II THE .
'

QAWPOLIS MEA VJSJT 0U11

SII)W

ROOM AT 161 3nl Avt, OR W 446-1641 FOR YOUR ~PET NEEDs. REMEMBER

- tw£1' IS OUR IUSIIESS, OUII.ONLY BUSINESS, NOr'A SIDEUNE. SO SHOP NOW AND SAVE,
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"' .
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.,;.joit
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TJC._.·

116 '

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ciup« .• •:i' e:... t

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brilei
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EXPERTS- SATISFACIIOI

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1.1. WALl. 10 WNJ: INSTIIJ.ATIOIIS
. PERf'ORMED BY.FIICIORY lUllED

I

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Y·

••'

-Dqor.....,
aU 9914590.

5 MD!NSrNIATII

I
SPECULTSTS

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laona&amp;

REaDY RJR IMMEDIATE AND
EXPERI' INSTMJ.A'OOJt
M . . SQ. Yll PlUS PAD

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32 COLORS IN STOCk

FRO

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NYlON MD ICE

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PIZZA M'X
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,,you,.,..,.

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WALL. TO WALL

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HEAVY SPONGE PADDING.

IN TH£ MEl WE Off£1 TIISE I'MtPETS TO YOU (OUR QJSTOMERS) AT GREARY REDUCED PRICES. WE GUARMTEE_

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FREEZER QUEEI EITREES

FREE Grand Prix
· Raoinc Car on
Sptolal Paob ·of

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Apple Turnovers ....•........ ... •;•~ .57c
Tenderflake Biscuits ............. i:.:. 11 c
Te.n derflake Buttermilk Biscuit• . i·:.:. 11c
~~J:t Buttermilk Biscuit• ....... 4 ~~:,oRe

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

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75

4

REFRIGERATED FEATURES·

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SQ. YD.
THIS IS.THE RJU. PRICE INSTill m WITH

21 8EAUTIRl aJIDRS, 10 QIJOSE fROM.

LIMIT

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''POLYESTER .
\

SQ. YD.
1H1S IS. DE INSI'III ED PRICE INQJJDING
AtfAVY SPONGE PAD.

14%-oL Cans

1-Qt. 14-oz. Con

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BEANS

~\·1:. ~
·~.t.i
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&amp;

PUNCH, GRAPE Ill ORANGE

. PILLSBURY

PHONE 675-1160 •

.

·w,

WE At aaPETWD HAVE ASSEMBLED .tHE.MOST COMPLETE sa.ECFION OF FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPm

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nta

STOP IN AND ·SEE US

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~ontnirtfur

.- r;...,. ., ·

for

* ·STORM WINDOWS
*STORM DOORS
*INSULATION

•,

ASCS . ~ominati,ons:Jg~'W . :

wltb daily •h..we,.,. lit . ll~bl .
raiu. Oay.Umc hlgbs .. lbe
'GAIJ.IPOUS ~ !'lot enough
lllljl&lt;'r ~Is to · mttldle 515 .
~·~~linations h•vc' yet been
Moaduy allll mostly Ia lbe
n•ccived ~t the GaUia County
5G!&lt;Tucsday and Wed!IC!Iday.
Agritultural Stabilization and
Ovemlgbt (oWtJla the mid Us

....:

this week are GMAD plants •t
Leeds, Mo., and St. Loull, Mo.,
and at the GM stamping plant
at Hamilton, Ohio. The Hamil·
ton plant Is vital to GM
production since It provides
basic parts to 23 assembly
plants.

Saturday evening.
Mrs. Mary Reed visited her
daughter, Mrs. Erma Cleland
of Chester and viewed slides
shown by Rev. Smith of Keno
Christian Church.
Sunday evening supper
guests of Mrs. Edna Summerfield were Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker of Syracuse
and Ann Swnmerfleld.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. SU.rling Massar
and family were Mr. and Mrs.
· Ray Justis.
Sundayvisitorso!Mrs. Mary
Reed were Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Cleland, Chester.
- Mrs. Sandra Masaar

basic requirements of a~c und
St•rvi&lt;..,, whid1 proYides the
pelllliuns at age 55 after 20
years of setvice In U1e in·
dustry at least five ol them in
a uniO:. mine.
The fund said it currently has
65,723 former miners receiving
the pensions. Instead of the
provision requiring miners to
work their final year In a union
mine ,tbe fund said the
follo~lng would apply:
"Those who have worked for
compar\ies under UMWA

aad ...t

. J , Melvin Gilbert, Asc· . 1'1!:..0 mot' nomlnrillni
rive tln-ough ~inc
Committee Chairman, &amp;ald.. ~~~~
t.ceived .bf Oct. . .. .
yea':' ·"n&lt;"' May, 1946 • ""~
G,llia
CINilty
has
ll
ecm·
rl,·
••~h · ASC. .~ommlllll!l'
rcoquu·t'li ~~ hav" ·been cmmunities, with each· Cilm··· Comlid~&lt;;:balnnlowlllhaft .·
ployed under such !'&lt;lntract at
Conscrvatioo
Servil-e
CASCSJ
munity electing three · ~· Jo ~~led tile m! · o( Ill
leastthrec of the ll!stfivc y&lt;•nrs uurth lo near &gt;t 'south.
Offil'e for ASC community m q n It y commIt t te .nimlrreeS : lllltll,": llld ...,, ·
.~fore. &lt;-casing wor.lt In the ~,ll-.._.fl'!l.~.~:.:.:. _io;;m~~'W$ committee seats.
representatives on Dec• .1,
.•Gilllea't. ·fleclillillonut~~lliltM
b11ununous coal Industry;
Uu.6e who have worked 10
throughd4 years under the
contract smce May, 1946, must
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il.cindnaliflh ~ nol·~l!cated.
have a\least two of the lastfive
By T. Allan Wolter
.
.
. :,:O!ftdklllililniMIIlilnaliidby .
years under contract; thooe
forming field. lnvestlptlons abOUt Mil; ·
petUIOil, Eadl petltiGn Dl!llt lit
District ~\anger
.
wa1er, forests and wildlife .h\· ·
-sliiMd""'at _lee.atiln.e''....::
. •_ . · .1
who have worked I&amp; through 19
IRONTON
Yes,
Martha,
lhere
ts
1errela1ionshlps.
Man's
effect
'on
'the
·
"'
·
~years under contract .:~~rtt-e
a Slippery Rock
.
. was
·
voters
.. ·
environment
Sll'essed. One .very .
· .Uil · ln .thebec:ammuni"''
:I. __Tile .
May, ~946, must have one of )lle
'
. In I his case il 's Slippeiy Rock State
inlereining assignment was to makii
ilt IJIIlhaY . on.any ..,..t qf
last (1ve years of such em·
College, on the banks of Slippery Rock
environmental observations of man's . ·· .-fie!', ·.No ·.alpiClat: form Is
pluyment."
Creek, localed in the town of (you
concern for . his environment and·
;~utrtd, b!al the.petition m)llt
The fund said
the
KUessed
ill
Slippery
Rock,
Pa.
'
inCIIIdt· a statement .that the
requirements regarding work
quali1y of life in the town of Slippery
-·•'-'.· .~ .'""' -~e.!f· ·'-led
. ..
Two weeks ago I went there to
Rock. ·Such an 1nvesligallon Jed.ua .to
"'"""""'"fannera
"""•m.•v '"""'
during the last five years of
. .
.
, ·EJ••Iblt
.
- ' -. u
paruc1pa1e,.as a siudenl, In a three-day
wonder how towns In this ...eJ .would
• . ·.
,...., _..
employment does not apply to
environmenral
education
workshop
.
d
h
i
·
Mai!Y·
·
petltlona
u
.they. ~.
1are .UII er su.c ntense IICI'IItlny. ·· ·
miners who since 1946 have
. ·, ....., ........
· - .........ible'-'
Accompanying me from this area were
1 h' k
h lille
.
-.. ........
..,.
,..,.
, worked 20 or more years for
, Dingess, representing the
1 rn beg.
some
. very wort. w
;.•~uon to ,.,. - - • " -. To ·
B
II
i
h'
l
·
•'"'
"""•·•nw"'"'""
BY JACK O'BRIAN
ErroU Gamer (bringing his nifty planlstics conlpanie{! signing the union
1ng to happen as a .. . '""~'"y,.·· · . . can·dldate, :_·
1 rngs are
· nn
I..awrence Co0111y School Systenl and
1
1 f h'
..
.,...... 11 1
TBOSBJ'S .COlT JOHNNY
IIIIo the St. Regis Malaonette Oct 23 for tllree ·contract.
resu 1 o 1 IS lrammg.
.
· ........
•-~ . 111•lilt be ........ ""
Ken .Clark, representing the Ironton
F'
1 11 11
f
· •-·I
••
A LOT' Or UCI. ·
weeks) has composed a greatbaUad to words by
Although the new regulations
rrsl o a • nes o commun ....t on
. .~..,.......
.......:a( ·...ie · lia...;..._
r•-iNEW YOIUt (KFS) '-'You can file an ol
four.Qacarw!nner,old ?M-time-around Sanuny go into ellect Nov. t, the fWld .
School Syslem.
havebeenopenedbelween u-11av1na
' · · · · ,. ' · .'~ - The objective of this training is
lechnlcal , experllse In eri~rliental
lrillrtlts.lll ·the.aGIIIIIIIII\117 ill· ·
Jobnny~'swtv. under "J'': Joailna'sthe
Cahn. Erroll'slast b~~~~t hit waa "Misty," now said miners who would be
1wofold, 10 make us as Individuals more
management and thoae having' ~- ih ' · ·*~he~Ia ~~~~~
,aew, Joenne'a the &amp;ecald and Jocly was first. .. recorded by about 100 artllts ... The. ·Spring eligible under the current
aware of 1he lnterrelalionshlps lhal
~eaching lhis to others. An' . examPle · . "...... · .. . ·Jill'.....·
FDRJr.at tbechlc ia CGte Beiijieloo(tedrnore
Rec&lt;Jrd Co. is verging onslgnil!g aN. Y. Knlcks sU.ndanls, but not under the
exist
in
our
environment,
and
to
·
h
be
·
·
·.
i!I'
G
iriiJI4.
·
·
·
llketbeGen.MacArthur lhlnhls dad: llllOkeda " star to~ Its wulnp. The star !a a pearl ol new requirements, would have
m1g 1
rell()urce managers and · · ·:, Till• ·lnclu"es p'roducera,
d
I
eve op an ac1ion plan for getting this
educa1ors. It's more than talk. · · . ..
,;,;.~
. . ..... ~- . '--• , ,.. __._ .
_ID'IICObplpe ... Oar favorite Uttle nelgbborbood
great price ... Muhammad·All doesn't· want his until Jan. 1,1973, to apply for a
infonna1ion
lo
the
general
public
and
N
h
Ohi
De
·
._,
___
..,.,....,,., .... - - pub,J.G.Me11Gn(at73rd•3r'ltAve.),ilgatting
fans to thlntbe'a gone star-rich: riding with pension and receive approval.
0
1he schools.
ex I year t e
parlmel!t "'
: ... W]ieiber · •lee'" by 11M
· dowmlghtchlc: Amerlea'atopfllhlon designer
Trin1 Lopez In his Rolls-Royce convertible, ol'
There will be a reviewer of
Educa1lon will conduct . 18 en·
·· ·. e'aaiml....._ or t[ · ·
Our
suc!e1y
goes
lo
great
lengths
to
vironmental
education
worklh~pa
.
·
:
·
:
'·..:i.J.~..: ri~~ ,. ·
Norman i!foren II a regular, lilo Frederick Mu shouts to everyone they pass, "This Is Trlnl aU applications for pensions .
educa1eand
prepare
children
for
alllhe
s•a1ewide
for
selected
taachen.,~
.
.
·,
~:=;.-;··.,,
to ,
Vlclllrla, tbe deflnl1lve antlqqes upwt who
Lopez' car, not mine I"
denied uoder the 'cu.rrent
diflicul1les 1hey wiU face as adults. It is
trainees will, ,In tutn, : eonduc
. t ·.. · . .....
. ..t.a.
'~ ..::. . •~ . -~..;,., .~.... :1
even ledUrea at lht Metropolitan M111e11111.
regulations, according to fund
somewhat
ironic
thal
very
lillie
k
h
their
hool
''!li"
•• '" - v
EJ:-N.Y. detective chief AI Seidman 111 being
Lut Ql the great bo\l)evardlers, John Ring· trustees Edward L. carey, c.
guidance Is offered to them on what
wor s ops 1n
own sc
II'~~· ··· · . AsCI l!:lcali~IYI . .'Diredor,
beckCIIIed~~lntothelhnellght ... StsteSen.
UngNorthQI~&amp;Ddollmillions,badn'tbeen W. Davis, and Paul R. Dean .
may well turn outto be the most critical
According · to Bill Dlnl"1·' · ' · • . 1)1~ld ·
McKtnali:: ·wtu'
Supervisor
of
County
Teachers,
plans · . . r·•· ,,..-... ~...;:.. •-'•""~
John Marchi, backed by the CDill8rVIItift Party here In two ;years bat his connoisseurship led
Carey, general counsel for
problem 1hey will face, which Is im·
d
h ld
'"" ......~...., ,....,..._.
,
d
are WI erway to 0 I llimlllr
. · 1q ·afr.nlwJt the Yllidlty of ·.
for. mayor last time VIII'IIUI Jawn Undlay, hiJn to only the great luu centers: staying at the lJMWA, is trustees
prnvrng an maintaining the quality of
workshop for selected teachen fr.ml.lll
.
· -'-". ..'.&gt; ..... • .',' : • •• . .. :. .
.
w-'1 at the JlllV'a big bub bollorlng Veep
the St. Regia, dining at "21" and Cote Basque, chainnan.
all life on this planet.
••
Co
Schoo'_,.,,
Spiro. The llbaeiiCe suppcwMJy 11 portento111 ... mldnlghtlng at P. J. Oarke's, and was so
The trustees said pensions
Just as we need Information about
.,.w~nceU SW)ty
... .
.:
' .. U :~ .11111:1 ~ .~lea
·
.d
f
e
.
•
Forest
Service
has
ol·
In
·ftomi•IMI
...,
patlllan
"'-'-·'
Lear
•
"""'ty
de"""led
to
be
back
In
Manhattan
be
didn't
get
will
be
approved
currenlly
for
In P J
d
those surviving miners who
a can 1 ate we vote or, we and our
fered suitable· lands for qu_alifled
. ·. - .·• .•••• - 1..""". :~-.- ....,
wilt -cllaalia'ofthe lateOile Ollenol 01aen 1o to bed for a1moet 30 hours- champagned right
....., •-··---· v .,........, ww
children must also have factual
1
10
Johlllloa'J BeDupoppiD fame ... Grant's famed
llfOIIId the clock.
meet the new requirements. No
knowledge on which to base our
groups
estab ish outdoor
. c,mpltte· lht· 11111 to 111
BaUr
payments,
however,
would
be
,hinkingonwhatlsgoodandbadforour
labOThratorSies. De
of. ·N · ,.l
. : rWIIIIIIJ'. and linl-.tbt e«nl»t dtrgr!rle a lit olf 'l'lrla Square on 42nd st.
The McGuff gang hired Roleland
oom made for any period prior to ·
e
tate
partment
a.tura
.•~
L .. ... ·
· It
· .'••.l...,
- ' - ...... ·.
environment.
R
.., ... ,.-·v
lliJil\ooO
·
feeltthela&amp;tkllandpa nltalaq -an atn for an 01:1. 23 rally- but cancelled It already; N 1
Back
10
Slippery
Rock.
The
esourcea
planl
~he
establlahn!lint
Ill
.
..
oliiCt
b1Jf111'td1r
t.
·
,:,
nickel for -baut on Jour pup.
runnU. out of backers ... Maria Schell retired
;hey. added that a maximum
Envlronmentall.earnlqg
Centen,
one
·
..
•"
...
:;....;.;
_...._
·wiD
ksh
a-11 Gecqe Kenned;y celebrated liis "•-'ffGIIIIIlcks rich, but inllation forced a second effort would be made to bring
wur op, sponsored by the U. S.
ofwhichwlllbelocalednorthol ,JIDrta.0 · , ~n"it.-u:i·,;;;~~
Dnt .,....,U... llllli~ In his favorite lookatheraavlngsandsolhe'scOIIIeback~ ... the chang~ in regulations to.
Foresi Service, was conducted by
mou1h. .. .•
.·
. . .. . .
·1\SC.:~
. · U. . ... '·
ri.taurant In the wwld, Quo Vadli - Gen1 John Ringling North considered the Inflation- the attention of persons whooe
members of that agency's national
The u. s. Foretal &amp;erme ·!Ill· a
llt~ert"''l• · of ..ii....com•
~raining 1eam. RepreS.nlf!l among the
con linuing program of Envlnnmlntal
1rolt1
aoMtita
George II a youag a. SecoDd time arouitd ••. receulon and decided, "The only friend I know appUcations were previously
''Seculd 'lbne Around" sorwwrtter Slmmy wl»abouldhavenothlngtofearforhlallnanclal denied. Tbey asked that- all
50 trainees were natural resource
Education which .!•,. ~nducttd
Cl,rttu... ~'1..~. '-lli:!...,:
.managers, educators, outdoor cluba,
1hroughou1 the nation auch 11 the one · .. · ......,·.. ·'."" .,·........,;..:.. .::::::!' ,-_
Cabo and biB belullf1ll BrooklyaHiorn (lllo security the rest of his life Is Jean Paul Getty" such persons write the filnd.
informal ion specialists, soil scienllats,
j
1 eel su
Rock Pa
""' - ._.., - - . "'"
IICOIIII timearound) wilt
helped beautify ... Oh, we'd gue11 Bob Hope needn't worry, nor- 'immediately, giving their
recreation planners aod various conUll compel 11 ppery
' ·• · ·
dk!illirc
will' lbtlr awi+ll!tiona
the llrelcly beautiful CGte ~e; ditto the Bing nor Morton ~. certainly not Joel Social Security number and
Yea, Marthlr, lhete II a Sllppar)o • · wert ,............ .. , 11111 .·
George Woocla ol tbe lnt'l Banking set ... Great McU'ea, Claudette Colbert, Avereil Harriman current address, to apedlte
11 . : .
wltbln. 16 .
old Met len«: Laurlts Melcblcr had a stroke.
andafewhundredmoreofthecelebset.
the review.
Mos1 of our time wa• spent per•
_,.
· ··· ·
&lt;.. · . : .." ,' ';·,:. ~ :.: ·' ··.·: ' .

; . . WASHINGTON (lJPIJ- The'
· United Mine Workers Welfare
and Retirement Fund · has
unounced liberalized
requirements for soft coal
, mlnen to be eligible for '150
per month pensions, effective
Nov· I.
The fund said the action was
being . taken. bOth to comply
with .recent federal court
d~c!slons and to make
... eligibility requirements more
. uniform to all applicants
r'"gardiess ·Of when they
stopped worltlng.

..,...,_BID
. ......_•. ··"?""""'

. :Ar~~:::;·strike c~e~Iines 1a1e

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Murphy
have moved their house trailer
from her parents property, Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Summerfield, to
the land they purchased from
Mr. Craft at Tuppers Plains.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. SU.rling and family
were Mr . Robert Gray and Ray
Justis.
Mrs . Robert Gray attended a
·meeting in Columbus Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Sum·
merfield spent Thursday
evening with their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Summerfield and
daughter in Parkersburg.
SWlday dinner guests of Mrs.
Leota Massar were Mr. and
Mrs. David Riggs and
daughters of Vienna, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Summerfield and Amber spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Rex Swnmerfield.
1\!r. and Mrs. Joe Connally
were visiting friends at Belpre

A.key ~lOVe came in erasin~
the previous requirement that
a 'miner nwat work his final
year in a union mine.
It alao wiped out a provision
that miners who retired prior
to J965 had to work In the
bitWhinous coal industry 2lJ of
the previous 30 years.
The action does ·not affect
hard coal alllneri from the
anthracite coal fields . who
came under a separate PensiOn
plan.
·
·
' No change was made In the

M•llltl)• ,loudy

: .:-• ·. '.'· ·":.t:-.. ' '

.._";'

•
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EOrmer fiaules

.lall ~ ()rp
:· ~en Ih (fUS~ E. as:tern
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:··Rules · liberalize~ . for full pension~

By lJIIIIed Prela lllleraalloui

United Auto Workers and
General Motors bargalnin·g
'
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teams · met through ihe
weekend to try to resolve
grievances against a COB!·
cutting management team that
triggered strikes by 12,i00
workers af~GM plants In
Kanaa8, Wisconsin .311d Texas.
Strikes at Janesville, Wll.;
Arlington, Ta., and Kansas
City, Kan., were expected to
• end by Monday or Tuesday 8$
part of the union's new
strategy · of ' .'hit-and-run"
_ - - strikes-short strikes that do
not diain the union's strike
' fund.
WEIGHT WATCHERS DAY will be climaxed with an open house Thursday, Oct. 26,
• Three strikes called last
beginning at 7:30p.m. in the Washington grade school audilllrium in Gallipolis. Proclaiming
week were nothing more than
"Weight Watchers Day" in the Gallipolis area is City Manager D. Kenneth Morgan. Looking on
"long w~end" walkouts and
· are Gallipolis Weight Watchers Jackie Coonen, Bess Grace and Madge Boggs.
three strike dea4lines In the
coming week are set to e~pire
Thursday night and Friday.
The series of "quickie"
strikes have been directed
mainly at the General ·Motors
Assembly Division (GMAD).
The union has· accused the
recently formed . GMAD with
"slashing back assembly line
manpower while demanding as
much, ·or more production,
llsuing heavy disciplinary Jay.
,
offs, and attempting to dllcard
~
important provisions of agree- .
•
ments" witli fonnerly separate
divisions.
GMAD was set up to con:
soUdate basic manufacturing
and assembly operations under
Ol)e management group. It riow
operates 18 plants, Including
the Norwood, Ohio, plant which
was struck for a record 174
days over the same llsues.
The short-term strikes .disrupt GM production at a time
when GM's divisions · are
CAROLYN TAYLOR
CAROLYN TAYLOR
for record aales.
heading
BEFORE
AFI'ER
Unless a strike lasts more than
one week, the workers do not
CONGRATULATIONS will be in order for three
receive any strike bepe!its
Gallipolis Weight Watchers Thursday night, Qct. 26, In the
from the union.
Washington Grade school auditorium. Miss carolyn TaY,ior,
GM could counter the union's
above, is shown before and after she entered the program.
ADRIANNE Levine, area new strategy by refualng to go
Miss Taylor, an employee of the Holzer Medical Center, has
director, Weight Watchers, along and r~n the planil
lost HO pounds. other lOll-pound losers from GalUpoUs are
Inc., Clnclnnali; Is shown until aU Issues are resolved.
Mrs. Lark Napier, 100 pounds, and Mrs. Penny McKean,
here after losing 37~ The company, so far, has in134'1.!-pounds. All three wiU be honored during the Weight
pounds. ,She will be the guest dicated no plans to Jock out
Watchers open house Thursday.
speaker In Gallipolis on striking workers.
Thursday, Oct. 28, beginning
Oh strike oow are 5,000
at 7: 30 p.m., In the members of Local 95 at the
Washington grade school GMAD plant at Janesville,
' ,·
. ,
. .
auditorium. It will be part of 4,101l •members of Local 31 at
Weight Watchers Day ac- the GMAii plant at Kanaas
lil\
~
ijvltlc~ . lor .a..a reslt~Fnts. City, and 3,500 member• ·of
~~~~
~
'
'the pq~lle Is .invited. '
·~ Local 278 at G1&gt;!AD .(Jl

X,'l'lmt. ·flnrtlnel.s..d.,, Oct. Z1, 11'12

U-TIIt 7

....,..ca.·a•
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ou•••-.~
-MI-NOIA'

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St~s
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generate
sessions

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THIS STORE OPEN

-- DAILY
9 ·TO 9
CLOSED
SUNDAY

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252 THIRD AVENUE

R* STAR-U.S.
GOVT.. .INSPECTED
.
U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
'

ROUND
c

USDA

I.

CHOICE

Wt rnervt the rltht
limit qutnlltl•s on
ltuns In this 1d. Prices
.,IKIIVt ttlrl.l S1t., Oct. .
~

u, m2. None hiCI to

lb•.

BONELESS RUMP ROAST ••••• 111. ' .1.19

dtlltrt·. .

GALLIPOLIS ~ Ad rianne members of "Weight WatLeville, area director, Weight chers," too. Twelve novice
Watchers . Inc.. Cincinnati, a lecturers are preparing to lead
former
"fat"
Detroit new Classes soon.
housewife, will be the main
Adrianne devotes much time
speaker here during Thursday · to her two children, Juii.e, five
night's Weight Watchers open years, and Jonathan, seven
house program.
months. Adrianne is proud of
C harles Forsythe, the fac t thai during her recent
Chillicothe, southern Ohio area pregnancy with Jonathan she
supervisor fa( WW Inc., said ga ined only 18 pounds- a far
the program will be given in · cry from her pre•" Weight'
Washington School auditorium, Walchers " .da ys when she
beginning at 7:30 p.m. There gained over 50 pounds while
will be no admission . The carrying Julie.
public is invited.
Adri anne has led area
Theme of the Weight Wal- "Weight Watchers" members
. chers program is. "Goodbye toa cumulative loss of over 231
Fat, Hello Fashion." Local tons. Forty local members
Weight Watchers will iake part have shed more than 100
in the show.
pounds each. A lecturer has
Mrs. Levine joined Weight dropped 200 pounds.
· Watchers in 1966. She shed 37'h
pounds, and has main.U.ined
Four human blood types
her slim figure the past six
are
recognized- A, B, AB
years.
and 0.
It was on May 8, 19G7, the
. first "weight Watchers" ~ l ass
in Greater Cincinnati was
opened on Tennessee Ave., in
Bond Hill. Considering the size
and success o( Detroit classes,
Adrianne and Joe expected a
deluge of applicants, but only
40 fatties came to the 100 seals
Joe had set up. By the second·
week, the group had dwindled
to 28.
'
Despite pessimism by those
who said "! can't eat so much
and lose weight," members did
begin to shed pounds. The
visual proof of their success
in c1·cased the membership,
and two additional classes
were opened at the !lond Hi ll
location.
" Wdigh l Watc hers"
currently operates 120 weekly
clilsscs in . southern Ohio,
northW"estern Ohio, northem .
Kentucky .and Dearborn
County, Indiana. Current area
mc.mbership. ·including both
active and Lijetime Mem'bers
(those who already have
reached a proper weig~li,
. C X&lt;'~e d • JO.OOO. Twe.nty-,t)VO .
mo re areu classes. are
s~hedu lcd to open in May and
June.
The "Weight Watchers" surf!
has grown from a single lecturer; Adriall)ll!;"tO" 4G&lt;I'iilnell
•
. 'lecturers and over 200 ciEirks
312
6TH
ST.
and weighers.' There are Jour
full-time' ,upervisors, ' all

.-e

Wayne National .F oresf .· ~:.~~~

Voice along Br'Way

.....

a.

-·

~:a~~n n~=~: :~:enlallves

~~~~ ~:v~~vlronmenlal ~lloo

:.!~•.I ~WJ":on

b ·n 7 - n
·.' .,.·. . ~· . . ·.•.~ ...... , ··· ·,·t'
i!l!:!!i!-!!l!!!!l!,.!!i!U!!!.I!I.!!!-!!!!:l.-!!l!!!!U!I!-!!!is~-!!!-!!!i!!!!!!!iS~!!!!!!!!_!!!!!!!!!!iS~!!!!!!!-!!i=2i=!:!~...~=~·!!l!"~=·~-~R!.!l_i!!'"~~Ci!!:!!!!_!=:!!l!!!!!!~z:!!!l!!!!!!!!...,.!=:!!!!!!!!!!!iz!!l!!=:Z:!!!:!!!iz~i!!!!!!!!!=:_!,!l-!!!i-!!l!~'!:!!!!i-~'"~-!l!*~!:!~!.!l"~-~·~-!.!l!!!!~-~-~~-~:~s!.!ll!!!!!!!l"~~!lii=OI!!S~..:!!!!es=•~=il!_!!l!-ib!l"''I!!C~-I!Sil'IllS!.~l!ltdqi$ ·a)riiNiJIZJbsiftftt
. ,;&lt;. , •. · . · · · ( ;·

.

.... ......f.lll.
:
lllllllit'
.

FRESH
.•.•••••• \•.•••.
HOME-GROWN CABBAGE ....•••. lb. 10c
FRESH GREEN ONIONS ••••••••• Bunch ·10C
RED BUnON RADISHES • • • • • , ••• 6-oz. Pkg.1Oc
CRISP GREEN PEPPERS ••••.....•• each 10c
FANCY LONG GREEN CUCUft\BERS each 10c

.. ""J

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50 Mile Radius)

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Budget Ts 1m Available.
STATE FARE

STOKELY

WIEIIER OR SIIIDWICH

Pkgs. of 8

SHOWBOAT

FRUIT
DRI

75

ONLY t

5PACK

PRE-SOJI - f'lct..

- -

2·1b. Pkg.

99°

SUNSHINE FIG lARS • , ..•..•••.... ,
. ,..,,
"'"· 39c
SUNSHINI ....
"""""CKIRS

..............

MRS. FILBERT'S
FAMILY SIZE

.ClEF DELIGIIT

Soft Margarine

CHEESE LOAF

1-tb.
Bowl

SOAP l5.~~z.l $12 5
liZ . . . ~b; · $119

·zEST

7 YCI!rletles

'

18 DEOORATOR CXlORS 10 atOOSE FROM.

49c

• PEEP

-··
~~49C

~• -1.....,. _....

. POINT PI WANT .

::: 69C.
· KRAFT
SAUSAGE

EACH MD EVElY I'MtPET TO BE 1H£ HIGHES:r QUAUTY AVAILABlf. WE OFFER EXPERT WAlL TO .WAlL INSTAllATION.

JOUa fARI'Er W11 8E INSTAll m USING THE lATEST MID MOST MODERN METHODS.
'

SO .VISIT US OR tAU. 992·7590 MD S£E lHE FINE VALUES WE HAVE TO OFFER - FOR YOU ~S II THE .
'

QAWPOLIS MEA VJSJT 0U11

SII)W

ROOM AT 161 3nl Avt, OR W 446-1641 FOR YOUR ~PET NEEDs. REMEMBER

- tw£1' IS OUR IUSIIESS, OUII.ONLY BUSINESS, NOr'A SIDEUNE. SO SHOP NOW AND SAVE,
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"' .
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.,;.joit
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116 '

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brilei
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EXPERTS- SATISFACIIOI

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1.1. WALl. 10 WNJ: INSTIIJ.ATIOIIS
. PERf'ORMED BY.FIICIORY lUllED

I

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Y·

••'

-Dqor.....,
aU 9914590.

5 MD!NSrNIATII

I
SPECULTSTS

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laona&amp;

REaDY RJR IMMEDIATE AND
EXPERI' INSTMJ.A'OOJt
M . . SQ. Yll PlUS PAD

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32 COLORS IN STOCk

FRO

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NYlON MD ICE

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PIZZA M'X
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,,you,.,..,.

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WALL. TO WALL

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HEAVY SPONGE PADDING.

IN TH£ MEl WE Off£1 TIISE I'MtPETS TO YOU (OUR QJSTOMERS) AT GREARY REDUCED PRICES. WE GUARMTEE_

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FREEZER QUEEI EITREES

FREE Grand Prix
· Raoinc Car on
Sptolal Paob ·of

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Apple Turnovers ....•........ ... •;•~ .57c
Tenderflake Biscuits ............. i:.:. 11 c
Te.n derflake Buttermilk Biscuit• . i·:.:. 11c
~~J:t Buttermilk Biscuit• ....... 4 ~~:,oRe

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

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75

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REFRIGERATED FEATURES·

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SQ. YD.
THIS IS.THE RJU. PRICE INSTill m WITH

21 8EAUTIRl aJIDRS, 10 QIJOSE fROM.

LIMIT

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''POLYESTER .
\

SQ. YD.
1H1S IS. DE INSI'III ED PRICE INQJJDING
AtfAVY SPONGE PAD.

14%-oL Cans

1-Qt. 14-oz. Con

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BEANS

~\·1:. ~
·~.t.i
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&amp;

PUNCH, GRAPE Ill ORANGE

. PILLSBURY

PHONE 675-1160 •

.

·w,

WE At aaPETWD HAVE ASSEMBLED .tHE.MOST COMPLETE sa.ECFION OF FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPm

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nta

STOP IN AND ·SEE US

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~ontnirtfur

.- r;...,. ., ·

for

* ·STORM WINDOWS
*STORM DOORS
*INSULATION

•,

ASCS . ~ominati,ons:Jg~'W . :

wltb daily •h..we,.,. lit . ll~bl .
raiu. Oay.Umc hlgbs .. lbe
'GAIJ.IPOUS ~ !'lot enough
lllljl&lt;'r ~Is to · mttldle 515 .
~·~~linations h•vc' yet been
Moaduy allll mostly Ia lbe
n•ccived ~t the GaUia County
5G!&lt;Tucsday and Wed!IC!Iday.
Agritultural Stabilization and
Ovemlgbt (oWtJla the mid Us

....:

this week are GMAD plants •t
Leeds, Mo., and St. Loull, Mo.,
and at the GM stamping plant
at Hamilton, Ohio. The Hamil·
ton plant Is vital to GM
production since It provides
basic parts to 23 assembly
plants.

Saturday evening.
Mrs. Mary Reed visited her
daughter, Mrs. Erma Cleland
of Chester and viewed slides
shown by Rev. Smith of Keno
Christian Church.
Sunday evening supper
guests of Mrs. Edna Summerfield were Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker of Syracuse
and Ann Swnmerfleld.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. SU.rling Massar
and family were Mr. and Mrs.
· Ray Justis.
Sundayvisitorso!Mrs. Mary
Reed were Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Cleland, Chester.
- Mrs. Sandra Masaar

basic requirements of a~c und
St•rvi&lt;..,, whid1 proYides the
pelllliuns at age 55 after 20
years of setvice In U1e in·
dustry at least five ol them in
a uniO:. mine.
The fund said it currently has
65,723 former miners receiving
the pensions. Instead of the
provision requiring miners to
work their final year In a union
mine ,tbe fund said the
follo~lng would apply:
"Those who have worked for
compar\ies under UMWA

aad ...t

. J , Melvin Gilbert, Asc· . 1'1!:..0 mot' nomlnrillni
rive tln-ough ~inc
Committee Chairman, &amp;ald.. ~~~~
t.ceived .bf Oct. . .. .
yea':' ·"n&lt;"' May, 1946 • ""~
G,llia
CINilty
has
ll
ecm·
rl,·
••~h · ASC. .~ommlllll!l'
rcoquu·t'li ~~ hav" ·been cmmunities, with each· Cilm··· Comlid~&lt;;:balnnlowlllhaft .·
ployed under such !'&lt;lntract at
Conscrvatioo
Servil-e
CASCSJ
munity electing three · ~· Jo ~~led tile m! · o( Ill
leastthrec of the ll!stfivc y&lt;•nrs uurth lo near &gt;t 'south.
Offil'e for ASC community m q n It y commIt t te .nimlrreeS : lllltll,": llld ...,, ·
.~fore. &lt;-casing wor.lt In the ~,ll-.._.fl'!l.~.~:.:.:. _io;;m~~'W$ committee seats.
representatives on Dec• .1,
.•Gilllea't. ·fleclillillonut~~lliltM
b11ununous coal Industry;
Uu.6e who have worked 10
throughd4 years under the
contract smce May, 1946, must
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il.cindnaliflh ~ nol·~l!cated.
have a\least two of the lastfive
By T. Allan Wolter
.
.
. :,:O!ftdklllililniMIIlilnaliidby .
years under contract; thooe
forming field. lnvestlptlons abOUt Mil; ·
petUIOil, Eadl petltiGn Dl!llt lit
District ~\anger
.
wa1er, forests and wildlife .h\· ·
-sliiMd""'at _lee.atiln.e''....::
. •_ . · .1
who have worked I&amp; through 19
IRONTON
Yes,
Martha,
lhere
ts
1errela1ionshlps.
Man's
effect
'on
'the
·
"'
·
~years under contract .:~~rtt-e
a Slippery Rock
.
. was
·
voters
.. ·
environment
Sll'essed. One .very .
· .Uil · ln .thebec:ammuni"''
:I. __Tile .
May, ~946, must have one of )lle
'
. In I his case il 's Slippeiy Rock State
inlereining assignment was to makii
ilt IJIIlhaY . on.any ..,..t qf
last (1ve years of such em·
College, on the banks of Slippery Rock
environmental observations of man's . ·· .-fie!', ·.No ·.alpiClat: form Is
pluyment."
Creek, localed in the town of (you
concern for . his environment and·
;~utrtd, b!al the.petition m)llt
The fund said
the
KUessed
ill
Slippery
Rock,
Pa.
'
inCIIIdt· a statement .that the
requirements regarding work
quali1y of life in the town of Slippery
-·•'-'.· .~ .'""' -~e.!f· ·'-led
. ..
Two weeks ago I went there to
Rock. ·Such an 1nvesligallon Jed.ua .to
"'"""""'"fannera
"""•m.•v '"""'
during the last five years of
. .
.
, ·EJ••Iblt
.
- ' -. u
paruc1pa1e,.as a siudenl, In a three-day
wonder how towns In this ...eJ .would
• . ·.
,...., _..
employment does not apply to
environmenral
education
workshop
.
d
h
i
·
Mai!Y·
·
petltlona
u
.they. ~.
1are .UII er su.c ntense IICI'IItlny. ·· ·
miners who since 1946 have
. ·, ....., ........
· - .........ible'-'
Accompanying me from this area were
1 h' k
h lille
.
-.. ........
..,.
,..,.
, worked 20 or more years for
, Dingess, representing the
1 rn beg.
some
. very wort. w
;.•~uon to ,.,. - - • " -. To ·
B
II
i
h'
l
·
•'"'
"""•·•nw"'"'""
BY JACK O'BRIAN
ErroU Gamer (bringing his nifty planlstics conlpanie{! signing the union
1ng to happen as a .. . '""~'"y,.·· · . . can·dldate, :_·
1 rngs are
· nn
I..awrence Co0111y School Systenl and
1
1 f h'
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.,...... 11 1
TBOSBJ'S .COlT JOHNNY
IIIIo the St. Regis Malaonette Oct 23 for tllree ·contract.
resu 1 o 1 IS lrammg.
.
· ........
•-~ . 111•lilt be ........ ""
Ken .Clark, representing the Ironton
F'
1 11 11
f
· •-·I
••
A LOT' Or UCI. ·
weeks) has composed a greatbaUad to words by
Although the new regulations
rrsl o a • nes o commun ....t on
. .~..,.......
.......:a( ·...ie · lia...;..._
r•-iNEW YOIUt (KFS) '-'You can file an ol
four.Qacarw!nner,old ?M-time-around Sanuny go into ellect Nov. t, the fWld .
School Syslem.
havebeenopenedbelween u-11av1na
' · · · · ,. ' · .'~ - The objective of this training is
lechnlcal , experllse In eri~rliental
lrillrtlts.lll ·the.aGIIIIIIIII\117 ill· ·
Jobnny~'swtv. under "J'': Joailna'sthe
Cahn. Erroll'slast b~~~~t hit waa "Misty," now said miners who would be
1wofold, 10 make us as Individuals more
management and thoae having' ~- ih ' · ·*~he~Ia ~~~~~
,aew, Joenne'a the &amp;ecald and Jocly was first. .. recorded by about 100 artllts ... The. ·Spring eligible under the current
aware of 1he lnterrelalionshlps lhal
~eaching lhis to others. An' . examPle · . "...... · .. . ·Jill'.....·
FDRJr.at tbechlc ia CGte Beiijieloo(tedrnore
Rec&lt;Jrd Co. is verging onslgnil!g aN. Y. Knlcks sU.ndanls, but not under the
exist
in
our
environment,
and
to
·
h
be
·
·
·.
i!I'
G
iriiJI4.
·
·
·
llketbeGen.MacArthur lhlnhls dad: llllOkeda " star to~ Its wulnp. The star !a a pearl ol new requirements, would have
m1g 1
rell()urce managers and · · ·:, Till• ·lnclu"es p'roducera,
d
I
eve op an ac1ion plan for getting this
educa1ors. It's more than talk. · · . ..
,;,;.~
. . ..... ~- . '--• , ,.. __._ .
_ID'IICObplpe ... Oar favorite Uttle nelgbborbood
great price ... Muhammad·All doesn't· want his until Jan. 1,1973, to apply for a
infonna1ion
lo
the
general
public
and
N
h
Ohi
De
·
._,
___
..,.,....,,., .... - - pub,J.G.Me11Gn(at73rd•3r'ltAve.),ilgatting
fans to thlntbe'a gone star-rich: riding with pension and receive approval.
0
1he schools.
ex I year t e
parlmel!t "'
: ... W]ieiber · •lee'" by 11M
· dowmlghtchlc: Amerlea'atopfllhlon designer
Trin1 Lopez In his Rolls-Royce convertible, ol'
There will be a reviewer of
Educa1lon will conduct . 18 en·
·· ·. e'aaiml....._ or t[ · ·
Our
suc!e1y
goes
lo
great
lengths
to
vironmental
education
worklh~pa
.
·
:
·
:
'·..:i.J.~..: ri~~ ,. ·
Norman i!foren II a regular, lilo Frederick Mu shouts to everyone they pass, "This Is Trlnl aU applications for pensions .
educa1eand
prepare
children
for
alllhe
s•a1ewide
for
selected
taachen.,~
.
.
·,
~:=;.-;··.,,
to ,
Vlclllrla, tbe deflnl1lve antlqqes upwt who
Lopez' car, not mine I"
denied uoder the 'cu.rrent
diflicul1les 1hey wiU face as adults. It is
trainees will, ,In tutn, : eonduc
. t ·.. · . .....
. ..t.a.
'~ ..::. . •~ . -~..;,., .~.... :1
even ledUrea at lht Metropolitan M111e11111.
regulations, according to fund
somewhat
ironic
thal
very
lillie
k
h
their
hool
''!li"
•• '" - v
EJ:-N.Y. detective chief AI Seidman 111 being
Lut Ql the great bo\l)evardlers, John Ring· trustees Edward L. carey, c.
guidance Is offered to them on what
wor s ops 1n
own sc
II'~~· ··· · . AsCI l!:lcali~IYI . .'Diredor,
beckCIIIed~~lntothelhnellght ... StsteSen.
UngNorthQI~&amp;Ddollmillions,badn'tbeen W. Davis, and Paul R. Dean .
may well turn outto be the most critical
According · to Bill Dlnl"1·' · ' · • . 1)1~ld ·
McKtnali:: ·wtu'
Supervisor
of
County
Teachers,
plans · . . r·•· ,,..-... ~...;:.. •-'•""~
John Marchi, backed by the CDill8rVIItift Party here In two ;years bat his connoisseurship led
Carey, general counsel for
problem 1hey will face, which Is im·
d
h ld
'"" ......~...., ,....,..._.
,
d
are WI erway to 0 I llimlllr
. · 1q ·afr.nlwJt the Yllidlty of ·.
for. mayor last time VIII'IIUI Jawn Undlay, hiJn to only the great luu centers: staying at the lJMWA, is trustees
prnvrng an maintaining the quality of
workshop for selected teachen fr.ml.lll
.
· -'-". ..'.&gt; ..... • .',' : • •• . .. :. .
.
w-'1 at the JlllV'a big bub bollorlng Veep
the St. Regia, dining at "21" and Cote Basque, chainnan.
all life on this planet.
••
Co
Schoo'_,.,,
Spiro. The llbaeiiCe suppcwMJy 11 portento111 ... mldnlghtlng at P. J. Oarke's, and was so
The trustees said pensions
Just as we need Information about
.,.w~nceU SW)ty
... .
.:
' .. U :~ .11111:1 ~ .~lea
·
.d
f
e
.
•
Forest
Service
has
ol·
In
·ftomi•IMI
...,
patlllan
"'-'-·'
Lear
•
"""'ty
de"""led
to
be
back
In
Manhattan
be
didn't
get
will
be
approved
currenlly
for
In P J
d
those surviving miners who
a can 1 ate we vote or, we and our
fered suitable· lands for qu_alifled
. ·. - .·• .•••• - 1..""". :~-.- ....,
wilt -cllaalia'ofthe lateOile Ollenol 01aen 1o to bed for a1moet 30 hours- champagned right
....., •-··---· v .,........, ww
children must also have factual
1
10
Johlllloa'J BeDupoppiD fame ... Grant's famed
llfOIIId the clock.
meet the new requirements. No
knowledge on which to base our
groups
estab ish outdoor
. c,mpltte· lht· 11111 to 111
BaUr
payments,
however,
would
be
,hinkingonwhatlsgoodandbadforour
labOThratorSies. De
of. ·N · ,.l
. : rWIIIIIIJ'. and linl-.tbt e«nl»t dtrgr!rle a lit olf 'l'lrla Square on 42nd st.
The McGuff gang hired Roleland
oom made for any period prior to ·
e
tate
partment
a.tura
.•~
L .. ... ·
· It
· .'••.l...,
- ' - ...... ·.
environment.
R
.., ... ,.-·v
lliJil\ooO
·
feeltthela&amp;tkllandpa nltalaq -an atn for an 01:1. 23 rally- but cancelled It already; N 1
Back
10
Slippery
Rock.
The
esourcea
planl
~he
establlahn!lint
Ill
.
..
oliiCt
b1Jf111'td1r
t.
·
,:,
nickel for -baut on Jour pup.
runnU. out of backers ... Maria Schell retired
;hey. added that a maximum
Envlronmentall.earnlqg
Centen,
one
·
..
•"
...
:;....;.;
_...._
·wiD
ksh
a-11 Gecqe Kenned;y celebrated liis "•-'ffGIIIIIlcks rich, but inllation forced a second effort would be made to bring
wur op, sponsored by the U. S.
ofwhichwlllbelocalednorthol ,JIDrta.0 · , ~n"it.-u:i·,;;;~~
Dnt .,....,U... llllli~ In his favorite lookatheraavlngsandsolhe'scOIIIeback~ ... the chang~ in regulations to.
Foresi Service, was conducted by
mou1h. .. .•
.·
. . .. . .
·1\SC.:~
. · U. . ... '·
ri.taurant In the wwld, Quo Vadli - Gen1 John Ringling North considered the Inflation- the attention of persons whooe
members of that agency's national
The u. s. Foretal &amp;erme ·!Ill· a
llt~ert"''l• · of ..ii....com•
~raining 1eam. RepreS.nlf!l among the
con linuing program of Envlnnmlntal
1rolt1
aoMtita
George II a youag a. SecoDd time arouitd ••. receulon and decided, "The only friend I know appUcations were previously
''Seculd 'lbne Around" sorwwrtter Slmmy wl»abouldhavenothlngtofearforhlallnanclal denied. Tbey asked that- all
50 trainees were natural resource
Education which .!•,. ~nducttd
Cl,rttu... ~'1..~. '-lli:!...,:
.managers, educators, outdoor cluba,
1hroughou1 the nation auch 11 the one · .. · ......,·.. ·'."" .,·........,;..:.. .::::::!' ,-_
Cabo and biB belullf1ll BrooklyaHiorn (lllo security the rest of his life Is Jean Paul Getty" such persons write the filnd.
informal ion specialists, soil scienllats,
j
1 eel su
Rock Pa
""' - ._.., - - . "'"
IICOIIII timearound) wilt
helped beautify ... Oh, we'd gue11 Bob Hope needn't worry, nor- 'immediately, giving their
recreation planners aod various conUll compel 11 ppery
' ·• · ·
dk!illirc
will' lbtlr awi+ll!tiona
the llrelcly beautiful CGte ~e; ditto the Bing nor Morton ~. certainly not Joel Social Security number and
Yea, Marthlr, lhete II a Sllppar)o • · wert ,............ .. , 11111 .·
George Woocla ol tbe lnt'l Banking set ... Great McU'ea, Claudette Colbert, Avereil Harriman current address, to apedlte
11 . : .
wltbln. 16 .
old Met len«: Laurlts Melcblcr had a stroke.
andafewhundredmoreofthecelebset.
the review.
Mos1 of our time wa• spent per•
_,.
· ··· ·
&lt;.. · . : .." ,' ';·,:. ~ :.: ·' ··.·: ' .

; . . WASHINGTON (lJPIJ- The'
· United Mine Workers Welfare
and Retirement Fund · has
unounced liberalized
requirements for soft coal
, mlnen to be eligible for '150
per month pensions, effective
Nov· I.
The fund said the action was
being . taken. bOth to comply
with .recent federal court
d~c!slons and to make
... eligibility requirements more
. uniform to all applicants
r'"gardiess ·Of when they
stopped worltlng.

..,...,_BID
. ......_•. ··"?""""'

. :Ar~~:::;·strike c~e~Iines 1a1e

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Murphy
have moved their house trailer
from her parents property, Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Summerfield, to
the land they purchased from
Mr. Craft at Tuppers Plains.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. SU.rling and family
were Mr . Robert Gray and Ray
Justis.
Mrs . Robert Gray attended a
·meeting in Columbus Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Sum·
merfield spent Thursday
evening with their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Summerfield and
daughter in Parkersburg.
SWlday dinner guests of Mrs.
Leota Massar were Mr. and
Mrs. David Riggs and
daughters of Vienna, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Summerfield and Amber spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Rex Swnmerfield.
1\!r. and Mrs. Joe Connally
were visiting friends at Belpre

A.key ~lOVe came in erasin~
the previous requirement that
a 'miner nwat work his final
year in a union mine.
It alao wiped out a provision
that miners who retired prior
to J965 had to work In the
bitWhinous coal industry 2lJ of
the previous 30 years.
The action does ·not affect
hard coal alllneri from the
anthracite coal fields . who
came under a separate PensiOn
plan.
·
·
' No change was made In the

M•llltl)• ,loudy

: .:-• ·. '.'· ·":.t:-.. ' '

.._";'

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EOrmer fiaules

.lall ~ ()rp
:· ~en Ih (fUS~ E. as:tern
.·

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:··Rules · liberalize~ . for full pension~

By lJIIIIed Prela lllleraalloui

United Auto Workers and
General Motors bargalnin·g
'
'
teams · met through ihe
weekend to try to resolve
grievances against a COB!·
cutting management team that
triggered strikes by 12,i00
workers af~GM plants In
Kanaa8, Wisconsin .311d Texas.
Strikes at Janesville, Wll.;
Arlington, Ta., and Kansas
City, Kan., were expected to
• end by Monday or Tuesday 8$
part of the union's new
strategy · of ' .'hit-and-run"
_ - - strikes-short strikes that do
not diain the union's strike
' fund.
WEIGHT WATCHERS DAY will be climaxed with an open house Thursday, Oct. 26,
• Three strikes called last
beginning at 7:30p.m. in the Washington grade school audilllrium in Gallipolis. Proclaiming
week were nothing more than
"Weight Watchers Day" in the Gallipolis area is City Manager D. Kenneth Morgan. Looking on
"long w~end" walkouts and
· are Gallipolis Weight Watchers Jackie Coonen, Bess Grace and Madge Boggs.
three strike dea4lines In the
coming week are set to e~pire
Thursday night and Friday.
The series of "quickie"
strikes have been directed
mainly at the General ·Motors
Assembly Division (GMAD).
The union has· accused the
recently formed . GMAD with
"slashing back assembly line
manpower while demanding as
much, ·or more production,
llsuing heavy disciplinary Jay.
,
offs, and attempting to dllcard
~
important provisions of agree- .
•
ments" witli fonnerly separate
divisions.
GMAD was set up to con:
soUdate basic manufacturing
and assembly operations under
Ol)e management group. It riow
operates 18 plants, Including
the Norwood, Ohio, plant which
was struck for a record 174
days over the same llsues.
The short-term strikes .disrupt GM production at a time
when GM's divisions · are
CAROLYN TAYLOR
CAROLYN TAYLOR
for record aales.
heading
BEFORE
AFI'ER
Unless a strike lasts more than
one week, the workers do not
CONGRATULATIONS will be in order for three
receive any strike bepe!its
Gallipolis Weight Watchers Thursday night, Qct. 26, In the
from the union.
Washington Grade school auditorium. Miss carolyn TaY,ior,
GM could counter the union's
above, is shown before and after she entered the program.
ADRIANNE Levine, area new strategy by refualng to go
Miss Taylor, an employee of the Holzer Medical Center, has
director, Weight Watchers, along and r~n the planil
lost HO pounds. other lOll-pound losers from GalUpoUs are
Inc., Clnclnnali; Is shown until aU Issues are resolved.
Mrs. Lark Napier, 100 pounds, and Mrs. Penny McKean,
here after losing 37~ The company, so far, has in134'1.!-pounds. All three wiU be honored during the Weight
pounds. ,She will be the guest dicated no plans to Jock out
Watchers open house Thursday.
speaker In Gallipolis on striking workers.
Thursday, Oct. 28, beginning
Oh strike oow are 5,000
at 7: 30 p.m., In the members of Local 95 at the
Washington grade school GMAD plant at Janesville,
' ,·
. ,
. .
auditorium. It will be part of 4,101l •members of Local 31 at
Weight Watchers Day ac- the GMAii plant at Kanaas
lil\
~
ijvltlc~ . lor .a..a reslt~Fnts. City, and 3,500 member• ·of
~~~~
~
'
'the pq~lle Is .invited. '
·~ Local 278 at G1&gt;!AD .(Jl

X,'l'lmt. ·flnrtlnel.s..d.,, Oct. Z1, 11'12

U-TIIt 7

....,..ca.·a•
.

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ou•••-.~
-MI-NOIA'

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�rl
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·Meigs youth winnero

j

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.. WORKING WITH MENTAL ~ARDATION HEALTH
BOARD - Dr. Querico DoronU. of Wheelersburg, former
superintendent at the Gallipolis State Institute is working
with the Tri-County Mental Retardation Bo~ serving
Meigs, GaUta apd Jackson Counties. Dr. Doronlla graduated
from the Medical Center at Santo Tomas University in
MI!Dila. He has done two years work ln child psychiatry and
has a private practice ln Wheelersburg.,He is In Galtipolls
twice a month and in Jackson County each Thursday. ·

A~orney

heading group
to elect John Halliday

IRONTON - Ironton Attorney Craig A: Allen hasbeen
I!Ppointed cha.irman . of . the
Lawrence county committee to
elect John E. Halliday,
Gallipolis, to the new 92nd
district for the Ohio House of
Rej)resentatives.
, "Mr. Halliday has outstanding qualifications to
repreient our district which
includes ·Lawrence, Galli&amp;,
·,Me~gs and .parts of Athens
' Counties. He has nev,er been
Identified with th.e Special
· ~nteresta group of: the Ohio
LegislatUre as . baa his op·
ponent, andMr. Halliday ·haa ·
been active ln all Phases of
county, township and city

government for the past 40
years," Allen stated.
"Mr. Halllday has been a
practicing attorney since 1932,.
has served as prosecuting
attorney of Gallia county, and
as municipal judge of
Gallipolis. He served In the Alr
Force In World War II, for four
years, and has been endorsed
by four major labor unions in
the 92nd House District," Mr.
Allen states.
"I sincerely.feel that John E.
Halllday is the better candidate to represent J,.awrence
county in the Ohio House of
Representatives, and pledge
all our effoi'~ in his behalf,"
Allen concluded

Marriage like fairy tale

-'· , ,. ' I '' ·-•

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, OClOBER 22 -1 P.M. TO 1' 'P.M.
•

j

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~

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Flalllead Iridian.
&gt;
The brlde, 1 na tjve pi BrlsWI,

Vrcki Nelson, .
like mother,
crowned·queen

'

'I'

.

"

•

•

: RUTLAND - Vicki Nelson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
~elson , formerly of Rutland,
was crowned · homecoming
'queen at Owensboro High
''Schoo\ in Ken~cky recenUy.
)lisa Nelaon was selected for
the honor by the student body
•¢ over 2,000 s!udents.
' V!cki's mother, the former
I~abelle spires, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Phillips
bf Ru'tland, was crowned
homecmling queen at'Rutland.
21!.yearli ago.
, Her husband, Bob, son of Mr.
• · and ~rs . Ed Nelson, Rutland,
was captain of the football
..team that year in Rutland.

•PROTESTSPILUlOVER
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - A
protest at city hall by about
1,000 blacks over the killing of
a black teen-ager by a white
policemen spilled over Into the
city's business section Tuesday,
Two pollee officers were hurt
In the brief melee and four
Tuppers Plains persons were arrested when
some members of the group
smashed several store windows
and '1118d~ off with costume
jewelry. from a department,
By MT!I, Evelyn Brlckles
store jewelry case.
, Mrs. Dorothy Ness of Gallion
The pro testers had crowded
and Mrs. Vlrglriia Osborn of Into city council chambers
Columbus visited rela tives earlier to demand the suspen.
here Wednesday. ·
slon of two detectives Involved
• Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk In the Saturday shooting of Saul
and family of Little Hocking Unk Jr., 15, a robbery suspect.
have moved to the VIolet
Mayor John Ballard met with
Mlllhone llroperty here on Rt. 10 r~resentatlves of the group
7.
and announced he would
Mr. and Mrs: Veri Tuttle and appoint a commission to
Mrs. Onita Cole attended the determine whether the officers
· Lancaster fair Thursday.
used lllegal_methods or Illegally
Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Smith · used their weapons in.making
of Delaware were ' Monday the arrest,
guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles.
Thurman Babcock is poorly
'
at this time and those visiting Wellle . .
the Babcoc~s the past week
~r . and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
were Mrs. Okey Conley of visited Dana McCain . at
Eutem, Mrs. Ronnie Cowdery Veterans Memorial Hospital on
~f Long Bo!tom, ' Sammy Tuesday.
·
'
Rardin of Lone Bottom, Rev.
Doris Koenig received word
· ~ M,l. Robert Wyatt of of th~ blfth of a granddaughter
Pllrkal'lburg and lll!veral locaj born to her son and daughterJIIIPbora. Tiley IIIIo eaUed on ,in-law, Mr.' and Mrs. Leonard
Mr. lll!IMtl. Olc:ar Babcol;k. J!;oenig Jr. of Chester at Holzer
llfrl. Mmne Cbapman at- Hospital. The couple have two
Ill N lbi{Wnl of .her lon- ~!her glrla ~· bo .
·
~ 111111,1r.lfil'lllolr'Beaver, Of . Sevei'it ·~rom here attended'
Nllwlflflmtru, Oblo Sund&amp;y. the funeral of Ralph Parlier at
with The · Methodist Church· in
Chester TljQday,
•
•
.
........
Martino(
Clarence Nlcbola attended
the funeral of hll nepbew
karry Nichola 'at CIIJ'kabura,
II(. Va. Sunday. Mn. 'wruord
1'!11Ple II. Alhe111 came and I
IIIJIII 'lfttll her mother, Mrs.
Nlallall, who w11 unable to
11111ral.

Society News

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1 BUSHEL

z,~~39c

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~···~lu-te•~

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G96 GUN

REG.

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WOODEN

I* TREATMENT
~CAMP STOOLS
.
~
I
.
I$
39 . '
$ .. 99 ' • .
15 Ol SPRAY

f•

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. M1N~K~S'

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. REG. 94'

Dixie

Dispenser with

FITS ALL SHOTGUNS

HECK'S REG. $1.28
HECK'S REG. $1.99

'

DEODORANT
6
y

SOF' STliOKE

·RAND
McNALLY

•a.ai

• /.

-~-

HECK'S REG. 99'

~---~------'

22
HECK'S REG. 11.99

12 oz.

~THE

CONTOUR

SET
OFZ

66c

ORIGINAL

.

HOT SEA

ASH .TRAYS

.

ASST.
COLORS

KUTZTOWN, Pa. (UPI)- An
"Get out, get out."
angry football fan was halted
The agents grabbed the irate
by Secret Service agents fan and pushed him against the
Saturday when he leaped from car with such force that his
the stands and charged at Sen. mouth was cut and be began to
George McGovern with such bleed.
speed that he nearly collided
The man told reporters that
with !lie Democratic preslden· "these people paid two bucks tQ
tial candidate.
see a football game and they
McGovern, campaigning turned it into a political rally."
across PeMsylvania in pursuit The man refused to say If he
of the hardblit vote, niade an wN~ a suppor~r of President
~decision to-visit the
JXon.
ga · 'between Kutztown State . Undisturbed by · the near
&lt;;c. ~ge' and Cheyney Stale. . en c oun te r , /McGovern
ltfcGovern arrived just proceeded on to address
before halftime and walled in several thousand persons on
his car until play ended for the the main business street of
Intermission. McGovern was Reading, Pa. McGovern is on a
then driven around the track tour which carried him from
surrounding the field.
the state's eastern hard coal
H.e then got out of his car and fields to the steel towns of
began addressing tbe crowd. western Pennsylvania.
While he was speaking, a man
On a cloudy, autumn day
·iii :his 30's ru.ihed at Me- when he had to compete
Govern, ~uting something. against the World Series and
He came with such speed that college football games for
he knocked down another fan. crowds, McGovern, son of a
Reacting quickly, Secret Methodist preacher, was
st'rvice agenta posted them· joined by a Jewish governor
selves in front of McGovern and a Catholic colleague from
seized the man then leaned the Senate.
him against a .'car. He was Gov. Milton J. Sbapp, a
bBndculfed and escorted from millionaire, !Qid about 3,500
the field.
persons In Scranton, in the
:It was not known immediate- heart of the state's hard coal
IY whether the unidentified . fields, " "we've already got a
was charged with any depression."
crime.
"In four years time Nixon
'Gordon Well, an aide to the had succeeded in doing what it
cAndidate, said McGovern had took Harding, Collldge and
decided to make the unsche- Hoover 12 years to do," Shapp
duled visit at the urging of the said.
.
Kutztown College president,
Sen. Edmund S. Muskle, )).
Lawrence M. stratton.
Maine, joined Shapp In lacing
, Witnesses said the man ran Nixon.
at McGovern yelling:
"Aman who holds the office

J¥i!.
.·

man

MIAMI

HECK.'S REG. '3.99

Ideal tor hunting, lislling, cold
cors, football gameo. .

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· baJl·· · ·tme·s . . , i .·tnttnt·1.:
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VOL VII NO. 38

SUNDAY., OCTOBER 22, 1972

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PAGE 15
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of the presidency must he a
man who believes in the
people, and Nixon does not,"
Muskie said.
"He uses people. I told you
you could not trust Nixon in
1968. Nothing has changed. You
still can't trust him. I told you
he would put you out of a job
and he did,"
McGovern seized upon Frl·
day's cost of living figures

so

~~~~~~
:Xo~~=m~ in;t&gt;.~;nm·
:::&gt;.::: :;~:;:;:;;;:-~} Poilu
· ti•on ~:~~H~:;;rt~:~:~:.
·
policies. The figures showed an
with · rorei!ln ·t.tinlstl!r Tran '·
increase of.one-half of one per
cent In the seasonally adjusted
cost of living Index for Sep.
tember.
Noting that an · administration spokesman called
September '-'a dead month,...
McGovern said :
"The fact is that we have had
a bad year. Indeed, it has been
four bad years for the families
of America." .
The crowds grew larger as
the three politicians moved
westward across the state. The
Democrats consider Pennsylvania, which they carried In
1968, vital to McGovern's
chances.
In an apparent slip o1 the
tongue , Muskle told the Scranton rally that McGovern's
chances were .almost nonexlstent.
"McGovern," he said, ."beUeves deeply in a better
America against such hopelesl!
odda."
By the time the entourage
had reached Bethlehem, Pa., a
steel town, the Maine senator
was
correcting
that
assessment.

deal· out bill' veto
explalned

SAIGON (UP!) - President
•
Nguyen Van Th1eu and _ the
South VIetnamese Nat10nal
__ _
Security Council turned down a
.
•
"temporary peace solution"
discussed during talks with COLUMBUS (UPI) President Nixon's special adV\· William D. Ruckelshaus,
ser Henry A. Kissinger, the admlnilt;"ator of the federal
newspaper Tin Song reported Environmental Protection
Saturday.
Agency • said_ Saturday
"These suggestions are com- although President Nixon
pletely unacceptable from the suggested much of what is constandpoint of the Vietnamese talned in the water poUuUon
government which is restoring b!U, he vetoe~ the proposal
· an honorable peace that wlU ~cause of Its f1SC8llmpact on
' tr
budget.
Ia
s orever. for th e coun trY, " theRuckelshaus
was here to
sa1d the report.
meet with the Ohio Commlttee,
. Tm Song (Live News) is tQ ReEleCt the President and
partuilly lm~n~ by Hoang held what was termed "an
Due Nha, Thieu s nephew and avallabiUtY news conference"
personal
secretary,
. 1 ted
. th thrwho dahas prior to . the closed-door.
t
par 1c pa
m e ee ys meeting
of talks _between Kissinger and "The · President took a
South V1etnamese government pesslmlatlc view of hil ablllty
leaders.
to control l!mds. H y011 can't
d Theilsnofewthes~reter did not give control fundi, then the me•
e
mporary peace sure becomes lnflaUona "
~oMion." Other sources have Ructe'lahaus said. "Cong~
md1cated discussions with the refilled to give him a apendlng
North Vietnamese at the Paris celllng, 110 he decided to veto
peace talk!l .lncluded proposals it."
for a .cease.fire, and a halt In Rilckelshaus said Congresa
United States bombing of the told the President he did not
North, w1th other major pollti· have to use all the money set
cal issues to be decided later. aside, but ooce the Preeldent
The South Vietnamese would impOund the money,
governmentalsoplasteredthou· Congresawouldscreambewll
,
san.ds of posters on buildings not releaalng.lt for the purpose
a drug raid in nearby had witnessed the execution. · throughout Saigon proclaiming Intended.
Hollywood which netted some
Olher apartment house res- Thieu's strong appoa!Uon 14 any He laid ''no doubt" the
$750,000 worth of marijuana !dents tolil pollee they had not peace plan that included a PreSident's veto of th~ bill
and which may be llnk.ed to the seen Smith · or Bennett coaliUon with the Communista. makes it a political football.
siayings.
recently, but that tile girls had
Pollee said a man who rented apparently been living there
the Miami apartment with for.aweekor10daya.
Smith about 'a month ago,
The girls were dressed
·
.:::;.1 t::J
1 .:::;. .
' Charles Bennett, .was being casually in jeans and·the body
sought by Holl)&gt;wood police tor of one of them waa found on a
questioning In connection with white shag throw rug ' which
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)- thesewltures is to 'get It ootof
the dn!g raid.
was on top of 11'111-to-wall ,UJIICrupulous dealers are aell· 1!'bere you got It as fail as you
f. u: S. c111tom8 spokesman Carpeting. The aparlmellt was · '!ng thousands of flood· can,'"
confirmed to the Miami News decor.ated with psychedelic art damaged Pennlylvarila cars tQ . He Slid he hU warned enry
that federal agenta had the objecta and. poetel'l, rellcloua tmkno.... buyersallover the state and Canada of the
. ap~rtment 111der surveillance statues, leopard skin CUihions nation, state officials said lerloilln- of the problem. He
as part of an Investlgallo~ and featured a 1!'ater bed. ·
saturday.
aent a letter offering • lilt of
about which he would release
the Kirls and Smith all had
The Htlmllel ranged from ret~llttallan n1IJIII:iers of dano details-and that ."the . been shOt and Smltl)'a face 11,000 to 311,0tll clll'l, lfhlcb 11111ed V.hlc* to f!VfiCJIIale
deatha of the three sent the · bore bruises from an apparent have turned · up in Maryland, motor velllcle ~t.
Investigation down .tile drain." beating beftn he na killed. New Yen, Soutll CUo\lna,
"I ha-ven't bid any Interest
ThelipOkeananalaoaild that
The sisters were the dlqgh- Geor&amp;la, Wlaconaln, llllnola ' Uji lll!d W me fmn anyCIIle
ltw11afederalagentwhoflrat b!rs of Mr. llld Mn. Loull anciCallforiiiL
fortllelllt,''hesald. "Ail we
mdced an odor coming fronl · Herthum of Balon Rou&amp;e.
Some dealerl know they can do II write another letter
ll!r.l]181'111lent -.nd, with the Herthum--,rorlla- for- the'--llaw flee;d-dunqed Clll'I~Bul and try apln.~
llp8l'imellt comple&amp; ~er, Louisiana Department of~ many haw been ll;lcRd by
'lbere were abwt 35,000 can
entered the apartment and waysllld Mn. Herthum II the dealera who bofllb1 tile~ at damapd when tropical atorm
found tile bodies. .
. JV!cretary to the alate's lllee 1IIICtkinl, llPd tbenl up, Agnea CIUied lllllllve flooding
HGIIIiclde inveatlgatora were revenue ~llector.
then reaold them to rellll llil J - ill eutetn Pennaay1ng Utile about the cue, · ''They were .ery pq111W outleta. ·
aylvMia. The llate illlll'ance
hoft\ler,euepllhlt they were and lllltd , everybody,'' the ,.
•-n-Il'\, the ume people department •ld ma.t of the
atudylng lhl poalblllty that · tearful Herthum ~~~ of IU . who dell in l!olen Cll'l," llid veliclea ,..ere oowred by InSmltb had been alain by 1 daughten. "I nmed llllm WIQlam '11lelmell, Illite dlree- IUI'IIICI.
•••• frGm tbt narco11e1 about
CIIIIIM, llllltbe)' !AiroiiiiiMfnhldea. ''nitre II
II f t
Mild

18

3 murders clued
,.

Consensus, and thP riPvPlnp.

drug solves the problems of
daily life.
Aresolution was also pasted
whereby the Ohio PTA will
cooperate wtth local, state and
national health agencies In
educating lhe · public about
problems relating to the siCkle ·
cell disease ...TheOhlo PTA abo ,
reaffirmed Its support for the
state income tax by ruoluUon,
and agreed to make available
to all unlta and councils the
results of the U. S. Gbvernment
studies concerning the effects
of the continued use tf
marijuana In support of tlleir
firm . stand to oppose the ·
legalization of marijuana,

SAIGON (UPI) - South VIetnamese and Communist troope
fought for control of two hamleta and a militia outpost Saturday
NEW YORK (UPI) within 15 mile! of Saigon where U. S. presidential adviser Henry
Cancer of tbe llmg, the A. Kls8lnger held a third day of talks wJih government officials.
· variety tha( holds the least
Saigon Mayor Col. Do Klen Nhleu ordered a general
poSBiblllly of survival, Is tightening of security In Saigon to guard against expected
. Increasing
rapidly that commando and terror raids Inside the capital•before the Nov. 7
tl)e lungs are now the spot U. s. presidential elecUons.
where canc.er ts found most
U.S. B52 bombers dumped
often, the American Cancer more than 600 tons of high mand said.
Society said Saturday.
explosives in seven raids
In Saigon, government
Lung cancer kill• ap to 91 . jlround Saigon between noon workers plastered walls with
pet. of Its vlctlma and Its Friday and noon Saturday, thousands
of
posters
Incidence In the United spokesmen said. The bombing denouncing any coalition
states has been steadily strikes coul!! be clearly heard government. Political Ob·
growing, ACS repo.rled. The inside the capital. Jet fighters servers satd that the Nguyen
rate this year among men, flew at least 34 miSBions In Van Thieu administration
who are most often affected, support of' embattled govern· appeared to be publicly ve!Qing
1s 18 t1mes greater lb an It men! forces, the U.S. com· any attempt to end the war by
was 40 years ago.
the Imposition of a coalition.
.Kissinger's third day In

They knew too much?

PUSH BUTTON

Children and Youth - Open
Your Eyes ." ·
Among the resolutions
(lltssed by the PTA at the.
convention were ones relaUng
to support or stricter enforcement or present laws '
regarding ,the use of
hand guns , more diversleducational · · op·fied
portunities in the school
system ; public kindergarten
for every child in Ohio;
discourage through the
National · Association of
Broadcasters advertising
which infers that the use of any
par ticular non-prescription

times over 1932

t

•2''

\ HECK'S REG. 88'

$

'I

UMBRELLAS

HECK'S
REG.

TOILET
.BOWL
CLEANER ,

L-

~

$

GLOBE
$ 99

REG. OR MEN11f0~ U ·oz.

TY·D·IOL

-

T-24 ·

~
MENNEN

METAL ONLY

·····*'- CHAMOIS

RIGHT GUARD
FOOT GUARD.

HECK'S REG. '1.19 .

·

LICE~SE PLATES

WITH ASSORTED HEADINGS

•

2,2

$

HECK'S
R_E_G~._,2_ " - - - - - - -

'

.J
a.
t

PAN

pur·

chase of Bufferln lOO's.

'

__
1

::~-g:l

Cup

99~

'

HECK'S REG. $2.99

BUFFERIN
Free

.

I

ment or accountability
proc&lt;:.dures for Ohio's Public
Schools.
Other speakers were Dr.
F•·anklin B. Walter, deputy
superintendent of the Ohin
Department of Education who
spoke &lt;in "Quality Educati.on in
U1e 1970s''; The Honorable.
Oliver \)casek, Senator !rom
the 27th Distrlc~ who discussed
"Can We Afford Quality
Education in Ohio"; Robert E.
Sweet, Department·of Health
on "Teenage Alc.ohol and
Drugs"; and Dr. Lawrence c.
Hawkins of the University of
Cincinnati on u Pr~!\~llrP!\ on

increased by 18

eGo vern

•2•

'l'!le visual arts judging was by
Mr . Robert · Cordinale,
a:;sisl&gt;tnl professur ; Division of
Arl Education, Ohio State, a
student in the Division of Art
Education, and Kail Rothman
school psychologist, Depart-'
men! of Child Study, Columbus
Public Schools.
ll was announced at the
conference that the 1973 theme
will be "Responding to Ufe."
Among the highlights of the
conv~ntion at t)le Neil House
was a talk by Martin W. Essex,
State Superintendent of Public
Instruction, who reported on
the PTA's role in the Search for

Battle r_ages
Craig Reed, arls winner
:-:.:-==
near
Saigon
Grid an held

HECK'S

BRYLCREEM

.

·.

•

PORTA FI_LE
$ 48

HECK'S REG.

-~-~~2;;.;.;
. tor~s~gc_

•

1

·$}66 .

HECK'S
REG.
4r

PLAYING CARDS

~·

CAN

.LAUNDRY BASKET-·

POKER OR BRI.DGE

; ·,

$

·•

HECK'S,REG. $2.6&amp;'

30l

. ·--- ..

..'

.·' ••
·~

GARBAGE .

~4.66

HECK'S · REG.

'

' '" ""tr' '•

- I ... ...
• It rr••f• _.,,, , , r '''n· ~
... ~
~

20 GAliON
GALVANIZED

PET BASK·ETS
$ 99

ARLEE, Mont. (UPI)- "It's
· quite like a fairy tale, don't you
tlllnk?" dis Vivian Rice JWd ·
WUW, 13; ol ber mvrlage to
LOuie Nine. Pipe, a 7'-year-old

England, first learned about
Nine Pipe In 1969 when she
bought a recording of Flathead
Indian aongs. :
"I Sill' a picture of Louie ln
lhe al!llim's Insert and fell In
love with him,' lllle said.
So In 1970 she wrote to a
Mlilaoula, Mont., newspaper
Inquiring about Nine Pipe. The
. action sparked a flurry of
letters between Nine Pipe and
his bride-to-be and In the next
few months she moved to
Canada to be closer to him ~
"I dldn 't have any money to
· come to Monll!na, so Louie sent
me bus fare," she said.
She IIITived Oct. 7 and the
couple was married this week
by a justice of the peace In
Missoula.
Mr. and lifrs. Nine Pipe live
In a onH'oom log cabin, still
listen to "Flathead Indian
Recordings,'' and have the
neighbors "wondering what
Louie's got that they don't."

.

.

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,.,.

REEDSVILLE - Craig second in •culplure ; Mark
Reed of Reedsville was one of Williams, Pomeroy. a third in
the Ohio .winners of the 1972 1 prose, and Keith Doss, MidNational P.T.A. Cultural Art dleporl, an honorable mention
Exhibit held in New York City. in poetry .
Announcement of his
Other winners in District 16
honorable mention award lor announced by Mrs. Richard
original guitar music was Vaughan, new district director,
made at , the 67th ·Annual were Ellen Wether.holt,
Convention of the Ohio Gallipolis, a first, and Ted
Congress of Parents and . Linscott, Athens, a third In
Teachers, Inc. in Columbus watercolor ; Robin Kuhner,
last week.
Chesape;~ke, a third in collage;
Craig's composition , Tina Roberts, Chesapeake, a,
"Reflections," took first in first in prose, and Kara
Ohio when it was judged a year Buchanan, Jackson, a second
ago and then we~t on to the in primary music.
national competition. At the
Judges at the slate con·
time he wrote the music, he ference were for literature, Dr.
was an eighth grader at the Robert Wess, chairman of the
Riverview Elementary School. Dept. of English at the Ohio
He is now . a sophomore at Domi.nican College; Mrs .'
Eastern High School. Cl'aig is Harriet Price, Children 's
thesonofMr.andMrs. Marvin Librarian , Bexley Library ;
Reed of Reedsville.
and Mrs. Judy Blair, coor·
At t)le state convention last dinator of staff development,
week, 'county and district blue Department ol .icademlc
ribbon entries in the cultural Humanities, columbus Public
arts exhibit were judged to Schools.
select the sta~ ~t place
The music was judged by Dr.
winners.which wih'conlpete on Keith Thompson, assistant
the 1973 national level. • _
prole.ssor of. music, School of
In the group were . three Music o,t Ohio State Univer·
Meigs Countlans - Paul sity ; and June Speak, mas~rs
McElhaney of Middleport. a degree candidate at Ohio State.

(UPI)-Police u ld
Saturday that two beaullflll
Louisiana sisters, found slain
In a poah Miami apartment,
may have been killed because
they wltnel18'!d the. drug-linked
executlonoftheboylriendof
ooe of them,
irhe bOdies of DeniSe Herthum Underwood, 20, and her
alater, Diane Herthum, 18, and
JaduJon Harvey Smith, 31, of
· Miami were found Thursday
night 1n a two-bedroom apart.
mentlninapartmeiltcomplex
known 11 a "llngles" Qllllrter8
' for lirllne stewardesses and
young profeuionala.
. The girls were from Baton
Rouge, La., 11'here their
parentt hold political jcibl. The
older Cirl - IJIIfl'ied oot
...,..ted fJ'Gm her husband
and had been lllll1lellnf In
Vlainl foi'" abwl II year. He{
IIIIer llad, come for a vlllt.
Both stria, beauty conteai
W!nnefl In the put, had
p1annec1 to go to college atartiltt!ID January.
'l1lfl oJdlr Iiiier had been
wltb Smllb llld be ac-

Van Lam at the minister's ·
home, and spent the rest of the
day with Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen .
Creigh!Qn w. Abrams, the U.s.
Army chief of staff.

fll

FLYER (not fryer) TAXES OFF - A llflnlmlete Ia
launched at Rio Grande last 11'etll In tile flrlll'llternltiGnll
Chicken Flying Meet at tile Bob Evana F - P'llltftl.
LOngest Olgbt of the day was II&amp; feel, 2 ln., by HIM)' 70,
owned by W. R. Haney &amp; Sons, Pltrlot.

2,000 cheer on flying ,
fowl in first contest
RIO GRANDE - Records
were set In all classes at the
First International Chicken
Flying Meet held during the
Bob Evans Farm Festival In
Rio Grande -on October II.
Morethan30entrlesfromthe
U. S. and France competed In
this flying competition held
under cloudy skies. About 2,000
spectators cheered on the
entrants.
The Olghta were under the
direction of !Jr. Glyde Marsh,
D.V.M., the International
assocla !I on flight director.
Only one chicken was
disqualified for flying ·back·
wards!
The results were :
Class I (32 oz. or less), Qr:ville, owned by Robert Pondlllo
of Athens, ?feet; Haney, W. R.
Haney &amp; Sons, Patriot, 612 feet
(only two enlranta'.· ,
Class II (33 oz. bt t less than
48 oz.), Karl, Carl Shriver,
Patriot, 17 feet, ,11 inches;

Class IV (14 oz. and over),
Carroll, Carroll Ruff of
Thurman, 13 feet, 5 Inches ; Haney 70, w..R. Hanay l Simi,
Scott, Scott Wood of Patriot, 9 Patriot, II&amp; feet, 2 lnchea; Olcl
While, John Halliday of
feet, 5'h Inches.
Gallipolis, 22 feet, 0'4 lncl\11;
Claas Ill (.a oz, but less than Pompldou, Phllllpe Si1J1P11 of
64 "'·), Terry, Larry Failor of Paris, France, 21 feet, 21nchea.
Patriot, 38leet, 0 Inches; Ray, There were no "chicken
Raymond Morrison of Thur· chickens" or "foul fowl" alllle
man, 35 feet, 7 Inches; Haney meet. The Peruvian chlcktn · ·
69, W. R. Haney fi Sons, didn'tmake It up ln Urne for tile·
.
flight.
.
Patriot, 28 feet, 6 Inches.

.

Search continues
in Alaskan wilds

ANCHORAGE, Alaska
(UPIJ - The Air Force
reversed-·ltself Saturday and
said the voice heard by
California dUzens band radio
operators could have come
from the·· plane · missing In
Alaska for six days with House
Democratic Majority Leader
HaleBoggsaboard.
U
· .
When the plane went ·down
Monday, five Californians reported having heard many
a sta~ Insurance Depsrtrnent details from a pilot ln dislreo!
official.
In Alaska. However, the
"Local salvage dealers of. conversations were eiglit hours
fered them-~bout 22 per cent, ·after the Boggs plane would
but25or30dealersfromoutof , have run out of fuel.
state were up 14 SO per cent
For this reason, plus doubts
~fore you knew lt. There's no about the plane's having
doubt that they plaMed to citizens band equipment
reseU them at run·value."
aboard, an Alr Force spokesHe .said he received a call man said earlier this week that
recently from Wisconsin's mo- · the report.ed conversations
tor vehicle department asking "just didn't fell with what we
foracheckonacarsoldthere. had."
The buyer noticed a musty
But the Californians, who
ameU whlcb.llngered Inside the make occasional dlilant con·car,
tacts because of freak weather
''The biaulaUon under the ·conditions, were fiown to
hood had been painted," Urben Anclt!Jl'age for Interrogation.
said. "He thought It was
Col. Earl Rlf, an Alr Force
atra,.e, 110 he pulled aome of It spolleaman, said Saturday "It
off, Underneath he found Is clear that If we assume
&amp;!lc)Uehanlll River mud." ·
cert8ln llllnp, the dlilreiS
Thecarnaaold!or ~w a aignala could have come fJ'Gm
ulvagedealerat.,uuetlon.It the rn1aaiJ11 easna 310."

car'·· buyon.,.Q a.,.n W'orned

.......
111111
111m·..w
JII'Oblbll
tlldwworld.
Tilly
tbat

tbtre-.m.

no

"
chorage toFiirblnkl, llld lhtn
took off again.
.
About 50 abandoned llntripl
without communlcaUa alit
along tile route.
It alao must be uaumod tllll
Jonz had aboard clllzena bind ·
equipment which II not earnmon·for planes In Aluka, 11111 ·
perhaplthathilnonnalequipo .
lnent was not funcUonlnC.
The ea1Uornla111 said the ·
voice they heard ind!Cited lhll
he had landed, and lhtn t* II
the air agalil-priiiiJMbf:r . .
cause of some technlCII clllft.
cuiUes. ·
Maj. Kim Shelley, analllw
Air Force spoktllllln, •ld ..
the tst of hil kno11'ledp, 11U
had not been mentioned Ia
Initial reportl received by tbt
Alaska Alr Ccmmlnd.
Victor Plrlrer fll Kmllll
City, C.llf., aild he ~Maid I
pilot repi)O that he nalll
.miles over the nllr w11b •
holl''aiiUIIPb' of fuel left.~
thepilot-iaid; ' 011. 1111 a..;~·~I'm 1oinC whit tile radii." ·
.After an intlr9l1,
J1111
spolie of ali!IPiDI, p 'b ·
toward water. 1'bt lilt a.·
millloo -.. IOol p~lllld •

..

tbt

111derliand.

$Ull

Jonl,

,

'l1lflpllot had put bll
at 12 illllll

from:_~''T~be~~
hiDdl
before tile Wllc:oothe
Dan E.
II
,.
- u
~lll&amp;:l:.!pne
tbt:flooii.:
com~pan~iii3~~Jhad~.l!'"lll
;~'d~tlu'OOCh
~J·that~Wha~t~hll:i;to:)1e:uaumed:!~~IJ~5~:•~
.. ~
liD..,_
rtld ~~·~t~lellt
for lt.
mw..,. on
art

I •

�rl
I

I

••
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j

·Meigs youth winnero

j

.

.. WORKING WITH MENTAL ~ARDATION HEALTH
BOARD - Dr. Querico DoronU. of Wheelersburg, former
superintendent at the Gallipolis State Institute is working
with the Tri-County Mental Retardation Bo~ serving
Meigs, GaUta apd Jackson Counties. Dr. Doronlla graduated
from the Medical Center at Santo Tomas University in
MI!Dila. He has done two years work ln child psychiatry and
has a private practice ln Wheelersburg.,He is In Galtipolls
twice a month and in Jackson County each Thursday. ·

A~orney

heading group
to elect John Halliday

IRONTON - Ironton Attorney Craig A: Allen hasbeen
I!Ppointed cha.irman . of . the
Lawrence county committee to
elect John E. Halliday,
Gallipolis, to the new 92nd
district for the Ohio House of
Rej)resentatives.
, "Mr. Halliday has outstanding qualifications to
repreient our district which
includes ·Lawrence, Galli&amp;,
·,Me~gs and .parts of Athens
' Counties. He has nev,er been
Identified with th.e Special
· ~nteresta group of: the Ohio
LegislatUre as . baa his op·
ponent, andMr. Halliday ·haa ·
been active ln all Phases of
county, township and city

government for the past 40
years," Allen stated.
"Mr. Halllday has been a
practicing attorney since 1932,.
has served as prosecuting
attorney of Gallia county, and
as municipal judge of
Gallipolis. He served In the Alr
Force In World War II, for four
years, and has been endorsed
by four major labor unions in
the 92nd House District," Mr.
Allen states.
"I sincerely.feel that John E.
Halllday is the better candidate to represent J,.awrence
county in the Ohio House of
Representatives, and pledge
all our effoi'~ in his behalf,"
Allen concluded

Marriage like fairy tale

-'· , ,. ' I '' ·-•

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, OClOBER 22 -1 P.M. TO 1' 'P.M.
•

j

~

~

'

Flalllead Iridian.
&gt;
The brlde, 1 na tjve pi BrlsWI,

Vrcki Nelson, .
like mother,
crowned·queen

'

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"

•

•

: RUTLAND - Vicki Nelson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
~elson , formerly of Rutland,
was crowned · homecoming
'queen at Owensboro High
''Schoo\ in Ken~cky recenUy.
)lisa Nelaon was selected for
the honor by the student body
•¢ over 2,000 s!udents.
' V!cki's mother, the former
I~abelle spires, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Phillips
bf Ru'tland, was crowned
homecmling queen at'Rutland.
21!.yearli ago.
, Her husband, Bob, son of Mr.
• · and ~rs . Ed Nelson, Rutland,
was captain of the football
..team that year in Rutland.

•PROTESTSPILUlOVER
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - A
protest at city hall by about
1,000 blacks over the killing of
a black teen-ager by a white
policemen spilled over Into the
city's business section Tuesday,
Two pollee officers were hurt
In the brief melee and four
Tuppers Plains persons were arrested when
some members of the group
smashed several store windows
and '1118d~ off with costume
jewelry. from a department,
By MT!I, Evelyn Brlckles
store jewelry case.
, Mrs. Dorothy Ness of Gallion
The pro testers had crowded
and Mrs. Vlrglriia Osborn of Into city council chambers
Columbus visited rela tives earlier to demand the suspen.
here Wednesday. ·
slon of two detectives Involved
• Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk In the Saturday shooting of Saul
and family of Little Hocking Unk Jr., 15, a robbery suspect.
have moved to the VIolet
Mayor John Ballard met with
Mlllhone llroperty here on Rt. 10 r~resentatlves of the group
7.
and announced he would
Mr. and Mrs: Veri Tuttle and appoint a commission to
Mrs. Onita Cole attended the determine whether the officers
· Lancaster fair Thursday.
used lllegal_methods or Illegally
Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Smith · used their weapons in.making
of Delaware were ' Monday the arrest,
guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brlckles.
Thurman Babcock is poorly
'
at this time and those visiting Wellle . .
the Babcoc~s the past week
~r . and Mrs. Oscar Babcock
were Mrs. Okey Conley of visited Dana McCain . at
Eutem, Mrs. Ronnie Cowdery Veterans Memorial Hospital on
~f Long Bo!tom, ' Sammy Tuesday.
·
'
Rardin of Lone Bottom, Rev.
Doris Koenig received word
· ~ M,l. Robert Wyatt of of th~ blfth of a granddaughter
Pllrkal'lburg and lll!veral locaj born to her son and daughterJIIIPbora. Tiley IIIIo eaUed on ,in-law, Mr.' and Mrs. Leonard
Mr. lll!IMtl. Olc:ar Babcol;k. J!;oenig Jr. of Chester at Holzer
llfrl. Mmne Cbapman at- Hospital. The couple have two
Ill N lbi{Wnl of .her lon- ~!her glrla ~· bo .
·
~ 111111,1r.lfil'lllolr'Beaver, Of . Sevei'it ·~rom here attended'
Nllwlflflmtru, Oblo Sund&amp;y. the funeral of Ralph Parlier at
with The · Methodist Church· in
Chester TljQday,
•
•
.
........
Martino(
Clarence Nlcbola attended
the funeral of hll nepbew
karry Nichola 'at CIIJ'kabura,
II(. Va. Sunday. Mn. 'wruord
1'!11Ple II. Alhe111 came and I
IIIJIII 'lfttll her mother, Mrs.
Nlallall, who w11 unable to
11111ral.

Society News

,.

:';·!I: l ti•••

u.

'

•

'

1 BUSHEL

z,~~39c

l

,.

~···~lu-te•~

I

~

G96 GUN

REG.

•.

'

WOODEN

I* TREATMENT
~CAMP STOOLS
.
~
I
.
I$
39 . '
$ .. 99 ' • .
15 Ol SPRAY

f•

·~ ,

. M1N~K~S'

'

'

-~

•.

"

. REG. 94'

Dixie

Dispenser with

FITS ALL SHOTGUNS

HECK'S REG. $1.28
HECK'S REG. $1.99

'

DEODORANT
6
y

SOF' STliOKE

·RAND
McNALLY

•a.ai

• /.

-~-

HECK'S REG. 99'

~---~------'

22
HECK'S REG. 11.99

12 oz.

~THE

CONTOUR

SET
OFZ

66c

ORIGINAL

.

HOT SEA

ASH .TRAYS

.

ASST.
COLORS

KUTZTOWN, Pa. (UPI)- An
"Get out, get out."
angry football fan was halted
The agents grabbed the irate
by Secret Service agents fan and pushed him against the
Saturday when he leaped from car with such force that his
the stands and charged at Sen. mouth was cut and be began to
George McGovern with such bleed.
speed that he nearly collided
The man told reporters that
with !lie Democratic preslden· "these people paid two bucks tQ
tial candidate.
see a football game and they
McGovern, campaigning turned it into a political rally."
across PeMsylvania in pursuit The man refused to say If he
of the hardblit vote, niade an wN~ a suppor~r of President
~decision to-visit the
JXon.
ga · 'between Kutztown State . Undisturbed by · the near
&lt;;c. ~ge' and Cheyney Stale. . en c oun te r , /McGovern
ltfcGovern arrived just proceeded on to address
before halftime and walled in several thousand persons on
his car until play ended for the the main business street of
Intermission. McGovern was Reading, Pa. McGovern is on a
then driven around the track tour which carried him from
surrounding the field.
the state's eastern hard coal
H.e then got out of his car and fields to the steel towns of
began addressing tbe crowd. western Pennsylvania.
While he was speaking, a man
On a cloudy, autumn day
·iii :his 30's ru.ihed at Me- when he had to compete
Govern, ~uting something. against the World Series and
He came with such speed that college football games for
he knocked down another fan. crowds, McGovern, son of a
Reacting quickly, Secret Methodist preacher, was
st'rvice agenta posted them· joined by a Jewish governor
selves in front of McGovern and a Catholic colleague from
seized the man then leaned the Senate.
him against a .'car. He was Gov. Milton J. Sbapp, a
bBndculfed and escorted from millionaire, !Qid about 3,500
the field.
persons In Scranton, in the
:It was not known immediate- heart of the state's hard coal
IY whether the unidentified . fields, " "we've already got a
was charged with any depression."
crime.
"In four years time Nixon
'Gordon Well, an aide to the had succeeded in doing what it
cAndidate, said McGovern had took Harding, Collldge and
decided to make the unsche- Hoover 12 years to do," Shapp
duled visit at the urging of the said.
.
Kutztown College president,
Sen. Edmund S. Muskle, )).
Lawrence M. stratton.
Maine, joined Shapp In lacing
, Witnesses said the man ran Nixon.
at McGovern yelling:
"Aman who holds the office

J¥i!.
.·

man

MIAMI

HECK.'S REG. '3.99

Ideal tor hunting, lislling, cold
cors, football gameo. .

.

J un·
· baJl·· · ·tme·s . . , i .·tnttnt·1.:
·~
· +

+

,_

VOL VII NO. 38

SUNDAY., OCTOBER 22, 1972

___ _ _ _ :,.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..:......:....:..:....:......::.....:..:..:....::.::.:....=..:..:...::..______

PAGE 15
_ _ _ __....:.....;.::..:,:.

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.

of the presidency must he a
man who believes in the
people, and Nixon does not,"
Muskie said.
"He uses people. I told you
you could not trust Nixon in
1968. Nothing has changed. You
still can't trust him. I told you
he would put you out of a job
and he did,"
McGovern seized upon Frl·
day's cost of living figures

so

~~~~~~
:Xo~~=m~ in;t&gt;.~;nm·
:::&gt;.::: :;~:;:;:;;;:-~} Poilu
· ti•on ~:~~H~:;;rt~:~:~:.
·
policies. The figures showed an
with · rorei!ln ·t.tinlstl!r Tran '·
increase of.one-half of one per
cent In the seasonally adjusted
cost of living Index for Sep.
tember.
Noting that an · administration spokesman called
September '-'a dead month,...
McGovern said :
"The fact is that we have had
a bad year. Indeed, it has been
four bad years for the families
of America." .
The crowds grew larger as
the three politicians moved
westward across the state. The
Democrats consider Pennsylvania, which they carried In
1968, vital to McGovern's
chances.
In an apparent slip o1 the
tongue , Muskle told the Scranton rally that McGovern's
chances were .almost nonexlstent.
"McGovern," he said, ."beUeves deeply in a better
America against such hopelesl!
odda."
By the time the entourage
had reached Bethlehem, Pa., a
steel town, the Maine senator
was
correcting
that
assessment.

deal· out bill' veto
explalned

SAIGON (UP!) - President
•
Nguyen Van Th1eu and _ the
South VIetnamese Nat10nal
__ _
Security Council turned down a
.
•
"temporary peace solution"
discussed during talks with COLUMBUS (UPI) President Nixon's special adV\· William D. Ruckelshaus,
ser Henry A. Kissinger, the admlnilt;"ator of the federal
newspaper Tin Song reported Environmental Protection
Saturday.
Agency • said_ Saturday
"These suggestions are com- although President Nixon
pletely unacceptable from the suggested much of what is constandpoint of the Vietnamese talned in the water poUuUon
government which is restoring b!U, he vetoe~ the proposal
· an honorable peace that wlU ~cause of Its f1SC8llmpact on
' tr
budget.
Ia
s orever. for th e coun trY, " theRuckelshaus
was here to
sa1d the report.
meet with the Ohio Commlttee,
. Tm Song (Live News) is tQ ReEleCt the President and
partuilly lm~n~ by Hoang held what was termed "an
Due Nha, Thieu s nephew and avallabiUtY news conference"
personal
secretary,
. 1 ted
. th thrwho dahas prior to . the closed-door.
t
par 1c pa
m e ee ys meeting
of talks _between Kissinger and "The · President took a
South V1etnamese government pesslmlatlc view of hil ablllty
leaders.
to control l!mds. H y011 can't
d Theilsnofewthes~reter did not give control fundi, then the me•
e
mporary peace sure becomes lnflaUona "
~oMion." Other sources have Ructe'lahaus said. "Cong~
md1cated discussions with the refilled to give him a apendlng
North Vietnamese at the Paris celllng, 110 he decided to veto
peace talk!l .lncluded proposals it."
for a .cease.fire, and a halt In Rilckelshaus said Congresa
United States bombing of the told the President he did not
North, w1th other major pollti· have to use all the money set
cal issues to be decided later. aside, but ooce the Preeldent
The South Vietnamese would impOund the money,
governmentalsoplasteredthou· Congresawouldscreambewll
,
san.ds of posters on buildings not releaalng.lt for the purpose
a drug raid in nearby had witnessed the execution. · throughout Saigon proclaiming Intended.
Hollywood which netted some
Olher apartment house res- Thieu's strong appoa!Uon 14 any He laid ''no doubt" the
$750,000 worth of marijuana !dents tolil pollee they had not peace plan that included a PreSident's veto of th~ bill
and which may be llnk.ed to the seen Smith · or Bennett coaliUon with the Communista. makes it a political football.
siayings.
recently, but that tile girls had
Pollee said a man who rented apparently been living there
the Miami apartment with for.aweekor10daya.
Smith about 'a month ago,
The girls were dressed
·
.:::;.1 t::J
1 .:::;. .
' Charles Bennett, .was being casually in jeans and·the body
sought by Holl)&gt;wood police tor of one of them waa found on a
questioning In connection with white shag throw rug ' which
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)- thesewltures is to 'get It ootof
the dn!g raid.
was on top of 11'111-to-wall ,UJIICrupulous dealers are aell· 1!'bere you got It as fail as you
f. u: S. c111tom8 spokesman Carpeting. The aparlmellt was · '!ng thousands of flood· can,'"
confirmed to the Miami News decor.ated with psychedelic art damaged Pennlylvarila cars tQ . He Slid he hU warned enry
that federal agenta had the objecta and. poetel'l, rellcloua tmkno.... buyersallover the state and Canada of the
. ap~rtment 111der surveillance statues, leopard skin CUihions nation, state officials said lerloilln- of the problem. He
as part of an Investlgallo~ and featured a 1!'ater bed. ·
saturday.
aent a letter offering • lilt of
about which he would release
the Kirls and Smith all had
The Htlmllel ranged from ret~llttallan n1IJIII:iers of dano details-and that ."the . been shOt and Smltl)'a face 11,000 to 311,0tll clll'l, lfhlcb 11111ed V.hlc* to f!VfiCJIIale
deatha of the three sent the · bore bruises from an apparent have turned · up in Maryland, motor velllcle ~t.
Investigation down .tile drain." beating beftn he na killed. New Yen, Soutll CUo\lna,
"I ha-ven't bid any Interest
ThelipOkeananalaoaild that
The sisters were the dlqgh- Geor&amp;la, Wlaconaln, llllnola ' Uji lll!d W me fmn anyCIIle
ltw11afederalagentwhoflrat b!rs of Mr. llld Mn. Loull anciCallforiiiL
fortllelllt,''hesald. "Ail we
mdced an odor coming fronl · Herthum of Balon Rou&amp;e.
Some dealerl know they can do II write another letter
ll!r.l]181'111lent -.nd, with the Herthum--,rorlla- for- the'--llaw flee;d-dunqed Clll'I~Bul and try apln.~
llp8l'imellt comple&amp; ~er, Louisiana Department of~ many haw been ll;lcRd by
'lbere were abwt 35,000 can
entered the apartment and waysllld Mn. Herthum II the dealera who bofllb1 tile~ at damapd when tropical atorm
found tile bodies. .
. JV!cretary to the alate's lllee 1IIICtkinl, llPd tbenl up, Agnea CIUied lllllllve flooding
HGIIIiclde inveatlgatora were revenue ~llector.
then reaold them to rellll llil J - ill eutetn Pennaay1ng Utile about the cue, · ''They were .ery pq111W outleta. ·
aylvMia. The llate illlll'ance
hoft\ler,euepllhlt they were and lllltd , everybody,'' the ,.
•-n-Il'\, the ume people department •ld ma.t of the
atudylng lhl poalblllty that · tearful Herthum ~~~ of IU . who dell in l!olen Cll'l," llid veliclea ,..ere oowred by InSmltb had been alain by 1 daughten. "I nmed llllm WIQlam '11lelmell, Illite dlree- IUI'IIICI.
•••• frGm tbt narco11e1 about
CIIIIIM, llllltbe)' !AiroiiiiiMfnhldea. ''nitre II
II f t
Mild

18

3 murders clued
,.

Consensus, and thP riPvPlnp.

drug solves the problems of
daily life.
Aresolution was also pasted
whereby the Ohio PTA will
cooperate wtth local, state and
national health agencies In
educating lhe · public about
problems relating to the siCkle ·
cell disease ...TheOhlo PTA abo ,
reaffirmed Its support for the
state income tax by ruoluUon,
and agreed to make available
to all unlta and councils the
results of the U. S. Gbvernment
studies concerning the effects
of the continued use tf
marijuana In support of tlleir
firm . stand to oppose the ·
legalization of marijuana,

SAIGON (UPI) - South VIetnamese and Communist troope
fought for control of two hamleta and a militia outpost Saturday
NEW YORK (UPI) within 15 mile! of Saigon where U. S. presidential adviser Henry
Cancer of tbe llmg, the A. Kls8lnger held a third day of talks wJih government officials.
· variety tha( holds the least
Saigon Mayor Col. Do Klen Nhleu ordered a general
poSBiblllly of survival, Is tightening of security In Saigon to guard against expected
. Increasing
rapidly that commando and terror raids Inside the capital•before the Nov. 7
tl)e lungs are now the spot U. s. presidential elecUons.
where canc.er ts found most
U.S. B52 bombers dumped
often, the American Cancer more than 600 tons of high mand said.
Society said Saturday.
explosives in seven raids
In Saigon, government
Lung cancer kill• ap to 91 . jlround Saigon between noon workers plastered walls with
pet. of Its vlctlma and Its Friday and noon Saturday, thousands
of
posters
Incidence In the United spokesmen said. The bombing denouncing any coalition
states has been steadily strikes coul!! be clearly heard government. Political Ob·
growing, ACS repo.rled. The inside the capital. Jet fighters servers satd that the Nguyen
rate this year among men, flew at least 34 miSBions In Van Thieu administration
who are most often affected, support of' embattled govern· appeared to be publicly ve!Qing
1s 18 t1mes greater lb an It men! forces, the U.S. com· any attempt to end the war by
was 40 years ago.
the Imposition of a coalition.
.Kissinger's third day In

They knew too much?

PUSH BUTTON

Children and Youth - Open
Your Eyes ." ·
Among the resolutions
(lltssed by the PTA at the.
convention were ones relaUng
to support or stricter enforcement or present laws '
regarding ,the use of
hand guns , more diversleducational · · op·fied
portunities in the school
system ; public kindergarten
for every child in Ohio;
discourage through the
National · Association of
Broadcasters advertising
which infers that the use of any
par ticular non-prescription

times over 1932

t

•2''

\ HECK'S REG. 88'

$

'I

UMBRELLAS

HECK'S
REG.

TOILET
.BOWL
CLEANER ,

L-

~

$

GLOBE
$ 99

REG. OR MEN11f0~ U ·oz.

TY·D·IOL

-

T-24 ·

~
MENNEN

METAL ONLY

·····*'- CHAMOIS

RIGHT GUARD
FOOT GUARD.

HECK'S REG. '1.19 .

·

LICE~SE PLATES

WITH ASSORTED HEADINGS

•

2,2

$

HECK'S
R_E_G~._,2_ " - - - - - - -

'

.J
a.
t

PAN

pur·

chase of Bufferln lOO's.

'

__
1

::~-g:l

Cup

99~

'

HECK'S REG. $2.99

BUFFERIN
Free

.

I

ment or accountability
proc&lt;:.dures for Ohio's Public
Schools.
Other speakers were Dr.
F•·anklin B. Walter, deputy
superintendent of the Ohin
Department of Education who
spoke &lt;in "Quality Educati.on in
U1e 1970s''; The Honorable.
Oliver \)casek, Senator !rom
the 27th Distrlc~ who discussed
"Can We Afford Quality
Education in Ohio"; Robert E.
Sweet, Department·of Health
on "Teenage Alc.ohol and
Drugs"; and Dr. Lawrence c.
Hawkins of the University of
Cincinnati on u Pr~!\~llrP!\ on

increased by 18

eGo vern

•2•

'l'!le visual arts judging was by
Mr . Robert · Cordinale,
a:;sisl&gt;tnl professur ; Division of
Arl Education, Ohio State, a
student in the Division of Art
Education, and Kail Rothman
school psychologist, Depart-'
men! of Child Study, Columbus
Public Schools.
ll was announced at the
conference that the 1973 theme
will be "Responding to Ufe."
Among the highlights of the
conv~ntion at t)le Neil House
was a talk by Martin W. Essex,
State Superintendent of Public
Instruction, who reported on
the PTA's role in the Search for

Battle r_ages
Craig Reed, arls winner
:-:.:-==
near
Saigon
Grid an held

HECK'S

BRYLCREEM

.

·.

•

PORTA FI_LE
$ 48

HECK'S REG.

-~-~~2;;.;.;
. tor~s~gc_

•

1

·$}66 .

HECK'S
REG.
4r

PLAYING CARDS

~·

CAN

.LAUNDRY BASKET-·

POKER OR BRI.DGE

; ·,

$

·•

HECK'S,REG. $2.6&amp;'

30l

. ·--- ..

..'

.·' ••
·~

GARBAGE .

~4.66

HECK'S · REG.

'

' '" ""tr' '•

- I ... ...
• It rr••f• _.,,, , , r '''n· ~
... ~
~

20 GAliON
GALVANIZED

PET BASK·ETS
$ 99

ARLEE, Mont. (UPI)- "It's
· quite like a fairy tale, don't you
tlllnk?" dis Vivian Rice JWd ·
WUW, 13; ol ber mvrlage to
LOuie Nine. Pipe, a 7'-year-old

England, first learned about
Nine Pipe In 1969 when she
bought a recording of Flathead
Indian aongs. :
"I Sill' a picture of Louie ln
lhe al!llim's Insert and fell In
love with him,' lllle said.
So In 1970 she wrote to a
Mlilaoula, Mont., newspaper
Inquiring about Nine Pipe. The
. action sparked a flurry of
letters between Nine Pipe and
his bride-to-be and In the next
few months she moved to
Canada to be closer to him ~
"I dldn 't have any money to
· come to Monll!na, so Louie sent
me bus fare," she said.
She IIITived Oct. 7 and the
couple was married this week
by a justice of the peace In
Missoula.
Mr. and lifrs. Nine Pipe live
In a onH'oom log cabin, still
listen to "Flathead Indian
Recordings,'' and have the
neighbors "wondering what
Louie's got that they don't."

.

.

-

,.,.

REEDSVILLE - Craig second in •culplure ; Mark
Reed of Reedsville was one of Williams, Pomeroy. a third in
the Ohio .winners of the 1972 1 prose, and Keith Doss, MidNational P.T.A. Cultural Art dleporl, an honorable mention
Exhibit held in New York City. in poetry .
Announcement of his
Other winners in District 16
honorable mention award lor announced by Mrs. Richard
original guitar music was Vaughan, new district director,
made at , the 67th ·Annual were Ellen Wether.holt,
Convention of the Ohio Gallipolis, a first, and Ted
Congress of Parents and . Linscott, Athens, a third In
Teachers, Inc. in Columbus watercolor ; Robin Kuhner,
last week.
Chesape;~ke, a third in collage;
Craig's composition , Tina Roberts, Chesapeake, a,
"Reflections," took first in first in prose, and Kara
Ohio when it was judged a year Buchanan, Jackson, a second
ago and then we~t on to the in primary music.
national competition. At the
Judges at the slate con·
time he wrote the music, he ference were for literature, Dr.
was an eighth grader at the Robert Wess, chairman of the
Riverview Elementary School. Dept. of English at the Ohio
He is now . a sophomore at Domi.nican College; Mrs .'
Eastern High School. Cl'aig is Harriet Price, Children 's
thesonofMr.andMrs. Marvin Librarian , Bexley Library ;
Reed of Reedsville.
and Mrs. Judy Blair, coor·
At t)le state convention last dinator of staff development,
week, 'county and district blue Department ol .icademlc
ribbon entries in the cultural Humanities, columbus Public
arts exhibit were judged to Schools.
select the sta~ ~t place
The music was judged by Dr.
winners.which wih'conlpete on Keith Thompson, assistant
the 1973 national level. • _
prole.ssor of. music, School of
In the group were . three Music o,t Ohio State Univer·
Meigs Countlans - Paul sity ; and June Speak, mas~rs
McElhaney of Middleport. a degree candidate at Ohio State.

(UPI)-Police u ld
Saturday that two beaullflll
Louisiana sisters, found slain
In a poah Miami apartment,
may have been killed because
they wltnel18'!d the. drug-linked
executlonoftheboylriendof
ooe of them,
irhe bOdies of DeniSe Herthum Underwood, 20, and her
alater, Diane Herthum, 18, and
JaduJon Harvey Smith, 31, of
· Miami were found Thursday
night 1n a two-bedroom apart.
mentlninapartmeiltcomplex
known 11 a "llngles" Qllllrter8
' for lirllne stewardesses and
young profeuionala.
. The girls were from Baton
Rouge, La., 11'here their
parentt hold political jcibl. The
older Cirl - IJIIfl'ied oot
...,..ted fJ'Gm her husband
and had been lllll1lellnf In
Vlainl foi'" abwl II year. He{
IIIIer llad, come for a vlllt.
Both stria, beauty conteai
W!nnefl In the put, had
p1annec1 to go to college atartiltt!ID January.
'l1lfl oJdlr Iiiier had been
wltb Smllb llld be ac-

Van Lam at the minister's ·
home, and spent the rest of the
day with Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen .
Creigh!Qn w. Abrams, the U.s.
Army chief of staff.

fll

FLYER (not fryer) TAXES OFF - A llflnlmlete Ia
launched at Rio Grande last 11'etll In tile flrlll'llternltiGnll
Chicken Flying Meet at tile Bob Evana F - P'llltftl.
LOngest Olgbt of the day was II&amp; feel, 2 ln., by HIM)' 70,
owned by W. R. Haney &amp; Sons, Pltrlot.

2,000 cheer on flying ,
fowl in first contest
RIO GRANDE - Records
were set In all classes at the
First International Chicken
Flying Meet held during the
Bob Evans Farm Festival In
Rio Grande -on October II.
Morethan30entrlesfromthe
U. S. and France competed In
this flying competition held
under cloudy skies. About 2,000
spectators cheered on the
entrants.
The Olghta were under the
direction of !Jr. Glyde Marsh,
D.V.M., the International
assocla !I on flight director.
Only one chicken was
disqualified for flying ·back·
wards!
The results were :
Class I (32 oz. or less), Qr:ville, owned by Robert Pondlllo
of Athens, ?feet; Haney, W. R.
Haney &amp; Sons, Patriot, 612 feet
(only two enlranta'.· ,
Class II (33 oz. bt t less than
48 oz.), Karl, Carl Shriver,
Patriot, 17 feet, ,11 inches;

Class IV (14 oz. and over),
Carroll, Carroll Ruff of
Thurman, 13 feet, 5 Inches ; Haney 70, w..R. Hanay l Simi,
Scott, Scott Wood of Patriot, 9 Patriot, II&amp; feet, 2 lnchea; Olcl
While, John Halliday of
feet, 5'h Inches.
Gallipolis, 22 feet, 0'4 lncl\11;
Claas Ill (.a oz, but less than Pompldou, Phllllpe Si1J1P11 of
64 "'·), Terry, Larry Failor of Paris, France, 21 feet, 21nchea.
Patriot, 38leet, 0 Inches; Ray, There were no "chicken
Raymond Morrison of Thur· chickens" or "foul fowl" alllle
man, 35 feet, 7 Inches; Haney meet. The Peruvian chlcktn · ·
69, W. R. Haney fi Sons, didn'tmake It up ln Urne for tile·
.
flight.
.
Patriot, 28 feet, 6 Inches.

.

Search continues
in Alaskan wilds

ANCHORAGE, Alaska
(UPIJ - The Air Force
reversed-·ltself Saturday and
said the voice heard by
California dUzens band radio
operators could have come
from the·· plane · missing In
Alaska for six days with House
Democratic Majority Leader
HaleBoggsaboard.
U
· .
When the plane went ·down
Monday, five Californians reported having heard many
a sta~ Insurance Depsrtrnent details from a pilot ln dislreo!
official.
In Alaska. However, the
"Local salvage dealers of. conversations were eiglit hours
fered them-~bout 22 per cent, ·after the Boggs plane would
but25or30dealersfromoutof , have run out of fuel.
state were up 14 SO per cent
For this reason, plus doubts
~fore you knew lt. There's no about the plane's having
doubt that they plaMed to citizens band equipment
reseU them at run·value."
aboard, an Alr Force spokesHe .said he received a call man said earlier this week that
recently from Wisconsin's mo- · the report.ed conversations
tor vehicle department asking "just didn't fell with what we
foracheckonacarsoldthere. had."
The buyer noticed a musty
But the Californians, who
ameU whlcb.llngered Inside the make occasional dlilant con·car,
tacts because of freak weather
''The biaulaUon under the ·conditions, were fiown to
hood had been painted," Urben Anclt!Jl'age for Interrogation.
said. "He thought It was
Col. Earl Rlf, an Alr Force
atra,.e, 110 he pulled aome of It spolleaman, said Saturday "It
off, Underneath he found Is clear that If we assume
&amp;!lc)Uehanlll River mud." ·
cert8ln llllnp, the dlilreiS
Thecarnaaold!or ~w a aignala could have come fJ'Gm
ulvagedealerat.,uuetlon.It the rn1aaiJ11 easna 310."

car'·· buyon.,.Q a.,.n W'orned

.......
111111
111m·..w
JII'Oblbll
tlldwworld.
Tilly
tbat

tbtre-.m.

no

"
chorage toFiirblnkl, llld lhtn
took off again.
.
About 50 abandoned llntripl
without communlcaUa alit
along tile route.
It alao must be uaumod tllll
Jonz had aboard clllzena bind ·
equipment which II not earnmon·for planes In Aluka, 11111 ·
perhaplthathilnonnalequipo .
lnent was not funcUonlnC.
The ea1Uornla111 said the ·
voice they heard ind!Cited lhll
he had landed, and lhtn t* II
the air agalil-priiiiJMbf:r . .
cause of some technlCII clllft.
cuiUes. ·
Maj. Kim Shelley, analllw
Air Force spoktllllln, •ld ..
the tst of hil kno11'ledp, 11U
had not been mentioned Ia
Initial reportl received by tbt
Alaska Alr Ccmmlnd.
Victor Plrlrer fll Kmllll
City, C.llf., aild he ~Maid I
pilot repi)O that he nalll
.miles over the nllr w11b •
holl''aiiUIIPb' of fuel left.~
thepilot-iaid; ' 011. 1111 a..;~·~I'm 1oinC whit tile radii." ·
.After an intlr9l1,
J1111
spolie of ali!IPiDI, p 'b ·
toward water. 1'bt lilt a.·
millloo -.. IOol p~lllld •

..

tbt

111derliand.

$Ull

Jonl,

,

'l1lflpllot had put bll
at 12 illllll

from:_~''T~be~~
hiDdl
before tile Wllc:oothe
Dan E.
II
,.
- u
~lll&amp;:l:.!pne
tbt:flooii.:
com~pan~iii3~~Jhad~.l!'"lll
;~'d~tlu'OOCh
~J·that~Wha~t~hll:i;to:)1e:uaumed:!~~IJ~5~:•~
.. ~
liD..,_
rtld ~~·~t~lellt
for lt.
mw..,. on
art

I •

�.'

. •:.-.-

§ i!

N"me will take

NoJes .from :the ·artist's studio

parl in classic
, LAJ.D,lEL, Md. (UPI) -The
L@urel race course said ·
Saturday at least nlne top-level
thoroughbreds will
·
In
. $150,000
In-

.Television Log

claasic
Nov. 11.
· The latest entry is Roderick
. More O'Ferrall's English-bred
Parnell, a 4-year-()Jd son of.St.
Paddy, and winner of eight
European racea In the past two
years.
Others include Countess
Margit' Batlhany's San San
Meadow Stables' Riva Ridge:
Westerly Stud's 'l'YJ)ecast, both
representing the United
States; Tokykicqi Kitano.'s
Mejiro-Mushashi, Japan · Favi
Tikkoo's Steel Pulse, Engw.d;
Hugo Dolan's Boreen, Iretand;
Lee Ah Seon'gs Jumbo Jet,
Singapore and the Soviet
Union's Herold.

Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
SUNDAY OCT. 22, m2
6:00- Film 4. ·
6:30-:- Day of Discovery 4; l\lewsmaker '72 13; Bob Harrington ,.
6; Failll For Today 10. .
'
· 7:00- Communique 6; Old Time Gospel Hour 13; Sociellll$ In .~
1rans.lflon ~; Mormon Conference 10: .,

.

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•

7:30- Time for Timollly 4; Faith For Today·8; Revival Flres6;
Herald of Truth l; Lamp Unto My Feet to.
'
1:00 - Davey &amp; Follath 4; Leanard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan
6 ; Chu&lt;ch Service I]; Mormon t:holr l ; look Up and Live 10.
8:15 - Morning Report 4.
8:30- &lt;Xal. Roberts l; Try Our Healfl1 4; Kathryn Kuhlam 6;
~Y of Discovery 8: Camera 10; Rev. Humbard 13; Revival
f•res 15.

9:110- Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard 15;
Oral Roberts 10; Archie's Fun House B.
9: 30-Chllrchby Side of Road 4; Old Time Gospel Hour I; Good
l\lews 10, 13.
·
,
10:110- Church Service 4; Faith for Today 15; Curiosity Shop 6
I]; This Is The life l.
'
10:30- This Is the Life 15; Insight 4; Captain Noah '3· Notre
. Dame HiQhlights 8.
'
· 11:00 - TV Chapel 3; Joy In Living ]3; Camera Three 8; Consumer Report

'IRE WH&gt;I.t EVEvoWSEN family poleS with a large wooden shGe which marks their
borne near Tllppm Plains. Tbe names of the family are printed on the sign along with
lhwlngs ci family members,

111ISEAS'I'ERN SCHOOL bus makes a big deHvery wllllllt lloplat the Enevoldaen home
near Tuwen Plains. Tbe six adopted clilldren of Mr. and Mra. Danryn Enevoldsen and a
aeven~cblld liviJll with the family are jiclured aalbey leave the bu.

Enevoldsens adopt six
(Continued from page I)
exposed to · all of the
Enevoldsen children just as
early as possible so Jhat they
would understand that they
were "selected" to help make
up the family circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen
and their children are members ci lhe Rock Springs
Grange and of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange. They
love lhe rurallla vor of grange
, work. ·
The Enevoldsens' appear to
· have a "good life" going for
them. They are rare, generous
people who have opened their ·
home and their i'rms to the
love of children.
Mrs. Enevoldsen, a school
lirned -.{)f Astronaut John
Glenn, also from New Concord,
sums up the family relationship quite simply.
"Show respect and you get
respect,'' she comments.

JO ENEVOLDSEN ,l6,1oveathe clogs which help make
up lhe many peta of the family. The Enevoldaen family has
~o St. Bernards similar to the one In the picture.
·r-------------------------~

! Area Deaths !
Leater Bailey

Herberl Cochran

VIENNA, W. Va. - Lester
BUFFALO - Herbert Henry
W. Bailey, 78, died here Friday Cochran, 87, of Rt. I, Buffalo,
at Greenlawn Manor Nursing died Thursday in Holzer
Home. Mr. Bailey was born Medical Center. He was a
Sept. 15, 189-1 at Mlnnora, W. retired employe of Penn
Va. He ~erved with the am'ly ln Central Railroad Company and
World War 1.
• was a member of Warner
· He ia survived by his wife, United Methodist Church,
Maude Bailey, Long Bottom;
Survivors include his wife,
two daughters, VIrginia Lucy Hill; daughters, Mrs.
Starcher, Boyard, W.Va., and Gladys Herdman ' and Mrs.
Gretta Su!Ue, Long Bottom, Helen Sirnpaon, both of Bufand two grandsons.
falo ; Mrs . Catha Hill of
Funeral _,.rvices will be Robertsburg, Mrs. Reba
today at I p.m. at the Minnora Graham of Leon; sons, Lester
Methodist ChurciJ, · Minnora, and Delbert, both of Larue,
W. Va. Friends may call at Ohio, Kennltand Herbert, both
Sinnett Funeral Home in of Buffalo; 32 grandch~n ;
Spencer, W. Va., any time.
33 great-grandchildren; two
great-great-grandchildren.
'~am"• Bam'nu"'r
Service will be 2 p.m. today
J&lt;
~
·-e"'
in Buffalo Nazarene Church
·with the Rev. H. B. Parsons
REEDSVILLE - James 0. officiating. Burial will be in
Barringer, 53, Reedsville ManUla Cemetery at RobertsRoute I, died Saturday mor- burg. Friends may call at
ning at .the- Camden-Clark Raynes Funeral Home, BurMemorial Hospital following falo.
an extended illness.
Mr. Barringer was born in
Troy Townsl\ip, Athens John Jividen
County. the son of the late
RACINE - John Douglas
James D. and L&amp;ura Pullins Jividen, 72, Racine, &lt;lied
Barringer. He was a veteran of Friday a!tem09n at Holzer
World War U having served In · Medical Center.
the South Pacific and was an
Mr. Jividen was the son of
employe Of ~ Union Carbide the late Jasper F. and EmMetal Division at Marietta lor maline Clark. Jividen. He was
IS yean.
also preceded in death by two
Sarviving are his.wife, Rulh brothers, Clark and James.
Barber Barringer, a·aon. Carl,
Mr. Jividen is lurvived by
a daugbt~r. Mrs. Delbert his wife, Grace Lovett Jividen,
(Pat\)') PoweU, both of Reeds- one sister. Mrs. Harold
vill~; four lrothers, William Wetherholt, Gallipolla,- three
C., Sebring; Henry H., nephews and one niece:
Carrollton;
Clyde
J .,
Funeral~ervices will be held
Hockingport: Ernest D:, Monday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Reidsville; a lister, Mrs. funeral Home with the Rev.
llellte Speed of Alliance. Freeland Ncrrll officlatlnc.
Jill- parentt. Mr. BurlaT irililie lit Beec6 Grove'
P lllip: prectded In Cemetery: Friends may call at
delll lly a bivtbel and two the funeral home at anytime.

Jer•t

......

· F

'

II M tlctnlll be held

at lilt Wlllte PhUlip Long
with

GALLIPOLIS FERRY
lbllle PhiUip E. (Ned) Long, T/, ol
Ga~ Ferry, died Friday

..... Ol•

w·• • 11 •

at 4:21p.m. ill Hillier Medical
Clldlr Nl tlal • Jonc m-.

189(), af Gallipolis Ferry, a son
of the late Phillip and Amanda
Burge Long. He was a retired
employe or the former
Marietta Manufacturing
Company and spent his entire
life in Mason County.
Survivors include his wife,
Litlian Mayes Long, Gallipolis
Ferry; two daqghters, Mrs.
Eunice Forshee, Gallipolis
Ferry , and Mrs. Virg.inia
Thomas, Point Pleasant; two
sons, Frank K. Long, Gallipolis
Ferry, and · Lester L. Long,
Columbus, Ohio;.. one sister,
Mrs. Stella Reece , Gallipolis
Ferry; one brother, Charles
Dewey Long, Sr., Gallipolis
Ferry. 10 grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren. ·
Funeral services will be
conducted at 2 p.m. Monday
from the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, The Rev. William (Bud)
Hatfield and the Rev. Charles
McDonald will have charge of
the services. Burial wiU follow
in the Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 4 p.m.
today.

u,

·

r-----------~-------~
DANCE NlGHTL Y

·

11 :30- This Is The Answer l; Insight 15; Make A Wish 6 13; Rtx
Humbart 8; OSU Football 4.
'
12:00 -. CBPA Bowling 6; Columbus Town Meeting 10; Rev.
Calv•n Evans 13; Changing Times IS.
12:30 - Revival Firesl3; Pro Football Pre-Game Show I; Meet
file Press ], 4, 15.
·
I: 110- Pro For Football 8, 10, 15; Merl Haggard 3; Issues &amp;
Answers 13; Faith &amp; The Bible 4.
·
1:30-American Adventure6; Dick Van ()ykt4.
2:00- Pro Football 3. 4; Point of Vlew6; lower Lighthouse 13.
2: lO -tssueund Answers6; College Football'7213
3:00- Changing Times 13.
·
·
l: ~:-Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 6; Rookies 13; Living

•
;

i

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel

Iaosed Sunday)

TEENS NEED HEAI..nt HELP

Dear Rap :
o
Our state is supposed to be liberal. We let teenagers who
"qualify" get abortions without notifying their parenta
(especially tfthey'reabletopay). We also give treatment for VD
without parental consent, from age 12 on.
BUT: the high adloola and junior higha still require a note
from home before the sketdllest kind ci sex education can be
offered to studenta, Teachers are pretty paranoid about
discussing contraceptives. Before they can give Information on
venereal disease they need another ~~&amp;nature from pare~ts!
Probably the sllllest law here Ia that girls under the age r1. 18
caMot get prescriptlona foe cootraceptlves unlesa a parent
DEMARSSHINES
consen\8 in writing or In penon, preferably in penon, as
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) signatures can be forged. So it bolls down to IIIia: a girl can be
- 'red Demars broke loose for aborted legal)y and her p81'81ta need never know - the State
scoring runs of 34, 11 and six keeps her secret. But If she wants to prevent a pregnancy, the
yards and Jim Stoeckle tossed State gets all uptight and moral and sa)'J .''Not unless Mama oc
a seven yard touchdown pass to Papa gives you pem!l!!!don."
·
John Haggarty on a fake field
I'm a college student who is not in the 1eaat ''penniaaive." 1
goal try_ Saturday as Harvard was not the type to~~ Pill in high llchool,. but 1 knew
University stopped PrevJOII8ly many girls who were takq big chances beclnl!e they felt they
unbeaten Cornell, 33-15, In an were so in love they coulcm't walt - and at that time even
Ivy League football game.
' Planned Parenthood insisted you mUll be II before they'd help.
What I mean Is: There are girll who walt and girls who
Prrr WINS FIRST
absolutely won't - and It doesn't help to keep lnfonnatkln from
Mrs. Eva Miller
PI'ITSBURGH (UPI)
them, nor are the "walten" influenced toward sex by being
PT. PLEASA•.•T- Mrs. Eva - Bruce Murphy caught a 10- informed about lt. More likely their attitudes are reinforced
''
d
hd
through class di"'•"'ons.
Gladys Miller, 77, of 305 First yar touc own pass and ' Herewith, a plea for states to keep up with the limes: There
Street, Apt. 8, Point Pleasant, scall)pered 60 yards for are areas where a teencan'tget VD treebneat untesa hl.lno-ts
died at I :30 p.m. Friday in anot!ter tally to cap a three.-~·
Holzer Medical
Center touchdown fourth quarter know- which meana a Jot dm't set treated! Most states won't
following an extended illness. Saturday as Pitt won Its first allow paychlatric cOUJIIeling without parental knowledge _ and
Funeral services will be game of the season and · what teen who worries abouthcmoeexual Wlldenclel wiD CGnfide
conducted todayat 2 p.m. lrom snapped a- 10-game losing lnhismotberorfalher?Tbemajorllyrl.statenetoJWescriptions
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home streak by defeating Boston ·for contraceptives to minors un1esa pare~ll aptii'Ove (!bough
with the Rev .• Charles s. College ~20.
mostlooktheotherwaywhenPiamed Parenthood organizations
Thompson officiating. Burial ,·
offer help). And many IChool8 have no lei edtlcation clares
will follow in the Lone Oak ·
Whatsoever.
·
Cemetery.
, THE AFIERSHOCK
If you print thia, Heleii.OO SUe, you'll PI'Qbablyget as many
Mrs. Miller was born
SYLMAR, Calif. (UPI) - A lrickbata as bouquell; but It needs saying. I hope you will!January 'll, 189(), at Miners- small earthquake centered five COlLEGE RESEARCHER
.
ville, Ohio, Meigs County, and miles deep In the ground, near
was a daughter of the late here late Friday was described Dear C.S.:
We wiD. And it cioes! 'I1IIIIU lor yoll' timely, well-informed
Gegrge and Bertha Long by scientists as an aftershock
Williamson , Her husband, of the disastrous Feb. 9, 1971 letter. - HELEN AND SUE
George Miller, died in 1950.
temblor that claimed 65 liv.es.
+++
Dear Helen and SUe:
Survivors include one sister.
·Another annrer to M1sa 211. I bad to write to let hei- 1r:now
Mrs. Urania smith of Point
Bidwell;
Bruce
and
Clarence
thereatefellonaroundwhoukebllgirll.lloaewer,lhe'aright:
Pleasant and several nieces
Stout, bolh of .Rt. 1, Bidwell; a guyswllibeputdownfordatlnea fatlb'l.ltlakelcwrage-·lhat
and nephews.
brolher, Robert of Albany; two lint date.
·
Jady C. Stout
sisters, Mrs. E:lime Green of
Here are 1 few~ to ovwwe~Pten:
Oregoo and Mrs. Polly Small of
DRESS UPlSoc:liiY Wlllll to belieft)'OU'realkb,so don't
BIDWElL - Jady C. Stout, Centerville, Washington; 25 prove It b)'~ UOUIId ill alldft cr 11appy Totblrt. Keep your
79, Rt. 2, died at 5 a.m. grand
and 12 great- hair and mMftP lookiniiJ'I8t. Star.-&amp;.
Saturday in the Holzer Medical grandchildren.
Sta)' in ahlpe.l'ln IICIIItkJdini.IIIC pettplt need uerdtle. Be
Center wh6e he had been a
He was a member or lhe agile
patient lor the past two weeks. American Legion.
· You dm't haw to ndtiJe jut beal..e yaa're fill Dan't
He wu born May 20, titS in' Last rites will be held at I ~ lit there and IJOW.
,
·
...._,
County
Tenn
of
p.m.
u........o- .........._..._.._..... _~ 'Thla one'1 tba -~ lAirD to IPiz!' 11 m•IL 1 hav.e
J
,, IOJ1
~'"'""'7 ffVID ..., -. . ..-.-..,.----lliiow:a flit.....
......_ ..... _
lhe late Thon)as and Lydia burg Church With Rev. Jeff
..-- you - ' t - · - tlie wwdl ''lllc" or ''hiJie"
J1111~ Proffitt Stout. He married Butcher and Rev, Marlon arotlld II' they'd lUI It fW8 IIJ. ll'l J.11 to b:m fila wilh
Danford}', Dunn in 1917 and Williams officiating. Burial mn-wbenyaallllltwa:IIIVWJward,_IIJ.
Laat,lllke- ad bltllilu ..:flu tba 11811-•.
she pre ceded him on Aug. 16, ,..ill be at V1·nton Metnorlal
.... Bnt
1118'1.
.
Park. Graveside, rite! will be I'Ualwayat.veupotinlll1belrtfcrllllltl..... r:uwulot
Surviving
are · four conduct~ by the American &lt;iotherflllowtdotoo,lltber'donlyaclmlllt.-JI'RANK
daughters, Mrs. John Gilliam Legion:
.
of ·Graham, Ky.; Mrs: · Don
The body will lle In state at
CHAIRMAN 'J)Jl!S
after alenclllY lllnesa. A native
~and Mrs. WiUJam H. thechJrchonehourpriortothe
COtUMBUS (UPI) _ Tl18 oflfll'llniJI'my,Mear-a
I'IIIWpa, bolh of BldweU, and servlcea. Frlenda may clll at cbainllln c1 the Olio PubJk memberctf lite ldtllolt board

··

Timmy &amp; las51e 6.

·

12: 2S- CBS News a.

12:30- Split Second 6; Search tor Tom.orrow a, 10; l\lews 3; 3 W's
13,
I : oo- All

I

c---..........____..A...._________::::s·

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t:

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My Children 6, ll; News, Weather, Spar!$ 3; ~cklt r.o,.
Obllnger8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
1:30- JOn A Malch J, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As Tht t;
World Turns B, 10.
i!
2:00- Oeys of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding light a. 10.
••
2: 30- Dating Gamel3; Doctors l, 4, 15; Edge of Ntghte, 10.
~
l:OG-Another World 3, 4, 1S; General Hospital. 6, ll; Love f;
Splendored Thing B, 10; The Family Game 20.
!"
l: 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13; ,•
Secret Storm B, 10 ; The French Chef 20.
::
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon J; Somerset 15; SesaiM 15, 33; Love ''
American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Fllnlstones 6; Glll~n·s ~
IsleS; Sesame Street 20; Movle"Tarzan's Three Challenges" •
10
~
4: 30 - I Love Lucy 6; PeHicoat Junction 3; Merv Griffin I ; ~!
Daniel Boone ll ; Andy Grlflllll 15.
;.,·
5:00 - Mr. Roversl3; Dkk Van Oykel5; Ponderosal, 4; Denlel &gt;'
8"""" 6; Mr. Rodgers 20.
~!
5:30- Elec. Co. 33; Marshall Dillon IS; Oragnell; Gomer Pyle ,•
13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
•j
6:110- News 3. 4, a. 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News 13, 15 ; t•
Soclelles In Transition 33; Sesame St. 20.
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC Newt 6; CBS News t. 10; Folk I•
Guitar ll; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayova 33.
::
7:00 - News6; Truth or Conseq. 3; Bea11heCiock 4; Clrcusl1l; •'
1~~~~~:lc~t·:o~L~~';" !: Saint IS; Read Your Way Up
·7:lO-ToTeiiTheTrulll6; TrafflcCourt10; EpiiOdeAdlon33; ::
Parent Game 3; Mollywood Squirt$ 4; Y"""9 Dr. Kildare 8; ;:
Hodgepodge Loclllt 20; Town Hall: Politics 12 3.
.•
8:00- Gunsmoke I, 10; Rowan and Marlin's Laugh-In 4, 15; ;:
UF0.6; Hollywood Television Theatre 33.
·
·••
9:00- Here's Lucy 8, 10; Pro Football6, 13; MOvie "They Might ;:
Be Giants" 4, 15.
•
9:30- Dori~Day B; Only the Strong 10; Book Beat20. 33.
;:
10:00- Bill Cooby 8. 10; l\lews 20; From The Hills 3],
::
10:30 - Concerts In the Lawn 33.
.•

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11 : 00 - News3, ~, 6.B,10,15.

11:30- Dick Ca\1&lt;1116; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movies "Cutter's
Trail" 8; "Stop ·Train 349" 10.
11 :4.5- JohMy Carson 4.
12:00- News 6.

.•

12:30- Movies "Carry On Teach«rl' 6; "Mr. Scoutmnter" 13.
·
.
·
1:00 - Focus on Columbus 4.
2:00- News 4.
2:30- News 13.
LIONS GIVE ~.MZ
ROCK'II'EU. STARS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
WESTERVILLE, Ohio .
Ohio Uons Clubaof Ohio's Eye (UPI)- Jim Roc:kwllll'tllllad
Research Foundation bat lor IDS y..-.11 and tine 1AJucb.
presenteda$67,1K2checktothe downs Saturday to ltad
Ohio
State
University .M~ to a M-S1 w1aDevelopment Fund f"" llllppOrt Ou.Ji fa.
of vision and eye dlaeaae '· W
~an two tour
research. .
yard nn and oad aC 11ft
yards. Jim Banlldelli prm d
111•• EXPECTED
for two o1 011 :baln'l - .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - More Mualngum 11 now W and
lhan 100,000 persona were
ted
- t0 !tend
Olleibein N,
expec
a
the llllb
anlllll All American Quarter
fHa~~~-at the state
1'IUCIA IN 01110
am.ucxn&amp;&amp;,
0111o (UPI)

uo·--

IIIIOWN DDIOLI88EO

HANOVER, N.H. (UPI) _
Quarterback Steve SteiiOD
pared for two toachdowl8111d
raliforanelel ini~WGd . .
polilt ' qaartar 1161tuntar u

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Robert Taft,

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Ohio
Kanauga, Ohio

Valley'~

,.

Finest Night Club

·

Ph. 446-9174
'

Call No. 483

.·

REMAINS UNBEATEN
ADA, Ohio (UP!) - Ron
Slater tossed two touchdown
passes to Mark Neiderhauser
to• pace unbeaten and 19th
ranked Ashland to a 27-10 win
over Ohio Northern here
Saturday.
Slater hit Neiderhauser with
touchdown strikes of 37 and 24
yards as the Golden Eagles
r~ng up their seventh consecutive win.
The other Ashland scores
came on a one-yard run by Jon
Biar and a 34-yard pass interception by Dick Miller.
Ohio Northern scored all of
its points in the third period on
a 76 yard punt return and a 29
yard field goal l}y Steve
Mollett.
CAPS TOPSMU
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UPI ) Craig Snider punched across
two touchdowns to lead Capital
to a 21-14 win over the Mount
Union Purple Raiders in an
Ohio Conference
ga me
Saturday.

uarter

"t:

•

ladies Nights- Tues. &amp; Wed .
Happy Hour Daily
., . 2:30p.m.- 8:30p.m.

ifrench

MONDAY, OCT. 23, m2
6:110- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Hearl 10.
6:15- Farmtime 10; Farm Report 13.
6:20- Paul Harvey 13.
·
6:25 ~ Good l\lews ll.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10. .
6:45 - Corncob Report 3.
7:110- Today 3. 4,15; l\lf&gt;w$, Wealller, Spom6,1, 10. ·• ·•· ' •
. 7:25- Sports 13.
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers a; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnklf :?.
! 3.- Capt . Kangaroo 10 ; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33; :,·:.
B:00
8:30- Jack Lalanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Review 6.
8:55- Local News 1],
9:110- What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon t; Phil
Donahue IS; Captain Kangar&lt;X&gt; 8; Concentration 6; F1lendly
Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; In School Provrammlng20.
9:30- To Tell The Trulh3 ; Jeopardy6; Hazel&amp;.
9:55 - Chuck While Reports 10. ·
10:110- Concentration 3. 15; Phil Donahue 4; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Split Second 13..
·
11:110- Sale of Century 3, IS ; Gambit8, 10; P~ssword 13; Love,
American Style 6.
11 :25 - Carol DuVall 6.
11 :30 - Hollywood Squaresl, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13; love oflllt
8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
.
12:00- Jeopardy 3. 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
Contact 8; News 13,

THE ROVERS"

•OPEN 2:30P.M, TO 2:30A.M.

6:o0 :_ News, Weafller, Sports 6.
6:30- Untamed World 6; Hathayova 33.

WABASH BEATS OWU
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) Dave Cogdill passed three
yards to Jim Laurent and Hans
Steck scored on a 25 yard run
as Wabash (Ind.) defeated
Ohio Wes leyan 14-12 here
Saturday.
Tom Burke booted 41 and 32
yard field goals and Tom
Yingling scored on a two yard
run for the Wesleyan scoring.
Burke, with 15 seconds
remaining in the game, missed
a '1:1 yard field goal attempt.
Wabash is now 2-S and
Wesleyan 2-3-1.

On The River.
eNO COVER CHARGE
ePOPULAR PRICES

Mancini Generation 6; Baseballl, 4; Pro F&lt;X&gt;tball a 10
15; Living 33.
' '
4:30- World of Survival6, 13; Aw;of Anxletyll
''
5:~- Wild Wild West 6; Movie 'The Court Jesier" 13; Ripples

STEVE, TIM, RICK and Ken ''mother" a batch of pupa wbk:h armed at lhe Enevoldsen
home about two weeks ago. Pets are prevalent about the home of the family.,

To The Most Popular Band
11

~:00-

7:110- LawrenceWelk 13; Safari To Adventure 3; ·This Is Your
Llfe4; Wild Kingdom 15; Wall Till Your Father Gets Home6;
UFO 8; In The Know 10; Z&lt;X&gt;m 20.
7:30- World of Disney l, 4, 1S; Anna &amp; The King 10; Lefs Make
A Deal 6: Just Generation 33.
,
a:OO- F Bl 6, 13; Mash a, IO; Family Game 33, 20; McMillan
and Wile 3, 4, i).
9:00- Dick Van Dyke 10; Master Piece Theatre 33; Movie "The
Adventurers" 6, 13.
9:30- Mannix B, 10.
.
10:30- We Think You Should l&lt;"!'w 3; Protectors 4; Evil Touch
.a; High Road to Adventure 10; Pollee Surgeon 15.
11:110 - News. Weather, Sports3,4, 8, 10,15.
11:15- CBS News a. 10, 15.
11:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4. IS; Face the Illation 10; Movie
"Escape In the Deserf' 8.
12:00 - Movie "Mister Buddwlng" 10.
12: 15 - News 6, 13.
12:30 - College Football '72 6.
12:4.5- Movie "Mardi Gras" 13.
1:00- News 4.
1:30- Judd 6.
2:30- l'?Cal News 13.

GAllS FFA INSTAllS NEW MEMBERS- The Gallipolis FFA Chapter installed 15 new
greenhandmembers.at its October meeting. Bill Burleson was elected treasurer to replace
Jerry Cook, past treasurer. Also discussed was th~ coming citrus fruit sales. New greenha nds
are, left to right, first row, Danny Clay; Diane Haffelt, Terri Jividen; second row, Danny
Bo~, Dale Jam•s, Steve Wallis, Glen Borden, Bruce Scarbe.,.Y; third row, Lewis
Bodimer, Jeff ~ohnson, Robert Green, and Mike Cunningham. Absent .were Bobbie Barcus,
David Doimally alii! Danny Woodward.
---

RAIDERS TRIUMPH
PRINCETON, N.J. (UP!) Junior•Tom Parr passed and
ran for five touchdowns and 285
yards at the controls of
Colgate 's wisllbone offense
Saturday to power the underdog Red Raiders to a 35·28
triumph over Princeton.

.,

Charter No. 1.341
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMFSI'IC SUBl!IDIARIES, OF THE

The First National Bank
of Gallipolis, Ohio In the State of Ohio, atlhe close of business on October 10
1972 published In response to call made by Comptroller of !be currency, unde;
Title 12, Unlled Stales Code, Seetlon 181.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,003,652.46
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 2,002,228.47
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 2,878,614.77
other ~rities (including $30,000.00 corporate stock )
- - - 104,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - • • • • • • • • . . .
1,900,1100.00
Loans - - - - • . . . . • • • • • • • • • • _
7,168,302.63
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - - 148,491.55
Real estate owned other than bank premises - - - 4,508,35
- $15,210,548.23
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - ,· - - ,LIABB.ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
. and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • $3,866,163.23
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,348,335.00
Deposits of United Stales Govenunent - - - - - - - - - - • 113,339.63
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 1,368,653.47
Certified and officers' checks, tic. - - - - - - - - • - - - - 116,578.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • - - - - - - $13,313,070.01
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - $5,464,735.01
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - -· - - $ 7,848,335.00
other UablliUes - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - - - 515,560.09
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $13,828,630.10
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve lor bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $100,508.46
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - - - • $100,508.46
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - • •
- - $1,281 ,409.67
Common Stock-total par value - - - - - - 100,000,00
No. shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,1100
- - 900,1100.00
Surplus - - ·• - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - Undivided profits - • - - • • • • • •
- 281,409.67
TOTAL CAt'IT AL ACCOUNTS
$1,281,409.67
TQTAL UABJt.iTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - - $15,210,548.23
MEMORANDA
Average rl. total deposits for the 15 calendar
daya ending with caUdate -. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $13,112,523.55
Average of total loans for ·the 15 calendar
days ending with caU'Iiate - - ; .• - - - • - - - - - - - - · 7,083,109.26

I, MarlinG·. Kerns, Executive Vice President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that .IIIIa report of condition ia true and correct to th~ best of my
knowledge and belief.
·
!lfarUn G. Kel'lll, Executive VIce President
.
'
We, the underalgned directors attest the correctnesa of this report of condillon and declare that it hat been examined by UJ and to the best of our
kriowlelfle IIIII belie( Ia ~ and
~

comct.-

C.M •.~J

·-

. E.E.NIII -~
Ru1 DO. W....

-- -. -

BY KATI .MEEK
Arti•t-in-Rcsldcnce
GAI.I.IPOI.IS - On the way
l&lt;~ tlic studio Tuesday mol)'
mnJ.;, I saw tl1e sun red
between twll hills, thro;gh ih~

yarns, work out a design with
the yarn, and sew it down to a
dose and friendly, and I feel I
background cloth. If you have
am livfng ~md worKing in a classes, am not trained to a piece of cloth' solid color
special place. ·
·
leach in .· the conventional foot sq~are or more, a largeTh'' pcopl&lt;' iinthc territory of . sense, people ·must come to . eyed ·needle and-or · white

made me feel
good, made
happy. There
are too few things in the world
about which we can feel
bappy . I am working on L way
lo capture the impression of
that red fog with yarns and the
loom. I want to share the joy I
had.
. This opporlunity to serve as
artist-in 'residerice here in
Gallipolis is an exciting exc
perience for me. It is a
remarkably beautiful country .
The hills, valleys and trees
meet the sky in wonderful
~!terns. The river gi~es the
assurance that there •s con- .

through creation and support
of the French Art Colony, that
there is i.nleres1 in, and hunger
for knowledge of the arts. This
area w~s granted the
residency · because the
National Endowment for the
Arts, Ihe Office of Education
and the Ohio Arts Co~ncil
believed that here was a most
likely place for a resident
artist to he used effectively.
This is a new approach to
education. I am not a teacher.
I have been given space to set
up "the ideal studio" for my
work . It is in Washington
School because it is con-

Iact with all the world and yet

vcnient to students and the

lhc eummunity is quiet, clean,

ctmnnurHty in general.
!lecause I am not holding

learn without being taught.
I enjoy talking about what I .
do but it takes aJew questions
to get me started (no one's
discovered how to get me
stupped 1,
· Come, just look around, if
you like. My collection of
books is growing ·and there is
space to sit and read. The
studio is open' Tuesdays
through Saturdays 9 a.m. to 4 .
p.m. Knock and walk in. I'm
usually into something.
Sunday the 29th is Parent
Child Wqrkshop, French Art
Colony . We're planning to spin
some wool into interesting

a

it along. You may bring
and spinning devices too, but
this is optional.
At F.A.C. today, there is a
great opportunity to serve the
aris and al the same time take
in fresh air. Workday at •
Riverby
proves
th 9 t
willingness to work together,
raking leaves, and cleaning
gutters. makes being together
for sophisticated activities
more enjoyable than an ticipated. But the people of
Gallipolis already know that,
or Riverby, the French Art
Colony, wouldn't have come ·
into existence. See you there.

~~;j;~~~~~~~~~~~-m.r:~~"i$li:~m~~~~;*~~~;t~m::~tl~t~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~1l~~m;;;~;~~l~~t:1~;i:-m~~l~ffi;;~;m~~~;~1;m~~mmm;;;~~;;~m;m~m*~A\~11i

NOW YOU KNOW
For the past 11.000 years,
various societies have believed
amber could cure rheumatism
and asthma and ward off
witchcraft.

a running back with the· New
York Giants. He gives the playGifford named Lombardi me
by-play on NFL Monday night
HOUSTON (UP!) - Sport- Lombardi award dinne•· Jan . football.
scaster Frank Gifford will t8, it was annoqnced Saturday.
The Lombardi award ;
Gifford retired · from sponsored by the Rotary Club
serve as master or ceremonies
at the third annual Vince p1·ofcssional football in 1965 of Houston, is presented to the
after an outstanding career as nation's outstanding college

lineman and is in honor of the
late Green Bay , Packers and
Washington Redskins coach.
The award, presented In 1972
to Wall Patulski of Notre
Dame, Is a 45-pound block of
granite, symbolizing selfdiscipline.

VOTE FOR HONEST·REPRESENTATION
IN THE OHIO LEGISLATURE
for Southeastern Ohio:

State Spends $885,000 to Rebuild Road Beside,.
·'
Collins' Coal Plant
~

'

Plain Dealer Special
HANGING ROCK, 0 . - Under planning
and a eontract let during the administration
of former governor James A. Rhodes, Ohio is
spending $885,1100 to rebuild a mile-long
section of Ohio 650 that runs alongside the
coal preparation plant of the Collins Mining
Co. here in Lawrence County,
The Collins Mining Co. is owned and
operated by State Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIB, Ironton, a member of the Ohio State's
Urban and Highway Affairs committee.
The road costs are higher than usual
because the two-lane highway has to be
rebuilt with interstate highway strength to
bear up under Collins' heavy coal trucks.
The new mile~ong section will be higher
than the old roadway to avoid a flooding
proble.fi&gt; caused mostly by the Collins'
operations, a problem which cost the state an
average $9,700 a year in extra maintenance,
2Qtimes the normal cost for maintaining such
roadway.
COWNS' PREPARATION plant includes a coal-washing operation in which
sand and other noncoal material Is flushed
away to be pumped to settling ponds.
But the operations leaked sediment into
Osborne Run which borders Ohio 650. When
tbe sediment plugged the creek, heavy rains
flooded the road, undennining its foundation
and eroding its macadam surface.
Lawrence countians remember that after
!be coal plant was opened, highway maintenance crews came three, four and five
times a year to clean the ditch . Sometimes
they were there so often It looked like a
permanent assignment, according to some
residents.
Reconstruc!ion of the road is costing more
than normal because :
. -The road must he paved in concrete 15
inches thick to bear the heavy truck loads.
-The state had to build a $35,000 bridge to
connect Collins' driveway with th~ raised
road.
-A compact dirt "bench" was built, between the roadway and the ditch, to provide a
permanent ·work road for equipment to
dredge the creek in the future.
- The bridge and culverts had to be faced
with glazed brick to protect the structures ·

from corrosioo by acid drainage from old coal
mines.
Collins contends, and highway officials
agree, that some of the sedimentation In
Osborne Run comes from above his coal
plant. This sediment originates in the spoil
banks of old strip mine operations (many of
them by Collins Mining) in the creek's
watershed.
However, highway maintenance cost
records show that ditch work on the mile of
Ohio 650 tripled alter the Collins coal
preparation plant, began operation in 1960.
DURING TliE SIX YEARS prior to thai
time, ditch cleaning along the one-mile
section cost an average $3,200 aMually.
ranging from a low of $581 in 1955 to a high of
$5,133 in 1959.
But after Collins' coal washing began,
cleaning cost jumped to an annual average of
$9,700, ranging from a low of $530 in 1963 to a
high of $21,053 in 1965.
State Highway officials said several factors
account for the wide range In ditch cleaning
costs, including the number and force of
rainstorms, cleaning intervals and flue·
tuatlons In Collins' operations.
Although state highway reports staled that
Collins' mining operations were largely
responsible for the maintenance and
reconstruction work, none of the costs were
charged to the company,
This contrasts with the long&lt;Jtandlng policy
regarding traffic accidents. The Ohio
Department of Highways bills Insurance
companies for repair of vehicle-caused
damage to guard rails, light and sign posts
and other structures.
One state highway engineer at the
Chillicothe division office said the highway
department's policy Is not to charge a
rosiness fdr such Increased maintenance
costs If the business operations do not alter
the size of a watershed.
WHEN THE RAISING and improvement of
the mile of Ohio 650 was first proposed in 1965,
the project carried an estimated total cost of
$250,1100 - typical for a similar improvement
Of "ordinary" two-lane roadway.
But further study showed that spongy
bottom land would have to be dug out and
replaced and that the pavement would have to

be stronger than ordinary to bear the heavy
coal trucks.
The revised proposal made in 11163 carled a
cost estimate of $446,1100.
In 1970, the final proposal included the need
for the extra !ridge, higher right-of-way costa
and the ''workbench" for future dredging. By
then the estimated cost for the one-mlle
project was lip to f/22,1100.
Bids for the work were to have been let last
.spring. In October 1970, the highway
department moved the contract bidding to
last JlntW'Y' &amp;, llx days before the Rhodes- ,.:,
admJ.nlatration left office.
Actual cost will total about $885,1100 Including '180,900 for righ(-()f..,.ay purchases,
$56,700 in highway department englneering
and $629,1100 ln actual construction.
The coal preparation plant and part of
Collins' haul road from a strip mine to the
plant are on land which Collins leases from.
the federal government.
TIJESE LANDS ARE PART of the Wayne
National Forest administered by the U.S.
Fore81 Service.
Files ln the district ranger's office In
Ironton contain many complaints by rangers
about seepage of coal wash sediment into
Osborne Run.
·
The files contain reports of pump breakdownS when wash water from the plant was
let Into the stream. There alao are reports of
sediment pollution caused by overflow or
wall-breeching of the settling ponds.
The main settling pond, In an old stripe
mine pit on federal land above the plant, is
almost filled.
Collins was aaked by the U.S. Forest Service two years ago to build a new pond so the
old one could be abandoned.
INSTEAD, COlLINS PUSHED dirt up to
make the walls of the pond even higher.
Early In October, the new district ranger,
T. Alan Wolter, gavl Colllns an ultimatum:
Stop using the pond Immediately or face
cancellat.on of hl.l federal land use permits.
· Collins did not reply to the ultimatum until
alter It was made public, nearly a month
later; by The Plain Dealer. . •
The senator·then wrote to Wolter and said
he had pipe on order and was preparing
to relocate the settling pond.,NEXT : Better strip mine regulations
needed.

-CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER - SAtURDAY, DEC. 25, 1971-

VOJE FOR JOHN E. HALLIDAY
FOR

HO~EST

REPRESENTATION • AND AGAINST SPECIAL INTERESTS

92nd District · Ohio House of Representatives
It's time the people of Lawrence, Meigs, Gallla and parts of Athens
county received honest.representation in the Ohio Legislature, so send a
man to represent you, not just ,Special Interests to the House ..• vote for
John E. Halliday, the Democratic nominee on Nqvember 7 •• , no more
· costly road rebuilding just for one firiJl which dominates special interests. but building highways for all the people to use.
.

Vote· Your Way • Vote Halliday!
.

Gener.JI.I-Eler,lion
Tuesday, NovembeJ&lt;-7rl97'l- - ~ ·
.
· Sponsored by Halliday For Representative Comm.lttee
Warren F. Sheets, General Chairman
Pd. Plil. Adv.

·

ll't
'I

acba4alld

MaldQ ,Iil ·

w

I

at ...

Mrs.H~tKo~w~eU~of~Ck~~~o,~lh~e~~~~~F~u:ne:r:al~H~e~al~lh~C~w:~~i~l.~~~F~-~
kr~I7~J~·~-:~-~====~~ju~h~d:tf~t:a~te=d~-D~a~r:ta~ol~t~•.JV~t=hr:•:•~•~~A~~~~~~~!~~~~~_1~~l.--~~--_1~j[~~~
wa ,.... ), m.:
t1ne
.ll

"

-Not for Special Interests which result in Unfavorable Publicity like this

.,

·-

•

"

I

�.'

. •:.-.-

§ i!

N"me will take

NoJes .from :the ·artist's studio

parl in classic
, LAJ.D,lEL, Md. (UPI) -The
L@urel race course said ·
Saturday at least nlne top-level
thoroughbreds will
·
In
. $150,000
In-

.Television Log

claasic
Nov. 11.
· The latest entry is Roderick
. More O'Ferrall's English-bred
Parnell, a 4-year-()Jd son of.St.
Paddy, and winner of eight
European racea In the past two
years.
Others include Countess
Margit' Batlhany's San San
Meadow Stables' Riva Ridge:
Westerly Stud's 'l'YJ)ecast, both
representing the United
States; Tokykicqi Kitano.'s
Mejiro-Mushashi, Japan · Favi
Tikkoo's Steel Pulse, Engw.d;
Hugo Dolan's Boreen, Iretand;
Lee Ah Seon'gs Jumbo Jet,
Singapore and the Soviet
Union's Herold.

Programs for Tonight
and Tomorrow
SUNDAY OCT. 22, m2
6:00- Film 4. ·
6:30-:- Day of Discovery 4; l\lewsmaker '72 13; Bob Harrington ,.
6; Failll For Today 10. .
'
· 7:00- Communique 6; Old Time Gospel Hour 13; Sociellll$ In .~
1rans.lflon ~; Mormon Conference 10: .,

.

,

•

7:30- Time for Timollly 4; Faith For Today·8; Revival Flres6;
Herald of Truth l; Lamp Unto My Feet to.
'
1:00 - Davey &amp; Follath 4; Leanard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan
6 ; Chu&lt;ch Service I]; Mormon t:holr l ; look Up and Live 10.
8:15 - Morning Report 4.
8:30- &lt;Xal. Roberts l; Try Our Healfl1 4; Kathryn Kuhlam 6;
~Y of Discovery 8: Camera 10; Rev. Humbard 13; Revival
f•res 15.

9:110- Singing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Rex Humbard 15;
Oral Roberts 10; Archie's Fun House B.
9: 30-Chllrchby Side of Road 4; Old Time Gospel Hour I; Good
l\lews 10, 13.
·
,
10:110- Church Service 4; Faith for Today 15; Curiosity Shop 6
I]; This Is The life l.
'
10:30- This Is the Life 15; Insight 4; Captain Noah '3· Notre
. Dame HiQhlights 8.
'
· 11:00 - TV Chapel 3; Joy In Living ]3; Camera Three 8; Consumer Report

'IRE WH&gt;I.t EVEvoWSEN family poleS with a large wooden shGe which marks their
borne near Tllppm Plains. Tbe names of the family are printed on the sign along with
lhwlngs ci family members,

111ISEAS'I'ERN SCHOOL bus makes a big deHvery wllllllt lloplat the Enevoldaen home
near Tuwen Plains. Tbe six adopted clilldren of Mr. and Mra. Danryn Enevoldsen and a
aeven~cblld liviJll with the family are jiclured aalbey leave the bu.

Enevoldsens adopt six
(Continued from page I)
exposed to · all of the
Enevoldsen children just as
early as possible so Jhat they
would understand that they
were "selected" to help make
up the family circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen
and their children are members ci lhe Rock Springs
Grange and of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange. They
love lhe rurallla vor of grange
, work. ·
The Enevoldsens' appear to
· have a "good life" going for
them. They are rare, generous
people who have opened their ·
home and their i'rms to the
love of children.
Mrs. Enevoldsen, a school
lirned -.{)f Astronaut John
Glenn, also from New Concord,
sums up the family relationship quite simply.
"Show respect and you get
respect,'' she comments.

JO ENEVOLDSEN ,l6,1oveathe clogs which help make
up lhe many peta of the family. The Enevoldaen family has
~o St. Bernards similar to the one In the picture.
·r-------------------------~

! Area Deaths !
Leater Bailey

Herberl Cochran

VIENNA, W. Va. - Lester
BUFFALO - Herbert Henry
W. Bailey, 78, died here Friday Cochran, 87, of Rt. I, Buffalo,
at Greenlawn Manor Nursing died Thursday in Holzer
Home. Mr. Bailey was born Medical Center. He was a
Sept. 15, 189-1 at Mlnnora, W. retired employe of Penn
Va. He ~erved with the am'ly ln Central Railroad Company and
World War 1.
• was a member of Warner
· He ia survived by his wife, United Methodist Church,
Maude Bailey, Long Bottom;
Survivors include his wife,
two daughters, VIrginia Lucy Hill; daughters, Mrs.
Starcher, Boyard, W.Va., and Gladys Herdman ' and Mrs.
Gretta Su!Ue, Long Bottom, Helen Sirnpaon, both of Bufand two grandsons.
falo ; Mrs . Catha Hill of
Funeral _,.rvices will be Robertsburg, Mrs. Reba
today at I p.m. at the Minnora Graham of Leon; sons, Lester
Methodist ChurciJ, · Minnora, and Delbert, both of Larue,
W. Va. Friends may call at Ohio, Kennltand Herbert, both
Sinnett Funeral Home in of Buffalo; 32 grandch~n ;
Spencer, W. Va., any time.
33 great-grandchildren; two
great-great-grandchildren.
'~am"• Bam'nu"'r
Service will be 2 p.m. today
J&lt;
~
·-e"'
in Buffalo Nazarene Church
·with the Rev. H. B. Parsons
REEDSVILLE - James 0. officiating. Burial will be in
Barringer, 53, Reedsville ManUla Cemetery at RobertsRoute I, died Saturday mor- burg. Friends may call at
ning at .the- Camden-Clark Raynes Funeral Home, BurMemorial Hospital following falo.
an extended illness.
Mr. Barringer was born in
Troy Townsl\ip, Athens John Jividen
County. the son of the late
RACINE - John Douglas
James D. and L&amp;ura Pullins Jividen, 72, Racine, &lt;lied
Barringer. He was a veteran of Friday a!tem09n at Holzer
World War U having served In · Medical Center.
the South Pacific and was an
Mr. Jividen was the son of
employe Of ~ Union Carbide the late Jasper F. and EmMetal Division at Marietta lor maline Clark. Jividen. He was
IS yean.
also preceded in death by two
Sarviving are his.wife, Rulh brothers, Clark and James.
Barber Barringer, a·aon. Carl,
Mr. Jividen is lurvived by
a daugbt~r. Mrs. Delbert his wife, Grace Lovett Jividen,
(Pat\)') PoweU, both of Reeds- one sister. Mrs. Harold
vill~; four lrothers, William Wetherholt, Gallipolla,- three
C., Sebring; Henry H., nephews and one niece:
Carrollton;
Clyde
J .,
Funeral~ervices will be held
Hockingport: Ernest D:, Monday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
Reidsville; a lister, Mrs. funeral Home with the Rev.
llellte Speed of Alliance. Freeland Ncrrll officlatlnc.
Jill- parentt. Mr. BurlaT irililie lit Beec6 Grove'
P lllip: prectded In Cemetery: Friends may call at
delll lly a bivtbel and two the funeral home at anytime.

Jer•t

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II M tlctnlll be held

at lilt Wlllte PhUlip Long
with

GALLIPOLIS FERRY
lbllle PhiUip E. (Ned) Long, T/, ol
Ga~ Ferry, died Friday

..... Ol•

w·• • 11 •

at 4:21p.m. ill Hillier Medical
Clldlr Nl tlal • Jonc m-.

189(), af Gallipolis Ferry, a son
of the late Phillip and Amanda
Burge Long. He was a retired
employe or the former
Marietta Manufacturing
Company and spent his entire
life in Mason County.
Survivors include his wife,
Litlian Mayes Long, Gallipolis
Ferry; two daqghters, Mrs.
Eunice Forshee, Gallipolis
Ferry , and Mrs. Virg.inia
Thomas, Point Pleasant; two
sons, Frank K. Long, Gallipolis
Ferry, and · Lester L. Long,
Columbus, Ohio;.. one sister,
Mrs. Stella Reece , Gallipolis
Ferry; one brother, Charles
Dewey Long, Sr., Gallipolis
Ferry. 10 grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren. ·
Funeral services will be
conducted at 2 p.m. Monday
from the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, The Rev. William (Bud)
Hatfield and the Rev. Charles
McDonald will have charge of
the services. Burial wiU follow
in the Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 4 p.m.
today.

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DANCE NlGHTL Y

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11 :30- This Is The Answer l; Insight 15; Make A Wish 6 13; Rtx
Humbart 8; OSU Football 4.
'
12:00 -. CBPA Bowling 6; Columbus Town Meeting 10; Rev.
Calv•n Evans 13; Changing Times IS.
12:30 - Revival Firesl3; Pro Football Pre-Game Show I; Meet
file Press ], 4, 15.
·
I: 110- Pro For Football 8, 10, 15; Merl Haggard 3; Issues &amp;
Answers 13; Faith &amp; The Bible 4.
·
1:30-American Adventure6; Dick Van ()ykt4.
2:00- Pro Football 3. 4; Point of Vlew6; lower Lighthouse 13.
2: lO -tssueund Answers6; College Football'7213
3:00- Changing Times 13.
·
·
l: ~:-Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 6; Rookies 13; Living

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i

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel

Iaosed Sunday)

TEENS NEED HEAI..nt HELP

Dear Rap :
o
Our state is supposed to be liberal. We let teenagers who
"qualify" get abortions without notifying their parenta
(especially tfthey'reabletopay). We also give treatment for VD
without parental consent, from age 12 on.
BUT: the high adloola and junior higha still require a note
from home before the sketdllest kind ci sex education can be
offered to studenta, Teachers are pretty paranoid about
discussing contraceptives. Before they can give Information on
venereal disease they need another ~~&amp;nature from pare~ts!
Probably the sllllest law here Ia that girls under the age r1. 18
caMot get prescriptlona foe cootraceptlves unlesa a parent
DEMARSSHINES
consen\8 in writing or In penon, preferably in penon, as
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) signatures can be forged. So it bolls down to IIIia: a girl can be
- 'red Demars broke loose for aborted legal)y and her p81'81ta need never know - the State
scoring runs of 34, 11 and six keeps her secret. But If she wants to prevent a pregnancy, the
yards and Jim Stoeckle tossed State gets all uptight and moral and sa)'J .''Not unless Mama oc
a seven yard touchdown pass to Papa gives you pem!l!!!don."
·
John Haggarty on a fake field
I'm a college student who is not in the 1eaat ''penniaaive." 1
goal try_ Saturday as Harvard was not the type to~~ Pill in high llchool,. but 1 knew
University stopped PrevJOII8ly many girls who were takq big chances beclnl!e they felt they
unbeaten Cornell, 33-15, In an were so in love they coulcm't walt - and at that time even
Ivy League football game.
' Planned Parenthood insisted you mUll be II before they'd help.
What I mean Is: There are girll who walt and girls who
Prrr WINS FIRST
absolutely won't - and It doesn't help to keep lnfonnatkln from
Mrs. Eva Miller
PI'ITSBURGH (UPI)
them, nor are the "walten" influenced toward sex by being
PT. PLEASA•.•T- Mrs. Eva - Bruce Murphy caught a 10- informed about lt. More likely their attitudes are reinforced
''
d
hd
through class di"'•"'ons.
Gladys Miller, 77, of 305 First yar touc own pass and ' Herewith, a plea for states to keep up with the limes: There
Street, Apt. 8, Point Pleasant, scall)pered 60 yards for are areas where a teencan'tget VD treebneat untesa hl.lno-ts
died at I :30 p.m. Friday in anot!ter tally to cap a three.-~·
Holzer Medical
Center touchdown fourth quarter know- which meana a Jot dm't set treated! Most states won't
following an extended illness. Saturday as Pitt won Its first allow paychlatric cOUJIIeling without parental knowledge _ and
Funeral services will be game of the season and · what teen who worries abouthcmoeexual Wlldenclel wiD CGnfide
conducted todayat 2 p.m. lrom snapped a- 10-game losing lnhismotberorfalher?Tbemajorllyrl.statenetoJWescriptions
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home streak by defeating Boston ·for contraceptives to minors un1esa pare~ll aptii'Ove (!bough
with the Rev .• Charles s. College ~20.
mostlooktheotherwaywhenPiamed Parenthood organizations
Thompson officiating. Burial ,·
offer help). And many IChool8 have no lei edtlcation clares
will follow in the Lone Oak ·
Whatsoever.
·
Cemetery.
, THE AFIERSHOCK
If you print thia, Heleii.OO SUe, you'll PI'Qbablyget as many
Mrs. Miller was born
SYLMAR, Calif. (UPI) - A lrickbata as bouquell; but It needs saying. I hope you will!January 'll, 189(), at Miners- small earthquake centered five COlLEGE RESEARCHER
.
ville, Ohio, Meigs County, and miles deep In the ground, near
was a daughter of the late here late Friday was described Dear C.S.:
We wiD. And it cioes! 'I1IIIIU lor yoll' timely, well-informed
Gegrge and Bertha Long by scientists as an aftershock
Williamson , Her husband, of the disastrous Feb. 9, 1971 letter. - HELEN AND SUE
George Miller, died in 1950.
temblor that claimed 65 liv.es.
+++
Dear Helen and SUe:
Survivors include one sister.
·Another annrer to M1sa 211. I bad to write to let hei- 1r:now
Mrs. Urania smith of Point
Bidwell;
Bruce
and
Clarence
thereatefellonaroundwhoukebllgirll.lloaewer,lhe'aright:
Pleasant and several nieces
Stout, bolh of .Rt. 1, Bidwell; a guyswllibeputdownfordatlnea fatlb'l.ltlakelcwrage-·lhat
and nephews.
brolher, Robert of Albany; two lint date.
·
Jady C. Stout
sisters, Mrs. E:lime Green of
Here are 1 few~ to ovwwe~Pten:
Oregoo and Mrs. Polly Small of
DRESS UPlSoc:liiY Wlllll to belieft)'OU'realkb,so don't
BIDWElL - Jady C. Stout, Centerville, Washington; 25 prove It b)'~ UOUIId ill alldft cr 11appy Totblrt. Keep your
79, Rt. 2, died at 5 a.m. grand
and 12 great- hair and mMftP lookiniiJ'I8t. Star.-&amp;.
Saturday in the Holzer Medical grandchildren.
Sta)' in ahlpe.l'ln IICIIItkJdini.IIIC pettplt need uerdtle. Be
Center wh6e he had been a
He was a member or lhe agile
patient lor the past two weeks. American Legion.
· You dm't haw to ndtiJe jut beal..e yaa're fill Dan't
He wu born May 20, titS in' Last rites will be held at I ~ lit there and IJOW.
,
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County
Tenn
of
p.m.
u........o- .........._..._.._..... _~ 'Thla one'1 tba -~ lAirD to IPiz!' 11 m•IL 1 hav.e
J
,, IOJ1
~'"'""'7 ffVID ..., -. . ..-.-..,.----lliiow:a flit.....
......_ ..... _
lhe late Thon)as and Lydia burg Church With Rev. Jeff
..-- you - ' t - · - tlie wwdl ''lllc" or ''hiJie"
J1111~ Proffitt Stout. He married Butcher and Rev, Marlon arotlld II' they'd lUI It fW8 IIJ. ll'l J.11 to b:m fila wilh
Danford}', Dunn in 1917 and Williams officiating. Burial mn-wbenyaallllltwa:IIIVWJward,_IIJ.
Laat,lllke- ad bltllilu ..:flu tba 11811-•.
she pre ceded him on Aug. 16, ,..ill be at V1·nton Metnorlal
.... Bnt
1118'1.
.
Park. Graveside, rite! will be I'Ualwayat.veupotinlll1belrtfcrllllltl..... r:uwulot
Surviving
are · four conduct~ by the American &lt;iotherflllowtdotoo,lltber'donlyaclmlllt.-JI'RANK
daughters, Mrs. John Gilliam Legion:
.
of ·Graham, Ky.; Mrs: · Don
The body will lle In state at
CHAIRMAN 'J)Jl!S
after alenclllY lllnesa. A native
~and Mrs. WiUJam H. thechJrchonehourpriortothe
COtUMBUS (UPI) _ Tl18 oflfll'llniJI'my,Mear-a
I'IIIWpa, bolh of BldweU, and servlcea. Frlenda may clll at cbainllln c1 the Olio PubJk memberctf lite ldtllolt board

··

Timmy &amp; las51e 6.

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12: 2S- CBS News a.

12:30- Split Second 6; Search tor Tom.orrow a, 10; l\lews 3; 3 W's
13,
I : oo- All

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My Children 6, ll; News, Weather, Spar!$ 3; ~cklt r.o,.
Obllnger8; Green Acres 10; Watch Your Child 15.
1:30- JOn A Malch J, 4, 15; Let's Make A Deal6, 13; As Tht t;
World Turns B, 10.
i!
2:00- Oeys of Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Newlywed Game 13; Mike
Douglas 6; Guiding light a. 10.
••
2: 30- Dating Gamel3; Doctors l, 4, 15; Edge of Ntghte, 10.
~
l:OG-Another World 3, 4, 1S; General Hospital. 6, ll; Love f;
Splendored Thing B, 10; The Family Game 20.
!"
l: 30- Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13; ,•
Secret Storm B, 10 ; The French Chef 20.
::
4:00 - Mr. Cartoon J; Somerset 15; SesaiM 15, 33; Love ''
American Style 13; Merv Griffin 4; Fllnlstones 6; Glll~n·s ~
IsleS; Sesame Street 20; Movle"Tarzan's Three Challenges" •
10
~
4: 30 - I Love Lucy 6; PeHicoat Junction 3; Merv Griffin I ; ~!
Daniel Boone ll ; Andy Grlflllll 15.
;.,·
5:00 - Mr. Roversl3; Dkk Van Oykel5; Ponderosal, 4; Denlel &gt;'
8"""" 6; Mr. Rodgers 20.
~!
5:30- Elec. Co. 33; Marshall Dillon IS; Oragnell; Gomer Pyle ,•
13; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
•j
6:110- News 3. 4, a. 10; Truth or Conseq. 6; News 13, 15 ; t•
Soclelles In Transition 33; Sesame St. 20.
6:30 - NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC Newt 6; CBS News t. 10; Folk I•
Guitar ll; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Hathayova 33.
::
7:00 - News6; Truth or Conseq. 3; Bea11heCiock 4; Clrcusl1l; •'
1~~~~~:lc~t·:o~L~~';" !: Saint IS; Read Your Way Up
·7:lO-ToTeiiTheTrulll6; TrafflcCourt10; EpiiOdeAdlon33; ::
Parent Game 3; Mollywood Squirt$ 4; Y"""9 Dr. Kildare 8; ;:
Hodgepodge Loclllt 20; Town Hall: Politics 12 3.
.•
8:00- Gunsmoke I, 10; Rowan and Marlin's Laugh-In 4, 15; ;:
UF0.6; Hollywood Television Theatre 33.
·
·••
9:00- Here's Lucy 8, 10; Pro Football6, 13; MOvie "They Might ;:
Be Giants" 4, 15.
•
9:30- Dori~Day B; Only the Strong 10; Book Beat20. 33.
;:
10:00- Bill Cooby 8. 10; l\lews 20; From The Hills 3],
::
10:30 - Concerts In the Lawn 33.
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11 : 00 - News3, ~, 6.B,10,15.

11:30- Dick Ca\1&lt;1116; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movies "Cutter's
Trail" 8; "Stop ·Train 349" 10.
11 :4.5- JohMy Carson 4.
12:00- News 6.

.•

12:30- Movies "Carry On Teach«rl' 6; "Mr. Scoutmnter" 13.
·
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·
1:00 - Focus on Columbus 4.
2:00- News 4.
2:30- News 13.
LIONS GIVE ~.MZ
ROCK'II'EU. STARS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
WESTERVILLE, Ohio .
Ohio Uons Clubaof Ohio's Eye (UPI)- Jim Roc:kwllll'tllllad
Research Foundation bat lor IDS y..-.11 and tine 1AJucb.
presenteda$67,1K2checktothe downs Saturday to ltad
Ohio
State
University .M~ to a M-S1 w1aDevelopment Fund f"" llllppOrt Ou.Ji fa.
of vision and eye dlaeaae '· W
~an two tour
research. .
yard nn and oad aC 11ft
yards. Jim Banlldelli prm d
111•• EXPECTED
for two o1 011 :baln'l - .
COLUMBUS (UPI) - More Mualngum 11 now W and
lhan 100,000 persona were
ted
- t0 !tend
Olleibein N,
expec
a
the llllb
anlllll All American Quarter
fHa~~~-at the state
1'IUCIA IN 01110
am.ucxn&amp;&amp;,
0111o (UPI)

uo·--

IIIIOWN DDIOLI88EO

HANOVER, N.H. (UPI) _
Quarterback Steve SteiiOD
pared for two toachdowl8111d
raliforanelel ini~WGd . .
polilt ' qaartar 1161tuntar u

-Trldam..ODa, J t't
o1 PI ::1at K'
_...,

Robert Taft,

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Ohio
Kanauga, Ohio

Valley'~

,.

Finest Night Club

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Ph. 446-9174
'

Call No. 483

.·

REMAINS UNBEATEN
ADA, Ohio (UP!) - Ron
Slater tossed two touchdown
passes to Mark Neiderhauser
to• pace unbeaten and 19th
ranked Ashland to a 27-10 win
over Ohio Northern here
Saturday.
Slater hit Neiderhauser with
touchdown strikes of 37 and 24
yards as the Golden Eagles
r~ng up their seventh consecutive win.
The other Ashland scores
came on a one-yard run by Jon
Biar and a 34-yard pass interception by Dick Miller.
Ohio Northern scored all of
its points in the third period on
a 76 yard punt return and a 29
yard field goal l}y Steve
Mollett.
CAPS TOPSMU
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UPI ) Craig Snider punched across
two touchdowns to lead Capital
to a 21-14 win over the Mount
Union Purple Raiders in an
Ohio Conference
ga me
Saturday.

uarter

"t:

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ladies Nights- Tues. &amp; Wed .
Happy Hour Daily
., . 2:30p.m.- 8:30p.m.

ifrench

MONDAY, OCT. 23, m2
6:110- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Hearl 10.
6:15- Farmtime 10; Farm Report 13.
6:20- Paul Harvey 13.
·
6:25 ~ Good l\lews ll.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10. .
6:45 - Corncob Report 3.
7:110- Today 3. 4,15; l\lf&gt;w$, Wealller, Spom6,1, 10. ·• ·•· ' •
. 7:25- Sports 13.
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers a; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnklf :?.
! 3.- Capt . Kangaroo 10 ; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33; :,·:.
B:00
8:30- Jack Lalanne 13; Romper Room 8; New Zoo Review 6.
8:55- Local News 1],
9:110- What Every Woman Wants to Know 3; Paul Dixon t; Phil
Donahue IS; Captain Kangar&lt;X&gt; 8; Concentration 6; F1lendly
Junction 10; Ben Casey 13; In School Provrammlng20.
9:30- To Tell The Trulh3 ; Jeopardy6; Hazel&amp;.
9:55 - Chuck While Reports 10. ·
10:110- Concentration 3. 15; Phil Donahue 4; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Split Second 13..
·
11:110- Sale of Century 3, IS ; Gambit8, 10; P~ssword 13; Love,
American Style 6.
11 :25 - Carol DuVall 6.
11 :30 - Hollywood Squaresl, 4, 15; Bewitched 6, 13; love oflllt
8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
.
12:00- Jeopardy 3. 15; Password 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4;
Contact 8; News 13,

THE ROVERS"

•OPEN 2:30P.M, TO 2:30A.M.

6:o0 :_ News, Weafller, Sports 6.
6:30- Untamed World 6; Hathayova 33.

WABASH BEATS OWU
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) Dave Cogdill passed three
yards to Jim Laurent and Hans
Steck scored on a 25 yard run
as Wabash (Ind.) defeated
Ohio Wes leyan 14-12 here
Saturday.
Tom Burke booted 41 and 32
yard field goals and Tom
Yingling scored on a two yard
run for the Wesleyan scoring.
Burke, with 15 seconds
remaining in the game, missed
a '1:1 yard field goal attempt.
Wabash is now 2-S and
Wesleyan 2-3-1.

On The River.
eNO COVER CHARGE
ePOPULAR PRICES

Mancini Generation 6; Baseballl, 4; Pro F&lt;X&gt;tball a 10
15; Living 33.
' '
4:30- World of Survival6, 13; Aw;of Anxletyll
''
5:~- Wild Wild West 6; Movie 'The Court Jesier" 13; Ripples

STEVE, TIM, RICK and Ken ''mother" a batch of pupa wbk:h armed at lhe Enevoldsen
home about two weeks ago. Pets are prevalent about the home of the family.,

To The Most Popular Band
11

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7:110- LawrenceWelk 13; Safari To Adventure 3; ·This Is Your
Llfe4; Wild Kingdom 15; Wall Till Your Father Gets Home6;
UFO 8; In The Know 10; Z&lt;X&gt;m 20.
7:30- World of Disney l, 4, 1S; Anna &amp; The King 10; Lefs Make
A Deal 6: Just Generation 33.
,
a:OO- F Bl 6, 13; Mash a, IO; Family Game 33, 20; McMillan
and Wile 3, 4, i).
9:00- Dick Van Dyke 10; Master Piece Theatre 33; Movie "The
Adventurers" 6, 13.
9:30- Mannix B, 10.
.
10:30- We Think You Should l&lt;"!'w 3; Protectors 4; Evil Touch
.a; High Road to Adventure 10; Pollee Surgeon 15.
11:110 - News. Weather, Sports3,4, 8, 10,15.
11:15- CBS News a. 10, 15.
11:30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4. IS; Face the Illation 10; Movie
"Escape In the Deserf' 8.
12:00 - Movie "Mister Buddwlng" 10.
12: 15 - News 6, 13.
12:30 - College Football '72 6.
12:4.5- Movie "Mardi Gras" 13.
1:00- News 4.
1:30- Judd 6.
2:30- l'?Cal News 13.

GAllS FFA INSTAllS NEW MEMBERS- The Gallipolis FFA Chapter installed 15 new
greenhandmembers.at its October meeting. Bill Burleson was elected treasurer to replace
Jerry Cook, past treasurer. Also discussed was th~ coming citrus fruit sales. New greenha nds
are, left to right, first row, Danny Clay; Diane Haffelt, Terri Jividen; second row, Danny
Bo~, Dale Jam•s, Steve Wallis, Glen Borden, Bruce Scarbe.,.Y; third row, Lewis
Bodimer, Jeff ~ohnson, Robert Green, and Mike Cunningham. Absent .were Bobbie Barcus,
David Doimally alii! Danny Woodward.
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RAIDERS TRIUMPH
PRINCETON, N.J. (UP!) Junior•Tom Parr passed and
ran for five touchdowns and 285
yards at the controls of
Colgate 's wisllbone offense
Saturday to power the underdog Red Raiders to a 35·28
triumph over Princeton.

.,

Charter No. 1.341
National Bank Region No.4
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING
DOMFSI'IC SUBl!IDIARIES, OF THE

The First National Bank
of Gallipolis, Ohio In the State of Ohio, atlhe close of business on October 10
1972 published In response to call made by Comptroller of !be currency, unde;
Title 12, Unlled Stales Code, Seetlon 181.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $1,003,652.46
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • 2,002,228.47
Obligations of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - 2,878,614.77
other ~rities (including $30,000.00 corporate stock )
- - - 104,750.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - • • • • • • • • . . .
1,900,1100.00
Loans - - - - • . . . . • • • • • • • • • • _
7,168,302.63
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - - - - - 148,491.55
Real estate owned other than bank premises - - - 4,508,35
- $15,210,548.23
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - ,· - - ,LIABB.ITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
. and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • • • $3,866,163.23
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,348,335.00
Deposits of United Stales Govenunent - - - - - - - - - - • 113,339.63
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 1,368,653.47
Certified and officers' checks, tic. - - - - - - - - • - - - - 116,578.63
TOTAL DEPOSITS • • • - - - - - - $13,313,070.01
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - - $5,464,735.01
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - -· - - $ 7,848,335.00
other UablliUes - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - - - - - - 515,560.09
TOTAL UABIUTIES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $13,828,630.10
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve lor bad debt losses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $100,508.46
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - - - - • $100,508.46
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total - - - - - • •
- - $1,281 ,409.67
Common Stock-total par value - - - - - - 100,000,00
No. shares authorized 1,000
No. shares outstanding 1,1100
- - 900,1100.00
Surplus - - ·• - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - Undivided profits - • - - • • • • • •
- 281,409.67
TOTAL CAt'IT AL ACCOUNTS
$1,281,409.67
TQTAL UABJt.iTIES, RESERVES, AND
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - - - $15,210,548.23
MEMORANDA
Average rl. total deposits for the 15 calendar
daya ending with caUdate -. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $13,112,523.55
Average of total loans for ·the 15 calendar
days ending with caU'Iiate - - ; .• - - - • - - - - - - - - · 7,083,109.26

I, MarlinG·. Kerns, Executive Vice President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that .IIIIa report of condition ia true and correct to th~ best of my
knowledge and belief.
·
!lfarUn G. Kel'lll, Executive VIce President
.
'
We, the underalgned directors attest the correctnesa of this report of condillon and declare that it hat been examined by UJ and to the best of our
kriowlelfle IIIII belie( Ia ~ and
~

comct.-

C.M •.~J

·-

. E.E.NIII -~
Ru1 DO. W....

-- -. -

BY KATI .MEEK
Arti•t-in-Rcsldcnce
GAI.I.IPOI.IS - On the way
l&lt;~ tlic studio Tuesday mol)'
mnJ.;, I saw tl1e sun red
between twll hills, thro;gh ih~

yarns, work out a design with
the yarn, and sew it down to a
dose and friendly, and I feel I
background cloth. If you have
am livfng ~md worKing in a classes, am not trained to a piece of cloth' solid color
special place. ·
·
leach in .· the conventional foot sq~are or more, a largeTh'' pcopl&lt;' iinthc territory of . sense, people ·must come to . eyed ·needle and-or · white

made me feel
good, made
happy. There
are too few things in the world
about which we can feel
bappy . I am working on L way
lo capture the impression of
that red fog with yarns and the
loom. I want to share the joy I
had.
. This opporlunity to serve as
artist-in 'residerice here in
Gallipolis is an exciting exc
perience for me. It is a
remarkably beautiful country .
The hills, valleys and trees
meet the sky in wonderful
~!terns. The river gi~es the
assurance that there •s con- .

through creation and support
of the French Art Colony, that
there is i.nleres1 in, and hunger
for knowledge of the arts. This
area w~s granted the
residency · because the
National Endowment for the
Arts, Ihe Office of Education
and the Ohio Arts Co~ncil
believed that here was a most
likely place for a resident
artist to he used effectively.
This is a new approach to
education. I am not a teacher.
I have been given space to set
up "the ideal studio" for my
work . It is in Washington
School because it is con-

Iact with all the world and yet

vcnient to students and the

lhc eummunity is quiet, clean,

ctmnnurHty in general.
!lecause I am not holding

learn without being taught.
I enjoy talking about what I .
do but it takes aJew questions
to get me started (no one's
discovered how to get me
stupped 1,
· Come, just look around, if
you like. My collection of
books is growing ·and there is
space to sit and read. The
studio is open' Tuesdays
through Saturdays 9 a.m. to 4 .
p.m. Knock and walk in. I'm
usually into something.
Sunday the 29th is Parent
Child Wqrkshop, French Art
Colony . We're planning to spin
some wool into interesting

a

it along. You may bring
and spinning devices too, but
this is optional.
At F.A.C. today, there is a
great opportunity to serve the
aris and al the same time take
in fresh air. Workday at •
Riverby
proves
th 9 t
willingness to work together,
raking leaves, and cleaning
gutters. makes being together
for sophisticated activities
more enjoyable than an ticipated. But the people of
Gallipolis already know that,
or Riverby, the French Art
Colony, wouldn't have come ·
into existence. See you there.

~~;j;~~~~~~~~~~~-m.r:~~"i$li:~m~~~~;*~~~;t~m::~tl~t~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~1l~~m;;;~;~~l~~t:1~;i:-m~~l~ffi;;~;m~~~;~1;m~~mmm;;;~~;;~m;m~m*~A\~11i

NOW YOU KNOW
For the past 11.000 years,
various societies have believed
amber could cure rheumatism
and asthma and ward off
witchcraft.

a running back with the· New
York Giants. He gives the playGifford named Lombardi me
by-play on NFL Monday night
HOUSTON (UP!) - Sport- Lombardi award dinne•· Jan . football.
scaster Frank Gifford will t8, it was annoqnced Saturday.
The Lombardi award ;
Gifford retired · from sponsored by the Rotary Club
serve as master or ceremonies
at the third annual Vince p1·ofcssional football in 1965 of Houston, is presented to the
after an outstanding career as nation's outstanding college

lineman and is in honor of the
late Green Bay , Packers and
Washington Redskins coach.
The award, presented In 1972
to Wall Patulski of Notre
Dame, Is a 45-pound block of
granite, symbolizing selfdiscipline.

VOTE FOR HONEST·REPRESENTATION
IN THE OHIO LEGISLATURE
for Southeastern Ohio:

State Spends $885,000 to Rebuild Road Beside,.
·'
Collins' Coal Plant
~

'

Plain Dealer Special
HANGING ROCK, 0 . - Under planning
and a eontract let during the administration
of former governor James A. Rhodes, Ohio is
spending $885,1100 to rebuild a mile-long
section of Ohio 650 that runs alongside the
coal preparation plant of the Collins Mining
Co. here in Lawrence County,
The Collins Mining Co. is owned and
operated by State Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIB, Ironton, a member of the Ohio State's
Urban and Highway Affairs committee.
The road costs are higher than usual
because the two-lane highway has to be
rebuilt with interstate highway strength to
bear up under Collins' heavy coal trucks.
The new mile~ong section will be higher
than the old roadway to avoid a flooding
proble.fi&gt; caused mostly by the Collins'
operations, a problem which cost the state an
average $9,700 a year in extra maintenance,
2Qtimes the normal cost for maintaining such
roadway.
COWNS' PREPARATION plant includes a coal-washing operation in which
sand and other noncoal material Is flushed
away to be pumped to settling ponds.
But the operations leaked sediment into
Osborne Run which borders Ohio 650. When
tbe sediment plugged the creek, heavy rains
flooded the road, undennining its foundation
and eroding its macadam surface.
Lawrence countians remember that after
!be coal plant was opened, highway maintenance crews came three, four and five
times a year to clean the ditch . Sometimes
they were there so often It looked like a
permanent assignment, according to some
residents.
Reconstruc!ion of the road is costing more
than normal because :
. -The road must he paved in concrete 15
inches thick to bear the heavy truck loads.
-The state had to build a $35,000 bridge to
connect Collins' driveway with th~ raised
road.
-A compact dirt "bench" was built, between the roadway and the ditch, to provide a
permanent ·work road for equipment to
dredge the creek in the future.
- The bridge and culverts had to be faced
with glazed brick to protect the structures ·

from corrosioo by acid drainage from old coal
mines.
Collins contends, and highway officials
agree, that some of the sedimentation In
Osborne Run comes from above his coal
plant. This sediment originates in the spoil
banks of old strip mine operations (many of
them by Collins Mining) in the creek's
watershed.
However, highway maintenance cost
records show that ditch work on the mile of
Ohio 650 tripled alter the Collins coal
preparation plant, began operation in 1960.
DURING TliE SIX YEARS prior to thai
time, ditch cleaning along the one-mile
section cost an average $3,200 aMually.
ranging from a low of $581 in 1955 to a high of
$5,133 in 1959.
But after Collins' coal washing began,
cleaning cost jumped to an annual average of
$9,700, ranging from a low of $530 in 1963 to a
high of $21,053 in 1965.
State Highway officials said several factors
account for the wide range In ditch cleaning
costs, including the number and force of
rainstorms, cleaning intervals and flue·
tuatlons In Collins' operations.
Although state highway reports staled that
Collins' mining operations were largely
responsible for the maintenance and
reconstruction work, none of the costs were
charged to the company,
This contrasts with the long&lt;Jtandlng policy
regarding traffic accidents. The Ohio
Department of Highways bills Insurance
companies for repair of vehicle-caused
damage to guard rails, light and sign posts
and other structures.
One state highway engineer at the
Chillicothe division office said the highway
department's policy Is not to charge a
rosiness fdr such Increased maintenance
costs If the business operations do not alter
the size of a watershed.
WHEN THE RAISING and improvement of
the mile of Ohio 650 was first proposed in 1965,
the project carried an estimated total cost of
$250,1100 - typical for a similar improvement
Of "ordinary" two-lane roadway.
But further study showed that spongy
bottom land would have to be dug out and
replaced and that the pavement would have to

be stronger than ordinary to bear the heavy
coal trucks.
The revised proposal made in 11163 carled a
cost estimate of $446,1100.
In 1970, the final proposal included the need
for the extra !ridge, higher right-of-way costa
and the ''workbench" for future dredging. By
then the estimated cost for the one-mlle
project was lip to f/22,1100.
Bids for the work were to have been let last
.spring. In October 1970, the highway
department moved the contract bidding to
last JlntW'Y' &amp;, llx days before the Rhodes- ,.:,
admJ.nlatration left office.
Actual cost will total about $885,1100 Including '180,900 for righ(-()f..,.ay purchases,
$56,700 in highway department englneering
and $629,1100 ln actual construction.
The coal preparation plant and part of
Collins' haul road from a strip mine to the
plant are on land which Collins leases from.
the federal government.
TIJESE LANDS ARE PART of the Wayne
National Forest administered by the U.S.
Fore81 Service.
Files ln the district ranger's office In
Ironton contain many complaints by rangers
about seepage of coal wash sediment into
Osborne Run.
·
The files contain reports of pump breakdownS when wash water from the plant was
let Into the stream. There alao are reports of
sediment pollution caused by overflow or
wall-breeching of the settling ponds.
The main settling pond, In an old stripe
mine pit on federal land above the plant, is
almost filled.
Collins was aaked by the U.S. Forest Service two years ago to build a new pond so the
old one could be abandoned.
INSTEAD, COlLINS PUSHED dirt up to
make the walls of the pond even higher.
Early In October, the new district ranger,
T. Alan Wolter, gavl Colllns an ultimatum:
Stop using the pond Immediately or face
cancellat.on of hl.l federal land use permits.
· Collins did not reply to the ultimatum until
alter It was made public, nearly a month
later; by The Plain Dealer. . •
The senator·then wrote to Wolter and said
he had pipe on order and was preparing
to relocate the settling pond.,NEXT : Better strip mine regulations
needed.

-CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER - SAtURDAY, DEC. 25, 1971-

VOJE FOR JOHN E. HALLIDAY
FOR

HO~EST

REPRESENTATION • AND AGAINST SPECIAL INTERESTS

92nd District · Ohio House of Representatives
It's time the people of Lawrence, Meigs, Gallla and parts of Athens
county received honest.representation in the Ohio Legislature, so send a
man to represent you, not just ,Special Interests to the House ..• vote for
John E. Halliday, the Democratic nominee on Nqvember 7 •• , no more
· costly road rebuilding just for one firiJl which dominates special interests. but building highways for all the people to use.
.

Vote· Your Way • Vote Halliday!
.

Gener.JI.I-Eler,lion
Tuesday, NovembeJ&lt;-7rl97'l- - ~ ·
.
· Sponsored by Halliday For Representative Comm.lttee
Warren F. Sheets, General Chairman
Pd. Plil. Adv.

·

ll't
'I

acba4alld

MaldQ ,Iil ·

w

I

at ...

Mrs.H~tKo~w~eU~of~Ck~~~o,~lh~e~~~~~F~u:ne:r:al~H~e~al~lh~C~w:~~i~l.~~~F~-~
kr~I7~J~·~-:~-~====~~ju~h~d:tf~t:a~te=d~-D~a~r:ta~ol~t~•.JV~t=hr:•:•~•~~A~~~~~~~!~~~~~_1~~l.--~~--_1~j[~~~
wa ,.... ), m.:
t1ne
.ll

"

-Not for Special Interests which result in Unfavorable Publicity like this

.,

·-

•

"

I

�.

&lt; ' -~.
'
11-'l'hl8aodlly Timoi·Senlinei,~,Ort. 22, IV/2
0

•

•

,.

1ne evens

e

•

.~-

ser1e~ s

•

•

•

•

•
It-The Sl1ndaY Timoi·&amp;Minel,&amp;nlay,()cl, 22, 1972

0

·Cincinnati in·8-l
·

RaVensWood hands Wahama 21-0 grid, setback

.

.

t.

M ByGAR'f CLARK
The
· Red

~N-

BY VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer

. . a&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Brulsing fuUback Champ Henson and scampering quarter.
back Greg Hare scored two
touchdmms apiece Saturday to
lead unbeaten ~ fifth-ranked
Ohio State to a crushing 44-7
Big ·Ten victory over Indiana,
Indiana quarterback Ted
McNulty of the Big Ten's
leading passers, suffered a
possible torn knee ligament 41
the firs1 quarter .and could be·
lost for the rest of the season.

CiikiNNATI (UPI) - It was so easy for the
Cinci.nnati Reds Saturday that Manager Sparky
• Anderson had to gulp down only one pill for his ulcer.
Less than 24 hours after they were on the brink '
of elimination, the Reds .,- playing like the Reds
, who won the Nati1mal League pennant - clobbered
the Oakland A's 8-1 to tie the World Series at three.
games apiece.
It now all comes down to the him. It seemed as if he was
seventh game Sunday when giving him an "unintentional"

Jack Billingham starts for _the
Reds against .lohn "Blue
Moon" Odom for the A's as the
Reds attempt to become the
fint team .ever to · win the
series after losing the first two
games at me.
"I don't really feel much
pressure today," Anderson
881d even thouggh he wheeled
In four pitchers for a sevenhitter as he managed to match
the moves of Oakland's Dick
,,Williams. "It wasn't like
yesterday when I needed a
doll!ll pills for my ulcer. I only
needed one today."
Anderson said, "I . always
thought we would win, even
when we were down 2-G and 3-1.
But when (Gene) Tenace hit
that homer yesterday, I
thought for the first time that
we could lgse," The Reds
rallied to wln 1M Friday and
' then breezed Saturday in the
lint game that wasn't decided

intentional wa)k.
But with the Reds leading
Henson, a 6-foot-f, 224-pound
·only 2-1 Anderson wasn't going
aophomore,
scored on a 24-yard
to he acculled of tiot making
sideline dash and a one-yard
every move possible.
plunge.
He went to the mound and
Hare, the junior who directs
waved in Pedro Borbon, who
I
threw a strike past Bando and
then got him to foul out.
GARY BURNS, of 1928'h Chestnut St., GallipoUs, ca~
The Reds ,were leading 3-1 in
lured
the first deer of the 1972 hunting season (by bow)
the A's Seventh 1111d both
Friday. The 1~und spike Buck was nabbed in Addison
managers outdid themselves in
Twp. It was checked at Bob Saunders Quaker State Service
this Inning. Mangual led off
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
Center.
with a single and 'Tenace flied
( UPI )-Halfback Rob Miller
out. Gonzalo Marquez, the
scored the first three touchpinch-hitting star of this series,
downs as Western Michigan
batted for Green and lUI a
burioo Marshall ~-ll Saturday
bouncer to Borbon, who
afternoon, handling the
hesitated before throwing to
TbWJdering Herd their fifth
second for the force. That
straight loss.
hesitation cost him a double
Miller, who had not scored
p)ay and also cost him his spot
this season, tied a school recin the lineup;
ord with touchdown runs of 12,
Williams sent up Don Min'
two and one yardS as the Broncher to blitfor Bob Locker, who
cos took a 21-ll lead shortly
had replaced Blue in the last of
By GENE CADDES
the office of Commissioner after halftime.
the sixth. Ander.On decided io
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Now Bowie Kuhn was "making
The winners added touch· by Clie nm.
bring in Torn Hall to· counter that !hey have muffed two every effort to provide down jaunts of 23 yards by Paul
. Now the Reds think they can the lefthander Mincher. chances to win the world max.im'um security,"
Jorgensen and four yards by
"You get a few calls from ,Tim Roth.
: go •n the way.
Williams came back with a championship the no·pressure
: ''There's no way they can righthander,. Dave Duncan - way, the Oakland A's were cranks like this, ·but the~ you
They played without · star .
I stop us now," Insisted Bobby who struck out.
· lrying Saturday to face up to find someone with a gun and it fullback Larry Cates, 1111 All•; Tolan, who singled tWice, stole
The Reds then added five having to do it in one big, all· goes beyond the crank stage," Mid American Conference
two baae8 and scored twice.
runs In the last of the seventh important game.
Finley said.
VIda Blue started for the A's · and Hall was able to finish
"We haven't done anything
Although the threat incident
.
and was tagged for Jolinny despltetwosinglesintheninth. the easy, way all year," said caused much concern among
Bench's solo homer In the If the Reds hadn't padded their Manager Dick Williams. "I the A's , injured outfielder
, fourth and DaYid Concepcion's lead, Clay Carroll would gues~ now we'll just have to Reggie Jackson, sitting not far L' I
18Criflce Oy In the fifth, that probably have gotten in before win it in seven games."
from Tenace 's dressing
JCGred Hal McRae.
it was over. For the record,
Immediate after the A's had
cubicle, interjected with,
Blue wu charged with a Grimsley got the win.
dropped Saturday's sixth "Well, if you've got to go, you
Wll)iams, knowlng he was game, 11-1, Williams confirmed might as well go on national
third nm in the sixth that Tmy
l'l!rez "'""&amp;after he left sUII alive even if he lost, his earlier "if" announcement TV ."
.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) -, Larry
_.., . · ·· .· · .
deCJ'ded to save Rollie Fingers
First baseman Mike Epstein, Poole scored two touchdowns
and Dave
ton and Joe
that righthander John "Blue
·Horlen, making their · first .for the· seventh game and he Moon!' Odom would be his expected to take up some of the
~appearances in the serle~~, ran 8hort of rellev'ers after he starting pitcher when they slac~ in the Oakland offense and fullback John Matsko
gained 113 yards in 14 carrtes
were routed for five runs in. tile . took out Blue.
start playing for all the mar· caused by the absence pf
to lead Kent State University to
enth
Blue wasn't pitching the way bles in the 1 p. m. EDt Sunday Jackson, wenl hitless in foiiT
a 26-16 win over Xavier here
The 'cr~~~tl~l!f 52,737 at be ,did lalt yeu l!hfn he was game.
at-bats and is now zero·for-16 in Saturday for the Flashes
''
wrfrootstadiwn then really tile M\)p and Cy Young Award
Club owner Charles 0 . the series, but continued to be second consecutiw win.
ioaredmtheseventhwhen Joe winner, .but he was respec. Finley, who has seen his learn optimistic.
Xavier took an early 3-4 lead
Morgan's ruiHc:orlng single, table. He blanked the Reds lose two in a row now after
"For me its been a fun on a 41-yard field goal by Dan
Tolan's twiH'IIIl single and Wltil Bench homered in the holding a commanding 3·1 lead series," Epstein said. "I just Donahoe but Kent moved out in
. Cesar Geronimo's two-run fourth. McRae led off the fifth after four games, echoed wish I was conlributing more." front 7-3 at the end of the first
single wrapped up the Reds' with a double, went to third on Williams' remarks on doing
Asked about the Reds con. period on a 33-yard run by
first home series win since a groundout and scored on things the hard way.
· tinuing to run' on A's pitchers Daryl Hall.
1940.
Concepcion's sacrifice fly that . "In the eighth inning," even after building a corn·
Poole got his first touchdown
Anderson, who had promised made it 2-1.
Finley said, "My wife leaned fortable margin, Epstein said, of the afternoon on a seven
to "uae every.pitcher I've got if
In the sixth, Blue retired two over lo me and said, 'Honey, "You never have enough runs yard run In the second period to
I had to," then started keeping batters but Tolan singled and we never did accomplish in this game, so you can't fault
push Kent State out In front 13-3
..,_
-~·-. Ma·.o...
.,..,..~·,_ he decided Blue threw two halls to Benc;h. anyth'm~ the easy way. , .,
anyone for being aggressive." at the half.
to counter Wllllam.s, who baa Wllllarns, who had watched · Finley was deeply concerned
Williams was asked ·how the
Renard Harmon made it 19-3
been making more moves than Anderson pull 8 pitcher with 8 about the reported threat to strain of the series and the oneat the end of the third quarter.
Bobby Fischer and has spent 2-Gcount, wasn't to be outdone. catcher Gene Tenace,' adding run decisions in the first five before Xavier manage&lt;! to put
mere time on tbe mound than He Immediately brought In
games was affecting him.
a drive together and Pat Ragon
110111e of his pilchers.
Locker and Tolan stole 8econd
"I love it," he said. "It's scored on a one yard run to
Joe Rudl of the A's hit a one- on hls first pitch. Bench was
betler 1han going to weight make it 19-9.
out ~le in the sixth and went then intenUonaUy walked and
watchers. "
Poole got his second tiluciJ.
to aecond on Mike Epstein's Perez singled In Tolan for a nm
Williams then had a com- down on a nine yard scamper
groundout. With first il!lae that was charged to Blue.
urJ
pliment for Cincinnati third to finish the Kent Scoring.
open, Grlmaley was pitching
With Locker lifted for a ~ • "'
baseman Denis Menke, who
Paul Smith ran 11 yards lor
carefully to righthanded Sal plnch.IJitlilr, young Hamilton By Uni1ed Presolnternalional has only two hits in the six
the Musketeers final touchBando and got a 3-0 cOunt on started the lll!venth.l!e got into
EAST
games,
but
had
been
superb
in
down
of the day.
· trouble right away. Concepcion Albright 22 Wagner 21
the
field.
Poole carried 12 times lor 92
singled and stole second. After . Amherst 21 Rochester 0
Army 35 Rutgers 28
"I didn't know he (Cincinnati yards as the Kent Slate Ground
Hall struck out, Rose was in· Bucknell 26 Lafayette 7
Manager Sparky Anderson) attack dominated the contest.
lentionaUywalkedandMorgan Colby 34 Trinily !Conn .) 14
imported Brooks Robinson for The Flashes rushed 59 times
singled In Concepcion and went Colgale 35 Princeton 26
Connecticut 31 Maine 9
lhe Series," Williams said.
for 274 yards.
to second on the throw.
C, w. Post 31 Kings Point 26
Tolan then rapped an "o~ Dartmouth 49 Brown 20
• •
" · g1 d
th
Delaware 31 West Chester 14
po site fl eld sm e own e Dickinson 22 Muhlenberg 9
left field Une to score Morgan Fordham 14 St. John's (N .Y. ) 7 •
oakland
ab r h bi and Tolan and make it 11-1.
Franklin &amp; Marshall 24
Campanerls, ss
4 o 0 o
Williams then brought In
Widener 21
Alou, rf
4 0 0 0 Horle n for his first ap- Geneva 41 Grove City 14
Rudl. If
4 0 1 0
Harvard 3e Cornel 15
Epstein, lb
4 0 0 0 pearance. Tolan stole 8econd Indiana (Pa .l 20 Clarion St. 6
Banda, 3b
4 1. , 2 0 despite the big lead and Bench
Ithaca 28 Wilkes 11
Mangual , cf
·4 o 2 o
Jk
d
Mai
ne Maritime 27
West. Connecticut 14
4 o 1 0 was . in,tentional IY wa e
'Tenace, c
Green, 2b
2 0 1 I again. After Horlen wild pit- Ma ssachusetts 42 Rh . Island 1
Marquez, ph
I 0 0 0 ched the runners to second and Nor lheaslern 21 Springfield o
Kubiak, 2b
I 0 0 0 third, 'Tenace made a throw to Norwich 10 St. Lawrence o
Blue, p
I 0 0 0 third.
Penn 30 Lehigh 27
Locker,p
0 0 0 0
Penn
St. 17 Syracuse 0
.NEW HOMES FOR SALE .
Mincher, ph
0 0 0 0 Bando took the throw but Pittsburgh
35 Basion Coli. 20
Duncan, ph
I 0 0 0
was easily on the bag. Quantico 13 Villanova 7
Hamilton, p
0 0 0 0 Tolan.
But
Bando
feeling the Sl ippery Rock 14
Horlen, p
0 0 0 0
4 BR, 2 ba hs, Family room, total electric with Williamson
•
•I
Cent. Connecticut 6
TOTALS
34 1 7 1 frustration of the loss and Vermont
18 New Hampshire 17
Heating
and C.-ifral air conditioning, General Electric
Cincinnati
ab r h bi poaslbly thinking Toll\n was .,...Wesleyan 34 Worcester Tech 13 .
appliances, (ully carpeted, landscaped, conc,..te drive &amp;
Rose. If
3 1 0 o
str~ts.1 1f•. car garage, dining balcony, lot 75x175. county
Morgan , 2b
5 . 1 2 1 trying to show them up by western Mich. 34 Marshall 0
stealing
wtth
a
6-1
lead
shoved
Westminste~
(
Pa.
17
Defiance
7
w.ater, Tara sewer ·syst.em.
Tolon, cf
4 ·2 2 2
·
. '
West V.&gt;rglnoa 31 Tulane 19
Bench, c
2 2 1 1 Tolan, •as he made
the tag.
Williams 35 Bowdoin 1
Perez,1f
3 o 1 1 Tolan complained
to
the
Yale ,28 Columbia 14
McRae. rf
3 1 I 0
3 1\R, 2112 baths. family room, basement, total electric
Gero_pimo, rf
1 0 1 2 umpire and pointed at Bando Alabama 175~!:,~~ssee ·
1
0
with Williamson heating and central air condlllonl119,
Men~ e. 3b
• 0 0 0 but there were no further m- Clemson 37 Virginia 21
·concepcion, ss
3 1 2 I cidents.
General
Electric appliances, fully carpeted, landscaped,
Duke 20 Maryland 14
Noi.n, p
I 0 ,0 0
concrete
drive &amp; streets, 2V. car,garage, dining balcony, .
Fl orida 16 Mississippi 0
Grimsley, p
1 0 0 0 ., _Perez then. worked. Hoden
lot
95~175,
county wafer, Tara sewer system.
Fionda St. 37 Colorado St. 0
Borbon, p
0 0 0 0 ,.,.. a walk and Geronuno, WhQ Georgia
28 Vanderbilt 3
Hall,p
2 o 0 o·
TOTALS
12 8 10 8 waa a defensive sub for Wililam &amp; Mary 31
Virginia Mllilary 3
3 BR. 1112 baths, family room, ~semen!, 1 car gara·ge,
Oekland
000 010 000-1 McRae singled in the final two
• MIDWEST
Cincinnati
000 .111' sox-8 ruM of' the game.1 ·
total electric with WllilemiiClll heat1119 end central' •'!
Michigan .31 Illinois 7 .
E - Manqual. LOBconditioning,
General Electric appliances, {ully carll'!ted•
.WIIIIam.s, despite the loss, Mlc~.lg~n St. 31 Wisconsin o
Oeklond 7, Cincinnati 6. 28 - was
landscaped,
concre)e
drive a. strtelt, dining balcony, lot
ln good spirits.
Minnesota 43 Iowa 14
Morgan, Green, McRae. 3B ·95x175,
county
w
Tara sewer system.
ter,
0
was right when he Missouri 30 Notre. Dame 26
Concepcion. HR - Bench. SB . "Spar""
'f'1
.
Nebraska
~ Kansas 0
- Tolan 2, Concepcion. SF - 881d thla would go aeven games Ohio State 44 Indiana 1
Concepcion.
lp h ror i,b 10 but he juat bas picked the Purdue 37 Northwestern o
winner" he said
SOUTHWEST
total electric with Wi.illarniiClll heall119 and central air
llutiLl
52·3 0 3 2 4 Wf011J
WUiilmB
sakt
Odom
ready
Oklahoma
St.
20
Baylor
7
conditioning,
General Electric appllonc;es, fully carpeted,
Locker
1-3 1 o o o o
landscaped, concre•e drlw &amp; streets, dining t;&gt;alcony, ,lot
Hemlllon
2-3 3 4 4 I 1 md Finl!fl and Ken Holtzman loog as iie em. Andenon wW
95x tn_ counti' wat~ 'Tare "I&amp;WINVSI.t m,~
'"'....
1 1·3 2 1 1 i 1
again be ready to uae .U· hla
• 2-3 3 1 1 0 3 will be reedy for relief.
(W) 1
1 0 0 1 o . Blllln(lbam, the third game pitchera beblnd hlm.
FOR
1
10000 wlmer who also worked in
The
formula
worked
Friday
·
2'1-320001
.
ADDISON, OHiillliiO_ _ __
. . -Halt. WP ·- Horlen. relief in the 'fifth game, will and Saturday and he's gotitg to
lllart the finl1 game ind g~ as stick ~tli'it.
T-fll. A-52.?37.
I

Ohio
State's
rushing·
minded offense, dodged his
way for TD runs of seven and
six yards.
Indiana's lone touchdown
came on a 33-yard pass from
su~titute sophomore quarterback Rod Harris to Mike
Flanagan.
The Hoosiers suffered their
first Big Ten loss in three
games and Slipped to 2-4 for the
season. Ohio State Is 3-0 in the
conference and :HI overall.
Ohio State substitute
fullback Randy Keith scored in
the fourth quarter on a twoyard plunge ..and reserve
sophomore quafterllack Steve
Morrison scored on a one-yard

run. Blair Conway kicked a 32-

0

yard field goal for ·the
Buckeyes.
.
Henson, who scored his lOth
and lith Jouchdowns in five
garnes, picked up 113 yards in
22 carries.
McNulty, who threw only
llve passes before leaving the
game late in the first period,
Willi rushed hard each time he
tried to thro)l' and was hit hard
several times by Buckeye
defenders.
Ohio State intercepted two of
McNulty's key passes. In
the first quartet. One interce,l&gt;'
lion ·was returned 3D yards by
Rick Middleton to Indiana's
one -yard line to set up Hen•
son.'s first touchdown.

Herd is beaten

•

Odom to go zn

seventh tilt

-,;rzash es ·ro ll

over Xavl·er.

Saturday's
"d SCOres

Box score:
game szx

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
0

SPLIT LEVEL

SOUTHERN COLONIAL

0

'

CONJEMPORARY ·

ta'

. ,

·

.·

.

.neither team mounting' any.. gui11cdfour mo1du Ihe 10
'wllere the White Falcons 'lried scoring lhreats until late in the line. On the

~venswood

illegal
procedure penalty
·
prevented the White Falcons
from advancing any farther
tha n the'
, lr .owuJ 40 where Jeff
Haymaker was forced to punt.
Ravenswood took over on their
own 21 ya~d line, after
"''!"Yma ker's ~o-yard punt. On
,
their first PIIIY MiUer skirted
· went
around the left side and
·
down to the Wahama ~0 yard .
li'ne but a clipping penalty
·
brought the ball back to the
Ravenswood 42. The Devils
were farced to punt on a fourth
and ten situation and the White
Fa 1cons
· ha d held again. The
res t of the half went pretty
much the ..me way wltb

Jeff Haymaker had just
pun led to the Ravenswood 44
. with just under .three
yard line.
. tes to go'"
· the half. 0 n the
nunu
Red Devils' first play from
scrimmage Joe Foxx, the
Ravenswood quarterback, was
th.rown for ao II yard 1oss by
·
Mike Boston back to their own
33. On second down and 21
yards to go Foxx faded bac k
and found his en d Foose WI'de
open.
Foose carried the ball 45
yards down to the Wa ha rna 22
yard line where it was first and
ten for the Red Dev'ls
1 . M1'11er
then p1cked up eight yards
arOIUldtherightendandRoark

I

end for the fJ' rst S"Ol'e
c
of the ni, ht. Ad"'ns kick for
"'
the extrao point was
good and
the Red Devils lead with just
1:17 left in the half by a 7""•
score. Waha.ma then ran out
the clock and went into the
dressing room beh•·rd by 3
single touchdown· that should
never have been scored.
Waharna received the second
half kickoff and immediately
took to the air. On third down
and five yards to go Terry
Smith tried to hit Mike Lewis
with a pass. Lewis got •a hand
' -• "11 mto
on the ba II wh'1ch hP!'C'-•
the hands of a Ravenswood

Forest PaEii •*
HOME OF YOUR OWf{l

Bob Esbaugh set a school
record for the Herd with 14
punts.

I,.

OSU stats
Dept.

· Statistics

Ind .

Ohio St.
23
Rushes-yards 32-88
76-386
Passing yards 152
10
Return yards
41
67
Passes
9-19-3
2·6·2
Punts
5-41
2-47
Fumbles-lost 3-1
J.O
Pen. -yard~
3-27
2-10
First downs

By Quarter s:

Indiana
Ohio State
Ohio -

A small down payment will get you a 'ho111e of

13

0 7 0

your own 1 •• and you can pay for it in .a .few
years just like rent. Choice of floor plans and
decors; completely furnished, ready to move
into. Loads of built-in features.

Stop· today i\nd see the 12x60. Front Deri.
Parquet flooring, bay window Total
Electric.

o- 7

5,.·

14 3 14 13- 44
Hare (7 run) kick

fai led.
Ohio - pass
Henson
ru~) ;
Bradsahw
fromII Hare.
Indiana - Flanagan (33 pass

......
· •

from Harris I ; Gartner kick .

321
Ohio
(Conway
,
Ohio -- FG.
Henson
(24 run);
Conway kick.
Ohio - Hare (6 run! ; Conway kick .
Ohio - Keith (2 run); kick ,,
failed .
Ohio .,.- Mor.risoH () 'runl i''
Conway kick .

A - 86,365.

LOOKING FOR TACKLE - Wahama's Bruce HusseU
(74) Is looking for a tackle as a play goa around the side for

~·

~
· . ,:

. . ·.

~
·· .·

See Jirrt Staats or Joe Giles ;
Upper Rt. 7 Next Do or t o Au1o Auc I"ion
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio
.,
&gt;I

~

ic~CIC:ICIOI:H::IOOc:IC~I:H::IOCIC:IC~I:H::IOOC~.oli

m.

'

0

NEW YORK (UP!) -Bobby
Sheehan scored two power play
goals Saturday afternoon to
spark the New l(ork Raiders to
a 3-2 victory over the Houston
Aeros In a World Hockey
AssoclaUon game.
Sheehan's second power play
goal at 3:14 of the third period,
biB seventh of the season, put
the Raiders in front 3-2 and
proved to be the wiMing
marker. The goal, Sheehan's
fifth this yaar-on a power play,
came after Ken Block's shot
boiUlced off Aero goalie Wa)'11e
Rutledge's stick. Sheehan,
waiting just outside the
goafmQuth, fired the puck pest
· the defenseleas Houaton goalie.
Earlier, Sheehan tied the
score at 1-1 when, with New
OOLD NIGHT- A bitter cold nighl is evidenced here by members of the Wahama White
York once again on the power
Falcon Football gJ:jdders as they watch in desPeration as they were downed by Ravenswood 21·
play, he fired a shot pest
o. - Photo by Sam
Nichols
m.
,•
.
Rutledge from jUit Inside the
lace-off circle. .
Houston opened ·the scoring the net after Raider Goalie at 12:03 of the second period York defense and Donally
at 10:05of the lint periOd when Peter DonaUy had stopped a when Gordon LaBossiere took never had a chance on the shot.
a perfect pass In front of the net
New York tied it 2-2 at 16:47
Duke Harris fired a rebound shot by Ed Hoekstra.
Houston got It's second goal from Larry Hale _as the New of the sa'me period when
"shot into the open left side of
Wayne Rivers skated around
Rutledge and fired into the
open left side of the net. "

GOOD NEWS
ABOU-T SAVINGS
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highest allowable interestthat banks are allowed
to pay ... and remember there's no safety like
Bank Safety.

NEW STORE HOURS
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
· 9sOO A.M. TO lChOO P.M.
SUNDAY 1100 P.M. TILL 8100 P.M.

That's why more People are Saving more
money at O.V.B.
'

good yardage; Also shown in the photograph is Donnie
Machlr (60). Wahama suffered a 21-ll loss.- Photo by Sam
Nicholl

Raiders
defeat
Aeros

MOBILE HOME SALES

•

.

,.

I

'

ALL TYPES HANDGUNS AND SHOTGUNS IN STOCK.
STERm TAPE DECKS fUR CAR AND HOME.
CAR UNITS.$39.95
HOME UNITS ,5.00
TAPES '150
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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

,.

defender and this gave t11'e Red
game. 1:t2. seconds later Gary
S"''rk
~ went around the left end
for 3 1, )'ard .touchdown.
'
Adki ns' boot
made it H-ll.
On the very next series of
plays the White Falcons
showed an inslant replay of the
precedinu interception only
° was the man who
Rob Lambert
got one hand on the ball and
again the Red Devils we.re in
the right place at the right time
to haul in the interception.
Four plays late~ Foxx hit
Foose with a 17 yal"ll- touchdown pass. Adkins kick split
the uprightsto give visiting
Red Devils a 21-0 advantage.
The rest of the half went pretty

RIPLEY - Pt. Pleasant
built up a 14-0 halftime lead
here Friday night, then went on
to hand Ripley a 2~ setback.
It was the Big Blacks first
triumph of the 1972 campaign,
Coach Dick Ware's lads are
now 1-5-1 overall. Ripley is ~-4
overall.
It was the pitching arm of
junior quarterback Randy
Warner, and the expert cal·
ching of Paul Durst .and Joey
Given, plus some pre tty rugged
defensive work that ·turned the
tide.
Warner hit passes for three
touchdowns. He speared Paul
Durst with 9 and 6fl.yard
scoring shots, and nailed Given

·,

in a row.

•

'

•

.

much the &gt;;arne as the lirst half
· of action

.

~~~~~~~i&amp;~~~~~~~~~_q;uarte~~'714J~u'---:~i

ai

Four 1 straight passes were
elcd by Terry Smith. The
ccomp
· be'
1rst
mg a 10. yard. pass to
M'k
'" . Smith then h't
I ke .,.wts.
I
Ric
Hesson
with
a
12
yard
1
P ay . After Tony Grimm
caught one ·good for one yard
Sffil·tk"agam
· 1ound Lewisat th e
l'
.
··
15 yard me. This
is where the
dnve
· was hal ted. as penalties
·
d
1
·
an
osses put the White
F
1
. a cons bac k to midfield and
lhus en ded the on1y Falcon
· threat of th e night. The
scormg
f'ma 1score was Ra venswood 21
· ,wahama 0.
Th e m
· d"IV id ua1 Iea ders for
the Wh''•
'"' FaIcon" were : on•

caught three
passes
good
for
~· yards .
De
1
fensive y Mark Mitchell was
. the 1ea der wt'th 14
once agam
. d'I vi'dlua 1 ,tac kl es . M'
'"
. ' tc he11
was
h folowed by Mike Boston
w o seems to get better .every
game w1'th 10 lac kles. Audie
McFar1an d aIso had a good
·
'th
· · ·
game w1 seven mdiVIdua 1
tac kles. Don Mac
· h'1r, Rob
La mb~r t an d Tom SamseH
·
all
had s1x ta ckl es each t o round
· men.
ou t the top defensiVe
F r1'day, th e Wb'1te Fa1cons
'lllr
WI
y to s ta y above .500 when
they take lhe1r
, 4·3 won·1ost
record lo Spencer to ta ng Ie
w1'th th e Ye11ow Jac kets . Garne

0 7 G-~1
0 0 0 G- 0
STATISTICS
Dep..
•
W R
First Downs
'N'ot.
Avall.
•
YdsRushlng
13 NotavaU.
Yd p ,
s. assmg
58 82
T. Yatds
71 Not avail
. .
Passes Comp·Att.
5-17 •,...•
t'
1n••
..rcep tons ·
2 I
Furn bles Los t
1•1 t•
..,
Pena lti es
-82~ 1W
ScorIng:
(Ra v.)- M1'ller 10 yard run
(Adk'ms k'1ck) .
.
. Ra v. - Roark 14 yard run
(Adk'ms k'1ck) .
Ra v. - F oose 't7 yard pass
from Foxx (Adk'ms kick) .
Ravens.
Wahama

Point claims irst win

0

•

0

Use Our Christmas ·Lay-away on
Pistols, Shotguns or Any Sporting
Items. Can Be Ordered.
r

OWNER: CAROL W. MANLEY

,,

.

lu the W:ahama ,35 yard line

the
Wahama White defeating
Falcons 21-ll
·
he
re Friday. The "•arne, closer
tha the
score
indicates,
was
hardn.fought
battle
between
twoa
of. the top defensive teams in
th
e state, with the top ranked
Red
t Devils taking advantage of
w
. o Falcon turpovers and
turning
·
·
The tllem in to touchdowns..
Red DevUs received the
opening kickoff and returned it
to their own 34 yard line. After
three plays Ravenswood found
themselves four yards short of
the first. dOWn, and as a result
were forced to punt to the
surprise of everybody. ""e
uua
Lewis relw'ned the punt back

The Buckeyes pUed up 3.!6
yards rushing in 76 carries.
Ohio
State's • first
two ·touchdowns ca!lle within 77
seconds of the · first . quarter.
Hare, confusing the Indiana
defense on an option play, went
lnt&lt;i the end zone standing up
from seven yards Olll with 5:57
to go in the lirst perlo4.
Two plays later Middleton
intercepied a McNulty pass
and returned to the one-yardline, setting up Henson's t:U'St
score.
Harris' seco 0d-quarter
touchdown pass brought the
Hoosiers to within 14-7, but the
.stingy Buckeye defense hf:ld
Indiana scoreless' tile rest of
the game.

.

NEWLYWEDS. •• RETIREES • • •

PsYTS~ ,s_~~~~~.!t~v!~.
INFORM~~~7.~~~POINTM~Nls.

"

},

choice last year who had 642
yards this campaign. He pulled
a muscle in practice Thursday
night and did not make the trip
here.
Marshall, 1-5, failed 19 mount
any kind of attack in fillling to
the Broncos for the eighth year

.

ANNOUNcE ADDITION
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
'(UP!)-The Minnesota VIkings
announced Friday the addition
of defensive back Terry
Brown, who wiU replace injured Karl Kassulke on the
Vikings' 40-man roster.
' Brown, a 6-foot·l, 210-pound
safety, was acquired from the
St. Louis Cardinals on waivers.
He was drafted third by the
Cardinals in 1969, but missed
all of last season with a hlp
injury.
Kassulke was placed on the
move list after breaklng a
siilall bone in his right leg
againsf the Bfoncos in Denver
last week.
The Vikings also annoiUlced
they have added safety Alvin
Randolph to their taxi squad.
Randolph, 6-foot•2 and 205
pounds, was .acquired .on
waivers from Cincinnati
earUer this year.
NEBIWltA RO}ifPS
LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) Sophomore ql11rterbeck David
. Humm threw four touchdown
passes Saturday, three In a 21polnt second quarter, and
fourtho('lnlted )'lebralka rolled
to a 56-0 Big El@bt Conference
victory over outmanned
~.

with a 10-yard tally . He
compleled five passes for 132
yards and scooted home with a
lw&lt;&gt;-poinl conversion for his
biggest night ever.
Rick Armstead, 15().pound
Ripley senior halfback, scored
his team's lone TD on a three·
yard plunge after setting up the
sc or~ with a pass Interception.
It · was Homecoming at
Ripley, rather pre.tty, but a bit
sad. The Viking squad was
decimated by the absence of
eight boys, some of them
regulars, due to internal
fri ction, and they couldn 'I
make up the difference.
·
Pt. Pleasant plays at
Ravenswood Friday.

Offensive Plays
STATISTICS
· 66 63
pp R
By Quarters:
Dept.
7 8 Big Blacks
First Downs
01106-20
100 68 Ripley
Net Yds Rush
0 060--6
Passes
5-11 &amp;.22
Scoring:
lntercepled by
1 1
PPHS - Paul Durst 9
Yards Passirig
132 '1:1 Warner pass (pass 'failed),
Scrimmage Yd.s.
232 95
PPHS - Paul Durst 66
Return Ydge.
47 75 ., Warner pass (Warner run).
Fumbles
4 3
RIPLEY , Armsteed 3 run
1 2 ,(run failed).
Fwnbles Lost
Punts
7-30.6 9-23
PPHS - Joey Given 10
Penalties
. 110 50 Warner pass (run failed).

Bengals f~c~
biggest test
LOS ANGELES (UPI)Quarterbacks Ken Anderson
and Roman Gabriel may have
a pretty rugged day Sunday.
The Cincinnati Bengais have
dumped the quarterbacks 22
· times and the Rams have
~otten to the quarterback 17
times.
"They say Gabriel is as big
. as a tree," said ·assislaMt
coach Omck Weber. "And I
hope it's a O.ristmas tree.
:'I'd like to see us put a couple of Christmas ornaments on
him Uke Reid, White, ChomyszakandBerry,"sald Weber. "I
hope they're draping all over
him Sunday.
Mike Reid, Steve Chomyszak
Sherman White and Royce
Berry make up the Bengals
defensive line.
"But I'll tell you this, they're
tough looking monkeys," said

.MOBILE
HOME

Weber. "They're big strong
and quick.
"Our guys are the same
way," he said. "Two of the best
defensive front fours in the
business will be going after
Uiem Sunday.
"We're going to have a real
fine ball game," said Weber.
"We're golng to give It everything we've got this week against Los Angeles. They're a
good football team but so are
tlie Cincinnati Bengals."
However, the Bengals have
some injuries amqng the
defensive unit.
"We're not going to be at our
best," said head coach Paul
Brown. "We have some who
will try lt and !lee how lt works,
like Berry."
Berry, the defensive. captain,
has been sidelined with a knee
injury.

PINNING
SPECIAL

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·STORM

Skorich plans to
jazz. up offense
HOUSTON (UPI) - Cleveland coach Nick Skorlch will
attempt to jazz up the Browns
offense Sunday against Houston by using receivers Paul
Staroba and Gloster Richardson more frequently.
. Skorich will -also start Bo
.Scott at his old running back
slot and Bob DeM$rco wiU get
his first start at cenoor In an
attempt to bolster the Brown$
weak offensive line.
Both teams will be going with
inexperienced quarterbacks in
the Browna Mike Phipps and

f--

M
"""'
11' . ..

Cleveland and Houston have
played a total of 40 quarters of
ineffective offensive football
this season aild all they have to
show for It Is a total of 15 touch·
downs, eight for the Bro~
and seven by Houston.
Three of those t011chdowns
have come on two blocked
kicks and a fumble recovery.

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•

.~-

ser1e~ s

•

•

•

•

•
It-The Sl1ndaY Timoi·&amp;Minel,&amp;nlay,()cl, 22, 1972

0

·Cincinnati in·8-l
·

RaVensWood hands Wahama 21-0 grid, setback

.

.

t.

M ByGAR'f CLARK
The
· Red

~N-

BY VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer

. . a&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Brulsing fuUback Champ Henson and scampering quarter.
back Greg Hare scored two
touchdmms apiece Saturday to
lead unbeaten ~ fifth-ranked
Ohio State to a crushing 44-7
Big ·Ten victory over Indiana,
Indiana quarterback Ted
McNulty of the Big Ten's
leading passers, suffered a
possible torn knee ligament 41
the firs1 quarter .and could be·
lost for the rest of the season.

CiikiNNATI (UPI) - It was so easy for the
Cinci.nnati Reds Saturday that Manager Sparky
• Anderson had to gulp down only one pill for his ulcer.
Less than 24 hours after they were on the brink '
of elimination, the Reds .,- playing like the Reds
, who won the Nati1mal League pennant - clobbered
the Oakland A's 8-1 to tie the World Series at three.
games apiece.
It now all comes down to the him. It seemed as if he was
seventh game Sunday when giving him an "unintentional"

Jack Billingham starts for _the
Reds against .lohn "Blue
Moon" Odom for the A's as the
Reds attempt to become the
fint team .ever to · win the
series after losing the first two
games at me.
"I don't really feel much
pressure today," Anderson
881d even thouggh he wheeled
In four pitchers for a sevenhitter as he managed to match
the moves of Oakland's Dick
,,Williams. "It wasn't like
yesterday when I needed a
doll!ll pills for my ulcer. I only
needed one today."
Anderson said, "I . always
thought we would win, even
when we were down 2-G and 3-1.
But when (Gene) Tenace hit
that homer yesterday, I
thought for the first time that
we could lgse," The Reds
rallied to wln 1M Friday and
' then breezed Saturday in the
lint game that wasn't decided

intentional wa)k.
But with the Reds leading
Henson, a 6-foot-f, 224-pound
·only 2-1 Anderson wasn't going
aophomore,
scored on a 24-yard
to he acculled of tiot making
sideline dash and a one-yard
every move possible.
plunge.
He went to the mound and
Hare, the junior who directs
waved in Pedro Borbon, who
I
threw a strike past Bando and
then got him to foul out.
GARY BURNS, of 1928'h Chestnut St., GallipoUs, ca~
The Reds ,were leading 3-1 in
lured
the first deer of the 1972 hunting season (by bow)
the A's Seventh 1111d both
Friday. The 1~und spike Buck was nabbed in Addison
managers outdid themselves in
Twp. It was checked at Bob Saunders Quaker State Service
this Inning. Mangual led off
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
Center.
with a single and 'Tenace flied
( UPI )-Halfback Rob Miller
out. Gonzalo Marquez, the
scored the first three touchpinch-hitting star of this series,
downs as Western Michigan
batted for Green and lUI a
burioo Marshall ~-ll Saturday
bouncer to Borbon, who
afternoon, handling the
hesitated before throwing to
TbWJdering Herd their fifth
second for the force. That
straight loss.
hesitation cost him a double
Miller, who had not scored
p)ay and also cost him his spot
this season, tied a school recin the lineup;
ord with touchdown runs of 12,
Williams sent up Don Min'
two and one yardS as the Broncher to blitfor Bob Locker, who
cos took a 21-ll lead shortly
had replaced Blue in the last of
By GENE CADDES
the office of Commissioner after halftime.
the sixth. Ander.On decided io
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Now Bowie Kuhn was "making
The winners added touch· by Clie nm.
bring in Torn Hall to· counter that !hey have muffed two every effort to provide down jaunts of 23 yards by Paul
. Now the Reds think they can the lefthander Mincher. chances to win the world max.im'um security,"
Jorgensen and four yards by
"You get a few calls from ,Tim Roth.
: go •n the way.
Williams came back with a championship the no·pressure
: ''There's no way they can righthander,. Dave Duncan - way, the Oakland A's were cranks like this, ·but the~ you
They played without · star .
I stop us now," Insisted Bobby who struck out.
· lrying Saturday to face up to find someone with a gun and it fullback Larry Cates, 1111 All•; Tolan, who singled tWice, stole
The Reds then added five having to do it in one big, all· goes beyond the crank stage," Mid American Conference
two baae8 and scored twice.
runs In the last of the seventh important game.
Finley said.
VIda Blue started for the A's · and Hall was able to finish
"We haven't done anything
Although the threat incident
.
and was tagged for Jolinny despltetwosinglesintheninth. the easy, way all year," said caused much concern among
Bench's solo homer In the If the Reds hadn't padded their Manager Dick Williams. "I the A's , injured outfielder
, fourth and DaYid Concepcion's lead, Clay Carroll would gues~ now we'll just have to Reggie Jackson, sitting not far L' I
18Criflce Oy In the fifth, that probably have gotten in before win it in seven games."
from Tenace 's dressing
JCGred Hal McRae.
it was over. For the record,
Immediate after the A's had
cubicle, interjected with,
Blue wu charged with a Grimsley got the win.
dropped Saturday's sixth "Well, if you've got to go, you
Wll)iams, knowlng he was game, 11-1, Williams confirmed might as well go on national
third nm in the sixth that Tmy
l'l!rez "'""&amp;after he left sUII alive even if he lost, his earlier "if" announcement TV ."
.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) -, Larry
_.., . · ·· .· · .
deCJ'ded to save Rollie Fingers
First baseman Mike Epstein, Poole scored two touchdowns
and Dave
ton and Joe
that righthander John "Blue
·Horlen, making their · first .for the· seventh game and he Moon!' Odom would be his expected to take up some of the
~appearances in the serle~~, ran 8hort of rellev'ers after he starting pitcher when they slac~ in the Oakland offense and fullback John Matsko
gained 113 yards in 14 carrtes
were routed for five runs in. tile . took out Blue.
start playing for all the mar· caused by the absence pf
to lead Kent State University to
enth
Blue wasn't pitching the way bles in the 1 p. m. EDt Sunday Jackson, wenl hitless in foiiT
a 26-16 win over Xavier here
The 'cr~~~tl~l!f 52,737 at be ,did lalt yeu l!hfn he was game.
at-bats and is now zero·for-16 in Saturday for the Flashes
''
wrfrootstadiwn then really tile M\)p and Cy Young Award
Club owner Charles 0 . the series, but continued to be second consecutiw win.
ioaredmtheseventhwhen Joe winner, .but he was respec. Finley, who has seen his learn optimistic.
Xavier took an early 3-4 lead
Morgan's ruiHc:orlng single, table. He blanked the Reds lose two in a row now after
"For me its been a fun on a 41-yard field goal by Dan
Tolan's twiH'IIIl single and Wltil Bench homered in the holding a commanding 3·1 lead series," Epstein said. "I just Donahoe but Kent moved out in
. Cesar Geronimo's two-run fourth. McRae led off the fifth after four games, echoed wish I was conlributing more." front 7-3 at the end of the first
single wrapped up the Reds' with a double, went to third on Williams' remarks on doing
Asked about the Reds con. period on a 33-yard run by
first home series win since a groundout and scored on things the hard way.
· tinuing to run' on A's pitchers Daryl Hall.
1940.
Concepcion's sacrifice fly that . "In the eighth inning," even after building a corn·
Poole got his first touchdown
Anderson, who had promised made it 2-1.
Finley said, "My wife leaned fortable margin, Epstein said, of the afternoon on a seven
to "uae every.pitcher I've got if
In the sixth, Blue retired two over lo me and said, 'Honey, "You never have enough runs yard run In the second period to
I had to," then started keeping batters but Tolan singled and we never did accomplish in this game, so you can't fault
push Kent State out In front 13-3
..,_
-~·-. Ma·.o...
.,..,..~·,_ he decided Blue threw two halls to Benc;h. anyth'm~ the easy way. , .,
anyone for being aggressive." at the half.
to counter Wllllam.s, who baa Wllllarns, who had watched · Finley was deeply concerned
Williams was asked ·how the
Renard Harmon made it 19-3
been making more moves than Anderson pull 8 pitcher with 8 about the reported threat to strain of the series and the oneat the end of the third quarter.
Bobby Fischer and has spent 2-Gcount, wasn't to be outdone. catcher Gene Tenace,' adding run decisions in the first five before Xavier manage&lt;! to put
mere time on tbe mound than He Immediately brought In
games was affecting him.
a drive together and Pat Ragon
110111e of his pilchers.
Locker and Tolan stole 8econd
"I love it," he said. "It's scored on a one yard run to
Joe Rudl of the A's hit a one- on hls first pitch. Bench was
betler 1han going to weight make it 19-9.
out ~le in the sixth and went then intenUonaUy walked and
watchers. "
Poole got his second tiluciJ.
to aecond on Mike Epstein's Perez singled In Tolan for a nm
Williams then had a com- down on a nine yard scamper
groundout. With first il!lae that was charged to Blue.
urJ
pliment for Cincinnati third to finish the Kent Scoring.
open, Grlmaley was pitching
With Locker lifted for a ~ • "'
baseman Denis Menke, who
Paul Smith ran 11 yards lor
carefully to righthanded Sal plnch.IJitlilr, young Hamilton By Uni1ed Presolnternalional has only two hits in the six
the Musketeers final touchBando and got a 3-0 cOunt on started the lll!venth.l!e got into
EAST
games,
but
had
been
superb
in
down
of the day.
· trouble right away. Concepcion Albright 22 Wagner 21
the
field.
Poole carried 12 times lor 92
singled and stole second. After . Amherst 21 Rochester 0
Army 35 Rutgers 28
"I didn't know he (Cincinnati yards as the Kent Slate Ground
Hall struck out, Rose was in· Bucknell 26 Lafayette 7
Manager Sparky Anderson) attack dominated the contest.
lentionaUywalkedandMorgan Colby 34 Trinily !Conn .) 14
imported Brooks Robinson for The Flashes rushed 59 times
singled In Concepcion and went Colgale 35 Princeton 26
Connecticut 31 Maine 9
lhe Series," Williams said.
for 274 yards.
to second on the throw.
C, w. Post 31 Kings Point 26
Tolan then rapped an "o~ Dartmouth 49 Brown 20
• •
" · g1 d
th
Delaware 31 West Chester 14
po site fl eld sm e own e Dickinson 22 Muhlenberg 9
left field Une to score Morgan Fordham 14 St. John's (N .Y. ) 7 •
oakland
ab r h bi and Tolan and make it 11-1.
Franklin &amp; Marshall 24
Campanerls, ss
4 o 0 o
Williams then brought In
Widener 21
Alou, rf
4 0 0 0 Horle n for his first ap- Geneva 41 Grove City 14
Rudl. If
4 0 1 0
Harvard 3e Cornel 15
Epstein, lb
4 0 0 0 pearance. Tolan stole 8econd Indiana (Pa .l 20 Clarion St. 6
Banda, 3b
4 1. , 2 0 despite the big lead and Bench
Ithaca 28 Wilkes 11
Mangual , cf
·4 o 2 o
Jk
d
Mai
ne Maritime 27
West. Connecticut 14
4 o 1 0 was . in,tentional IY wa e
'Tenace, c
Green, 2b
2 0 1 I again. After Horlen wild pit- Ma ssachusetts 42 Rh . Island 1
Marquez, ph
I 0 0 0 ched the runners to second and Nor lheaslern 21 Springfield o
Kubiak, 2b
I 0 0 0 third, 'Tenace made a throw to Norwich 10 St. Lawrence o
Blue, p
I 0 0 0 third.
Penn 30 Lehigh 27
Locker,p
0 0 0 0
Penn
St. 17 Syracuse 0
.NEW HOMES FOR SALE .
Mincher, ph
0 0 0 0 Bando took the throw but Pittsburgh
35 Basion Coli. 20
Duncan, ph
I 0 0 0
was easily on the bag. Quantico 13 Villanova 7
Hamilton, p
0 0 0 0 Tolan.
But
Bando
feeling the Sl ippery Rock 14
Horlen, p
0 0 0 0
4 BR, 2 ba hs, Family room, total electric with Williamson
•
•I
Cent. Connecticut 6
TOTALS
34 1 7 1 frustration of the loss and Vermont
18 New Hampshire 17
Heating
and C.-ifral air conditioning, General Electric
Cincinnati
ab r h bi poaslbly thinking Toll\n was .,...Wesleyan 34 Worcester Tech 13 .
appliances, (ully carpeted, landscaped, conc,..te drive &amp;
Rose. If
3 1 0 o
str~ts.1 1f•. car garage, dining balcony, lot 75x175. county
Morgan , 2b
5 . 1 2 1 trying to show them up by western Mich. 34 Marshall 0
stealing
wtth
a
6-1
lead
shoved
Westminste~
(
Pa.
17
Defiance
7
w.ater, Tara sewer ·syst.em.
Tolon, cf
4 ·2 2 2
·
. '
West V.&gt;rglnoa 31 Tulane 19
Bench, c
2 2 1 1 Tolan, •as he made
the tag.
Williams 35 Bowdoin 1
Perez,1f
3 o 1 1 Tolan complained
to
the
Yale ,28 Columbia 14
McRae. rf
3 1 I 0
3 1\R, 2112 baths. family room, basement, total electric
Gero_pimo, rf
1 0 1 2 umpire and pointed at Bando Alabama 175~!:,~~ssee ·
1
0
with Williamson heating and central air condlllonl119,
Men~ e. 3b
• 0 0 0 but there were no further m- Clemson 37 Virginia 21
·concepcion, ss
3 1 2 I cidents.
General
Electric appliances, fully carpeted, landscaped,
Duke 20 Maryland 14
Noi.n, p
I 0 ,0 0
concrete
drive &amp; streets, 2V. car,garage, dining balcony, .
Fl orida 16 Mississippi 0
Grimsley, p
1 0 0 0 ., _Perez then. worked. Hoden
lot
95~175,
county wafer, Tara sewer system.
Fionda St. 37 Colorado St. 0
Borbon, p
0 0 0 0 ,.,.. a walk and Geronuno, WhQ Georgia
28 Vanderbilt 3
Hall,p
2 o 0 o·
TOTALS
12 8 10 8 waa a defensive sub for Wililam &amp; Mary 31
Virginia Mllilary 3
3 BR. 1112 baths, family room, ~semen!, 1 car gara·ge,
Oekland
000 010 000-1 McRae singled in the final two
• MIDWEST
Cincinnati
000 .111' sox-8 ruM of' the game.1 ·
total electric with WllilemiiClll heat1119 end central' •'!
Michigan .31 Illinois 7 .
E - Manqual. LOBconditioning,
General Electric appliances, {ully carll'!ted•
.WIIIIam.s, despite the loss, Mlc~.lg~n St. 31 Wisconsin o
Oeklond 7, Cincinnati 6. 28 - was
landscaped,
concre)e
drive a. strtelt, dining balcony, lot
ln good spirits.
Minnesota 43 Iowa 14
Morgan, Green, McRae. 3B ·95x175,
county
w
Tara sewer system.
ter,
0
was right when he Missouri 30 Notre. Dame 26
Concepcion. HR - Bench. SB . "Spar""
'f'1
.
Nebraska
~ Kansas 0
- Tolan 2, Concepcion. SF - 881d thla would go aeven games Ohio State 44 Indiana 1
Concepcion.
lp h ror i,b 10 but he juat bas picked the Purdue 37 Northwestern o
winner" he said
SOUTHWEST
total electric with Wi.illarniiClll heall119 and central air
llutiLl
52·3 0 3 2 4 Wf011J
WUiilmB
sakt
Odom
ready
Oklahoma
St.
20
Baylor
7
conditioning,
General Electric appllonc;es, fully carpeted,
Locker
1-3 1 o o o o
landscaped, concre•e drlw &amp; streets, dining t;&gt;alcony, ,lot
Hemlllon
2-3 3 4 4 I 1 md Finl!fl and Ken Holtzman loog as iie em. Andenon wW
95x tn_ counti' wat~ 'Tare "I&amp;WINVSI.t m,~
'"'....
1 1·3 2 1 1 i 1
again be ready to uae .U· hla
• 2-3 3 1 1 0 3 will be reedy for relief.
(W) 1
1 0 0 1 o . Blllln(lbam, the third game pitchera beblnd hlm.
FOR
1
10000 wlmer who also worked in
The
formula
worked
Friday
·
2'1-320001
.
ADDISON, OHiillliiO_ _ __
. . -Halt. WP ·- Horlen. relief in the 'fifth game, will and Saturday and he's gotitg to
lllart the finl1 game ind g~ as stick ~tli'it.
T-fll. A-52.?37.
I

Ohio
State's
rushing·
minded offense, dodged his
way for TD runs of seven and
six yards.
Indiana's lone touchdown
came on a 33-yard pass from
su~titute sophomore quarterback Rod Harris to Mike
Flanagan.
The Hoosiers suffered their
first Big Ten loss in three
games and Slipped to 2-4 for the
season. Ohio State Is 3-0 in the
conference and :HI overall.
Ohio State substitute
fullback Randy Keith scored in
the fourth quarter on a twoyard plunge ..and reserve
sophomore quafterllack Steve
Morrison scored on a one-yard

run. Blair Conway kicked a 32-

0

yard field goal for ·the
Buckeyes.
.
Henson, who scored his lOth
and lith Jouchdowns in five
garnes, picked up 113 yards in
22 carries.
McNulty, who threw only
llve passes before leaving the
game late in the first period,
Willi rushed hard each time he
tried to thro)l' and was hit hard
several times by Buckeye
defenders.
Ohio State intercepted two of
McNulty's key passes. In
the first quartet. One interce,l&gt;'
lion ·was returned 3D yards by
Rick Middleton to Indiana's
one -yard line to set up Hen•
son.'s first touchdown.

Herd is beaten

•

Odom to go zn

seventh tilt

-,;rzash es ·ro ll

over Xavl·er.

Saturday's
"d SCOres

Box score:
game szx

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
0

SPLIT LEVEL

SOUTHERN COLONIAL

0

'

CONJEMPORARY ·

ta'

. ,

·

.·

.

.neither team mounting' any.. gui11cdfour mo1du Ihe 10
'wllere the White Falcons 'lried scoring lhreats until late in the line. On the

~venswood

illegal
procedure penalty
·
prevented the White Falcons
from advancing any farther
tha n the'
, lr .owuJ 40 where Jeff
Haymaker was forced to punt.
Ravenswood took over on their
own 21 ya~d line, after
"''!"Yma ker's ~o-yard punt. On
,
their first PIIIY MiUer skirted
· went
around the left side and
·
down to the Wahama ~0 yard .
li'ne but a clipping penalty
·
brought the ball back to the
Ravenswood 42. The Devils
were farced to punt on a fourth
and ten situation and the White
Fa 1cons
· ha d held again. The
res t of the half went pretty
much the ..me way wltb

Jeff Haymaker had just
pun led to the Ravenswood 44
. with just under .three
yard line.
. tes to go'"
· the half. 0 n the
nunu
Red Devils' first play from
scrimmage Joe Foxx, the
Ravenswood quarterback, was
th.rown for ao II yard 1oss by
·
Mike Boston back to their own
33. On second down and 21
yards to go Foxx faded bac k
and found his en d Foose WI'de
open.
Foose carried the ball 45
yards down to the Wa ha rna 22
yard line where it was first and
ten for the Red Dev'ls
1 . M1'11er
then p1cked up eight yards
arOIUldtherightendandRoark

I

end for the fJ' rst S"Ol'e
c
of the ni, ht. Ad"'ns kick for
"'
the extrao point was
good and
the Red Devils lead with just
1:17 left in the half by a 7""•
score. Waha.ma then ran out
the clock and went into the
dressing room beh•·rd by 3
single touchdown· that should
never have been scored.
Waharna received the second
half kickoff and immediately
took to the air. On third down
and five yards to go Terry
Smith tried to hit Mike Lewis
with a pass. Lewis got •a hand
' -• "11 mto
on the ba II wh'1ch hP!'C'-•
the hands of a Ravenswood

Forest PaEii •*
HOME OF YOUR OWf{l

Bob Esbaugh set a school
record for the Herd with 14
punts.

I,.

OSU stats
Dept.

· Statistics

Ind .

Ohio St.
23
Rushes-yards 32-88
76-386
Passing yards 152
10
Return yards
41
67
Passes
9-19-3
2·6·2
Punts
5-41
2-47
Fumbles-lost 3-1
J.O
Pen. -yard~
3-27
2-10
First downs

By Quarter s:

Indiana
Ohio State
Ohio -

A small down payment will get you a 'ho111e of

13

0 7 0

your own 1 •• and you can pay for it in .a .few
years just like rent. Choice of floor plans and
decors; completely furnished, ready to move
into. Loads of built-in features.

Stop· today i\nd see the 12x60. Front Deri.
Parquet flooring, bay window Total
Electric.

o- 7

5,.·

14 3 14 13- 44
Hare (7 run) kick

fai led.
Ohio - pass
Henson
ru~) ;
Bradsahw
fromII Hare.
Indiana - Flanagan (33 pass

......
· •

from Harris I ; Gartner kick .

321
Ohio
(Conway
,
Ohio -- FG.
Henson
(24 run);
Conway kick.
Ohio - Hare (6 run! ; Conway kick .
Ohio - Keith (2 run); kick ,,
failed .
Ohio .,.- Mor.risoH () 'runl i''
Conway kick .

A - 86,365.

LOOKING FOR TACKLE - Wahama's Bruce HusseU
(74) Is looking for a tackle as a play goa around the side for

~·

~
· . ,:

. . ·.

~
·· .·

See Jirrt Staats or Joe Giles ;
Upper Rt. 7 Next Do or t o Au1o Auc I"ion
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio
.,
&gt;I

~

ic~CIC:ICIOI:H::IOOc:IC~I:H::IOCIC:IC~I:H::IOOC~.oli

m.

'

0

NEW YORK (UP!) -Bobby
Sheehan scored two power play
goals Saturday afternoon to
spark the New l(ork Raiders to
a 3-2 victory over the Houston
Aeros In a World Hockey
AssoclaUon game.
Sheehan's second power play
goal at 3:14 of the third period,
biB seventh of the season, put
the Raiders in front 3-2 and
proved to be the wiMing
marker. The goal, Sheehan's
fifth this yaar-on a power play,
came after Ken Block's shot
boiUlced off Aero goalie Wa)'11e
Rutledge's stick. Sheehan,
waiting just outside the
goafmQuth, fired the puck pest
· the defenseleas Houaton goalie.
Earlier, Sheehan tied the
score at 1-1 when, with New
OOLD NIGHT- A bitter cold nighl is evidenced here by members of the Wahama White
York once again on the power
Falcon Football gJ:jdders as they watch in desPeration as they were downed by Ravenswood 21·
play, he fired a shot pest
o. - Photo by Sam
Nichols
m.
,•
.
Rutledge from jUit Inside the
lace-off circle. .
Houston opened ·the scoring the net after Raider Goalie at 12:03 of the second period York defense and Donally
at 10:05of the lint periOd when Peter DonaUy had stopped a when Gordon LaBossiere took never had a chance on the shot.
a perfect pass In front of the net
New York tied it 2-2 at 16:47
Duke Harris fired a rebound shot by Ed Hoekstra.
Houston got It's second goal from Larry Hale _as the New of the sa'me period when
"shot into the open left side of
Wayne Rivers skated around
Rutledge and fired into the
open left side of the net. "

GOOD NEWS
ABOU-T SAVINGS
0

0

You don't have to be rich to invest your
money at O.V.B. in Gallipplis.

VILLAGE .GUN SHOPPE

It doesn't take $5,000.00 or $10,000.00
minimum deposit to buy one of our Certificates
o1 Deposit.
•

231 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

You can begin with a ~inimum deoosit of
$1,000.00 or more, and Ohio Valley Bank pays the
highest allowable interestthat banks are allowed
to pay ... and remember there's no safety like
Bank Safety.

NEW STORE HOURS
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
· 9sOO A.M. TO lChOO P.M.
SUNDAY 1100 P.M. TILL 8100 P.M.

That's why more People are Saving more
money at O.V.B.
'

good yardage; Also shown in the photograph is Donnie
Machlr (60). Wahama suffered a 21-ll loss.- Photo by Sam
Nicholl

Raiders
defeat
Aeros

MOBILE HOME SALES

•

.

,.

I

'

ALL TYPES HANDGUNS AND SHOTGUNS IN STOCK.
STERm TAPE DECKS fUR CAR AND HOME.
CAR UNITS.$39.95
HOME UNITS ,5.00
TAPES '150
0

'h

-

Ly~~~~ -~

• t e now ..n..

UUR

Mc:mbcr: F'edml

420THIRDAV_ENUE

appra:..tet 'fOQ.r

R

D081neM

t:lPtwlt 1. ~ ~tkln

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

,.

defender and this gave t11'e Red
game. 1:t2. seconds later Gary
S"''rk
~ went around the left end
for 3 1, )'ard .touchdown.
'
Adki ns' boot
made it H-ll.
On the very next series of
plays the White Falcons
showed an inslant replay of the
precedinu interception only
° was the man who
Rob Lambert
got one hand on the ball and
again the Red Devils we.re in
the right place at the right time
to haul in the interception.
Four plays late~ Foxx hit
Foose with a 17 yal"ll- touchdown pass. Adkins kick split
the uprightsto give visiting
Red Devils a 21-0 advantage.
The rest of the half went pretty

RIPLEY - Pt. Pleasant
built up a 14-0 halftime lead
here Friday night, then went on
to hand Ripley a 2~ setback.
It was the Big Blacks first
triumph of the 1972 campaign,
Coach Dick Ware's lads are
now 1-5-1 overall. Ripley is ~-4
overall.
It was the pitching arm of
junior quarterback Randy
Warner, and the expert cal·
ching of Paul Durst .and Joey
Given, plus some pre tty rugged
defensive work that ·turned the
tide.
Warner hit passes for three
touchdowns. He speared Paul
Durst with 9 and 6fl.yard
scoring shots, and nailed Given

·,

in a row.

•

'

•

.

much the &gt;;arne as the lirst half
· of action

.

~~~~~~~i&amp;~~~~~~~~~_q;uarte~~'714J~u'---:~i

ai

Four 1 straight passes were
elcd by Terry Smith. The
ccomp
· be'
1rst
mg a 10. yard. pass to
M'k
'" . Smith then h't
I ke .,.wts.
I
Ric
Hesson
with
a
12
yard
1
P ay . After Tony Grimm
caught one ·good for one yard
Sffil·tk"agam
· 1ound Lewisat th e
l'
.
··
15 yard me. This
is where the
dnve
· was hal ted. as penalties
·
d
1
·
an
osses put the White
F
1
. a cons bac k to midfield and
lhus en ded the on1y Falcon
· threat of th e night. The
scormg
f'ma 1score was Ra venswood 21
· ,wahama 0.
Th e m
· d"IV id ua1 Iea ders for
the Wh''•
'"' FaIcon" were : on•

caught three
passes
good
for
~· yards .
De
1
fensive y Mark Mitchell was
. the 1ea der wt'th 14
once agam
. d'I vi'dlua 1 ,tac kl es . M'
'"
. ' tc he11
was
h folowed by Mike Boston
w o seems to get better .every
game w1'th 10 lac kles. Audie
McFar1an d aIso had a good
·
'th
· · ·
game w1 seven mdiVIdua 1
tac kles. Don Mac
· h'1r, Rob
La mb~r t an d Tom SamseH
·
all
had s1x ta ckl es each t o round
· men.
ou t the top defensiVe
F r1'day, th e Wb'1te Fa1cons
'lllr
WI
y to s ta y above .500 when
they take lhe1r
, 4·3 won·1ost
record lo Spencer to ta ng Ie
w1'th th e Ye11ow Jac kets . Garne

0 7 G-~1
0 0 0 G- 0
STATISTICS
Dep..
•
W R
First Downs
'N'ot.
Avall.
•
YdsRushlng
13 NotavaU.
Yd p ,
s. assmg
58 82
T. Yatds
71 Not avail
. .
Passes Comp·Att.
5-17 •,...•
t'
1n••
..rcep tons ·
2 I
Furn bles Los t
1•1 t•
..,
Pena lti es
-82~ 1W
ScorIng:
(Ra v.)- M1'ller 10 yard run
(Adk'ms k'1ck) .
.
. Ra v. - Roark 14 yard run
(Adk'ms k'1ck) .
Ra v. - F oose 't7 yard pass
from Foxx (Adk'ms kick) .
Ravens.
Wahama

Point claims irst win

0

•

0

Use Our Christmas ·Lay-away on
Pistols, Shotguns or Any Sporting
Items. Can Be Ordered.
r

OWNER: CAROL W. MANLEY

,,

.

lu the W:ahama ,35 yard line

the
Wahama White defeating
Falcons 21-ll
·
he
re Friday. The "•arne, closer
tha the
score
indicates,
was
hardn.fought
battle
between
twoa
of. the top defensive teams in
th
e state, with the top ranked
Red
t Devils taking advantage of
w
. o Falcon turpovers and
turning
·
·
The tllem in to touchdowns..
Red DevUs received the
opening kickoff and returned it
to their own 34 yard line. After
three plays Ravenswood found
themselves four yards short of
the first. dOWn, and as a result
were forced to punt to the
surprise of everybody. ""e
uua
Lewis relw'ned the punt back

The Buckeyes pUed up 3.!6
yards rushing in 76 carries.
Ohio
State's • first
two ·touchdowns ca!lle within 77
seconds of the · first . quarter.
Hare, confusing the Indiana
defense on an option play, went
lnt&lt;i the end zone standing up
from seven yards Olll with 5:57
to go in the lirst perlo4.
Two plays later Middleton
intercepied a McNulty pass
and returned to the one-yardline, setting up Henson's t:U'St
score.
Harris' seco 0d-quarter
touchdown pass brought the
Hoosiers to within 14-7, but the
.stingy Buckeye defense hf:ld
Indiana scoreless' tile rest of
the game.

.

NEWLYWEDS. •• RETIREES • • •

PsYTS~ ,s_~~~~~.!t~v!~.
INFORM~~~7.~~~POINTM~Nls.

"

},

choice last year who had 642
yards this campaign. He pulled
a muscle in practice Thursday
night and did not make the trip
here.
Marshall, 1-5, failed 19 mount
any kind of attack in fillling to
the Broncos for the eighth year

.

ANNOUNcE ADDITION
BLOOMINGTON, Minn .
'(UP!)-The Minnesota VIkings
announced Friday the addition
of defensive back Terry
Brown, who wiU replace injured Karl Kassulke on the
Vikings' 40-man roster.
' Brown, a 6-foot·l, 210-pound
safety, was acquired from the
St. Louis Cardinals on waivers.
He was drafted third by the
Cardinals in 1969, but missed
all of last season with a hlp
injury.
Kassulke was placed on the
move list after breaklng a
siilall bone in his right leg
againsf the Bfoncos in Denver
last week.
The Vikings also annoiUlced
they have added safety Alvin
Randolph to their taxi squad.
Randolph, 6-foot•2 and 205
pounds, was .acquired .on
waivers from Cincinnati
earUer this year.
NEBIWltA RO}ifPS
LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) Sophomore ql11rterbeck David
. Humm threw four touchdown
passes Saturday, three In a 21polnt second quarter, and
fourtho('lnlted )'lebralka rolled
to a 56-0 Big El@bt Conference
victory over outmanned
~.

with a 10-yard tally . He
compleled five passes for 132
yards and scooted home with a
lw&lt;&gt;-poinl conversion for his
biggest night ever.
Rick Armstead, 15().pound
Ripley senior halfback, scored
his team's lone TD on a three·
yard plunge after setting up the
sc or~ with a pass Interception.
It · was Homecoming at
Ripley, rather pre.tty, but a bit
sad. The Viking squad was
decimated by the absence of
eight boys, some of them
regulars, due to internal
fri ction, and they couldn 'I
make up the difference.
·
Pt. Pleasant plays at
Ravenswood Friday.

Offensive Plays
STATISTICS
· 66 63
pp R
By Quarters:
Dept.
7 8 Big Blacks
First Downs
01106-20
100 68 Ripley
Net Yds Rush
0 060--6
Passes
5-11 &amp;.22
Scoring:
lntercepled by
1 1
PPHS - Paul Durst 9
Yards Passirig
132 '1:1 Warner pass (pass 'failed),
Scrimmage Yd.s.
232 95
PPHS - Paul Durst 66
Return Ydge.
47 75 ., Warner pass (Warner run).
Fumbles
4 3
RIPLEY , Armsteed 3 run
1 2 ,(run failed).
Fwnbles Lost
Punts
7-30.6 9-23
PPHS - Joey Given 10
Penalties
. 110 50 Warner pass (run failed).

Bengals f~c~
biggest test
LOS ANGELES (UPI)Quarterbacks Ken Anderson
and Roman Gabriel may have
a pretty rugged day Sunday.
The Cincinnati Bengais have
dumped the quarterbacks 22
· times and the Rams have
~otten to the quarterback 17
times.
"They say Gabriel is as big
. as a tree," said ·assislaMt
coach Omck Weber. "And I
hope it's a O.ristmas tree.
:'I'd like to see us put a couple of Christmas ornaments on
him Uke Reid, White, ChomyszakandBerry,"sald Weber. "I
hope they're draping all over
him Sunday.
Mike Reid, Steve Chomyszak
Sherman White and Royce
Berry make up the Bengals
defensive line.
"But I'll tell you this, they're
tough looking monkeys," said

.MOBILE
HOME

Weber. "They're big strong
and quick.
"Our guys are the same
way," he said. "Two of the best
defensive front fours in the
business will be going after
Uiem Sunday.
"We're going to have a real
fine ball game," said Weber.
"We're golng to give It everything we've got this week against Los Angeles. They're a
good football team but so are
tlie Cincinnati Bengals."
However, the Bengals have
some injuries amqng the
defensive unit.
"We're not going to be at our
best," said head coach Paul
Brown. "We have some who
will try lt and !lee how lt works,
like Berry."
Berry, the defensive. captain,
has been sidelined with a knee
injury.

PINNING
SPECIAL

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·STORM

Skorich plans to
jazz. up offense
HOUSTON (UPI) - Cleveland coach Nick Skorlch will
attempt to jazz up the Browns
offense Sunday against Houston by using receivers Paul
Staroba and Gloster Richardson more frequently.
. Skorich will -also start Bo
.Scott at his old running back
slot and Bob DeM$rco wiU get
his first start at cenoor In an
attempt to bolster the Brown$
weak offensive line.
Both teams will be going with
inexperienced quarterbacks in
the Browna Mike Phipps and

f--

M
"""'
11' . ..

Cleveland and Houston have
played a total of 40 quarters of
ineffective offensive football
this season aild all they have to
show for It Is a total of 15 touch·
downs, eight for the Bro~
and seven by Houston.
Three of those t011chdowns
have come on two blocked
kicks and a fumble recovery.

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~·riday

night by pulling away in
the seconq half for a eonvincing 35-U triumph over the
BlUe Devils in a Southeastern
Ohio League football contest.
The fired-up Gallians surprised Coach Gerald Inbody's
visiting Bulldogs by taking IHl
ahd 14.0 leads in the first hall,
but the Athenians' diversified
attack proved too much for the
Gallij)olitans during the final
half of play.
GAHSmarched 74 yards in 1\'
,'plays after receiving the
opening kickoff. Fullback Kev
Sheets smashed over from the
ooe with 4:36left to give GAHS
a IHl advaniage', QB Jim
Niday's pass to Rick Grymes
for. the extras was thrown outof-bounds.
Ath¢ns flilled to gain on its
BERRIDGE PlCKS UP FIRST DOWN ..:.. GAHS tailback Mike Berridge (14) plcke4 up
first series: Ste've ·Green
four yards and a Blue Devil first down on this play midway in the first period of Friday's
punted to the GAHS four as the
GAJIS..Athens game. Maklilg the stop oil the Athens 13 is Bulldog safety Tol!d Romig. Athens
period ended.
flilished strong to wlil, as:\4.
Ray' Strickmaker recovered
a GAHS fumble on the Blue
Devil six on the second play of
the seeond period. Veteran
senior fullback Don Wood got
three, two and then one and it
Staubach has been throwing
DALLAS (UP!) - Roger championship last year, has
was tied, .6-6, with 9:53 left in
Staubach, beating the medic's been out or action since he well in praclite all week, but the half.
timetable just as he predicred ducked his head and rammed Coach' Tom Landry said he did , .GAHS marched 77 yards in
. he would, was activared by the into the Los Angeles Rams' not expebt Staubach to . play
.
Dallas Cowboys Saturday as Marlin McKeever . on a against the 'Skins except in an
backup insurance to quar· scramble during an exhibition emergency or if the game got
e
nne-sided
either
way
and
he
.
game
Aug
.
12.
terback Craig Morton for
He suffered a shoulder could b~ u. ~ed slricUy to work · . l~'n
today's showdown with the
Q
.:::::;; •
~
separation
. that required on hiS llmmg.
Washington Reskins in the
surgery and the doctors
To make room for Staubach
,
. nation's Capital.
1
on
the
40-man
active
squad,
· ·
Staubach, whose passing and predicred he would be lost for
moved
rookie
IRONTON - Ironton all but
scrambling runs led the at least 12 weeks. Staubach Landry
linebacker
Mike
Keller
to
the
wrapped
up its se'chnd straight
' Cowboys out of the doldrums said he would make it back in
Futures List.
Southeastern Ohio League
· and into the Super Bowl eight to 10 weeks. He did.
football championship here
· Friday night by rolling over the
hapless Wellston Golden
I I
c;
Rockets 43-0.
·
It was Ironton's fifth conLANCASl'ER, S. C. (UP!)- speculation on the cause of the ryland State Coilege in 1969 and secutive Southeastern Ohio
An autopsy was ordered Satur- shooting.
sho~tly thereafter joined the League win against no setday to determine if former
Lower said that County Colts. In 1970, he was starting backs. Wellston suffered itS
Baltimore Colt cornerback Coroner Richard Khandler had cornerback for the Colts, who 12th straightSEOAL setback in
James E. "Butch" Duncan was ruled the death suicide but that won the world championship three years, and 16th in a row
overall during that period.
under the influence of drugs at he also had ordered an that year.
The Tigers of Coach Bob Lutz
the time he shot aod killed autopsy .
He was Injured at the start of
himself at the Lancaster pollee
Lower said officials had the 1971 season and was not need .only a win over Gallipolis
station.
found some ,"drug-related able to regain a starting berth. or Jackson to clinch at least a
lie for the 1972 title, and a
Police Chief Larry Lower paraphernalia" in Duncan's
victory over both would give
said Duncan, a native of car but added, "! would prefer
HORN[':TS WIN
the Lawrence Oo~ntians their
Lancaster, walked Into the not to he any more specific."
COAL GROVE - Coal
yolice stat,iQn shortly before
Duncan, 26, returned home Grove 's Hornets surprised first undisputed Utle ever. The
noon Friday, grabbed a .38 last ' m~nth ' afte r he was· South Point 2&amp;-20 for the second T.igers share&lt;! the crown In 1929
and i'n 1971.
plato! fr01;11 the holster of Lt. dropped by the New Orleans
straight year Friday night in
Russell Hinson , and shot ·Saints and the Miami Dolphins. an Ohio Valley Conference
Ironton's rugged defense
himself in the head.
Since that time he had been ga me . The Hornets and shut out an SEOAL foe for the
Lower said Duncan ''Was living with his mother, Mrs.
fourth consecutive week. IHS
Pointers both own identicall-2having some problems with Elloree Duncan.
has given up only 14 points in
·
0
season
records.
drugs," but refused further
league play, and those were to
Duncan graduated from Ma·
Waverly back on Sept. 22.
•
The Tigers pick~d up 23 first
downs, permitred three. Total
yards .favored the Tigers, 32525. Iron ton had 274 rushing and
51 "passing. Wellston had six
rushing and 19 passing. Terry
Mowery paced the Tigers with
77 yards in 13 trips.

Champs activate Staubac!t

Ti

...

..,.de
'i'ld
.
·
r
Duncan autopsy
0.

1973 Beetle:

Skinner appeared W be the
slickest AHS quarterback to
ifoi~Oiiiifiiiiiie-facea GAHS squac!Trlsevera!
in the hall made it ·J2-6. Niday mark to 4-3. GAHS dropped to bogged down (the Devils did a yea rs.'' And he'nnly a junior.
then hit John Waller for the 2·l · l overall . Inside the good job containing AHS
+++
two-point conversion
it was . SEOAL, Athens is 4-1. GAHS i&gt; runners most of th.e evening)
After a lethargic. fir~t half
H-6.
. 2-2-1 in conference play . .
,Skinner had Jitlle trouble performance, Athens came
Ten plays later, Athens
The Blue Deyils will host finding a receiver open over . back to completely domlnate
reduced it to 14-12 when Wood puwcrful Ironton Friday. til&lt; middle, alpng ihe sidelines, the game In the Second half.
blasted over from the one· to Athens will shoot for Its fourth or downfield. He hit Al~x GAHS led in every depa)'tment
climax a 71-yard drive. Les . straight victory at Meigs on TQpp_ing for gains of 24, 6, 15, 4 · following first half of play
t:;harnplin skirted left end with ·Oct, 'll.
(and a minus 9) . Skinner also ·(except the score, which was
I :05 left in ·the half and it was
hit Wood with a 16-yarder. AI 14-ll) . The .' Bulldogs hard·
H-~11 .
POST-GAME NOTES
Olson caugHt one· for 41, Les charging defense sacked Blue
Athens took the opening · Friday's . homecoming battle Champlin one for 1.1, Brent Devil backs six times for a
kickoff in the third period and was played in brisk 38 degree . Hawk one for six and Tim minus 30 yards In the final
marched 61 yards in seven temperature before Jess than Poston one for a minus 14.
three periods after GI\HS had
plays to go ahead for the first 2,000 fans. Most speciators
taken a 14-6 lead. Leading the
time. Wood smashed over from were from Gallipolis. ApBulldog assault were Mark
the two with 8:32 left, and it parently Bulldog fans sensed
' Riggs, Tim Poston, Dan
was 20-H. Wood was slopped an easy victory over the Blue
Tl:ipito, Mark Eskey, Charles
INOIVIDUAL NET
by Dave Kerns on a run for the Devils, who now trail the
YAflDS RUSHING
Adkins and Ray Strlckmaker.
· (Gallipolisl.
extras. ·
·
Athenians 17-~2 in the overall
Piayer- Pos. TCB YG Avg. ·
1\thens regained possession serie; between the two schools. Berri.;fge, LH
10 54 5.4
.With ~ : 17leftin the·period,.then Athens has won eight of the last Walter. R·H
3 12 4.0
14 35 ·. 2.5
drove 71 yards in 14 plays. The II from GAHS, a bitter pill for . Sheels. FB
Fisher: FB
1 1 1.0
Bulldogs made it
on the · Blue Devil fans to swallow.
Niday. QB
8 ·3 -.4
first play of the flral period, a:
TOTALS
36 W 2.7
. tAih~n&gt;}
four-yard pass from Don
Big difference Friday was
Player'-Pos.
TCB YG Avg.
Skinner tb end .:\lex Topping. Athens' new quarterback, Don Topping, E
I 11 11.0
Champlin ran the extras. With Skinner, 170-pound junior Champlin, LH
8 41 5.1
9 42 4.6
II :57 remaining, Athens led 28- making · his wero~ld varsity . B. Hawk, RH
ood.
FB
1
7 61 3.5
W
14.
start. Skinner, a smooth ball Skir\ner.
By .
QB
1 -1 -1
Final Athens touchdown handler, had all the protection Poston, HB
I ·2 ·2
TERRY
came with six seconds in the world (although he didn't TOTALS
37 152 4.1
INDIVIDUAL
PASSING
remaining when DOug Ellwood need it that much becabse of
JOHNSON
(Gallipolis}
intercepted a Mi~e Berridge his quickness) hit 10 of 14 PLAYER
C-A I YG TD
·Certainly, lhe conaerial and returned It 39 yards aerials for 100 yards and one Niday ·
4- 7 o 59 1
Berridge
0- 3 I' 0 0
venllonal home out·
.:.
lolals
4·10 1 · 59 1· numbers the mobile ~me
.
.
('Athens)
by a great percentage, but
PLAYER .
C-A I YG TD
there Is one big advantage
Skinner
10.14" 0 100 f
to owning a mobile home it
TOTALS
10-14 0 100 1
Is not llm iled lo any cerlaln
TEAM STATISTICS
j)oundary line. You have a
Departmenl
G A
source of new living ad Firsl Downs '
10 12
venlure, acquiring . mahy
Yard&gt; Rushing
129 t56
Greg Spence put IHS on the
In the third stanza, Terry Lo&gt;l Ru&gt;hing
30
4
new friends, a change of
W 152
board wlth,an 8-yard run in the Mowery tallied from the one, Net Rushing
scenery whenever you
Passes
Allempted
to· 14
first. Rick Massie kicked the and Massie's kick made it 31-0.
de&gt;lre and the whole
Passes Complel~d
4 10
counlry can be your back
extra point. Bruce Carter
Mark Fairchild tallied from Inlercepled By
0 1
yard . .
hauled in a 51-yard pass from the one in the fourti1 and Bob Yards Passing
59 100
Wherever you go, you
158 252
Massie, and Massie ·split the Mabry from the three to Tolal Yards
can always be , sure thai
Return
Y
ards
98
91
uprights to make ii 1'4-0. complere .the onslaught.
your mobile 'home Is as
Plays
46 51
Ironton tallied again In the first
1
2
modern and slyllsh as the
Friday, Ironton plays at Fumbl es
1 1
most elegant residehtial
period when Chris Johnson Gallipolis; Wellston takes on Los I Fumbles
Penallles
1·5
3-35
home.
hulled over from the one. Again arch rival Jackson at Wellston.
Recovered Enemy Fumble&gt;
Gel atl lhe Information
Massie's kick was true.
- GAHS: Niberl. Athens:
By Quarters :
on
lhe · beautiful , · sturdy,
Slrickmaker. Pun!&gt; - GAHS :
In the second period, MljSSie Ironton
21 3 7 12-i3 W
and
stylish new mobile
aller, 3-85. Athens: Green, 3booted a 33-yard field goal.
Wel.lston
0 0 0 0- 0. 83.
home&gt;. and see !hem.
just picture&gt; or de&gt;crlpSCORt NG - GAHS : Sheets,
1-ya rd run, 4:36, first, pass
tlon&gt; and fancy word&gt;, bul
fai l; Grymes, 46.yard pass
take a personal lour
fr om Niday, 5 : 36 second ,
lhrough lhls pre-buill,
Waller. pass from Niday .
relocatable dream home
Athens: Wood, 1-yard run .
and
discover first hand, the
9:53, second, kick fail ; Wood, J.
wonders
of modern mobile
yard run , 1:05 second,
home living. "
Charr1plin, run ; Wood. 2•yard

GAHS stats

*H

.

.

crushWHS

Logan hands JHS
3rd loss in row

JACKsoN - Visiting Logan
handed Jackson a 6-2 setback
here Friday nigh\. It was the
lronmen's third straight
Southeastern League set!Jack.
JackSQn is now 3-4 on the
year, and 2-3 In conference
play. Logan is 3-3-1 overall, and
Z.Z.l in league action.
QB Jim Kemper's three-yard
plunge with 4:59left In the first
period proved to be the winnlilg
score.
Jackson scored a safety with
I:30 left In the p;ame to avoid a

shutout:
For ·the Chiefs, Ken
Culbertson was the big gun
with 103 yards in 19 trips.
Kenny Valentine had 140 yards
in 24 trips for the Irorunen.
Jackson had 11 first downs,
Logan 8. Total yards favored
Jackson, 260-1&amp;1. .
Logan will host Waverly
Friday. Jackson is at Wellston.
By Quarters:
Logan
GOO~
Jackson
OOP2-2

run, 8: 32 third , run fall;
Topping, 4-yard pass from
11 : 57
fourth ,
Skin ner ,

Champlln: run ; D. Ellwood. 39.

y.:lrd pass inte rception, : 06,
fourth, Green, kick .
'
By Quarters:
GAHS
6 8 0 Q-14
Athens
0 14 6 15-35

OFFICIALS - Bob Overly,
John Roan, Sam Wood, Ed
Pickard, Chilllcolhe Chapter.
NEXT GAHS GAME - Ocl.
27. Ir onton, home.

Re·int-:ocJucing the
1972 pnce: ·.,.i:'
4
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Wilh the price of our new Beetle still under
$2,000, • 1he Volkswagen Beetle is a bigger
buy than ever beiore.
More warranty. for inslance, than you gel
wilh any other small car. Twice more, 24
monlhs or 24,000 miles.• •
More attention to specific deloiis 1hon ever
(and !hat's quile a loll . More than 1,000 inspecters meliculously scrulinizing more than
5,000 parts. Some two or three limes. For
us, it's not enough to gel il righl. we wanl it
perfect.
Volkswagen also has the mosl advanced .

oulomolive serv ice syslem in ihe world. A
brand new compuler is. or soon will be, waiting in our service area . We simply plug it in
to your VW. and i1. checks, vio sens.ors and
probes, Vila I service paris and spells OUI the
resulls in plain English . That's service.
Maybe all of Ihis expl_oins .why VW owners_ 1 . SEO standings
have galien mare resole dollars after ihree
ALL GAMES
or four yeqrs than the owners ·of any other
TEAM
W L T P .OP
lroniOfl
5 2 0 139 33
comporoble cor.I
.
Meigs
5 2 0 1..0 98
Obviously, il's not only ihe price oiihe '73
Alhens
4 3 0 1«&gt; 83
Logan
3 3 l 8J 90·
Beetle 1ho1 rem inds you of the good old days.
JaCkson
3 4 0 146 106
It's a lso ihe quality.
. bOIIIpolls
2 4 t S.. 107
Waverly
1 6 o 97 213
, F.w thing• in Iff. wort&lt; a• _. 111 a Volkswagen.
wellslon
0 7 0 6 252
SEO-'L ONLY

,.!973 Volklwag1n Sedan HI SIJggeued r'eloli price, P.O E. loc alto~e~ ond orher deal~r charges, If ar1y, addilionoL ·
·
..· If an owner maintainS and utrvke&amp; hh '&lt;'ehlde In occardonce with the ".o I"~'wogen morntenonc::e
sc h11du1e ony 1a~ ,ory
port lound to be defectlve~ in material or workmanship within 2-4 months or 2A,OO() m\les, whiche '&lt;'tH come~s (,,,, lelllcept
I\Orll'lol w•or ond teor and Hnvico items\ will be repaired OJ replac.ed by any U.S. or ConadiOI\ Voliswogen Dealer.
And this will be done free ol chorge . See your dealer lor de roils.
fSourn· lf69 monulacturers' auggested retail flfkel ond 1972 ov~Hage useri ca r lot retort t:Hrcu as quoted In NADA
Olkial
Cor G.utda, Ea1 t.atn...fd., J11.n.e. 121;
~.'lo1hw9Qtn of Amarjco,~

i.J..d

· ·

,.

~y

12 Noonl119 P.M.
.
Tue&gt;., Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. lo S.P.M,
Thur.l A.M. to f P.M.-Sat. 8 ~. M.lo 12 Noon

lronlon

Athens
MeigS.

Log•n
Gallipolis

Jackson

Waverly

W L T P OP

5 0 o 132 14
.4 1 0 121 · 35
3 2 0 101 16

2 2 1 55 21
2 2 I 64 63 ,
2 l.. 0_ ....90 14

1 4 0 78 1.11
6119

:E!:~~G~~:~t1:·

WATTS VOLKSWAGEN·, INC.
1'5 Up1J4!r River Rd. (C»&gt;Io Rt. 7), Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (6141 446·f800
·
Service-Parts-Office

TEAM

Waverly 29 Melis 2S
Ironton Q Wellslan o
LG&amp;:n • J1d&lt;1011 2

•

lront!in~t'&amp;.":r~us

Athenl 11 Mtlg'
W~verfy at lll!lllll
.leek son It Wtlltton

Hocking broke the course
record at Evans Field that he
set just six days,earlier at the
'Rio Grande Invitational.
Dunfee ran the course in
10:04, six seconds better than
the
previous
record.
Chesapeake's Gary Sheets was
second and he'll advance to the
District on his performance.
Other runners who qualified
for. the District on October 28th
'at C~J'umbus were: Ron
Robinson and Don Kauffing of
Peoples, Terry Moore and
Mark Tolley of North Adams,
Dave Smith and Bob Henry of
Lynchburg Clay, Mike Lacy of
West Union and Lee Lane of
Frankfort Adena.
Wheelersburg edged Ironton
for the class "AA" championship by a margin of JG.37,

Sunday Dinner
At Rio Grande ·
COllege Cafeteria

· NBA Standings
By Uni1ed Pre» lnlernalional
.Eastern Conference .
ill
•

• -I

poinls was stopped sho~t.
stole the ball

Friday's box
•
Jd

i'

A11an1ic· Division .,~ • Cincinnati
w. I. pet. g.b . . Rose II

Bps ion
New York
Bullalo

Travel Trailers.

0 1.000
4 I .800 I
1 3 .400 3
5

M
2b
organ
Tola n cf
Bench c

Ph ila delphia
0 4 .000 41!2 Perez l b
Central Division
Menk e Jb
w. I. pet . g .b. Geronimo rf

HOME
SALES
2110 Eulern Avenue

Houslon
Balli more

Galllpolll, Ohio 45431
PHONE .61_4-446-359

3 1 .750
3 2 .600

Chaney •s
I!' . Hague ph
'
~ ~ :~~ ~'h Concepcion ss
•
McGiolhlin p

~~~~:~::nd

Western Conference

Borbon p

Midwest Division
· w. I. pet.

Milwaukee
KC-Omaha
Chicago
Oelroi l

Phoenix
GoldenStale
Los Angeles
Seattle

·

Uhlaender ph

g.b. Hail p
Carr oll p
1 2 .333 1V2 Grimsley p
1 2 .333 1'/2 Totals
I 2 .333 1'12 Oakland

a I .750

Campanerisss

I. pet. g.b. Al ou rf
2 1 .667
Rudi if
2 1 .667
Eps lein1b
3 2 .600
Hegan lb
2 2 .500 'h Sando 3b

W.

Portland
1 3 .250
Friday's Results

1112

New York 92 Cleveland 89

Houston 120 Allan fa 108

Boslon 126 Buffalo 118
Milwaukee 109 Oetrolt 86
Golden Sf. lOt Seattle 92
Los Ang 126 Porfland 104
IO!ll ygamesscheduled)
WILL MISS GAME
BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
Baltimore Colts announced
Friday tpat halfback Tom
Matte will miss this Sunday's
game with tiie New York Jets
because of a recurring problem
with bleeding ulcers.
Matte, a 12-year veteran,
was adl!litted to Union
Memorial Hospital for tests
Friday morning. The same
dilemma sidelined him In 1970,
and he has been hampered by a
variety of injuries over the past
two yeara.
' The Colts announced tbat
Don McCauley will start in
Matte's place against the Jets.

:5
•....
.;I

I

i5

-

I!
a=

.

Four Falcons
. honored by BG

~Try this really durable mediuiJI

Wellston. The. win markild the defense lo the test the first time
first tinie. the Tigers have won · they had the bali, ronuuing it

Pro standings

Moon,
Concord, FIHiwood &amp;

Enjoy Your

By KEITH WISECUP
WAVERLY
John

.

Pacific Division

Both teams earned a spot in the
District at Ohio University in
Athens at the District finals on·
October 28th. Warren Local
finished a distant third with 100
points. 'Rock Hill was fourth
with a 103 score, then It was
Sheridan, Greenfield McClain
and the Fairland Dragons.
Cecil Morrison of Ironton
finished . first . Morrison's
winning time was 10:24. ·
Bernard Tilley of Wheelersburg came in second. Tilley's
time was 10:30.
Individual runners who
qualified for the District were :
.Mike Waugh and Joe Van
Sickle- of Sheridan, Bob
Reynoldsand Sam Edgell of
Warren Local, and Randy
Delawider and Mark Salyers of
Rock Hill.

I

.I

- ~~Shoema kci';-Waver-1:14;-bulleJ,..-..,i~their home~field
like :passer,· put on a star- when they had an undefeated lwo by passing. · Mei~s· John Wail£rs on the
49 where
sludded one-man show here powerhouse .
!,chew, who was outstandi ng the Marauders took over. The
The hear! breaking Joss for · both offensively and defen. drive stalled as the Marauders,
Frida)' night, hitting 13 of 19
passes for 193 yards and lhree · the obviously overconfident sively, recovered a Shoemaker on the Tiger '1:/, had Maloy
touchdowns in leading the Mara ud ers ruined their fumble on the Meigs seven to intercept a Vaughan aerial.
previously winless Tigers to a chances for a league ti tle end that threat.
Maloy returned it 20 yards.. to
29-25 victory over the Meigs althoug h
they
still
It was good ole' power the :;o yard line.
RACINE - Tile Southern ·Tornadoes assured Mm·a..uders. It ranked easily mathematically can tie lor the straight up the middle that
On the first play; Shoemaker
~emse~ves of_their first Southern Valley Conference the biggest upset or the South: crown, but-this would appear earned Meigs its first score, · hilMaloy for 22 yards to the28.
tJ~Ie Fhday.hight at Racine with a convincing 28-12 eastern Ohio Athletic League all but impossible.
· going 9-\ ya rds in II straigh\ ·Alter ·a first down gained · on
wm ov~r the Symmes Valley Vikings.
this year.
' The Tigers are now 1-6 running plays, the longest a 23- · three running plays and a hallAller Meigs had scored with overall and l·l in league play . yard sprint by Faulk. Weber the distance-to-the-goal
. Seruor fullback -Nick Ihle was again the
·
1:58
remai ning in the fourth while Meigs is 5-2 overall and 3- took it in from the three with penally against Meigs,
dominant figure ·for the Tornadoes as he scored
~ : 03 remaining in ' tbe first Shoemaker lobbed a high pass
. three touchdOW'lS and two extra points while run· quarter to take the lead 25-22, 2 in loop competition.
Shoemaker hi1 on five of seven
Bill Maloy bad his hands full quarter. Alter McKinney into the end zone right in the
ning for 171 yards. The 1751b., Ihle also led Southern aerials, including a 13-yard with a football nearly all night kicked ttie extra, everything · middle of three Marauder
on defense with nine tackles. ·
·
scoring strike to flanker Mike as he latched onto seven of . looked like the game would go defenders. The ball was batted
The Tornadoes are now 5-1·1
Migyanko with only 30 seconds Shoemaker's tosses for 119 as expected, a Meigs rout.
in U1e air by a Meigs defender,
.
overall aqd .3-0-1 In SVAC play for Symmes Valley's second left in the game. The play came yards and one touchdown.
The Tigers tpen drove to the and came down in hands of Joe
while Coach John Patton's score in the four th qu~rter on Waverly fourlh and seven. Maloy also intercepted a Meigs Meigs 37 where they were held Acord with 28 seconds left in
Vikings drop to 1-6 overall and making it 20-12.
The
lead
see-sawed pass.
on downs.
the half. Waverly lii\ed up to
1-3 in league play. Southern has
0 v e r s h a d owed . by
The Ma1·auders also stalled. kick for the extra point, but
!hie's 10 yard run to paydirl t hroughout. Meigs scored first
only h&amp;pless Southwestern yet in the fourth quarter iced the and· went ahead 7-0, Waverly Shoemaker's and Maloy 's Randy Chafin lined up in punt Acord faked it and M Maloy
to play on·its league 'schedule. Southern win. Mike Nease ran came back to make it 7-6, the great play was that of Meigs' · formation, but the snap from wide open in the end zone to
Avictory over the Highlanders in the extras to bring the final Marauders ·scored to make it running backs, fullback Dallas ce nter by Weber got lo Chafin give Waverly a ll-13 halftime
a week from · Friday would counl 'to 28-12.
.13-6, and the Tigers rallied in . Weber, halfback Chuck Faulk, on one bounce, forcing him to 'edge.
bring the championship to
SECOND HALF
Milch Nease was also great the closing seconds of the q~arterbac~ Andy Vaughan run with the ball. He was
Racine for the first time.
The Marauders were stopped
for Coach Bill Jewell's Tor- second quarter to go ahead 14- arid halfback Mick As h. Weber thrown for a 16-yard loss with
The Vikings put up sur- nadoes as he wentfor 110 yards •13. Meigs made it 19-ll before ' scored two touchdowns and ran the Tigers taking over on the cold on their fir.st series and
prising strength as Southern and made nine tackles on the Tigers took the lead again for 156 yards. Vaughan also Meigs 23 .
Chafi n pun red 39 yards to the
had only a 20-12 lead early in defense .. Other Tornadoes at 22·19.
scored two six-pointers and ran
Two plays later, Shoemaker Tiger 20. Waverly drove to the
the foirrth quarter. A stiff pointed oul for' fine defensive
Extra points were the dif· for 105 yards, Faulk hit the hit Maloy on the dead run be· Meigs l6 before Shoemaker
Southern defense and anotlier play were Jay Hill, nine ference in the game as Meigs holes for 127 yards, and Ash tween two Meigs defenders in pun led t5 yards (o the
•six·poinrer in tbe final period tackles, Ron Hill Greg Mid- scored only on Lou McKinney's gained 35 yards in six carries the end zone from the Meigs 23. Marauder two-foot line.
iced the win.
Weber broke up the middle
dleswart, and Tim Maurer, all kick after their first six-pointer plus deliveri ng a great The extra point attempt was
'
!hie opened th~ Tornado six tackles each', ' and Ron for th~i r only poin\s after. blocking job.
blocked and with 9:57lefl in the to the Meigs 10 on the first
scoring with a 20 yard ruri in Johnson with five tackles.
Waverly made good for five
Altogether, Meigs had 412 first half, Meigs still led 7-6.
play. Again the same play
the first quarwr. Sophomore
Not to be denied however, and all 11 Tiger defendets
Syimhes .Valley's Bill Webb em·• points including two two- yards rushing, a new
sensation Mitch Nease ram- led the. Viking defense with pointers and one single-point Marauder
record . The Vaughan hi tend Bill Chaney on wavcdgood·bye'\o Weberfor
bled 10 yards in the second ·nine tackles and four assists conversion.
p1·evious high was 338 against an 18 yard pass, later hit a 90 yard touchdown run, the
period for another score with while Ed Berry and Rod
The win is oniy the second in Coal Grove in 1970. The 25 Melvin Cremeans for 11 yards, longest in Meigs history. A
!hie adding the conversion to Bennett were also cited far .SEOAL play since the Tigers points scored in a losing effort then outran two Waverly Vaughan to Cremeans pass
give Southern a 14-0 lead at the great defensive work. •
joined the league in 1970. The js also a Meigs record.
defenders 17 yards for Meigs' for the extras was knocked
hall.
other
was
a
36-3l
win
over
HOW
IT
WENT
second
score with 5 : ~1 left. down and with 1:08leflln lbe
Southern· travels to Glousrer
1
.•
Strong-armed
quarterliack
The Tigers put the Meigs Faulk's attempt for the extra third period, Mella led Jt-U.
next Friday for a non-league Wellston two years hack at
1 ••
Jamie Lafon brought ~the game while Symmes Valley
•
Vikings back in the third goes to Kyger Creek to battle
quarter when he fired a 70 yard the Bobcats.
pass to end Dave Dunfee for six S. Valley
0 0 6 6-12
points, Dunfee caught seven Southern
6868-28
passes for 175 yards on the Dept.
South SM
night, Lafon hit on 10 o( 24 First Downs
16
10
passes for around 200 yards. Yards Rush,
304
99
!hie scored his second touch- Yards Pass.
15
200
down in the third period on a T. Yards
319
299
five yard run to give Southern a Fumbles
2
0
20.0 advantage.
Lost
2
0
Terry Pine went eight yards Passes Comp-Att.
2-6·1 10·24·1

Lancers, Pirates capJure
A, AA cross country titles
RIO GRANDE - The class
11
A'' and "AA" sOutheastern
Cross Country Sectional Meet
was held Friday afternoon at
Rio Grande College. Federal
Hocking w~s first In class "A"
and Wheelersburg won the
class "AA" portion of the meet.
The top three teams in class
"A" will advance to the
· District finals.
Federal Hocking finished
first with a score"of 58 points,
Southeastern · of Ross County
was second with 79 points and
Bloom Soutl. Webster placed
third with a lJl score. Peoples
High School Clll!le In fourth
followed by West Union ;
Lynchburg Clay, Manchester,
Fr~nkfort Adena and White
Oaks.
Ron Dunfee of Federal

"''

!•

I

ab r h Iii
5 I 3 2
3

2

oo

4 0 2 2
4 0 0 0

4 o 1 o
3 1 1 1
4 1 1 0

1ooo
1ooo
2 0 o o
I 0 0 o

' '

155-pound sophomore tailback, races for yardage against
visiting Symmes Valley during Friday night's 28-12 Tornado

I

gloss;finish tot all your exterior 111
trim. It flows on easily and · rsmoothly. Dries quickly. Easy
soap and wateJ-clean~up.

OPEN
12:00 THRU 1130 P.M..

AND
4•30 P.M. TO 5:30P.M. ·

-

manatueturer' who - ieWn
letters In awln•umc IIIII alllf

victory. Viking on right (62) Is Bill McCarty,
sophomore linebacker. (Leo HUJ photo).

1~

ooo o
1 o o 0
or oo

0
1
34
ab

0
0
S
r

0 0
0 0
8 5
h bi

5 0 0 0

Miller tops EHS 21-14

0 0
0 o
HEMLOCK
The
2 10 0
Miller
Falcons
wiped
out
an
11-3
1 o1 o
3 1 1 0 Eastern Eagle lead in the
Hendri ck cf
2 1 1 0 second quarter and went on to
Mi ncher ph
o o 0 0
Mangual c1
1 o d 0 defeat the Meigs countians, 21Tenace c
2 1 1 3 1~ , at Miller Friday night in a
Odom pr
0 0 0 0 non-league game.
Green 1b
1 oo0
Marquez ph .
1 0 1 1 The 21 points scored by the
Lewis pr
o o o o Falcons now l-3 overall, is the
Kubiak"2b
2 0 1 0 most ever · against a Roger '
Hunler p
2 0 0 0 Kir khart-coached Eastern
Fingers p
0 0 0 0
Hamil.t on p
0 0 0 0 learn. Kirkhart is now in his
Duncan ph
1 0 1 0 second year at Easrern.
Totals
,
30 4 7 4
The Eagles now have lost all
Cincinnati
100 110,011-S
Oakland
030 100 000--4 three of their non-leag ue
E- Aiou, Sando. DP- Cincin - games and have 3-1 overall
nali 1, Oakland I. LOB- mark. They are 3-1 in the
Cinc innati 6, Oakland 6.
2B- Perez. HRs- ROse, Ten - Southern Vall ey Athletic
ace, Menke. SB- Tolan 2, Conference.
Morgan. 5- M enke, Hendrick,
Miller drew first blood in the
Fingers.
first quarter wpcn quarterback
ip h r er bb so
McGiolhlin
3
2 4 4 2 3 Jeff Sicilian booted a 16 yard
Bo rbon
1
1 0 0 I 0 fie ld goal.
Hall
2 0 O· '0 0 I
Carroll
12-33000 1 The Eagles ·came roa ring
GrimsleyW
1 1-3 1 0 0 I 0 back laler in the same period
Hun ler
4 2·3 5 3 3 2 2 when halfback Randy Boring
Fingers L
3 2·3 3 2 2 1 4 scored the fi rst of his two
Hamiil!lfl
2-3 0 0 0 0 0
McGiolhlin pilched lo" one touchdowns on a one yard run .
bat ler in fourth .
Husky fullback AJa'n Duvall
·s.ve - Hamilton. HBP - by rammed in lhe extras to give
, McGlothlin (Rudi) .
WP- Fingers. T- 2:26. A- the Eagles their only lead of
the night, 8-3.
49,410.
4...0
3 0

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

Coach Jim Cook's Falcons
Individually, Duvall led all
ripped across two six-poinrers • Eastern bali carriers with 58
in lhe second quarte r, the first ya rds in 13 carries while fresh·
a two yard run by Carl McFann man Don~ie Eichin~er g~ined
and the second a nine yard pass 52 yards m]G carr1es. Hmkle
from Sicilian to end Dave led Miller w1th 68 yards m eight
carries while McFann had 61
Starner.
Miller !t-ed the win in the yards in 13 carries and Starner
thirct"period with another 54 yardsln 15 carries.
Next week, the Eagles will
score, a 22 yard run by Roger
try
toreach the .500 mark when
Hinkle. '
Boring scored the Eagles' they play the Southweslern
second touchdown in the fourth Highlanders in a SVAC tilt.
quarter on a four yard run. Miller travels to NelsonvilleBolh of Easrern's touchdowns York to batUe the powerful
were set up by Miller penalties, Buckeyes.
By Quarters:
the first a 15 yard roughing the
Eastern
a. oo6-H
kicker and the second a pass
Miller
3 12 6 0-21
ini.erference 'call.

remaining. Vaughan
tried a quarterback

was
on his own 28 and fumbled
. where Ste"e Oyer recovered
for th(:· 1'igers. After
Shoemaker hit Acord for 14
yards to the 19, the Tigers
•ground a first down to the two,
Walters cracked the middle for
no gain, Anderson co~ld gain
only a yard in two carries, and
on .fourth down, Walrers made
it into the end zone by inches.
Shoemaker hit, you guessed it,
Maloy for the extras to make it
22-19, Waverly . This was the
final play of the. third period.
Coac h Charles Chancey's
steamed up Marauders drove
down the field to the Waverly
12 on seven running plays that
started from their own 'll.
Terry Whitla tch, 138 lb .
sophomore, coming off a very
cold bench for the shaken up
Faulk; carried the ball to ·the
seven but a bone-crushing
tackle caused a fumble that
Waverly recovered .
A few plays later, however,
the league's top interceptor ,
Cremeans, gobbled up a
Shoemaker aerial at his own
~- Meigs marched on the
ground ten straight plays with
Vaughan sneaking it over from
the one with only , 1:58

Acord ,

4-43,

and

none. Waverly, Dailey. 1·0. ~ .

INTERCEPTION o
RETURNS : Meigs, Cremeans,
1·0. .Waverly, Maloy, t-20 ..
INDIVIDUAL , SCORING:
Meigs, Vaughan, HD's (12
Dept.
E M points); Weber, 2 TD's, (12
, and McKinney. 1 EP,
.First Downs
13 . 18 polnb)
(1 polnl) .
Total Yards
176 261
Waverly, Maloy. 1 TO, 4
185 EP's, 110 points); Acord,
Yards Rush.
1~2
76 Walters, and Mlgyanko, ali 1
Yards Pass.
2l
TD, (ali 6 polnls), and Dalley, 1
Passes Comp-AtJ..Jnt.
EP, (1 polnl) .
3-17·2 MI-l
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
7 6 6 6,-25
1-1
1·1
Fumbles Lost
Waverly
0 14 8 7- 29
3-35 7-65
'Penalties
2-27.0 2-11.0
Punts

By BILL

NElSON

If you fail to have your ·new car
checked at interva·ls spelled out by the
manufacturer, it can resu it in cancellation of your warranty.
The average car weighs almost two
tons and has 15,000 parts.
Thanks to the popularity of camper
trailers, the old-fashioned tent is
becoming a rate sight on camp· ..
grounds.

and 4 orders
of frlfl'h tries.

onlY

The only thing that's old-fashioned
about our car repair service ,is our
personalized concern for our .·
customers at Smith Nelson Motors,
Inc.

'

EveRY SundaY
(ALl- DAY)

Otlfn ~Ev~Dill 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till' s p.m.'
Service on ·Sat. Till 12 noo.n.

GALLIPOLIS
•

UpPIF lt. 7 Kaflauga, Ohio

SMilH NELSON
MOroRS,
Pomioc
' Iuick
'·, PH~ 992-2174 ·
· ,MAJN ST•.POMEROY, oHIO~
I

dariJialbe ...

1
'
•
1
~~._~~-1~~~--------------~--------~~~~----~--_1~~_:--------~~L---~----_.--~--------~~~L_:_______________~----------~~~--.J~----~~_j~--~----------~------------~------~----~----------~----------------------------~~~--~---~------------~~---~·-I

[

Mlgyanko. 2-31.
PUNTING: Meigs, Chafin, t·
J?. Waverly, Shoemaker, 2·88.
KICKOFF RETURNS :
Meigs. Faulk, 2-59; Couch, 1·20,
and Pearch, I· t7. Waverly •
Wells, 2-47 ; Wallers, 2-22, and
Rhodes, 1·5.
·
PUNT RETURNS: Meigs,

STEER THIS WAY

j,

'·

,.
!. ,_

'\

M. W.

Firs! Downs
· t9 18
by rushing
17 7
by posslng .
2 11
by penally
o o
Yards Rushing
412 t02
Yards PaS&gt;Ing
28 193
Tolal Yards
4.W 295
Pass Attempls
8 19
Pass Compte!ions
3 13
Passes had lnlorcepled I
1
Fumbles
3 J
Fumbles Lost
2 2
Punling
1-39. 2-88,
.
39 .0 44.0
Penalties
5-29 1-S
Plays From Scrimmage
59 .. 64
tNOIVIDUAL RUSHING
Mtlg&gt;
TC YG Avg.
Weber
15 156 t0.4
Faulk
19 127 6.7
Vaughan
9 10l 11.7
~h .
6 35 5.9
Whltlalch
1 5 5.0
Chafin
1 -16 -16.0
TOTALS
51 412 1.4
Weverly
TC YG Avg.
Walters
19 60 M
Anderson
16 36 2.3
Shoemaker
7 6 0.9
Mlgyonko
I 0 0,0
TOTALS
43 103 ~.4
INDIVIDUAL PASSING:
Meigs, Vaughan, 3-8; ~8 ¥Dreis,
no TO's. Shoemaker, 1J.19, 193
yards, 3 TD's.
RECEIVING ! Meigs,
ChaneyT 1·18; Cremeans, 1·11,
Foulk 1-(-1). Waverly, Maloy,

I

I

..

To test your headlights, flash
up
and down on your garage door, or on a
wall. Check your dim lights as well as
your upper and lower beams.
Using the right grade (octane number) of gasoline will help you get more
miles per gallon.

family Pac:k
Includes these •
4 sandwiChes •

long, but .was stopped short.
Mei~ led 25·22 and left it up to .
their defense.
Shoemaker then proceeded
tQ thread the needle five times
out of seven for 59 yards in the
next 60 seconds. The final
U1row came with 30 seconds
left to Migyanko who was .wide
open on the far sidelines. The
· pass was perfect. Jed. Dailey
booted the extra to make It :!9·
25. Waverly 's homecoming
crowd was going wild.
Meigs made another atrempt
to score, however, as Vaugll(ln
rolled out from .his own Hand
refused to go down until he
g~ined 28 ya rds to the.Waverly
31 with five seconds left. He
faded ba.ck to pass, but was
knocked ctown at the line or
ss:-dmmage trying to run··oriee
more . The game ended on this
play.
. Next week, the Marauders
'take on the Athens Bulldogs .at
Marauder Stadium while
Coach Tom Oyer's Tigers go to
Logan .

MEIGS-WAVERLY
GRtO STATISTICS

7·119 ;

MITCH NEASE ON THE GO - Southern's Mitch Nease,

BOWLING GREEN Ohio
(UP!)- Mike Weger, a defensive bact with the Deii'Oit
· HFqr Tllat , _. , &amp; "Ptaleuionol
Uoila and . three other
Touch,"
.
prominent Bowling Green
FEATURING
State University graduates,
liave been aelei:ted for in'
• 24 New AMF lanes
ductlon Into uie .Chool'a Ath- !
e SIIICUar and
.Jetic Hall ·of Flllllll, it waa an.nounc:.d Sltunlay.
The other three inducleellnclude ' Ron . Blacklel!ge,
~iaHzlng
IAiltant footbaU CCIICI1 at the
Columbia
Unlvenlty of aadnnaU, who
Ball$.
waa an all confereDce football'
and butelballllar ln.•~·!!"~£.-.--..,...
1HO; .Joe Sleaferth,
PIIOIIE
· buPiball ' CCIICI1 at .uran •
•• ' W
IATBTO:
Centr1J-Hower Hlgb School
CIIUIOIIIOUPS, P.t.mu.
...3362
waa a four year bubtblll
SlUIIIH1S. ,
letterman In 1be IMt' IIIII Don
Kepler, a Florida golf club
"AU Neill AMF Equipment"

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, captures ·
•
28-12 Wln

touchdown.

and

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SO.uthern

jf

to regain the lead. A · fur six
from ·
to

Tlmea-lleatlnel. Sunday, Oct. Z2, 11172

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~·riday

night by pulling away in
the seconq half for a eonvincing 35-U triumph over the
BlUe Devils in a Southeastern
Ohio League football contest.
The fired-up Gallians surprised Coach Gerald Inbody's
visiting Bulldogs by taking IHl
ahd 14.0 leads in the first hall,
but the Athenians' diversified
attack proved too much for the
Gallij)olitans during the final
half of play.
GAHSmarched 74 yards in 1\'
,'plays after receiving the
opening kickoff. Fullback Kev
Sheets smashed over from the
ooe with 4:36left to give GAHS
a IHl advaniage', QB Jim
Niday's pass to Rick Grymes
for. the extras was thrown outof-bounds.
Ath¢ns flilled to gain on its
BERRIDGE PlCKS UP FIRST DOWN ..:.. GAHS tailback Mike Berridge (14) plcke4 up
first series: Ste've ·Green
four yards and a Blue Devil first down on this play midway in the first period of Friday's
punted to the GAHS four as the
GAJIS..Athens game. Maklilg the stop oil the Athens 13 is Bulldog safety Tol!d Romig. Athens
period ended.
flilished strong to wlil, as:\4.
Ray' Strickmaker recovered
a GAHS fumble on the Blue
Devil six on the second play of
the seeond period. Veteran
senior fullback Don Wood got
three, two and then one and it
Staubach has been throwing
DALLAS (UP!) - Roger championship last year, has
was tied, .6-6, with 9:53 left in
Staubach, beating the medic's been out or action since he well in praclite all week, but the half.
timetable just as he predicred ducked his head and rammed Coach' Tom Landry said he did , .GAHS marched 77 yards in
. he would, was activared by the into the Los Angeles Rams' not expebt Staubach to . play
.
Dallas Cowboys Saturday as Marlin McKeever . on a against the 'Skins except in an
backup insurance to quar· scramble during an exhibition emergency or if the game got
e
nne-sided
either
way
and
he
.
game
Aug
.
12.
terback Craig Morton for
He suffered a shoulder could b~ u. ~ed slricUy to work · . l~'n
today's showdown with the
Q
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separation
. that required on hiS llmmg.
Washington Reskins in the
surgery and the doctors
To make room for Staubach
,
. nation's Capital.
1
on
the
40-man
active
squad,
· ·
Staubach, whose passing and predicred he would be lost for
moved
rookie
IRONTON - Ironton all but
scrambling runs led the at least 12 weeks. Staubach Landry
linebacker
Mike
Keller
to
the
wrapped
up its se'chnd straight
' Cowboys out of the doldrums said he would make it back in
Futures List.
Southeastern Ohio League
· and into the Super Bowl eight to 10 weeks. He did.
football championship here
· Friday night by rolling over the
hapless Wellston Golden
I I
c;
Rockets 43-0.
·
It was Ironton's fifth conLANCASl'ER, S. C. (UP!)- speculation on the cause of the ryland State Coilege in 1969 and secutive Southeastern Ohio
An autopsy was ordered Satur- shooting.
sho~tly thereafter joined the League win against no setday to determine if former
Lower said that County Colts. In 1970, he was starting backs. Wellston suffered itS
Baltimore Colt cornerback Coroner Richard Khandler had cornerback for the Colts, who 12th straightSEOAL setback in
James E. "Butch" Duncan was ruled the death suicide but that won the world championship three years, and 16th in a row
overall during that period.
under the influence of drugs at he also had ordered an that year.
The Tigers of Coach Bob Lutz
the time he shot aod killed autopsy .
He was Injured at the start of
himself at the Lancaster pollee
Lower said officials had the 1971 season and was not need .only a win over Gallipolis
station.
found some ,"drug-related able to regain a starting berth. or Jackson to clinch at least a
lie for the 1972 title, and a
Police Chief Larry Lower paraphernalia" in Duncan's
victory over both would give
said Duncan, a native of car but added, "! would prefer
HORN[':TS WIN
the Lawrence Oo~ntians their
Lancaster, walked Into the not to he any more specific."
COAL GROVE - Coal
yolice stat,iQn shortly before
Duncan, 26, returned home Grove 's Hornets surprised first undisputed Utle ever. The
noon Friday, grabbed a .38 last ' m~nth ' afte r he was· South Point 2&amp;-20 for the second T.igers share&lt;! the crown In 1929
and i'n 1971.
plato! fr01;11 the holster of Lt. dropped by the New Orleans
straight year Friday night in
Russell Hinson , and shot ·Saints and the Miami Dolphins. an Ohio Valley Conference
Ironton's rugged defense
himself in the head.
Since that time he had been ga me . The Hornets and shut out an SEOAL foe for the
Lower said Duncan ''Was living with his mother, Mrs.
fourth consecutive week. IHS
Pointers both own identicall-2having some problems with Elloree Duncan.
has given up only 14 points in
·
0
season
records.
drugs," but refused further
league play, and those were to
Duncan graduated from Ma·
Waverly back on Sept. 22.
•
The Tigers pick~d up 23 first
downs, permitred three. Total
yards .favored the Tigers, 32525. Iron ton had 274 rushing and
51 "passing. Wellston had six
rushing and 19 passing. Terry
Mowery paced the Tigers with
77 yards in 13 trips.

Champs activate Staubac!t

Ti

...

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'i'ld
.
·
r
Duncan autopsy
0.

1973 Beetle:

Skinner appeared W be the
slickest AHS quarterback to
ifoi~Oiiiifiiiiiie-facea GAHS squac!Trlsevera!
in the hall made it ·J2-6. Niday mark to 4-3. GAHS dropped to bogged down (the Devils did a yea rs.'' And he'nnly a junior.
then hit John Waller for the 2·l · l overall . Inside the good job containing AHS
+++
two-point conversion
it was . SEOAL, Athens is 4-1. GAHS i&gt; runners most of th.e evening)
After a lethargic. fir~t half
H-6.
. 2-2-1 in conference play . .
,Skinner had Jitlle trouble performance, Athens came
Ten plays later, Athens
The Blue Deyils will host finding a receiver open over . back to completely domlnate
reduced it to 14-12 when Wood puwcrful Ironton Friday. til&lt; middle, alpng ihe sidelines, the game In the Second half.
blasted over from the one· to Athens will shoot for Its fourth or downfield. He hit Al~x GAHS led in every depa)'tment
climax a 71-yard drive. Les . straight victory at Meigs on TQpp_ing for gains of 24, 6, 15, 4 · following first half of play
t:;harnplin skirted left end with ·Oct, 'll.
(and a minus 9) . Skinner also ·(except the score, which was
I :05 left in ·the half and it was
hit Wood with a 16-yarder. AI 14-ll) . The .' Bulldogs hard·
H-~11 .
POST-GAME NOTES
Olson caugHt one· for 41, Les charging defense sacked Blue
Athens took the opening · Friday's . homecoming battle Champlin one for 1.1, Brent Devil backs six times for a
kickoff in the third period and was played in brisk 38 degree . Hawk one for six and Tim minus 30 yards In the final
marched 61 yards in seven temperature before Jess than Poston one for a minus 14.
three periods after GI\HS had
plays to go ahead for the first 2,000 fans. Most speciators
taken a 14-6 lead. Leading the
time. Wood smashed over from were from Gallipolis. ApBulldog assault were Mark
the two with 8:32 left, and it parently Bulldog fans sensed
' Riggs, Tim Poston, Dan
was 20-H. Wood was slopped an easy victory over the Blue
Tl:ipito, Mark Eskey, Charles
INOIVIDUAL NET
by Dave Kerns on a run for the Devils, who now trail the
YAflDS RUSHING
Adkins and Ray Strlckmaker.
· (Gallipolisl.
extras. ·
·
Athenians 17-~2 in the overall
Piayer- Pos. TCB YG Avg. ·
1\thens regained possession serie; between the two schools. Berri.;fge, LH
10 54 5.4
.With ~ : 17leftin the·period,.then Athens has won eight of the last Walter. R·H
3 12 4.0
14 35 ·. 2.5
drove 71 yards in 14 plays. The II from GAHS, a bitter pill for . Sheels. FB
Fisher: FB
1 1 1.0
Bulldogs made it
on the · Blue Devil fans to swallow.
Niday. QB
8 ·3 -.4
first play of the flral period, a:
TOTALS
36 W 2.7
. tAih~n&gt;}
four-yard pass from Don
Big difference Friday was
Player'-Pos.
TCB YG Avg.
Skinner tb end .:\lex Topping. Athens' new quarterback, Don Topping, E
I 11 11.0
Champlin ran the extras. With Skinner, 170-pound junior Champlin, LH
8 41 5.1
9 42 4.6
II :57 remaining, Athens led 28- making · his wero~ld varsity . B. Hawk, RH
ood.
FB
1
7 61 3.5
W
14.
start. Skinner, a smooth ball Skir\ner.
By .
QB
1 -1 -1
Final Athens touchdown handler, had all the protection Poston, HB
I ·2 ·2
TERRY
came with six seconds in the world (although he didn't TOTALS
37 152 4.1
INDIVIDUAL
PASSING
remaining when DOug Ellwood need it that much becabse of
JOHNSON
(Gallipolis}
intercepted a Mi~e Berridge his quickness) hit 10 of 14 PLAYER
C-A I YG TD
·Certainly, lhe conaerial and returned It 39 yards aerials for 100 yards and one Niday ·
4- 7 o 59 1
Berridge
0- 3 I' 0 0
venllonal home out·
.:.
lolals
4·10 1 · 59 1· numbers the mobile ~me
.
.
('Athens)
by a great percentage, but
PLAYER .
C-A I YG TD
there Is one big advantage
Skinner
10.14" 0 100 f
to owning a mobile home it
TOTALS
10-14 0 100 1
Is not llm iled lo any cerlaln
TEAM STATISTICS
j)oundary line. You have a
Departmenl
G A
source of new living ad Firsl Downs '
10 12
venlure, acquiring . mahy
Yard&gt; Rushing
129 t56
Greg Spence put IHS on the
In the third stanza, Terry Lo&gt;l Ru&gt;hing
30
4
new friends, a change of
W 152
board wlth,an 8-yard run in the Mowery tallied from the one, Net Rushing
scenery whenever you
Passes
Allempted
to· 14
first. Rick Massie kicked the and Massie's kick made it 31-0.
de&gt;lre and the whole
Passes Complel~d
4 10
counlry can be your back
extra point. Bruce Carter
Mark Fairchild tallied from Inlercepled By
0 1
yard . .
hauled in a 51-yard pass from the one in the fourti1 and Bob Yards Passing
59 100
Wherever you go, you
158 252
Massie, and Massie ·split the Mabry from the three to Tolal Yards
can always be , sure thai
Return
Y
ards
98
91
uprights to make ii 1'4-0. complere .the onslaught.
your mobile 'home Is as
Plays
46 51
Ironton tallied again In the first
1
2
modern and slyllsh as the
Friday, Ironton plays at Fumbl es
1 1
most elegant residehtial
period when Chris Johnson Gallipolis; Wellston takes on Los I Fumbles
Penallles
1·5
3-35
home.
hulled over from the one. Again arch rival Jackson at Wellston.
Recovered Enemy Fumble&gt;
Gel atl lhe Information
Massie's kick was true.
- GAHS: Niberl. Athens:
By Quarters :
on
lhe · beautiful , · sturdy,
Slrickmaker. Pun!&gt; - GAHS :
In the second period, MljSSie Ironton
21 3 7 12-i3 W
and
stylish new mobile
aller, 3-85. Athens: Green, 3booted a 33-yard field goal.
Wel.lston
0 0 0 0- 0. 83.
home&gt;. and see !hem.
just picture&gt; or de&gt;crlpSCORt NG - GAHS : Sheets,
1-ya rd run, 4:36, first, pass
tlon&gt; and fancy word&gt;, bul
fai l; Grymes, 46.yard pass
take a personal lour
fr om Niday, 5 : 36 second ,
lhrough lhls pre-buill,
Waller. pass from Niday .
relocatable dream home
Athens: Wood, 1-yard run .
and
discover first hand, the
9:53, second, kick fail ; Wood, J.
wonders
of modern mobile
yard run , 1:05 second,
home living. "
Charr1plin, run ; Wood. 2•yard

GAHS stats

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crushWHS

Logan hands JHS
3rd loss in row

JACKsoN - Visiting Logan
handed Jackson a 6-2 setback
here Friday nigh\. It was the
lronmen's third straight
Southeastern League set!Jack.
JackSQn is now 3-4 on the
year, and 2-3 In conference
play. Logan is 3-3-1 overall, and
Z.Z.l in league action.
QB Jim Kemper's three-yard
plunge with 4:59left In the first
period proved to be the winnlilg
score.
Jackson scored a safety with
I:30 left In the p;ame to avoid a

shutout:
For ·the Chiefs, Ken
Culbertson was the big gun
with 103 yards in 19 trips.
Kenny Valentine had 140 yards
in 24 trips for the Irorunen.
Jackson had 11 first downs,
Logan 8. Total yards favored
Jackson, 260-1&amp;1. .
Logan will host Waverly
Friday. Jackson is at Wellston.
By Quarters:
Logan
GOO~
Jackson
OOP2-2

run, 8: 32 third , run fall;
Topping, 4-yard pass from
11 : 57
fourth ,
Skin ner ,

Champlln: run ; D. Ellwood. 39.

y.:lrd pass inte rception, : 06,
fourth, Green, kick .
'
By Quarters:
GAHS
6 8 0 Q-14
Athens
0 14 6 15-35

OFFICIALS - Bob Overly,
John Roan, Sam Wood, Ed
Pickard, Chilllcolhe Chapter.
NEXT GAHS GAME - Ocl.
27. Ir onton, home.

Re·int-:ocJucing the
1972 pnce: ·.,.i:'
4
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Wilh the price of our new Beetle still under
$2,000, • 1he Volkswagen Beetle is a bigger
buy than ever beiore.
More warranty. for inslance, than you gel
wilh any other small car. Twice more, 24
monlhs or 24,000 miles.• •
More attention to specific deloiis 1hon ever
(and !hat's quile a loll . More than 1,000 inspecters meliculously scrulinizing more than
5,000 parts. Some two or three limes. For
us, it's not enough to gel il righl. we wanl it
perfect.
Volkswagen also has the mosl advanced .

oulomolive serv ice syslem in ihe world. A
brand new compuler is. or soon will be, waiting in our service area . We simply plug it in
to your VW. and i1. checks, vio sens.ors and
probes, Vila I service paris and spells OUI the
resulls in plain English . That's service.
Maybe all of Ihis expl_oins .why VW owners_ 1 . SEO standings
have galien mare resole dollars after ihree
ALL GAMES
or four yeqrs than the owners ·of any other
TEAM
W L T P .OP
lroniOfl
5 2 0 139 33
comporoble cor.I
.
Meigs
5 2 0 1..0 98
Obviously, il's not only ihe price oiihe '73
Alhens
4 3 0 1«&gt; 83
Logan
3 3 l 8J 90·
Beetle 1ho1 rem inds you of the good old days.
JaCkson
3 4 0 146 106
It's a lso ihe quality.
. bOIIIpolls
2 4 t S.. 107
Waverly
1 6 o 97 213
, F.w thing• in Iff. wort&lt; a• _. 111 a Volkswagen.
wellslon
0 7 0 6 252
SEO-'L ONLY

,.!973 Volklwag1n Sedan HI SIJggeued r'eloli price, P.O E. loc alto~e~ ond orher deal~r charges, If ar1y, addilionoL ·
·
..· If an owner maintainS and utrvke&amp; hh '&lt;'ehlde In occardonce with the ".o I"~'wogen morntenonc::e
sc h11du1e ony 1a~ ,ory
port lound to be defectlve~ in material or workmanship within 2-4 months or 2A,OO() m\les, whiche '&lt;'tH come~s (,,,, lelllcept
I\Orll'lol w•or ond teor and Hnvico items\ will be repaired OJ replac.ed by any U.S. or ConadiOI\ Voliswogen Dealer.
And this will be done free ol chorge . See your dealer lor de roils.
fSourn· lf69 monulacturers' auggested retail flfkel ond 1972 ov~Hage useri ca r lot retort t:Hrcu as quoted In NADA
Olkial
Cor G.utda, Ea1 t.atn...fd., J11.n.e. 121;
~.'lo1hw9Qtn of Amarjco,~

i.J..d

· ·

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~y

12 Noonl119 P.M.
.
Tue&gt;., Wed., Fri. 8 A.M. lo S.P.M,
Thur.l A.M. to f P.M.-Sat. 8 ~. M.lo 12 Noon

lronlon

Athens
MeigS.

Log•n
Gallipolis

Jackson

Waverly

W L T P OP

5 0 o 132 14
.4 1 0 121 · 35
3 2 0 101 16

2 2 1 55 21
2 2 I 64 63 ,
2 l.. 0_ ....90 14

1 4 0 78 1.11
6119

:E!:~~G~~:~t1:·

WATTS VOLKSWAGEN·, INC.
1'5 Up1J4!r River Rd. (C»&gt;Io Rt. 7), Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone (6141 446·f800
·
Service-Parts-Office

TEAM

Waverly 29 Melis 2S
Ironton Q Wellslan o
LG&amp;:n • J1d&lt;1011 2

•

lront!in~t'&amp;.":r~us

Athenl 11 Mtlg'
W~verfy at lll!lllll
.leek son It Wtlltton

Hocking broke the course
record at Evans Field that he
set just six days,earlier at the
'Rio Grande Invitational.
Dunfee ran the course in
10:04, six seconds better than
the
previous
record.
Chesapeake's Gary Sheets was
second and he'll advance to the
District on his performance.
Other runners who qualified
for. the District on October 28th
'at C~J'umbus were: Ron
Robinson and Don Kauffing of
Peoples, Terry Moore and
Mark Tolley of North Adams,
Dave Smith and Bob Henry of
Lynchburg Clay, Mike Lacy of
West Union and Lee Lane of
Frankfort Adena.
Wheelersburg edged Ironton
for the class "AA" championship by a margin of JG.37,

Sunday Dinner
At Rio Grande ·
COllege Cafeteria

· NBA Standings
By Uni1ed Pre» lnlernalional
.Eastern Conference .
ill
•

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poinls was stopped sho~t.
stole the ball

Friday's box
•
Jd

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A11an1ic· Division .,~ • Cincinnati
w. I. pet. g.b . . Rose II

Bps ion
New York
Bullalo

Travel Trailers.

0 1.000
4 I .800 I
1 3 .400 3
5

M
2b
organ
Tola n cf
Bench c

Ph ila delphia
0 4 .000 41!2 Perez l b
Central Division
Menk e Jb
w. I. pet . g .b. Geronimo rf

HOME
SALES
2110 Eulern Avenue

Houslon
Balli more

Galllpolll, Ohio 45431
PHONE .61_4-446-359

3 1 .750
3 2 .600

Chaney •s
I!' . Hague ph
'
~ ~ :~~ ~'h Concepcion ss
•
McGiolhlin p

~~~~:~::nd

Western Conference

Borbon p

Midwest Division
· w. I. pet.

Milwaukee
KC-Omaha
Chicago
Oelroi l

Phoenix
GoldenStale
Los Angeles
Seattle

·

Uhlaender ph

g.b. Hail p
Carr oll p
1 2 .333 1V2 Grimsley p
1 2 .333 1'/2 Totals
I 2 .333 1'12 Oakland

a I .750

Campanerisss

I. pet. g.b. Al ou rf
2 1 .667
Rudi if
2 1 .667
Eps lein1b
3 2 .600
Hegan lb
2 2 .500 'h Sando 3b

W.

Portland
1 3 .250
Friday's Results

1112

New York 92 Cleveland 89

Houston 120 Allan fa 108

Boslon 126 Buffalo 118
Milwaukee 109 Oetrolt 86
Golden Sf. lOt Seattle 92
Los Ang 126 Porfland 104
IO!ll ygamesscheduled)
WILL MISS GAME
BALTIMORE (UP!) -The
Baltimore Colts announced
Friday tpat halfback Tom
Matte will miss this Sunday's
game with tiie New York Jets
because of a recurring problem
with bleeding ulcers.
Matte, a 12-year veteran,
was adl!litted to Union
Memorial Hospital for tests
Friday morning. The same
dilemma sidelined him In 1970,
and he has been hampered by a
variety of injuries over the past
two yeara.
' The Colts announced tbat
Don McCauley will start in
Matte's place against the Jets.

:5
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Four Falcons
. honored by BG

~Try this really durable mediuiJI

Wellston. The. win markild the defense lo the test the first time
first tinie. the Tigers have won · they had the bali, ronuuing it

Pro standings

Moon,
Concord, FIHiwood &amp;

Enjoy Your

By KEITH WISECUP
WAVERLY
John

.

Pacific Division

Both teams earned a spot in the
District at Ohio University in
Athens at the District finals on·
October 28th. Warren Local
finished a distant third with 100
points. 'Rock Hill was fourth
with a 103 score, then It was
Sheridan, Greenfield McClain
and the Fairland Dragons.
Cecil Morrison of Ironton
finished . first . Morrison's
winning time was 10:24. ·
Bernard Tilley of Wheelersburg came in second. Tilley's
time was 10:30.
Individual runners who
qualified for the District were :
.Mike Waugh and Joe Van
Sickle- of Sheridan, Bob
Reynoldsand Sam Edgell of
Warren Local, and Randy
Delawider and Mark Salyers of
Rock Hill.

I

.I

- ~~Shoema kci';-Waver-1:14;-bulleJ,..-..,i~their home~field
like :passer,· put on a star- when they had an undefeated lwo by passing. · Mei~s· John Wail£rs on the
49 where
sludded one-man show here powerhouse .
!,chew, who was outstandi ng the Marauders took over. The
The hear! breaking Joss for · both offensively and defen. drive stalled as the Marauders,
Frida)' night, hitting 13 of 19
passes for 193 yards and lhree · the obviously overconfident sively, recovered a Shoemaker on the Tiger '1:/, had Maloy
touchdowns in leading the Mara ud ers ruined their fumble on the Meigs seven to intercept a Vaughan aerial.
previously winless Tigers to a chances for a league ti tle end that threat.
Maloy returned it 20 yards.. to
29-25 victory over the Meigs althoug h
they
still
It was good ole' power the :;o yard line.
RACINE - Tile Southern ·Tornadoes assured Mm·a..uders. It ranked easily mathematically can tie lor the straight up the middle that
On the first play; Shoemaker
~emse~ves of_their first Southern Valley Conference the biggest upset or the South: crown, but-this would appear earned Meigs its first score, · hilMaloy for 22 yards to the28.
tJ~Ie Fhday.hight at Racine with a convincing 28-12 eastern Ohio Athletic League all but impossible.
· going 9-\ ya rds in II straigh\ ·Alter ·a first down gained · on
wm ov~r the Symmes Valley Vikings.
this year.
' The Tigers are now 1-6 running plays, the longest a 23- · three running plays and a hallAller Meigs had scored with overall and l·l in league play . yard sprint by Faulk. Weber the distance-to-the-goal
. Seruor fullback -Nick Ihle was again the
·
1:58
remai ning in the fourth while Meigs is 5-2 overall and 3- took it in from the three with penally against Meigs,
dominant figure ·for the Tornadoes as he scored
~ : 03 remaining in ' tbe first Shoemaker lobbed a high pass
. three touchdOW'lS and two extra points while run· quarter to take the lead 25-22, 2 in loop competition.
Shoemaker hi1 on five of seven
Bill Maloy bad his hands full quarter. Alter McKinney into the end zone right in the
ning for 171 yards. The 1751b., Ihle also led Southern aerials, including a 13-yard with a football nearly all night kicked ttie extra, everything · middle of three Marauder
on defense with nine tackles. ·
·
scoring strike to flanker Mike as he latched onto seven of . looked like the game would go defenders. The ball was batted
The Tornadoes are now 5-1·1
Migyanko with only 30 seconds Shoemaker's tosses for 119 as expected, a Meigs rout.
in U1e air by a Meigs defender,
.
overall aqd .3-0-1 In SVAC play for Symmes Valley's second left in the game. The play came yards and one touchdown.
The Tigers tpen drove to the and came down in hands of Joe
while Coach John Patton's score in the four th qu~rter on Waverly fourlh and seven. Maloy also intercepted a Meigs Meigs 37 where they were held Acord with 28 seconds left in
Vikings drop to 1-6 overall and making it 20-12.
The
lead
see-sawed pass.
on downs.
the half. Waverly lii\ed up to
1-3 in league play. Southern has
0 v e r s h a d owed . by
The Ma1·auders also stalled. kick for the extra point, but
!hie's 10 yard run to paydirl t hroughout. Meigs scored first
only h&amp;pless Southwestern yet in the fourth quarter iced the and· went ahead 7-0, Waverly Shoemaker's and Maloy 's Randy Chafin lined up in punt Acord faked it and M Maloy
to play on·its league 'schedule. Southern win. Mike Nease ran came back to make it 7-6, the great play was that of Meigs' · formation, but the snap from wide open in the end zone to
Avictory over the Highlanders in the extras to bring the final Marauders ·scored to make it running backs, fullback Dallas ce nter by Weber got lo Chafin give Waverly a ll-13 halftime
a week from · Friday would counl 'to 28-12.
.13-6, and the Tigers rallied in . Weber, halfback Chuck Faulk, on one bounce, forcing him to 'edge.
bring the championship to
SECOND HALF
Milch Nease was also great the closing seconds of the q~arterbac~ Andy Vaughan run with the ball. He was
Racine for the first time.
The Marauders were stopped
for Coach Bill Jewell's Tor- second quarter to go ahead 14- arid halfback Mick As h. Weber thrown for a 16-yard loss with
The Vikings put up sur- nadoes as he wentfor 110 yards •13. Meigs made it 19-ll before ' scored two touchdowns and ran the Tigers taking over on the cold on their fir.st series and
prising strength as Southern and made nine tackles on the Tigers took the lead again for 156 yards. Vaughan also Meigs 23 .
Chafi n pun red 39 yards to the
had only a 20-12 lead early in defense .. Other Tornadoes at 22·19.
scored two six-pointers and ran
Two plays later, Shoemaker Tiger 20. Waverly drove to the
the foirrth quarter. A stiff pointed oul for' fine defensive
Extra points were the dif· for 105 yards, Faulk hit the hit Maloy on the dead run be· Meigs l6 before Shoemaker
Southern defense and anotlier play were Jay Hill, nine ference in the game as Meigs holes for 127 yards, and Ash tween two Meigs defenders in pun led t5 yards (o the
•six·poinrer in tbe final period tackles, Ron Hill Greg Mid- scored only on Lou McKinney's gained 35 yards in six carries the end zone from the Meigs 23. Marauder two-foot line.
iced the win.
Weber broke up the middle
dleswart, and Tim Maurer, all kick after their first six-pointer plus deliveri ng a great The extra point attempt was
'
!hie opened th~ Tornado six tackles each', ' and Ron for th~i r only poin\s after. blocking job.
blocked and with 9:57lefl in the to the Meigs 10 on the first
scoring with a 20 yard ruri in Johnson with five tackles.
Waverly made good for five
Altogether, Meigs had 412 first half, Meigs still led 7-6.
play. Again the same play
the first quarwr. Sophomore
Not to be denied however, and all 11 Tiger defendets
Syimhes .Valley's Bill Webb em·• points including two two- yards rushing, a new
sensation Mitch Nease ram- led the. Viking defense with pointers and one single-point Marauder
record . The Vaughan hi tend Bill Chaney on wavcdgood·bye'\o Weberfor
bled 10 yards in the second ·nine tackles and four assists conversion.
p1·evious high was 338 against an 18 yard pass, later hit a 90 yard touchdown run, the
period for another score with while Ed Berry and Rod
The win is oniy the second in Coal Grove in 1970. The 25 Melvin Cremeans for 11 yards, longest in Meigs history. A
!hie adding the conversion to Bennett were also cited far .SEOAL play since the Tigers points scored in a losing effort then outran two Waverly Vaughan to Cremeans pass
give Southern a 14-0 lead at the great defensive work. •
joined the league in 1970. The js also a Meigs record.
defenders 17 yards for Meigs' for the extras was knocked
hall.
other
was
a
36-3l
win
over
HOW
IT
WENT
second
score with 5 : ~1 left. down and with 1:08leflln lbe
Southern· travels to Glousrer
1
.•
Strong-armed
quarterliack
The Tigers put the Meigs Faulk's attempt for the extra third period, Mella led Jt-U.
next Friday for a non-league Wellston two years hack at
1 ••
Jamie Lafon brought ~the game while Symmes Valley
•
Vikings back in the third goes to Kyger Creek to battle
quarter when he fired a 70 yard the Bobcats.
pass to end Dave Dunfee for six S. Valley
0 0 6 6-12
points, Dunfee caught seven Southern
6868-28
passes for 175 yards on the Dept.
South SM
night, Lafon hit on 10 o( 24 First Downs
16
10
passes for around 200 yards. Yards Rush,
304
99
!hie scored his second touch- Yards Pass.
15
200
down in the third period on a T. Yards
319
299
five yard run to give Southern a Fumbles
2
0
20.0 advantage.
Lost
2
0
Terry Pine went eight yards Passes Comp-Att.
2-6·1 10·24·1

Lancers, Pirates capJure
A, AA cross country titles
RIO GRANDE - The class
11
A'' and "AA" sOutheastern
Cross Country Sectional Meet
was held Friday afternoon at
Rio Grande College. Federal
Hocking w~s first In class "A"
and Wheelersburg won the
class "AA" portion of the meet.
The top three teams in class
"A" will advance to the
· District finals.
Federal Hocking finished
first with a score"of 58 points,
Southeastern · of Ross County
was second with 79 points and
Bloom Soutl. Webster placed
third with a lJl score. Peoples
High School Clll!le In fourth
followed by West Union ;
Lynchburg Clay, Manchester,
Fr~nkfort Adena and White
Oaks.
Ron Dunfee of Federal

"''

!•

I

ab r h Iii
5 I 3 2
3

2

oo

4 0 2 2
4 0 0 0

4 o 1 o
3 1 1 1
4 1 1 0

1ooo
1ooo
2 0 o o
I 0 0 o

' '

155-pound sophomore tailback, races for yardage against
visiting Symmes Valley during Friday night's 28-12 Tornado

I

gloss;finish tot all your exterior 111
trim. It flows on easily and · rsmoothly. Dries quickly. Easy
soap and wateJ-clean~up.

OPEN
12:00 THRU 1130 P.M..

AND
4•30 P.M. TO 5:30P.M. ·

-

manatueturer' who - ieWn
letters In awln•umc IIIII alllf

victory. Viking on right (62) Is Bill McCarty,
sophomore linebacker. (Leo HUJ photo).

1~

ooo o
1 o o 0
or oo

0
1
34
ab

0
0
S
r

0 0
0 0
8 5
h bi

5 0 0 0

Miller tops EHS 21-14

0 0
0 o
HEMLOCK
The
2 10 0
Miller
Falcons
wiped
out
an
11-3
1 o1 o
3 1 1 0 Eastern Eagle lead in the
Hendri ck cf
2 1 1 0 second quarter and went on to
Mi ncher ph
o o 0 0
Mangual c1
1 o d 0 defeat the Meigs countians, 21Tenace c
2 1 1 3 1~ , at Miller Friday night in a
Odom pr
0 0 0 0 non-league game.
Green 1b
1 oo0
Marquez ph .
1 0 1 1 The 21 points scored by the
Lewis pr
o o o o Falcons now l-3 overall, is the
Kubiak"2b
2 0 1 0 most ever · against a Roger '
Hunler p
2 0 0 0 Kir khart-coached Eastern
Fingers p
0 0 0 0
Hamil.t on p
0 0 0 0 learn. Kirkhart is now in his
Duncan ph
1 0 1 0 second year at Easrern.
Totals
,
30 4 7 4
The Eagles now have lost all
Cincinnati
100 110,011-S
Oakland
030 100 000--4 three of their non-leag ue
E- Aiou, Sando. DP- Cincin - games and have 3-1 overall
nali 1, Oakland I. LOB- mark. They are 3-1 in the
Cinc innati 6, Oakland 6.
2B- Perez. HRs- ROse, Ten - Southern Vall ey Athletic
ace, Menke. SB- Tolan 2, Conference.
Morgan. 5- M enke, Hendrick,
Miller drew first blood in the
Fingers.
first quarter wpcn quarterback
ip h r er bb so
McGiolhlin
3
2 4 4 2 3 Jeff Sicilian booted a 16 yard
Bo rbon
1
1 0 0 I 0 fie ld goal.
Hall
2 0 O· '0 0 I
Carroll
12-33000 1 The Eagles ·came roa ring
GrimsleyW
1 1-3 1 0 0 I 0 back laler in the same period
Hun ler
4 2·3 5 3 3 2 2 when halfback Randy Boring
Fingers L
3 2·3 3 2 2 1 4 scored the fi rst of his two
Hamiil!lfl
2-3 0 0 0 0 0
McGiolhlin pilched lo" one touchdowns on a one yard run .
bat ler in fourth .
Husky fullback AJa'n Duvall
·s.ve - Hamilton. HBP - by rammed in lhe extras to give
, McGlothlin (Rudi) .
WP- Fingers. T- 2:26. A- the Eagles their only lead of
the night, 8-3.
49,410.
4...0
3 0

SKYLINE LANES
and PRO-SHOP

Coach Jim Cook's Falcons
Individually, Duvall led all
ripped across two six-poinrers • Eastern bali carriers with 58
in lhe second quarte r, the first ya rds in 13 carries while fresh·
a two yard run by Carl McFann man Don~ie Eichin~er g~ined
and the second a nine yard pass 52 yards m]G carr1es. Hmkle
from Sicilian to end Dave led Miller w1th 68 yards m eight
carries while McFann had 61
Starner.
Miller !t-ed the win in the yards in 13 carries and Starner
thirct"period with another 54 yardsln 15 carries.
Next week, the Eagles will
score, a 22 yard run by Roger
try
toreach the .500 mark when
Hinkle. '
Boring scored the Eagles' they play the Southweslern
second touchdown in the fourth Highlanders in a SVAC tilt.
quarter on a four yard run. Miller travels to NelsonvilleBolh of Easrern's touchdowns York to batUe the powerful
were set up by Miller penalties, Buckeyes.
By Quarters:
the first a 15 yard roughing the
Eastern
a. oo6-H
kicker and the second a pass
Miller
3 12 6 0-21
ini.erference 'call.

remaining. Vaughan
tried a quarterback

was
on his own 28 and fumbled
. where Ste"e Oyer recovered
for th(:· 1'igers. After
Shoemaker hit Acord for 14
yards to the 19, the Tigers
•ground a first down to the two,
Walters cracked the middle for
no gain, Anderson co~ld gain
only a yard in two carries, and
on .fourth down, Walrers made
it into the end zone by inches.
Shoemaker hit, you guessed it,
Maloy for the extras to make it
22-19, Waverly . This was the
final play of the. third period.
Coac h Charles Chancey's
steamed up Marauders drove
down the field to the Waverly
12 on seven running plays that
started from their own 'll.
Terry Whitla tch, 138 lb .
sophomore, coming off a very
cold bench for the shaken up
Faulk; carried the ball to ·the
seven but a bone-crushing
tackle caused a fumble that
Waverly recovered .
A few plays later, however,
the league's top interceptor ,
Cremeans, gobbled up a
Shoemaker aerial at his own
~- Meigs marched on the
ground ten straight plays with
Vaughan sneaking it over from
the one with only , 1:58

Acord ,

4-43,

and

none. Waverly, Dailey. 1·0. ~ .

INTERCEPTION o
RETURNS : Meigs, Cremeans,
1·0. .Waverly, Maloy, t-20 ..
INDIVIDUAL , SCORING:
Meigs, Vaughan, HD's (12
Dept.
E M points); Weber, 2 TD's, (12
, and McKinney. 1 EP,
.First Downs
13 . 18 polnb)
(1 polnl) .
Total Yards
176 261
Waverly, Maloy. 1 TO, 4
185 EP's, 110 points); Acord,
Yards Rush.
1~2
76 Walters, and Mlgyanko, ali 1
Yards Pass.
2l
TD, (ali 6 polnls), and Dalley, 1
Passes Comp-AtJ..Jnt.
EP, (1 polnl) .
3-17·2 MI-l
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
7 6 6 6,-25
1-1
1·1
Fumbles Lost
Waverly
0 14 8 7- 29
3-35 7-65
'Penalties
2-27.0 2-11.0
Punts

By BILL

NElSON

If you fail to have your ·new car
checked at interva·ls spelled out by the
manufacturer, it can resu it in cancellation of your warranty.
The average car weighs almost two
tons and has 15,000 parts.
Thanks to the popularity of camper
trailers, the old-fashioned tent is
becoming a rate sight on camp· ..
grounds.

and 4 orders
of frlfl'h tries.

onlY

The only thing that's old-fashioned
about our car repair service ,is our
personalized concern for our .·
customers at Smith Nelson Motors,
Inc.

'

EveRY SundaY
(ALl- DAY)

Otlfn ~Ev~Dill 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. till' s p.m.'
Service on ·Sat. Till 12 noo.n.

GALLIPOLIS
•

UpPIF lt. 7 Kaflauga, Ohio

SMilH NELSON
MOroRS,
Pomioc
' Iuick
'·, PH~ 992-2174 ·
· ,MAJN ST•.POMEROY, oHIO~
I

dariJialbe ...

1
'
•
1
~~._~~-1~~~--------------~--------~~~~----~--_1~~_:--------~~L---~----_.--~--------~~~L_:_______________~----------~~~--.J~----~~_j~--~----------~------------~------~----~----------~----------------------------~~~--~---~------------~~---~·-I

[

Mlgyanko. 2-31.
PUNTING: Meigs, Chafin, t·
J?. Waverly, Shoemaker, 2·88.
KICKOFF RETURNS :
Meigs. Faulk, 2-59; Couch, 1·20,
and Pearch, I· t7. Waverly •
Wells, 2-47 ; Wallers, 2-22, and
Rhodes, 1·5.
·
PUNT RETURNS: Meigs,

STEER THIS WAY

j,

'·

,.
!. ,_

'\

M. W.

Firs! Downs
· t9 18
by rushing
17 7
by posslng .
2 11
by penally
o o
Yards Rushing
412 t02
Yards PaS&gt;Ing
28 193
Tolal Yards
4.W 295
Pass Attempls
8 19
Pass Compte!ions
3 13
Passes had lnlorcepled I
1
Fumbles
3 J
Fumbles Lost
2 2
Punling
1-39. 2-88,
.
39 .0 44.0
Penalties
5-29 1-S
Plays From Scrimmage
59 .. 64
tNOIVIDUAL RUSHING
Mtlg&gt;
TC YG Avg.
Weber
15 156 t0.4
Faulk
19 127 6.7
Vaughan
9 10l 11.7
~h .
6 35 5.9
Whltlalch
1 5 5.0
Chafin
1 -16 -16.0
TOTALS
51 412 1.4
Weverly
TC YG Avg.
Walters
19 60 M
Anderson
16 36 2.3
Shoemaker
7 6 0.9
Mlgyonko
I 0 0,0
TOTALS
43 103 ~.4
INDIVIDUAL PASSING:
Meigs, Vaughan, 3-8; ~8 ¥Dreis,
no TO's. Shoemaker, 1J.19, 193
yards, 3 TD's.
RECEIVING ! Meigs,
ChaneyT 1·18; Cremeans, 1·11,
Foulk 1-(-1). Waverly, Maloy,

I

I

..

To test your headlights, flash
up
and down on your garage door, or on a
wall. Check your dim lights as well as
your upper and lower beams.
Using the right grade (octane number) of gasoline will help you get more
miles per gallon.

family Pac:k
Includes these •
4 sandwiChes •

long, but .was stopped short.
Mei~ led 25·22 and left it up to .
their defense.
Shoemaker then proceeded
tQ thread the needle five times
out of seven for 59 yards in the
next 60 seconds. The final
U1row came with 30 seconds
left to Migyanko who was .wide
open on the far sidelines. The
· pass was perfect. Jed. Dailey
booted the extra to make It :!9·
25. Waverly 's homecoming
crowd was going wild.
Meigs made another atrempt
to score, however, as Vaugll(ln
rolled out from .his own Hand
refused to go down until he
g~ined 28 ya rds to the.Waverly
31 with five seconds left. He
faded ba.ck to pass, but was
knocked ctown at the line or
ss:-dmmage trying to run··oriee
more . The game ended on this
play.
. Next week, the Marauders
'take on the Athens Bulldogs .at
Marauder Stadium while
Coach Tom Oyer's Tigers go to
Logan .

MEIGS-WAVERLY
GRtO STATISTICS

7·119 ;

MITCH NEASE ON THE GO - Southern's Mitch Nease,

BOWLING GREEN Ohio
(UP!)- Mike Weger, a defensive bact with the Deii'Oit
· HFqr Tllat , _. , &amp; "Ptaleuionol
Uoila and . three other
Touch,"
.
prominent Bowling Green
FEATURING
State University graduates,
liave been aelei:ted for in'
• 24 New AMF lanes
ductlon Into uie .Chool'a Ath- !
e SIIICUar and
.Jetic Hall ·of Flllllll, it waa an.nounc:.d Sltunlay.
The other three inducleellnclude ' Ron . Blacklel!ge,
~iaHzlng
IAiltant footbaU CCIICI1 at the
Columbia
Unlvenlty of aadnnaU, who
Ball$.
waa an all confereDce football'
and butelballllar ln.•~·!!"~£.-.--..,...
1HO; .Joe Sleaferth,
PIIOIIE
· buPiball ' CCIICI1 at .uran •
•• ' W
IATBTO:
Centr1J-Hower Hlgb School
CIIUIOIIIOUPS, P.t.mu.
...3362
waa a four year bubtblll
SlUIIIH1S. ,
letterman In 1be IMt' IIIII Don
Kepler, a Florida golf club
"AU Neill AMF Equipment"

•

..

, -,........

r •

, captures ·
•
28-12 Wln

touchdown.

and

'

SO.uthern

jf

to regain the lead. A · fur six
from ·
to

Tlmea-lleatlnel. Sunday, Oct. Z2, 11172

ll- Tile ... -

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----- -· .'

�'

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~:

Pirates in

'

.'
By C. E. Blalletft
Eiteuton Asent. Agricullllre
POMEROY - Nine Meigs
County farmers had an inpui
ln10 the 1971 Ohio Farm
Business Analysis Report.
They submilted their !ann
business swnmaries through
this office, a.Sisted by Bill

·B obcats
.,

ALBANY - Kyger Creek's the Rub• at s havt• ltllowcd ~4 dashed over from the seven fur Then came the turning point of after Alexander was 'called for
Brooks began moving his
--~~·w·pilui~tt·a"-ruing offense exploded. t~&lt; •i" '' r.. r a fiJ ,.v,·ra;;c.
,, :1-0 lead. He then caught a tilt• ,
The ba;ill~~~~~~~~~;,th~c~k~ic~k~erwb~ukt~t~hei'--~~~~~Ksh~o~r~t~·~itd~to~-~
ie
on a
and
sceund qtuu-tcr h('re Friday wh!C'h rn11 NI !o a:-- 8~ -lh:i ( · lnr y vcr siun .
picked tt up. faked left, ran fourth down play at the ~2. The scored i L~ final six-pointer with
night , overcoming H 15 ,point lal:l l Wl'Ck , slruLk ror lwo first
Win gback Greg McCarty ri ~ ht behind the Bobcat wedge Spartans fumbled the ball over 42 seconds remaining on a
ddicil in defeHting the Class period scores. t"ollowing an returned the ensuing kickoff JO and broke down the sidelines two plays later . John Rumley, three yard run by. Gilders.
Double A Alexander Spart&lt;ms, Orland Cremeans punt, yards to the 40 where the fur a 75 yard TO run . A key junior defensive end, fell on the
Coach Sprague commended
VINTON - Rolling on land and in the air here 27-21.
Alcxandet•moved 70 yards in 1~ Bobc:" ts began their best block was thrown at the 50 by ball .
his team fo r its big comeback
Friday night Coach John Blake's North Gallia ' Co"ch Jim Sprague's Bob- pitys behind the strong running suslainc&gt;d dnve of the evening. Chb Smith. Cremeans booted
Spraguemen drove to the effort. "It was a team victory, "
Pirates. defea'ted the winless Hannan Trace Wild· CHI S had not scored in five of senior fullback Greg Sparked by the runnihg of the extra point to reduce the 13The
yard line where Cremeans he satd .
cats 32-6 before a large homecoming crowd. T~e quarters prior tu the 20 point Gilders, the area 's leading suphomore tailback Mike Rife, score to 15-13.
attempted a field goal which
Curr y · wa s the leading
win 'pushed North Gallia's record in the Southern second stanza Friday night. KC scm·er. Gil.~crs scored three who replaced the injured After stoppmg the Spartans was wide.
Bobcat runnet· wit~ IH yards.
Valley Athletic Conference to 3-2. The Pirates are 3-4 last scored in the final period TO's and three extra points Lawren ~e Tabor, the Gallians at the 39-yard line, Kyger
Alexander late drove to the Rife had 53 yards in II carries.
weeks ago at Eastern.
Friday night.
drove 60 yards in 10 plays. Rife Creek began movin·g the ball six yard .li!JLlvhere 'Senior The Bobcat defense although it
in all games. It also snapped a two game losing twoAlexander
went into the
Midway in the drive, the gained 38 yards durjng the behind the hard running of hnebackei'"'!ffil Rife hit permitted 21 points was
streak.
contest ~ with a :i-1 record, Spartans were forced to punt drive which also featured a fullback George CW'ry and
Gilders
with
a
jar- commended for its hard hitting
The loss left Hlmnan Trace fact they had finally scored. scoring 210 points In leading all but KC was charged with nine yard pass from quar- McCarty. Curry broke loose on
ring tackl e 'forcing a and pass coverag~.
with a ~league mark and 0-7
The Pirates scored their final area offensive units. The roughing the kicker. Another terback John Baird to tight end a 37 yard run while McCarty fumble . Rife recovered the
', .....,
Kyger Creek now 4-2-1 will
record overall.
six-pointer on a foW' yard run Bobcats had permitted just 23 big play was a 29-yard run on Clay Hudson .
carried it 18 yards to the six. loose ball.'
hos t Symmes Valley Thursday
The Pirates reached the by freshman fullback Bruce points in six games prior to the the option by senior · quar- · The Bobcats broke the With just two seconds left in the
Kyger Creek drove to the 17 mght in a Southern Valley
scoreboard with 9:40 left in the Runyon : It came with 4:56 left first period Friday night. KG tcrback Greg Brooks. Gilders scoring ice with 10: 14Jeft in the half, CW'ry hulled over from
yard
line where on foW'lh down Athletic Conference game.
opening · period when Dave climaxing a 50 yard march. 'was the area's best defensive scqred from the one with 5:58 first half. Senior fullback Jim the one giving the Southern
STATISTICS
Wickline blocked a punt. George again ran the con- unft. They are now second remaining making the score 6- Bias raced 10 yards off tackle Valley Athletic Confe~ence the Bobcats faked a field goal
KC A
attempt.
Rife
,
the
holder,
DEPARTMENT
Wickline grabbed the ball and version.
behind the Nelsonville York 0. He booted the extra point for the first six-pointer. A kick team a lead for the first bme in passed to end Mark Darst but First Downs
14 15
raced 10 yards for the score.
'~ IJ •
The Spartans struck again for the conversion was wide to the contest.
Wickline and Keith Saunders Buckeyes. The Buckeyes
220
205
.'
the
ball
sailed
over
the
h~nds
of
Yards
Rushing
Phil Hollenbaugh added the were both credited with a fine permitted 13 points in their loss ·following a blocked punt by the right.
Although the third period the stretching receiver.
30 15
Yards Passing
conversion on a run.
Steve . Thomas . Alexander
Alexander then failed to was scoreless, it offered harddefensive game. Saunders Friday to Belpre.
7 16
John Roush, Bobcat safety, Passes Att.
With 5:04 left in the second intercepted two passes while
has
per
Nelsonville-York
recovered
on
the
20
yard
line.
move
as
a
."fired-up"
defense
httting
football
for
both
teams.
·~~·
4 3
killed another Spartan drive Passes completed
period, North Galli a's junior Witkline blocked two punts. mitted 43 points in seven Five plays later, Gilders forced a punting situation.
The Bobcats started to drive wtth a pass interception.
2
3
Fwnbles
end Keith Weddington took an
Runyon was the top rusher games for a 6.1 average whtle
1 3
The winning touchdown t' wnbles Lost
... Owen Games pass 14 yards to for North Gallia with 73 yards .
58 30
came with 2:30 left in the game Penalized
'- .., ,.
the end zone. Hollenbaugh Hollenbaugh had 71 yards and
when
Curry
raced
55
yards
to
By
Quarters:
again ran the conversion . Tracy Johnson added 40 yards.
' ,
0 20 0 7- 27
the end zone. Cremeans kicked KC
''
North Gallia went into the
Montgomery led the WildAlex.
15
0 0 6- 21
the
extra
point
for
a
27-l51ead.
'""
locker room at the half with a cats with 32 yards. North
24-0 lead 'following a 12 yard Gallia travels to Hannan, W.
pass reception by T. J . Va.. Friday night. Hannan
•••• Robinson.
Greg George, Trace is at Fort Gay.
SOUTil BEND, Ind. (UP!) Missouri's Bob Pankey in- fourth down opporll!nities ·in the score, and completed three
~
~serve quarterback, ran the
STATISTICS
Missouri
cashed
in
on
foW'th
tercepted Clements' first pilss the first touchdown parade. passes for 19 yards. He
• two point conversion.
DEPARTMENT
NG HT down plays six times for touch- of the game and returned 10 And all three of the Tigers' directed a 70-yard scoring
•• · Coach Tom Belville's First Downs
11
8 downs or to keep scoring drives yards to Notre Dame's 46. touchdowns were made on march in which he completed
Wildcats r~ached the scoring Yards Rushing
167 43 alive Saturday in a 30-26 upset From there Missouri moved to fourth down plays.
two passes for 65 yards, setting
column lor the first time this Yards Passing
' 82 116 of No. 11-ranked Notre Dame. a touchdown in 12 plays with
Notre
Dame
had
trouble
up a 12-yard touchdown run by
season with 7:25 left in the
Att.
12 19
It was the first defeat in five Leroy Moss running over from handling the wet ball - there Huff.
.
•• game. On a foW'th down play, Passes
Passes
Completed
7
9
starts
of
the
previously
unthe
16
.
was a dayiong drizzle - in the
Missouri riddled Notre
•• Wayne Hesson faked a punt, Fumbles
9
2 beaten Irish.
But
the
Irish
came
back
in
a
third
period
and
twice
turned
Dame's.
previously enviable
' then paiRed to Garland Mont- Fumbles Lost
2 2
Notre Dame went up against 66-yard drive and Andy Huff over the ball to the Tigers on defensive record by racking up
gomery for a 56 yard · touch- Penalized
80 60 Missouri as a four-touchdown scored from the one to set up a fumbles to set up field goals of 223 yards rushing and 106
down. Akick for the extra point
By Quarters :
favorite against a club which 7-7 tie.
25 and 20 yards by Greg Hill. passing. The Irish previously
was wide. ·
·1
HT
0
0
0
66
had won only twice in five
•
Missouri countered with a 67Hill connected on a 24-yard had allowed only 182 yards a
The Wildcats, although still NG
••
8 16 0 8-32 starts and which last week was yard scoring drive with Don field goal in the last period for garite and only 60 through the
shellacked by Nebraska 62-0. Johnson plunging from the one Missouri's final points before air. The Tiger defense also
'' losing, were overjoyed at the
But Saturday Missouri never while Notre Dame retaliated Clements sparked the Notre limited the Irish, who had
trailed in an offensive battle in with an 81-yard march in·which Dame rally, which finally averaged 447 a game to 356.
which neither team punted in John Cieszkowski scored from ended with less than three
•
the first half.
the 1 for a 14-14 deadlock.
minute$ left in the game when
· Notre Dame's sophomore
Missouri then paraded 91 Mike
Fink intercepted
Denison rips
quarterback Tom Clements yards in 17 plays before Clements• 17th and last pass of_
almost got the Irish a tie in the Johnson got his second touch- the contest.
Marietta 30-14
)
••
fourth period, but twice two- down on another one-yard
Previously Clements
Yuu Si mp ly save so much on an EVAN S INTERNA
•
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP! ) - · Surpnsed?
point
conversion
attempts
TIONAL
HOME
. ~ m all mon thly payments and short-te rm mort·
plunge
for
21-14
lead
with
69
sparked
an
80-yard
scoring
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL ·
0
Freshman quarterback Dan gages are the rule In fac t noborly has ever needed mo re Ihan a
''
failed
and
Notre
Dame
fell
four
FOOTBALL SCORES
Marysvilie26West Jefferson 14
seconds left in the half.
drive by running twice for 38 Ross ran nine yards for a
United Press lnternatfon•l Dublin .1 Hamilton Twp. 6
points short.
·
Missouri converted on three yards, the last for 13 yacds and touchdown and passed 26 and 12-year Evans tnternatronat Home mo rtgage' II you own a lot or
(Friday Night I
Upper Arlington 17 Lancaster
ca n get one you can ta k,e advantage ol our: tree pla n.~ servrce.
Fairfield
14
Covington
(Ky.)
14
moderncon str uc tro nmetnocls And easy ·cto rt·yo urself frn rshrnq
49-yards
!01·
two
more
TDs,
all
•• Catholic 0
Licking Heights 6 Granville 0
in the third quarter, to .lead Ge tlhe lull savrnqs stnry'
Elyria 15 Sandusky 7.
Col. Hartley 24 Col. Walnut
Denison to a 30-14 Ohio Con- FREE· MatU l1•s cou pon today lor " lull color h 7 pag~ catalog
;l~'""~~;i~~~;Loraln
Senior
0
Ridge
0
~
.
U ' l'o&lt;lsmoOtn· ·l'hl'i6clW I101!1'11'8Yf' Valley O'' ": .• ,
ference win over Marietta here tea1 1111ng 1111 niJreds ol excr trng 11ome styles enrl lloor pfa n rdeas
Alhens 35 Gallipolis 14
Saturday.
\ YP" .tl &gt;l • &lt;llll l )lt • ,,1 Ill' r i•&gt;Wil p,,~r! l!•llT I f1illl&lt; .Ulq I tHl V! 1.1 ( .r 1/ ( II :J i ll 71 P r lf.!J
Po~rtsrrtoutth7 Springfield South Sheridan 14 New Concord
~1141 (1 \ lr• wnl' •vrrunt'f,l 1:"!0 layrrlf' lll&lt;; lo.,17 '!,tl'ii ll'l md2nl l ;• 1 '!&gt; 88rnCIIrr1
Marietl&lt;l's
Steve
Morris,
who
6
Glenn 13
'
&lt;lltll'lllll 'l r rll uu l _n to•r• " l .rt 1' Pll l!llrl n ~&gt;r o o•n kt rl" r .-llo I ••I l : uf'&lt;; .&lt;u•rl rn&lt;;trr;;nr:P
MORGANTOWN, W. · Va. 31-19 victory over Tulane a 17-13 halftime leap.
Ph &gt;I IIP'iqd•••l
New Bostoo 15 Northwest 13 Col. Northland 29 . Col .
accounted
for
the
first
and
last
Kerry Marbury raced six
Middletown 26 Lima Senior 7 Brookhaven 0
(UPI)-West Virginia's Moun- Saturday.
evans
Riverdale 12 Carey 0
Gahanna 17 WN!ehall 0
Sophomore fullback Ron Lee · yards around. right ~nd for .a touchdowns of the game, fired
taineers exploded for 17 points
New Philadelphia 14 Mansfield Delaware 35 Moon! Vernon 7 in the final three minutes of the scored two touchdowru; on runs touchdown wi,th 3:3. gone m a 36-yard TD pass to John Bon
InTeRnaTIOnaL
Malabar 0 .
Worthington 60 Col. Westland 0
in the second period. Late in
Homes
first half and Danny Buggs oftwo yards, and Frank Nester . the second half to life the the period Denison tied it up 6-6
Shelby 6 Norwalk 0
Be• ley 54 Grandview 0
-o-o
• ..,., , , _,..
Buckeye Central 12 Mohawk 7 Newark 49 Marielta 15
returned a punt 9o yards early kicked a 35-yard field goal to Mountameer lead to 24-13. when Ed Exler finished a 14• SEND ME YOUR FREE CATALOG •
Fredericktown 30 Crestline 12 Walkins Memorial 9 Lakewood in the second half to sew up a rally West Virginia, now :i-2, to Doug Charley . mtercepted a
•
Evan s lntern ahonal Homes, D~pt. 0-48
•
Zanesville 48 Chillicothe 0
7
play,
64-yard
drive
by
running
.
Mike Walker pass and returned
•
46th St. a t Mtnneha ha, Mmn t!apolrs , Mmn . 5 5 40 6 •
Tri Valley 20 Philo 0
Canal Wlncester 24 Millersporf
i,t 13 yards to the Tulane 29 to the last yard .
I plan t o bu rld soon
•
•
1 own ., lo t
Sheridan 14 John Glenn 13
16
After Denison 's 22-yard third
set up the third Mountaineer
Bornesville a2 Shenandoah 9 Marion Catholic 7 Big Walnut 6
•
I co n i1SSrs t wr tt • fr n rsh mg wo r k
•
period
splurge,
Morris
ran
YouJ)gstown Chaney 9 Youngs. Miami Trace .48 Hillsboro 13
touchdown.
•
P I ~.'ISP lrilvl' iln E- I ·H rep resentalrve co n ta ct m e 11 •
town South 8
. Toledo Scott 48 Toledo Central
three yards for a touchdown
Less
than
two
minutes
later
Yovngstown East 14 Youngs·
10
•
NanH!
•
Ralph E Myl ~ r
•
•
Buggs, the 190 - pound and the host team added a
town North 8
T o ledo Bowsher 7 Toledo
801 400
Address
safety
.
Austintown Filch 9 Hubbard 0 Rogers 0
Ro11te 3
•
l own or RFD
Co u nty
•
sophomore speedster from AtC h es a pu ~e . Oh ro 456 19
Salem 14 Girard 9
Tol edo Cardinal Slrltch 22
Denison
now
is
5-0-1
overall
(6U ) !67-523t
•
S ta te
Z1p
•
lanta, received a punt on his
Columbiana 28 Sebring 0
Oregon Clay 19
and
1-0-1
in
the
loop's
southern
•
Telephone
Number
·--E
•
five yard line and zig-zagged 95
Lisbon 8 Beaver Local 6
Toledo Whitmer 19 Toledo
division,
while
Marietta
is
4-2
Brookfield 14 Labrae 12
Macomber 9
yards for a touchdown to
Lewisville 41 Canton South 7 Anthony Wayne 30 Maumee 17
assure the comeback victory. and 1-1.
Massillon 34 Cleve. Glenville 0 Lake 17 Perrysburg 6
Unebacker Tom Zakowski
Glenwood 15 Marlington 6
Fostoria 26 Sylvania 6
. ::::: ::· .:::;,;;: ;·.
w.. ·.·;::::... ··.::;.: :;: ::;:;. ·.; .;~·~::;~::::::::.:.:·::;: •':::=:·::;:_ :~::·:: :·. . ·.·
·:-....
Perry 34 Jackson 28
Bedford 20 ,Port Clinton 0
PATRIOT - A 60-yard efforts for the losers.
Intercepted a Steve Foley pass
Euclid 14 Valley ·Forge 7
Ottawa Hills 29 Hicksville 25
kickoff return by Dallas Dyer
Green's touchdowns all came at the Tulane 17 and returned
Genoa 32 Gibsonburg 0
rallied the Green Bobcats from as the result of long plays. The to the eight to set up West
Parma 34 Shaw 0
Berea 20 Bedford 7
Lakota 20 Elmwood 8
Fairview 6 Olmsted Falls 0
Eastwood 27 Otsego 0
a ~deficit here Friday night Bobcats could not muster any Virginia's second touchdown.
North Olmsted 20 Rocky River Liberty Center 18 Swanlon 14 as Green defeated South- sustained drives.
He then recovered a Glenn
12 . ·
Patrick Henry 31 Fairview 14
western 22-3· in a non-league
Southwestern 1-2 in the SVAC Barrett fumble at the Tulane 25
Orange 15 Aurora 13
Oak Harbor 10 Woodmore 6
Chagrin Falls 20 Kensfon 0
Arlington 24 Uberty Benton 8 game.
and 1-3 overall travels to to ease Nester's field goal.
Berkshire 23 Fairport 8
Bellvue 7 Willard 0
The
victory
spoiled Eastern Thursday night.
Lee Gibson kicked field goals
St. Edward 41 Erie McDowell Minford 20 Valley 14
homecoming
for
the
of 25 and 40 yards .to shove
STATISTICS
14
United 24 Crestview 6
.·:
Tuslaw ·o Northwest 0 (tie)
Jackson Millon 19 Mathews 7 Highlanders.
DEPARTMENT
SW G Tulane ahead ~ in the first
.·
East Canton 9 Lake 7
Warren Harding 30 Toledo
Coach Mel Carter's eleven , First Downs
7 9 quarter.
·.
North mont o Greenville 0 (tiel
Devilbiss 6
playing a spirited game, drove Yards Rushing
Freshman tailback Steve
160
145
West Millon 34 Northridge 12 Minerva 27 East Palestine 19 60 yards behind the running of
Yards Passing
37 65 Teutrlng scrambled· two yards
Eaton 20 Preble Shawnee 6
Howland ~I Champion 0
Marion Local 20 Lehman Liberty 20 Lakeview 14
sophomore John Earl Hut- Passes Attpt.
11
7 around right end for Tulane's
Catholic 12
South Range 44 Mineral Rldge chinson and some key passes'to Passes Completed
3 5 first touchdown, giving the
.·.
Parkway 16 New Bremen 0
8
Kevin Walker . The score came Fwnbles
Green
Wave,
a
13-0
lead
in
the
4 5
Springfield Shawnee 21 Maplefon ,l6 South Ce.nlral 0
:~~
Covington 6
Clearfork 28 Loudonvrlle 0
on a 12 yard pass from Flimbles Lost
I
3 second quarter.
1
Lima East 16 Northwestern 6 Wapakoneta 48 Delphos St. sophomore qlllll'terback Terry Penalized
sasil Godwin caught a six
55
55
Cedarville 27 Jonathan Alder 7 Johns 8
Ca t to · ·
d U d
'
yard touchdown pass from
By Quarters:
Steubenville 19 Steubenville St . Marys 20 Van Wert 0
r er
Juntor en
oy
Central o
Ottawa Glandorf 28 Lima Bath Wood . Arun for the conversion Green
6 8 0 ~22 Foleywith3:llleft in the game
Wintersville 12 Brook (W. Va .l
7
was stopped ..
SW
6000--6 for the !ina I tally.
o
Lima Shawnee 16 Sidney 6
on ·the ensuing kickoff, the
Buckeye South 6 Cadiz 0
Celina 22 Elida 22 (fie)
Highlanders were given a lo
toronto 26 Mingo oBellefontaine 18 Piqua 15
Jewitf-Sclo 20 Slanton Local 18 Paulding 6 Wayne Trace o
yard penalty before being
Woodsfield 24 Meadowbrook 14 Perry 14 Crestview 8
forced to kick over again. Dyer
Union Local 18 Beallsville 9
Allen East 21 Ada 18
Oak Hills 35 Flnneytown 21
Berijamln Logan 52 Riverside 7 fielded the ball at the 40 and
North College Hill 27 Harrison Indian Lake 21 Ridgemont 19 raced to the end zone. A pass
20 .
'
West Muskingum 20 Maysville for the extras failed.
Is your home ready for winter? Have you made all the
Indian Hill 34 Madlera 14
0
G
b k th 6-6 t' · th
nece5Sary preparations to protect your home against the
C&lt;!ieraln 18 Anderson 12
Zanesvi ll e Gooecrans 36
reen ro e e
teJn e
bitter cold this winter.
,
Wyoming 58 Taylor o
Catqwell o
second period on a 32.yard pass
Reading 21 Lockland 0
Miller 21 Eastern 14.
completion from quorterback
Let's take a little testto see If you ha,ve.
Ctn . Moeller 21 Cln. Roger Wayne 14 Xenia 0
Glenn Barrett to Ralph
1.
Has your furnace been cleaned this winter?
Bacon 0
Brookville 26 Tipp City 21
2. Does your furnacewo&lt;k exactly II kelt should?
Loveland •2 Deer Park 6 .
Oakwood 34 West Carrollton 20 Chatfield. A:pass from Barrett
3. Does your oil lank have a new ftlter on it.
Milford 27 Glen Esle e
Palterson 14 Alder 13
to Wooten was good for the two
•·
Is your hot water tank working properly .
Madison 20 Coshocton 3
Miamisburg &lt;16 Fairview 14
·
·
Th h If
5. Have your water lines had n~w heat tapes and lnRiverview 16 Crooksville 0
Franklin 48 Madison Butter 12 pom 1 conversion.
e a
svlotloo put on In thetas! year or so? .
·
Montl"'lier 24'Bryan 14
Minster 34 Ansonia 22
ended after Southwestern
6. Is your mobile home uh~erplnned to keep out the
Napoleon 30 Bowling Green 14 Graham Local 50 Greenon 2
threatened twice but could not
cold?
.
'
·
Archbold 3Q Delta 0
No&lt;lheaslern 34 Tecumseh. 6 move ln. One Highlander drive
Wauseon 14 Evergreen 6
Garfield Heights 40 Shaker
7. Do all your windows and doors tie&amp; I promptly?
Interest paid quarterly on all certificates
Lima C"ntral Catholic 43
Heights 14
·
died at the four yard line.
8. Do all your water faucets work?
Defiance 20
Eastlake North 26 Maple
Southwestern played con·
9. Has your roof been sealed In the last two years?
Deposit by the lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Height~ 6
trolled ball dW'ing a scoreless
.Colonel Crawford 14 Elgin 0
Pleasant 26 RldQedale 0
Berea Mfijpark 14 Mentor 6
third period . The Highlanders
Interest availahle.monthly on accounts of $1;000 or more
River Valley 28 "Wynford 1 · Medina" 21 Avon. Lake 6
If you can answer ns to all these questions then don't call
.
Marion Catholic 7 Big Walnut 6 Westlake 3 Bay VIllage 2
drove 80 yards but could not
us, But If you can't, calf us today.
Highland 1A Cardington 12
. Brecksville 31 Independence 16 score. The game was rmal)y
MciulltGIIHd.ONorlh Union 17 Brooklyn 28 l':'orth Rovatton· 14 decided in ·the final minutes of
. Gellon 21 Upper Sandusky 0
Ashtabula 30 Conneaut 0
.
Tiffin Columbian 14 Bucyrus 6 A5htabulaffarbor 13 Madison 7· · the foW'th quarter. Barrett
. Kenton 25 Coldwater 0
Perry 54 Southington 8
_
raced 55 yards fol"Jb!Llinal.
"-Col Souttn..-tlH;-W;m8rOn5wlcolf'Waasworth 3
A
to Cl'
ood
Col: Marlon Franklin 41 Col. Wickliffe 13 Painesville · score. pass . me was g
c.ntrel 22
.
Riverside 6
for the converston.
'Col. Eastmocr 44 Col. Mohawk Mt. Heallhy 20 Forreot Park 16
Fullback Phil Lewis lea the
o
Cin . Sf. Xavier 27 Cln . Purcell 8 Highlander offense with 56
Col. East 11 Cot. Linden Sycamore 26 Mariemont o
.
. .
McKtntiY 14
Paulding 6 Wayne Trace o
yar~s m, 12 carries. Mtke
Pike Street
Kanauga, Ohio
Col. North .o Col. Whetstone o Oakwood 35 Canton ~ehman 12 Dillon, Terry Fortner. Kevin
'
Newly
Authorized
Colt
man Service Center
-teryllle 45 Rt)IROld•burg 0 · North Canton Hoover ,5• Walker Larry Fallon ' !lpb
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
Ph.
446·1101
or
:U7.71U
Mifflin 311 Hlllllrd 0
F01rtess 2 ,
'
' ·
0r11w CfiY :M GtowapGI t 7
E'yrla Catholic 33 Cayton Roth !luff and Pack wer~ , ~II
'l.tldlrl ~fltlt IP,Otenlangy
6
credited wlth good defen~tve

1

L

}

Management
Agen't, of
Jackson.
These individual summaries
are a part of the state sumllUil'Y and always confidential.
The statewide report gives a
fa.ctual picture of farm·
manage")ent problems and
opportunities because it is'
' based on actual farming
operations.
The overall dairy farm
summary is based on 200
o•vner-operator and tenantlandlord farms. A more
detailed analysis is made of 150
dairy farms- 4hat provide
specific information.
When ranked by family labor

...

...

Notre Dame alls .30-26

•

invested.
middle 50 pel.
had $116,000 invested and the
top 25 pet . had $157,000 invested. This gave a percent
re rurn on investment of -0.7 for
the low group, U for the
middle group, and 12.5 for ,the
high group.
Cash receipts for . the low
group and Ihe 'middle group
were almost the same, $39,509
fur the low group, $41 ,013 for
rhe middle group, while the top
25 pel. had receipts of $64,170.
Cash expenses were $31,705
for I he lower &lt;15 pel., $27,376 for
rhe middle group, and $39,792
for rhe high.
Going 10 the more detailed
analysis of the 159 enterprises,
we find the number of cows

~:g5: gt~o~2p. ll'and $2.26 for the

APPARENTLY THE
HIGHER income farmer is
able 10 use more effectiv~ly his
1abor, aI1houg h the d1'fference
isrelatively sma11..
On a per·cow basis, the lower
25 per. used 8.60 man 'work
un11s per cow, the lop "'
w pel.
.
Th
used only 6.87. ts cost was
$I90.20 for the Iower group
compare d to $174 .32 for Ihe top.
The milk sold per cow was
'"" 58 for the 1ower, $798 .35 for
.WI.
.
•the rop.Cashexpensespercow
.,, 93 f h 1
25
were ..,..I. or t e ower
8
f
h
pel. and $304. I or I e lop 2li
per.
Th

. f d
.ff
e d1 erence tn ee
required between th e lower

•

HI.

..
'

I
!

•

Friday's high
school scores

LITY TRACTORS

•

• 40 pto HP and 52 pta HP models (gas
•
·•
•
•

j.

M o~(/!) ._ .~ , ,_

Green defeats

SW team, 22-6

••••••••••••••••••

. Three Savings Plans to •·•
Suit Your Needs

and diesel)
Lightning flash shift (8F-4R s~aeds)
synchromesh transmission
Planetary final drive
Big, rear fuel tank- new " walkthrough" styling
Big capacity live independent
hydraulics

• Precision draft control 3-point hitch
with infinite rare response
• Hydrostatic power steering, adjustable seat, Dyna-Life• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes
• Options include twin-shaft 540!1000
RPM IPTO and differenliallock.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT
POMEROY, OriiO

~

Itt
~

IN
5l
11

TWO floor heat outlets-

~

fjl
~

li:lf

HEATlNG OIL

DOUBLE THE HEAT
OVER YOUR FLOORS!

Save Any Amou11t Any Time

'

~
COMruiLMOBilE HOME~

SERVICES, IN~

..

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS,
-and LOAN COMPANY "·

°

·

d
•0
d
serve
a
,
-acre
mea
h' h had bee
eded d ·ow
w tcf. t
th
kn se
fA
turmg
Or
e trs wee o ugus . d 1 din 0 1
chard f! rass an a
cover
wereI sowed.
These
plants
ed h . ht f 6 t 8had
.
alta n a etg o odo htn·d
ches and abl'dense
a
bee
hd s
orne estaM tsKING
e · 1 1
WE
ARE
A
h · · · th pans
t bor
anot
coun yh' hy
th 1.1erd.VISit
h. m e h.
· e 1 e ttc
d mg mac. mew
bl tct
IS
rna e avat 1a e
o
cooperators once or twice each
bY the Western SCD .
year
De
y h f SCS h
d
nver o o o
as rna e
deta'lt ed dramaoo
· •• destgns
·
on
(
f
H If
the arms o George o man
V
Ch h w·ll'
near ernon W'C • 1 tam
CuIIen an d Joun
" McDermt'tt on
Oldtown Cr ee k and Herbert
Hender~on on Rou te 35 at Fl ve
M'l
Creek .
1e
0 n th e Hoffman farm the
·
·IS broug ht
nee d 1or dramage
b tb
Ia
th
a ou Y a seepy p ce on e
· r·te ld . rn all •
st'de of a s1opmg
the area affected is about one
acre but there is so much water
seeping from the hill at the

analysis, farms in the higher
earnings categories had :
11 ) Lower overhead costs as
a percent of gross income.
12) . Lower machine investment per crop acre and
.lower machine cost per crop
acre.
(3) Greater gross farm income per farn1 and. per man.
(4) Higher return per dollar
feed fed .
(5 ) Higher value of
production per crop acre.
(6) More crop acres.
· (7) More hired lalior and
higher hoW'ly wage rates pa. id
ro hired labor.
.
(8) Higher g·ross income per
$1,000 invested.
(9) Higher profit margin.
(Management Income and
Profit plus interested divided
by Gross Incom· e·
110) Higher percent return
on investment. (Management
Income and Profll plus interest
divided by Total Investment.)
Success or failW'e depends on
whether the business:
( 1) Is making a profit on
each dollar of output. Is the

.., "f•

.~. ~ ~

•r

· This past year the SCS
assisted landowners In building
1,165 ponds; usually about a
thousand have been built each
year in Ohio. Quilliam cited the
versatility of the pond practice.
He listed pond uses to Include
livestock water, fire control,
house water, wildlife, and
recreation; including .fishing,
hunting, bird watching,
swimming, and ice skating.
The SCS guides landowners
in selecting pond locations with
proper soli conditions which

porential?' Is the
bijj
eno,l!!lh to carry the investment
an&lt;ff dy.erhead cost in equipIn~~· ~ facilities and other
capital resources? Is the
business big enough to provl&lt;i~
. productive and profitable
employment
for . labor
resources?
THE H,IGH INCOME '
operators out-performed their
eompetition In both these
categories. They managed
a'C·
larger
businesses,
complishe~ more per worker,
and used capital resources
more effectively. They ex·
celled in output per acre and in
performance of livestock.
enrerprise.
No one factor can be singled
out as the basic difference
between high ~nd lo'!' income·
farms. For each of the ef
ficiency 'measures studied,~:
some fl!fms in the low income••
group ranked near the top.
Satisfactory incomes were the
result of above average performance "across the boJrd 11
father than outstanding
achievement in only one or two
departments.

The drainag~ system in-

~olved .ts what ts known as an

· mterceptor type system. This
system Involves digging the
ditch and laying the tile at the
upper edge of the wet area so
as to tntercept the water before
it appears on the surface.
The Cullen and. McDennitt
tile jobs are in wet bo\tom land.
The soil on these farms needing
drainage is Senecaville Silt
Loam and a random type of tile
placing is planned to be used .
•
By this method we mean that
the tile is placed in the areas
which are wet only. On the
Henderson farm the soil Is
have an adequate, but not Melvin Silt Loam and In that
excessive, drainage area. SCS
soil it is necessary to Install tlle
also advises landowners in on what Is known as the pattern
planting the pond area to
system . By this system
prevent erosion and sediment parallel tile lines are placed
damage and to provide food about 50 feet apart to drain the
and cover for wildlife. Qullliam wet area.
stated that proper planting also
makes ponds more attractive.
He pointed out.tbit the SCS hail'
helped landowners install over
25,000 ponds in the past 30
years since the Soil and Water
Conservation
District
movement began In Ohio.
Quilliam especially praised
the good work that landowners
have done in the northwest
section of the state. This area
had few ponds because of its
nat topography, but with the
use of "dugout and reservoir ..
type ponds this section of the
state is fast catching up with
other areas.

Pigs drink worms away
safely, with one dose of
Purina
Liquid Pig
Wormer. It helps improve
feed efficiency and weight
gains-saves you money.

.:::::::=

Coate just 2-3 cents to
wo~m

a 25-40 lb. pig,

See us soon for economical Purina

LIQUID PIG WORMER

by landowners in Ohio

1

overall

upper edge of this wet place
that It is Impossible to work
machinery over it and
livestock avoid It because they
could become mired.

Pond ·building increases
COLUMBUS - "Ponds and
lakes have long been a popular
conservation practice in Ohio,
but more landowners were
assisted this year in building

the

cropping prugram geared 1o
produce maximum net return
,per crop acre? Does the clair)'
operation produce maximum
retW'n per dollar of feed fed? Ia
machine cost per crop ac('l! low
enough to ·permit a profit?
121 Has enough volwne. IS
rhere
·
volume to

J. D. North PrOduce
Vine Street

Gallipolis, 0.

fOR WINTER-

550 signed to scouting
·..

lOADS OF
HOME.COMFORT,
BROUGHT TO YOU
BY OUR FRIENDLY
NICE GUYS!

m1mmum

Passbook Savings Accounts

CO.

AGood Combination From Landmark

~

5,000
.

-

sedimentation in streams and
Ponds and that a conference
has been called in Charleston
Dec. 12 and 13 to discuss this
problem. Some national
leaders will be present.
The West Virginia Department of Highways, West
Vl·rgt·n1·a Department of
Natural Resources. West
Virginia Department of
Health, Soil Conservation
Service and Extension Service
will be represented along with

(SCS) .

,,
::«

2 Year, Savings
Certificates

ATTENTION

Ia y 0 f th e Ia nd

stated Robert E. Qullliam,
state conservationist of the U.
S. Soil Conservation Service

PH. 992-2176

All SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

-,r

ponds than ever before,"

ALL NEW INTERNATIONAL 454 and 574

••
....

E~

three tracts of. land in Mason
C""nty. Thes~ t'nclude a 10,4()().
Public Hunting
acre Corns'"ik
...
area, the Charles R. Butler
farm on Little 16 Mile Creek,
an"~ the Doss farm recently
bought by Fred Green and his
brother James, at Upland.
We have been workl.ng wlth
Paul·Matthews, Dt'slrt'ct Game
Biologist, for more than a year
t'n the preparatt'on of the plan
for Cornstalk Public Hunting
Area. Tht's plan brings out
ways and means that the W.
va·. Department of NatW'al
Resources l·s planning to carry
out improved wildlife habitat
on this much-used area.
On a recent trip with Paul
Matthews to Cornstalk to
observe some of the practices
·that have been carried out, we
talked with Millard Wallis,
resident manager, and A. G.
Middleton. Mr. Middleton and
ll
lped Ia 1 th
· Mr. Wa 15 he
s r
e
dev.elopment of C~rnstalk
moro. than 30 years ago when tt
was known as a Land Use Area
1m t f
0( th U S De
e · · par en
Agriculture.
MR. BUTLER a~d Mr ·
Green are plannmg to unprove
their fanns as grassland farms
on which they will raise beef
catUe. The main items in which
they were interestea were
development of grass and
improvement of
water
facilities for livestock .
On the Green farm we ob-

BYJ obn Cooper
Soil Conservatlo n Servlce
PT PLEASANT
·
. - The
Western Soil Conservation
· t h Id ·t
1
D.ts t nc
e
1 s regu ar
monthl Y ll)~e ting at the d'IS tr'ct
1
offl ce tn
· Pt· PI easan t With
Carroll Greene, executive
secre ta ry of the State Sol' I
. Commt'tt ee of
Conserv at 1on
Charleston, present.
Greensat'd theNtS
. be commg
.
a natt'onwt'de real'••tt'on of the
de trtmen
·
ta I eff-ec t of so t'l

group decides that a bill should
be Introduced into the
legislatW'e that such a bill wlll
be drafted and introduced into
the State Legislature at its next
session.
WE HAVE BEEN assisting
with conservation planning on

'.

C(1111men1 s ntade by the

Sedimentation in pond&amp;
and stre~ms •.m'p·, ortant

soil conservation district
represenlatives.
Greene brought out that after
the seminar is held that if the

I

, ~nsion Economists John ' W.
B"s
rian, Reed D. Taylor,
wri rers of the report, ExRfchard D. Duvick, and John
E. Moore, include answers to
1he quesliUn, ''Whal . is lhe
reason for the difference in
success or faiiW'e on these
farms?" Several factors In the
.
summaries· explain these

climb&lt;.'(( fr·om the lower to the
hi~hcr ~roup , slarling with 51
cuws in the lowe1·, 48' in lhe
middle. and 69 in the upper.
The nuntber of cows per man
equivalent didn' r change quite
as 'much, being 34, 33, and 43.
.
returns per dollars
of-feed.fed.changed.fr.om-~~~·- --~~~-~-...;.....---~~--.-.-.- - - - - - - - - --' For

TWO GREAT NEW

..

and 1hl' 1up wa~ unly $17, IJcin)!. . Dt· ~;;till'tl coPi~-s of the fo"arrn
$445 fur •he lower 25 pet . and Business Analysis Report are
$428 fur tile uoocr.
available from this ulfice.

intreuscd as lhC:

hoW' of labor to the farm, we
find the lower .25 pel. 'llelled a
minus I cent Joss fur each hour
of Ia bar . . The .middle 50 pel.
received $2.14 for their labor
while the top 2li pet: averaged
$5.34!
Tu get
s

new in farming

rarmers

and managemem incopte per

p. your family

.......ndlnl
of llvin1 with
1 new, plttnt!ICI

That's Landmark Heating
Oil Service In a nubhell :
excellent product,
available to all owners of
new or e•lstlng houHS,
dependable delivery by
Friendly Nice Guy' who
· ·have a great easy-pay
Budget Plan. ll'i Hay to
vet starftd with Landmark
Ht.lflng Oil-lust give us a
c.olll Ph. 992-2111.

·• OIL HC111E

for
. . ,_...._.. al.. ltaw..,. • .....,..._....._._,
t1tor- Stool••'•- llow - · Tloor'll lol \100. 1M oo
..., ...... l;oeto&lt; . . _ - - - · - hoot ... J
f '' .,.,... fMR ..., W . . . . ..
I ll1•1 011
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POMEROY ~·

YOUR NIW .
OIUSID

Jack W. C..,, MJ.

'

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StrvJno .Meigs. O.llia

~'WE-DEUVEI--WE

&amp; . Mi10n

Counties

o,itn Mon.-S.t . until 4p.m.

· Ph. 992-2111

SERVICE-WE FHWIU--~
'

of
educational
values
Scouting. "
More than 80 parents also
agreed to be volunteer leaders
or committee members for
units, Oils reported. .
Dils praised the many
volunteers who helped make
School Night successful, including school superintendents
and · principals, school coordinators, organizers, unit
commissioners, unlt leaders,
and other volunteers from the
Tri-State Area Council.

OW Min Wilder Cea
•HiniOnYour.
Clir,
•Trtctor.

r-.
......

QUAKER MAID

A NTI.fltll:EZE

-

..........

Ill US .fOR

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. ·' Latest reports on School Night
for Scouting held recently in
area schools show that ii50 boys
signed up to become Cub
Scouts and Scouts.
Rogert Dils, School Night
chairman for the Tri-State
Area Council, .Boy Scouts of
America, said, ''The success of
this neighborhood - oriented,
one-night stand proved that
boys who want to be Scouts can
find a unit to joi~ and that we
were able to help them get the
fun,
adventure,
and

Feeder Calf $ale!
NOVEMBER 2 - 8 P.M.
OHIO VALLEY UVESTOCK SALES IN.C.
GAU.IPOUS, 0.
Consignors &amp; Buyers Welcome
calves may be delivered after 3:00 p.m.
November 1 and·between 6:00a.m. 1nd 11:00
a.m. November 2. Late deliveries m1y be
rejected.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT

QUAKER MAID

Pennanent Anti;.fre•z•

..., ..

hiC..

~·--

"Your Farm Supply Supermarket"

PAUL H. BAER

CENTRAL SOYA

MINERSVILLE, O. 45763
PHONE 985-3830

OF OHIO

Or Olllo Y•lley

Uyestqck S.les Co. TeleP-hone
446-9049, or your Co11nty Agent.
·

lrd &amp; Sycamore Sts.

•
f.

$135

O.lllpolls. Ohio

�'

..

-

..

•

~:

Pirates in

'

.'
By C. E. Blalletft
Eiteuton Asent. Agricullllre
POMEROY - Nine Meigs
County farmers had an inpui
ln10 the 1971 Ohio Farm
Business Analysis Report.
They submilted their !ann
business swnmaries through
this office, a.Sisted by Bill

·B obcats
.,

ALBANY - Kyger Creek's the Rub• at s havt• ltllowcd ~4 dashed over from the seven fur Then came the turning point of after Alexander was 'called for
Brooks began moving his
--~~·w·pilui~tt·a"-ruing offense exploded. t~&lt; •i" '' r.. r a fiJ ,.v,·ra;;c.
,, :1-0 lead. He then caught a tilt• ,
The ba;ill~~~~~~~~~;,th~c~k~ic~k~erwb~ukt~t~hei'--~~~~~Ksh~o~r~t~·~itd~to~-~
ie
on a
and
sceund qtuu-tcr h('re Friday wh!C'h rn11 NI !o a:-- 8~ -lh:i ( · lnr y vcr siun .
picked tt up. faked left, ran fourth down play at the ~2. The scored i L~ final six-pointer with
night , overcoming H 15 ,point lal:l l Wl'Ck , slruLk ror lwo first
Win gback Greg McCarty ri ~ ht behind the Bobcat wedge Spartans fumbled the ball over 42 seconds remaining on a
ddicil in defeHting the Class period scores. t"ollowing an returned the ensuing kickoff JO and broke down the sidelines two plays later . John Rumley, three yard run by. Gilders.
Double A Alexander Spart&lt;ms, Orland Cremeans punt, yards to the 40 where the fur a 75 yard TO run . A key junior defensive end, fell on the
Coach Sprague commended
VINTON - Rolling on land and in the air here 27-21.
Alcxandet•moved 70 yards in 1~ Bobc:" ts began their best block was thrown at the 50 by ball .
his team fo r its big comeback
Friday night Coach John Blake's North Gallia ' Co"ch Jim Sprague's Bob- pitys behind the strong running suslainc&gt;d dnve of the evening. Chb Smith. Cremeans booted
Spraguemen drove to the effort. "It was a team victory, "
Pirates. defea'ted the winless Hannan Trace Wild· CHI S had not scored in five of senior fullback Greg Sparked by the runnihg of the extra point to reduce the 13The
yard line where Cremeans he satd .
cats 32-6 before a large homecoming crowd. T~e quarters prior tu the 20 point Gilders, the area 's leading suphomore tailback Mike Rife, score to 15-13.
attempted a field goal which
Curr y · wa s the leading
win 'pushed North Gallia's record in the Southern second stanza Friday night. KC scm·er. Gil.~crs scored three who replaced the injured After stoppmg the Spartans was wide.
Bobcat runnet· wit~ IH yards.
Valley Athletic Conference to 3-2. The Pirates are 3-4 last scored in the final period TO's and three extra points Lawren ~e Tabor, the Gallians at the 39-yard line, Kyger
Alexander late drove to the Rife had 53 yards in II carries.
weeks ago at Eastern.
Friday night.
drove 60 yards in 10 plays. Rife Creek began movin·g the ball six yard .li!JLlvhere 'Senior The Bobcat defense although it
in all games. It also snapped a two game losing twoAlexander
went into the
Midway in the drive, the gained 38 yards durjng the behind the hard running of hnebackei'"'!ffil Rife hit permitted 21 points was
streak.
contest ~ with a :i-1 record, Spartans were forced to punt drive which also featured a fullback George CW'ry and
Gilders
with
a
jar- commended for its hard hitting
The loss left Hlmnan Trace fact they had finally scored. scoring 210 points In leading all but KC was charged with nine yard pass from quar- McCarty. Curry broke loose on
ring tackl e 'forcing a and pass coverag~.
with a ~league mark and 0-7
The Pirates scored their final area offensive units. The roughing the kicker. Another terback John Baird to tight end a 37 yard run while McCarty fumble . Rife recovered the
', .....,
Kyger Creek now 4-2-1 will
record overall.
six-pointer on a foW' yard run Bobcats had permitted just 23 big play was a 29-yard run on Clay Hudson .
carried it 18 yards to the six. loose ball.'
hos t Symmes Valley Thursday
The Pirates reached the by freshman fullback Bruce points in six games prior to the the option by senior · quar- · The Bobcats broke the With just two seconds left in the
Kyger Creek drove to the 17 mght in a Southern Valley
scoreboard with 9:40 left in the Runyon : It came with 4:56 left first period Friday night. KG tcrback Greg Brooks. Gilders scoring ice with 10: 14Jeft in the half, CW'ry hulled over from
yard
line where on foW'lh down Athletic Conference game.
opening · period when Dave climaxing a 50 yard march. 'was the area's best defensive scqred from the one with 5:58 first half. Senior fullback Jim the one giving the Southern
STATISTICS
Wickline blocked a punt. George again ran the con- unft. They are now second remaining making the score 6- Bias raced 10 yards off tackle Valley Athletic Confe~ence the Bobcats faked a field goal
KC A
attempt.
Rife
,
the
holder,
DEPARTMENT
Wickline grabbed the ball and version.
behind the Nelsonville York 0. He booted the extra point for the first six-pointer. A kick team a lead for the first bme in passed to end Mark Darst but First Downs
14 15
raced 10 yards for the score.
'~ IJ •
The Spartans struck again for the conversion was wide to the contest.
Wickline and Keith Saunders Buckeyes. The Buckeyes
220
205
.'
the
ball
sailed
over
the
h~nds
of
Yards
Rushing
Phil Hollenbaugh added the were both credited with a fine permitted 13 points in their loss ·following a blocked punt by the right.
Although the third period the stretching receiver.
30 15
Yards Passing
conversion on a run.
Steve . Thomas . Alexander
Alexander then failed to was scoreless, it offered harddefensive game. Saunders Friday to Belpre.
7 16
John Roush, Bobcat safety, Passes Att.
With 5:04 left in the second intercepted two passes while
has
per
Nelsonville-York
recovered
on
the
20
yard
line.
move
as
a
."fired-up"
defense
httting
football
for
both
teams.
·~~·
4 3
killed another Spartan drive Passes completed
period, North Galli a's junior Witkline blocked two punts. mitted 43 points in seven Five plays later, Gilders forced a punting situation.
The Bobcats started to drive wtth a pass interception.
2
3
Fwnbles
end Keith Weddington took an
Runyon was the top rusher games for a 6.1 average whtle
1 3
The winning touchdown t' wnbles Lost
... Owen Games pass 14 yards to for North Gallia with 73 yards .
58 30
came with 2:30 left in the game Penalized
'- .., ,.
the end zone. Hollenbaugh Hollenbaugh had 71 yards and
when
Curry
raced
55
yards
to
By
Quarters:
again ran the conversion . Tracy Johnson added 40 yards.
' ,
0 20 0 7- 27
the end zone. Cremeans kicked KC
''
North Gallia went into the
Montgomery led the WildAlex.
15
0 0 6- 21
the
extra
point
for
a
27-l51ead.
'""
locker room at the half with a cats with 32 yards. North
24-0 lead 'following a 12 yard Gallia travels to Hannan, W.
pass reception by T. J . Va.. Friday night. Hannan
•••• Robinson.
Greg George, Trace is at Fort Gay.
SOUTil BEND, Ind. (UP!) Missouri's Bob Pankey in- fourth down opporll!nities ·in the score, and completed three
~
~serve quarterback, ran the
STATISTICS
Missouri
cashed
in
on
foW'th
tercepted Clements' first pilss the first touchdown parade. passes for 19 yards. He
• two point conversion.
DEPARTMENT
NG HT down plays six times for touch- of the game and returned 10 And all three of the Tigers' directed a 70-yard scoring
•• · Coach Tom Belville's First Downs
11
8 downs or to keep scoring drives yards to Notre Dame's 46. touchdowns were made on march in which he completed
Wildcats r~ached the scoring Yards Rushing
167 43 alive Saturday in a 30-26 upset From there Missouri moved to fourth down plays.
two passes for 65 yards, setting
column lor the first time this Yards Passing
' 82 116 of No. 11-ranked Notre Dame. a touchdown in 12 plays with
Notre
Dame
had
trouble
up a 12-yard touchdown run by
season with 7:25 left in the
Att.
12 19
It was the first defeat in five Leroy Moss running over from handling the wet ball - there Huff.
.
•• game. On a foW'th down play, Passes
Passes
Completed
7
9
starts
of
the
previously
unthe
16
.
was a dayiong drizzle - in the
Missouri riddled Notre
•• Wayne Hesson faked a punt, Fumbles
9
2 beaten Irish.
But
the
Irish
came
back
in
a
third
period
and
twice
turned
Dame's.
previously enviable
' then paiRed to Garland Mont- Fumbles Lost
2 2
Notre Dame went up against 66-yard drive and Andy Huff over the ball to the Tigers on defensive record by racking up
gomery for a 56 yard · touch- Penalized
80 60 Missouri as a four-touchdown scored from the one to set up a fumbles to set up field goals of 223 yards rushing and 106
down. Akick for the extra point
By Quarters :
favorite against a club which 7-7 tie.
25 and 20 yards by Greg Hill. passing. The Irish previously
was wide. ·
·1
HT
0
0
0
66
had won only twice in five
•
Missouri countered with a 67Hill connected on a 24-yard had allowed only 182 yards a
The Wildcats, although still NG
••
8 16 0 8-32 starts and which last week was yard scoring drive with Don field goal in the last period for garite and only 60 through the
shellacked by Nebraska 62-0. Johnson plunging from the one Missouri's final points before air. The Tiger defense also
'' losing, were overjoyed at the
But Saturday Missouri never while Notre Dame retaliated Clements sparked the Notre limited the Irish, who had
trailed in an offensive battle in with an 81-yard march in·which Dame rally, which finally averaged 447 a game to 356.
which neither team punted in John Cieszkowski scored from ended with less than three
•
the first half.
the 1 for a 14-14 deadlock.
minute$ left in the game when
· Notre Dame's sophomore
Missouri then paraded 91 Mike
Fink intercepted
Denison rips
quarterback Tom Clements yards in 17 plays before Clements• 17th and last pass of_
almost got the Irish a tie in the Johnson got his second touch- the contest.
Marietta 30-14
)
••
fourth period, but twice two- down on another one-yard
Previously Clements
Yuu Si mp ly save so much on an EVAN S INTERNA
•
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP! ) - · Surpnsed?
point
conversion
attempts
TIONAL
HOME
. ~ m all mon thly payments and short-te rm mort·
plunge
for
21-14
lead
with
69
sparked
an
80-yard
scoring
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL ·
0
Freshman quarterback Dan gages are the rule In fac t noborly has ever needed mo re Ihan a
''
failed
and
Notre
Dame
fell
four
FOOTBALL SCORES
Marysvilie26West Jefferson 14
seconds left in the half.
drive by running twice for 38 Ross ran nine yards for a
United Press lnternatfon•l Dublin .1 Hamilton Twp. 6
points short.
·
Missouri converted on three yards, the last for 13 yacds and touchdown and passed 26 and 12-year Evans tnternatronat Home mo rtgage' II you own a lot or
(Friday Night I
Upper Arlington 17 Lancaster
ca n get one you can ta k,e advantage ol our: tree pla n.~ servrce.
Fairfield
14
Covington
(Ky.)
14
moderncon str uc tro nmetnocls And easy ·cto rt·yo urself frn rshrnq
49-yards
!01·
two
more
TDs,
all
•• Catholic 0
Licking Heights 6 Granville 0
in the third quarter, to .lead Ge tlhe lull savrnqs stnry'
Elyria 15 Sandusky 7.
Col. Hartley 24 Col. Walnut
Denison to a 30-14 Ohio Con- FREE· MatU l1•s cou pon today lor " lull color h 7 pag~ catalog
;l~'""~~;i~~~;Loraln
Senior
0
Ridge
0
~
.
U ' l'o&lt;lsmoOtn· ·l'hl'i6clW I101!1'11'8Yf' Valley O'' ": .• ,
ference win over Marietta here tea1 1111ng 1111 niJreds ol excr trng 11ome styles enrl lloor pfa n rdeas
Alhens 35 Gallipolis 14
Saturday.
\ YP" .tl &gt;l • &lt;llll l )lt • ,,1 Ill' r i•&gt;Wil p,,~r! l!•llT I f1illl&lt; .Ulq I tHl V! 1.1 ( .r 1/ ( II :J i ll 71 P r lf.!J
Po~rtsrrtoutth7 Springfield South Sheridan 14 New Concord
~1141 (1 \ lr• wnl' •vrrunt'f,l 1:"!0 layrrlf' lll&lt;; lo.,17 '!,tl'ii ll'l md2nl l ;• 1 '!&gt; 88rnCIIrr1
Marietl&lt;l's
Steve
Morris,
who
6
Glenn 13
'
&lt;lltll'lllll 'l r rll uu l _n to•r• " l .rt 1' Pll l!llrl n ~&gt;r o o•n kt rl" r .-llo I ••I l : uf'&lt;; .&lt;u•rl rn&lt;;trr;;nr:P
MORGANTOWN, W. · Va. 31-19 victory over Tulane a 17-13 halftime leap.
Ph &gt;I IIP'iqd•••l
New Bostoo 15 Northwest 13 Col. Northland 29 . Col .
accounted
for
the
first
and
last
Kerry Marbury raced six
Middletown 26 Lima Senior 7 Brookhaven 0
(UPI)-West Virginia's Moun- Saturday.
evans
Riverdale 12 Carey 0
Gahanna 17 WN!ehall 0
Sophomore fullback Ron Lee · yards around. right ~nd for .a touchdowns of the game, fired
taineers exploded for 17 points
New Philadelphia 14 Mansfield Delaware 35 Moon! Vernon 7 in the final three minutes of the scored two touchdowru; on runs touchdown wi,th 3:3. gone m a 36-yard TD pass to John Bon
InTeRnaTIOnaL
Malabar 0 .
Worthington 60 Col. Westland 0
in the second period. Late in
Homes
first half and Danny Buggs oftwo yards, and Frank Nester . the second half to life the the period Denison tied it up 6-6
Shelby 6 Norwalk 0
Be• ley 54 Grandview 0
-o-o
• ..,., , , _,..
Buckeye Central 12 Mohawk 7 Newark 49 Marielta 15
returned a punt 9o yards early kicked a 35-yard field goal to Mountameer lead to 24-13. when Ed Exler finished a 14• SEND ME YOUR FREE CATALOG •
Fredericktown 30 Crestline 12 Walkins Memorial 9 Lakewood in the second half to sew up a rally West Virginia, now :i-2, to Doug Charley . mtercepted a
•
Evan s lntern ahonal Homes, D~pt. 0-48
•
Zanesville 48 Chillicothe 0
7
play,
64-yard
drive
by
running
.
Mike Walker pass and returned
•
46th St. a t Mtnneha ha, Mmn t!apolrs , Mmn . 5 5 40 6 •
Tri Valley 20 Philo 0
Canal Wlncester 24 Millersporf
i,t 13 yards to the Tulane 29 to the last yard .
I plan t o bu rld soon
•
•
1 own ., lo t
Sheridan 14 John Glenn 13
16
After Denison 's 22-yard third
set up the third Mountaineer
Bornesville a2 Shenandoah 9 Marion Catholic 7 Big Walnut 6
•
I co n i1SSrs t wr tt • fr n rsh mg wo r k
•
period
splurge,
Morris
ran
YouJ)gstown Chaney 9 Youngs. Miami Trace .48 Hillsboro 13
touchdown.
•
P I ~.'ISP lrilvl' iln E- I ·H rep resentalrve co n ta ct m e 11 •
town South 8
. Toledo Scott 48 Toledo Central
three yards for a touchdown
Less
than
two
minutes
later
Yovngstown East 14 Youngs·
10
•
NanH!
•
Ralph E Myl ~ r
•
•
Buggs, the 190 - pound and the host team added a
town North 8
T o ledo Bowsher 7 Toledo
801 400
Address
safety
.
Austintown Filch 9 Hubbard 0 Rogers 0
Ro11te 3
•
l own or RFD
Co u nty
•
sophomore speedster from AtC h es a pu ~e . Oh ro 456 19
Salem 14 Girard 9
Tol edo Cardinal Slrltch 22
Denison
now
is
5-0-1
overall
(6U ) !67-523t
•
S ta te
Z1p
•
lanta, received a punt on his
Columbiana 28 Sebring 0
Oregon Clay 19
and
1-0-1
in
the
loop's
southern
•
Telephone
Number
·--E
•
five yard line and zig-zagged 95
Lisbon 8 Beaver Local 6
Toledo Whitmer 19 Toledo
division,
while
Marietta
is
4-2
Brookfield 14 Labrae 12
Macomber 9
yards for a touchdown to
Lewisville 41 Canton South 7 Anthony Wayne 30 Maumee 17
assure the comeback victory. and 1-1.
Massillon 34 Cleve. Glenville 0 Lake 17 Perrysburg 6
Unebacker Tom Zakowski
Glenwood 15 Marlington 6
Fostoria 26 Sylvania 6
. ::::: ::· .:::;,;;: ;·.
w.. ·.·;::::... ··.::;.: :;: ::;:;. ·.; .;~·~::;~::::::::.:.:·::;: •':::=:·::;:_ :~::·:: :·. . ·.·
·:-....
Perry 34 Jackson 28
Bedford 20 ,Port Clinton 0
PATRIOT - A 60-yard efforts for the losers.
Intercepted a Steve Foley pass
Euclid 14 Valley ·Forge 7
Ottawa Hills 29 Hicksville 25
kickoff return by Dallas Dyer
Green's touchdowns all came at the Tulane 17 and returned
Genoa 32 Gibsonburg 0
rallied the Green Bobcats from as the result of long plays. The to the eight to set up West
Parma 34 Shaw 0
Berea 20 Bedford 7
Lakota 20 Elmwood 8
Fairview 6 Olmsted Falls 0
Eastwood 27 Otsego 0
a ~deficit here Friday night Bobcats could not muster any Virginia's second touchdown.
North Olmsted 20 Rocky River Liberty Center 18 Swanlon 14 as Green defeated South- sustained drives.
He then recovered a Glenn
12 . ·
Patrick Henry 31 Fairview 14
western 22-3· in a non-league
Southwestern 1-2 in the SVAC Barrett fumble at the Tulane 25
Orange 15 Aurora 13
Oak Harbor 10 Woodmore 6
Chagrin Falls 20 Kensfon 0
Arlington 24 Uberty Benton 8 game.
and 1-3 overall travels to to ease Nester's field goal.
Berkshire 23 Fairport 8
Bellvue 7 Willard 0
The
victory
spoiled Eastern Thursday night.
Lee Gibson kicked field goals
St. Edward 41 Erie McDowell Minford 20 Valley 14
homecoming
for
the
of 25 and 40 yards .to shove
STATISTICS
14
United 24 Crestview 6
.·:
Tuslaw ·o Northwest 0 (tie)
Jackson Millon 19 Mathews 7 Highlanders.
DEPARTMENT
SW G Tulane ahead ~ in the first
.·
East Canton 9 Lake 7
Warren Harding 30 Toledo
Coach Mel Carter's eleven , First Downs
7 9 quarter.
·.
North mont o Greenville 0 (tiel
Devilbiss 6
playing a spirited game, drove Yards Rushing
Freshman tailback Steve
160
145
West Millon 34 Northridge 12 Minerva 27 East Palestine 19 60 yards behind the running of
Yards Passing
37 65 Teutrlng scrambled· two yards
Eaton 20 Preble Shawnee 6
Howland ~I Champion 0
Marion Local 20 Lehman Liberty 20 Lakeview 14
sophomore John Earl Hut- Passes Attpt.
11
7 around right end for Tulane's
Catholic 12
South Range 44 Mineral Rldge chinson and some key passes'to Passes Completed
3 5 first touchdown, giving the
.·.
Parkway 16 New Bremen 0
8
Kevin Walker . The score came Fwnbles
Green
Wave,
a
13-0
lead
in
the
4 5
Springfield Shawnee 21 Maplefon ,l6 South Ce.nlral 0
:~~
Covington 6
Clearfork 28 Loudonvrlle 0
on a 12 yard pass from Flimbles Lost
I
3 second quarter.
1
Lima East 16 Northwestern 6 Wapakoneta 48 Delphos St. sophomore qlllll'terback Terry Penalized
sasil Godwin caught a six
55
55
Cedarville 27 Jonathan Alder 7 Johns 8
Ca t to · ·
d U d
'
yard touchdown pass from
By Quarters:
Steubenville 19 Steubenville St . Marys 20 Van Wert 0
r er
Juntor en
oy
Central o
Ottawa Glandorf 28 Lima Bath Wood . Arun for the conversion Green
6 8 0 ~22 Foleywith3:llleft in the game
Wintersville 12 Brook (W. Va .l
7
was stopped ..
SW
6000--6 for the !ina I tally.
o
Lima Shawnee 16 Sidney 6
on ·the ensuing kickoff, the
Buckeye South 6 Cadiz 0
Celina 22 Elida 22 (fie)
Highlanders were given a lo
toronto 26 Mingo oBellefontaine 18 Piqua 15
Jewitf-Sclo 20 Slanton Local 18 Paulding 6 Wayne Trace o
yard penalty before being
Woodsfield 24 Meadowbrook 14 Perry 14 Crestview 8
forced to kick over again. Dyer
Union Local 18 Beallsville 9
Allen East 21 Ada 18
Oak Hills 35 Flnneytown 21
Berijamln Logan 52 Riverside 7 fielded the ball at the 40 and
North College Hill 27 Harrison Indian Lake 21 Ridgemont 19 raced to the end zone. A pass
20 .
'
West Muskingum 20 Maysville for the extras failed.
Is your home ready for winter? Have you made all the
Indian Hill 34 Madlera 14
0
G
b k th 6-6 t' · th
nece5Sary preparations to protect your home against the
C&lt;!ieraln 18 Anderson 12
Zanesvi ll e Gooecrans 36
reen ro e e
teJn e
bitter cold this winter.
,
Wyoming 58 Taylor o
Catqwell o
second period on a 32.yard pass
Reading 21 Lockland 0
Miller 21 Eastern 14.
completion from quorterback
Let's take a little testto see If you ha,ve.
Ctn . Moeller 21 Cln. Roger Wayne 14 Xenia 0
Glenn Barrett to Ralph
1.
Has your furnace been cleaned this winter?
Bacon 0
Brookville 26 Tipp City 21
2. Does your furnacewo&lt;k exactly II kelt should?
Loveland •2 Deer Park 6 .
Oakwood 34 West Carrollton 20 Chatfield. A:pass from Barrett
3. Does your oil lank have a new ftlter on it.
Milford 27 Glen Esle e
Palterson 14 Alder 13
to Wooten was good for the two
•·
Is your hot water tank working properly .
Madison 20 Coshocton 3
Miamisburg &lt;16 Fairview 14
·
·
Th h If
5. Have your water lines had n~w heat tapes and lnRiverview 16 Crooksville 0
Franklin 48 Madison Butter 12 pom 1 conversion.
e a
svlotloo put on In thetas! year or so? .
·
Montl"'lier 24'Bryan 14
Minster 34 Ansonia 22
ended after Southwestern
6. Is your mobile home uh~erplnned to keep out the
Napoleon 30 Bowling Green 14 Graham Local 50 Greenon 2
threatened twice but could not
cold?
.
'
·
Archbold 3Q Delta 0
No&lt;lheaslern 34 Tecumseh. 6 move ln. One Highlander drive
Wauseon 14 Evergreen 6
Garfield Heights 40 Shaker
7. Do all your windows and doors tie&amp; I promptly?
Interest paid quarterly on all certificates
Lima C"ntral Catholic 43
Heights 14
·
died at the four yard line.
8. Do all your water faucets work?
Defiance 20
Eastlake North 26 Maple
Southwestern played con·
9. Has your roof been sealed In the last two years?
Deposit by the lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Height~ 6
trolled ball dW'ing a scoreless
.Colonel Crawford 14 Elgin 0
Pleasant 26 RldQedale 0
Berea Mfijpark 14 Mentor 6
third period . The Highlanders
Interest availahle.monthly on accounts of $1;000 or more
River Valley 28 "Wynford 1 · Medina" 21 Avon. Lake 6
If you can answer ns to all these questions then don't call
.
Marion Catholic 7 Big Walnut 6 Westlake 3 Bay VIllage 2
drove 80 yards but could not
us, But If you can't, calf us today.
Highland 1A Cardington 12
. Brecksville 31 Independence 16 score. The game was rmal)y
MciulltGIIHd.ONorlh Union 17 Brooklyn 28 l':'orth Rovatton· 14 decided in ·the final minutes of
. Gellon 21 Upper Sandusky 0
Ashtabula 30 Conneaut 0
.
Tiffin Columbian 14 Bucyrus 6 A5htabulaffarbor 13 Madison 7· · the foW'th quarter. Barrett
. Kenton 25 Coldwater 0
Perry 54 Southington 8
_
raced 55 yards fol"Jb!Llinal.
"-Col Souttn..-tlH;-W;m8rOn5wlcolf'Waasworth 3
A
to Cl'
ood
Col: Marlon Franklin 41 Col. Wickliffe 13 Painesville · score. pass . me was g
c.ntrel 22
.
Riverside 6
for the converston.
'Col. Eastmocr 44 Col. Mohawk Mt. Heallhy 20 Forreot Park 16
Fullback Phil Lewis lea the
o
Cin . Sf. Xavier 27 Cln . Purcell 8 Highlander offense with 56
Col. East 11 Cot. Linden Sycamore 26 Mariemont o
.
. .
McKtntiY 14
Paulding 6 Wayne Trace o
yar~s m, 12 carries. Mtke
Pike Street
Kanauga, Ohio
Col. North .o Col. Whetstone o Oakwood 35 Canton ~ehman 12 Dillon, Terry Fortner. Kevin
'
Newly
Authorized
Colt
man Service Center
-teryllle 45 Rt)IROld•burg 0 · North Canton Hoover ,5• Walker Larry Fallon ' !lpb
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
Ph.
446·1101
or
:U7.71U
Mifflin 311 Hlllllrd 0
F01rtess 2 ,
'
' ·
0r11w CfiY :M GtowapGI t 7
E'yrla Catholic 33 Cayton Roth !luff and Pack wer~ , ~II
'l.tldlrl ~fltlt IP,Otenlangy
6
credited wlth good defen~tve

1

L

}

Management
Agen't, of
Jackson.
These individual summaries
are a part of the state sumllUil'Y and always confidential.
The statewide report gives a
fa.ctual picture of farm·
manage")ent problems and
opportunities because it is'
' based on actual farming
operations.
The overall dairy farm
summary is based on 200
o•vner-operator and tenantlandlord farms. A more
detailed analysis is made of 150
dairy farms- 4hat provide
specific information.
When ranked by family labor

...

...

Notre Dame alls .30-26

•

invested.
middle 50 pel.
had $116,000 invested and the
top 25 pet . had $157,000 invested. This gave a percent
re rurn on investment of -0.7 for
the low group, U for the
middle group, and 12.5 for ,the
high group.
Cash receipts for . the low
group and Ihe 'middle group
were almost the same, $39,509
fur the low group, $41 ,013 for
rhe middle group, while the top
25 pel. had receipts of $64,170.
Cash expenses were $31,705
for I he lower &lt;15 pel., $27,376 for
rhe middle group, and $39,792
for rhe high.
Going 10 the more detailed
analysis of the 159 enterprises,
we find the number of cows

~:g5: gt~o~2p. ll'and $2.26 for the

APPARENTLY THE
HIGHER income farmer is
able 10 use more effectiv~ly his
1abor, aI1houg h the d1'fference
isrelatively sma11..
On a per·cow basis, the lower
25 per. used 8.60 man 'work
un11s per cow, the lop "'
w pel.
.
Th
used only 6.87. ts cost was
$I90.20 for the Iower group
compare d to $174 .32 for Ihe top.
The milk sold per cow was
'"" 58 for the 1ower, $798 .35 for
.WI.
.
•the rop.Cashexpensespercow
.,, 93 f h 1
25
were ..,..I. or t e ower
8
f
h
pel. and $304. I or I e lop 2li
per.
Th

. f d
.ff
e d1 erence tn ee
required between th e lower

•

HI.

..
'

I
!

•

Friday's high
school scores

LITY TRACTORS

•

• 40 pto HP and 52 pta HP models (gas
•
·•
•
•

j.

M o~(/!) ._ .~ , ,_

Green defeats

SW team, 22-6

••••••••••••••••••

. Three Savings Plans to •·•
Suit Your Needs

and diesel)
Lightning flash shift (8F-4R s~aeds)
synchromesh transmission
Planetary final drive
Big, rear fuel tank- new " walkthrough" styling
Big capacity live independent
hydraulics

• Precision draft control 3-point hitch
with infinite rare response
• Hydrostatic power steering, adjustable seat, Dyna-Life• clutch, hydraulic wet disc brakes
• Options include twin-shaft 540!1000
RPM IPTO and differenliallock.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT
POMEROY, OriiO

~

Itt
~

IN
5l
11

TWO floor heat outlets-

~

fjl
~

li:lf

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Save Any Amou11t Any Time

'

~
COMruiLMOBilE HOME~

SERVICES, IN~

..

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS,
-and LOAN COMPANY "·

°

·

d
•0
d
serve
a
,
-acre
mea
h' h had bee
eded d ·ow
w tcf. t
th
kn se
fA
turmg
Or
e trs wee o ugus . d 1 din 0 1
chard f! rass an a
cover
wereI sowed.
These
plants
ed h . ht f 6 t 8had
.
alta n a etg o odo htn·d
ches and abl'dense
a
bee
hd s
orne estaM tsKING
e · 1 1
WE
ARE
A
h · · · th pans
t bor
anot
coun yh' hy
th 1.1erd.VISit
h. m e h.
· e 1 e ttc
d mg mac. mew
bl tct
IS
rna e avat 1a e
o
cooperators once or twice each
bY the Western SCD .
year
De
y h f SCS h
d
nver o o o
as rna e
deta'lt ed dramaoo
· •• destgns
·
on
(
f
H If
the arms o George o man
V
Ch h w·ll'
near ernon W'C • 1 tam
CuIIen an d Joun
" McDermt'tt on
Oldtown Cr ee k and Herbert
Hender~on on Rou te 35 at Fl ve
M'l
Creek .
1e
0 n th e Hoffman farm the
·
·IS broug ht
nee d 1or dramage
b tb
Ia
th
a ou Y a seepy p ce on e
· r·te ld . rn all •
st'de of a s1opmg
the area affected is about one
acre but there is so much water
seeping from the hill at the

analysis, farms in the higher
earnings categories had :
11 ) Lower overhead costs as
a percent of gross income.
12) . Lower machine investment per crop acre and
.lower machine cost per crop
acre.
(3) Greater gross farm income per farn1 and. per man.
(4) Higher return per dollar
feed fed .
(5 ) Higher value of
production per crop acre.
(6) More crop acres.
· (7) More hired lalior and
higher hoW'ly wage rates pa. id
ro hired labor.
.
(8) Higher g·ross income per
$1,000 invested.
(9) Higher profit margin.
(Management Income and
Profit plus interested divided
by Gross Incom· e·
110) Higher percent return
on investment. (Management
Income and Profll plus interest
divided by Total Investment.)
Success or failW'e depends on
whether the business:
( 1) Is making a profit on
each dollar of output. Is the

.., "f•

.~. ~ ~

•r

· This past year the SCS
assisted landowners In building
1,165 ponds; usually about a
thousand have been built each
year in Ohio. Quilliam cited the
versatility of the pond practice.
He listed pond uses to Include
livestock water, fire control,
house water, wildlife, and
recreation; including .fishing,
hunting, bird watching,
swimming, and ice skating.
The SCS guides landowners
in selecting pond locations with
proper soli conditions which

porential?' Is the
bijj
eno,l!!lh to carry the investment
an&lt;ff dy.erhead cost in equipIn~~· ~ facilities and other
capital resources? Is the
business big enough to provl&lt;i~
. productive and profitable
employment
for . labor
resources?
THE H,IGH INCOME '
operators out-performed their
eompetition In both these
categories. They managed
a'C·
larger
businesses,
complishe~ more per worker,
and used capital resources
more effectively. They ex·
celled in output per acre and in
performance of livestock.
enrerprise.
No one factor can be singled
out as the basic difference
between high ~nd lo'!' income·
farms. For each of the ef
ficiency 'measures studied,~:
some fl!fms in the low income••
group ranked near the top.
Satisfactory incomes were the
result of above average performance "across the boJrd 11
father than outstanding
achievement in only one or two
departments.

The drainag~ system in-

~olved .ts what ts known as an

· mterceptor type system. This
system Involves digging the
ditch and laying the tile at the
upper edge of the wet area so
as to tntercept the water before
it appears on the surface.
The Cullen and. McDennitt
tile jobs are in wet bo\tom land.
The soil on these farms needing
drainage is Senecaville Silt
Loam and a random type of tile
placing is planned to be used .
•
By this method we mean that
the tile is placed in the areas
which are wet only. On the
Henderson farm the soil Is
have an adequate, but not Melvin Silt Loam and In that
excessive, drainage area. SCS
soil it is necessary to Install tlle
also advises landowners in on what Is known as the pattern
planting the pond area to
system . By this system
prevent erosion and sediment parallel tile lines are placed
damage and to provide food about 50 feet apart to drain the
and cover for wildlife. Qullliam wet area.
stated that proper planting also
makes ponds more attractive.
He pointed out.tbit the SCS hail'
helped landowners install over
25,000 ponds in the past 30
years since the Soil and Water
Conservation
District
movement began In Ohio.
Quilliam especially praised
the good work that landowners
have done in the northwest
section of the state. This area
had few ponds because of its
nat topography, but with the
use of "dugout and reservoir ..
type ponds this section of the
state is fast catching up with
other areas.

Pigs drink worms away
safely, with one dose of
Purina
Liquid Pig
Wormer. It helps improve
feed efficiency and weight
gains-saves you money.

.:::::::=

Coate just 2-3 cents to
wo~m

a 25-40 lb. pig,

See us soon for economical Purina

LIQUID PIG WORMER

by landowners in Ohio

1

overall

upper edge of this wet place
that It is Impossible to work
machinery over it and
livestock avoid It because they
could become mired.

Pond ·building increases
COLUMBUS - "Ponds and
lakes have long been a popular
conservation practice in Ohio,
but more landowners were
assisted this year in building

the

cropping prugram geared 1o
produce maximum net return
,per crop acre? Does the clair)'
operation produce maximum
retW'n per dollar of feed fed? Ia
machine cost per crop ac('l! low
enough to ·permit a profit?
121 Has enough volwne. IS
rhere
·
volume to

J. D. North PrOduce
Vine Street

Gallipolis, 0.

fOR WINTER-

550 signed to scouting
·..

lOADS OF
HOME.COMFORT,
BROUGHT TO YOU
BY OUR FRIENDLY
NICE GUYS!

m1mmum

Passbook Savings Accounts

CO.

AGood Combination From Landmark

~

5,000
.

-

sedimentation in streams and
Ponds and that a conference
has been called in Charleston
Dec. 12 and 13 to discuss this
problem. Some national
leaders will be present.
The West Virginia Department of Highways, West
Vl·rgt·n1·a Department of
Natural Resources. West
Virginia Department of
Health, Soil Conservation
Service and Extension Service
will be represented along with

(SCS) .

,,
::«

2 Year, Savings
Certificates

ATTENTION

Ia y 0 f th e Ia nd

stated Robert E. Qullliam,
state conservationist of the U.
S. Soil Conservation Service

PH. 992-2176

All SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

-,r

ponds than ever before,"

ALL NEW INTERNATIONAL 454 and 574

••
....

E~

three tracts of. land in Mason
C""nty. Thes~ t'nclude a 10,4()().
Public Hunting
acre Corns'"ik
...
area, the Charles R. Butler
farm on Little 16 Mile Creek,
an"~ the Doss farm recently
bought by Fred Green and his
brother James, at Upland.
We have been workl.ng wlth
Paul·Matthews, Dt'slrt'ct Game
Biologist, for more than a year
t'n the preparatt'on of the plan
for Cornstalk Public Hunting
Area. Tht's plan brings out
ways and means that the W.
va·. Department of NatW'al
Resources l·s planning to carry
out improved wildlife habitat
on this much-used area.
On a recent trip with Paul
Matthews to Cornstalk to
observe some of the practices
·that have been carried out, we
talked with Millard Wallis,
resident manager, and A. G.
Middleton. Mr. Middleton and
ll
lped Ia 1 th
· Mr. Wa 15 he
s r
e
dev.elopment of C~rnstalk
moro. than 30 years ago when tt
was known as a Land Use Area
1m t f
0( th U S De
e · · par en
Agriculture.
MR. BUTLER a~d Mr ·
Green are plannmg to unprove
their fanns as grassland farms
on which they will raise beef
catUe. The main items in which
they were interestea were
development of grass and
improvement of
water
facilities for livestock .
On the Green farm we ob-

BYJ obn Cooper
Soil Conservatlo n Servlce
PT PLEASANT
·
. - The
Western Soil Conservation
· t h Id ·t
1
D.ts t nc
e
1 s regu ar
monthl Y ll)~e ting at the d'IS tr'ct
1
offl ce tn
· Pt· PI easan t With
Carroll Greene, executive
secre ta ry of the State Sol' I
. Commt'tt ee of
Conserv at 1on
Charleston, present.
Greensat'd theNtS
. be commg
.
a natt'onwt'de real'••tt'on of the
de trtmen
·
ta I eff-ec t of so t'l

group decides that a bill should
be Introduced into the
legislatW'e that such a bill wlll
be drafted and introduced into
the State Legislature at its next
session.
WE HAVE BEEN assisting
with conservation planning on

'.

C(1111men1 s ntade by the

Sedimentation in pond&amp;
and stre~ms •.m'p·, ortant

soil conservation district
represenlatives.
Greene brought out that after
the seminar is held that if the

I

, ~nsion Economists John ' W.
B"s
rian, Reed D. Taylor,
wri rers of the report, ExRfchard D. Duvick, and John
E. Moore, include answers to
1he quesliUn, ''Whal . is lhe
reason for the difference in
success or faiiW'e on these
farms?" Several factors In the
.
summaries· explain these

climb&lt;.'(( fr·om the lower to the
hi~hcr ~roup , slarling with 51
cuws in the lowe1·, 48' in lhe
middle. and 69 in the upper.
The nuntber of cows per man
equivalent didn' r change quite
as 'much, being 34, 33, and 43.
.
returns per dollars
of-feed.fed.changed.fr.om-~~~·- --~~~-~-...;.....---~~--.-.-.- - - - - - - - - --' For

TWO GREAT NEW

..

and 1hl' 1up wa~ unly $17, IJcin)!. . Dt· ~;;till'tl coPi~-s of the fo"arrn
$445 fur •he lower 25 pet . and Business Analysis Report are
$428 fur tile uoocr.
available from this ulfice.

intreuscd as lhC:

hoW' of labor to the farm, we
find the lower .25 pel. 'llelled a
minus I cent Joss fur each hour
of Ia bar . . The .middle 50 pel.
received $2.14 for their labor
while the top 2li pet: averaged
$5.34!
Tu get
s

new in farming

rarmers

and managemem incopte per

p. your family

.......ndlnl
of llvin1 with
1 new, plttnt!ICI

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Oil Service In a nubhell :
excellent product,
available to all owners of
new or e•lstlng houHS,
dependable delivery by
Friendly Nice Guy' who
· ·have a great easy-pay
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vet starftd with Landmark
Ht.lflng Oil-lust give us a
c.olll Ph. 992-2111.

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OIL MUTER

StrvJno .Meigs. O.llia

~'WE-DEUVEI--WE

&amp; . Mi10n

Counties

o,itn Mon.-S.t . until 4p.m.

· Ph. 992-2111

SERVICE-WE FHWIU--~
'

of
educational
values
Scouting. "
More than 80 parents also
agreed to be volunteer leaders
or committee members for
units, Oils reported. .
Dils praised the many
volunteers who helped make
School Night successful, including school superintendents
and · principals, school coordinators, organizers, unit
commissioners, unlt leaders,
and other volunteers from the
Tri-State Area Council.

OW Min Wilder Cea
•HiniOnYour.
Clir,
•Trtctor.

r-.
......

QUAKER MAID

A NTI.fltll:EZE

-

..........

Ill US .fOR

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. ·' Latest reports on School Night
for Scouting held recently in
area schools show that ii50 boys
signed up to become Cub
Scouts and Scouts.
Rogert Dils, School Night
chairman for the Tri-State
Area Council, .Boy Scouts of
America, said, ''The success of
this neighborhood - oriented,
one-night stand proved that
boys who want to be Scouts can
find a unit to joi~ and that we
were able to help them get the
fun,
adventure,
and

Feeder Calf $ale!
NOVEMBER 2 - 8 P.M.
OHIO VALLEY UVESTOCK SALES IN.C.
GAU.IPOUS, 0.
Consignors &amp; Buyers Welcome
calves may be delivered after 3:00 p.m.
November 1 and·between 6:00a.m. 1nd 11:00
a.m. November 2. Late deliveries m1y be
rejected.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT

QUAKER MAID

Pennanent Anti;.fre•z•

..., ..

hiC..

~·--

"Your Farm Supply Supermarket"

PAUL H. BAER

CENTRAL SOYA

MINERSVILLE, O. 45763
PHONE 985-3830

OF OHIO

Or Olllo Y•lley

Uyestqck S.les Co. TeleP-hone
446-9049, or your Co11nty Agent.
·

lrd &amp; Sycamore Sts.

•
f.

$135

O.lllpolls. Ohio

�·-:a or-:.·uM :Jt:~:tur,~~
u.-,e : .J. ''~·:· ••:itiltttaj' ~ ':L ,.,,,elJ'iiiiJ.Jt::llltll~l,
.
. ' Notice
Notice·
.NO'fiCE
WAN.T ADS
Wanted To
Mobile Homes for Sale Employment
i

'l

'

.

'

'

•

f

..

'

•

HAYMAN'S Auclion -- a good KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK V ~ . W . Shoo tin9 Ma't c h dl
Brnad Run Rod &amp; Gun Club .
01 L BASE I. We have many
place to qo each Friday
New H.wen ; Starts at noon,
new
producls
s.ince
the
for
·
evening. 1 p:m. at Laurel
Svn
dcty , Oc tober
22nd ;
malion
of
lhis
Company.
Also
Cliff on old Rl. 7, I n1ile wesl
of Rock Springs Fairground.

10-IO·lfc

several new ones th is month

plus monthly specictls . All
these in addition to the

s po nsO r'f' d by

Post

Ma ::-.on, W. Va .

9926.

10-19·3lc
Sale, Port: . originals. Ladles, we would
like very much for. you to try GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Oclober
land MethOdist Church ,
21. 1 p. m. Factory Choked
these c~mellcs and to serve
Thursday, Friday; October
gur,s onl'/ . Second· place
you , Phone Helen Jane, 992·
.26th and 27ih; baked gQods,
shoo ter s get free shot in ne;,.:t ·
5113.
Friday.
rn&lt;J1 ch. , Assorted . mea:ts.
10-1-tfc
• ~acine Gun ·Club.
7
P
=lA"Nc:O
"""T"u-nin_g_,"L
_a_n_e-=D-a-,
niel s,
-~~~-'I~Wn.LU..no.Ltie. responsible for
OCIP13ei"28ltllfirUDecember
· any debts contraded by ~ny
151h , 259 Broadway, Midone other than mvself .
Spain and Portugal rna~e
Signed: Larry R. Hubbard . dlpor! ; phone 992.2081 .
10-16-5lc up the Iberian Peninsula .
•I0-20-3tp
..
MISC~LLAN~OUS

\

.... ,. --

•• '

- - -- .. --.,

INFORMATIO"

, • DEAU!..INES .
,5 P .M . Dav BeJ()re PublicatloiT:.
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Caricellatlon - Correct ions
Wilt be aCC~:eptcd unljl 9 a.m. lor

Da v of P.ut-licafion

me

REGULATIONS

Bring Your Unhulled
.
1

Publisher reserves the 1
r ight to edit or reject any 11.ds ,
deemed
obiectional. . The ,
publisher will not be responsible.·
·far more than one incorrect
lnsert.lon..

12 cents
th ree
cor,secutive insertions.
18 cents per
secutlve insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

WALNUTS .
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

·8~30

8 : 30

lt1 ·11

choked and sleeved guns will

be handicapped . No alcoholic
beverages are allowed.

10·19-31c

Card of Thanks

Firemen and the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
Arthur Orr

'69 CADILLAC,

sed~n

air conditioned, green with
brown vinv l top. All power,,
automatic, good condition.

10-17-6fp

Real Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
land, two-thi rds basemen1,
bUilding '20' x 40', plus barn,
located in Long Bottom, citv
wa ler, partially remodeled;

992-3891

phon• 985-3539.

or Trade

10-19-3fp

1963 CHEV. Stat ion Wagon, 8 ROOM house and. bath, nice
'la rge lot, natural gas, built-in
excel lent condffion, sel l or
trade for Volkswagen of equal

va lue ; phone 985·4118.
10-20·31c

food,

The Barnhart Family
10-11-ltp
UNITED SteeiWorkersof Local
6197 gives many thanks for
consideration, kin(fness and
refreshments to the Pomeroy
Wine Store throughout our

strike. Many thanks.
10·22·1tc

apartments.

Phone 992·5434.

4-12-lfc

~~--:----

3 ROOM house and bath, fur ·
nished ; also trailer ; adults

only ; phone 992-5592.

10-17-lfc
12x.51 TRAILER in Syracuse
after Oct. 22 ; "Pr i vate

lot,

adults only . Phone · 985-3504
aller 5 p.m .

Wanted To Buy

10·22-31p

WOULD like fo buy used flute in 2 BEDROOM trailer, Bob's
goo~ condition; call after 6
Mobile Courl, Syracus-e;
p.m. 992-5224.
I0-21- 3tc , phone 992-2951.
10-22-tfc
200 BALE S ot' good Ihis year 's F:-U~R:-N-:-I~S;-:-H~E:-:D:---1--b-,:-droom
hav . delivered ; phone 742 ·

4459 ·

10 _20 .31c

apartment,

adults

only,

Middleport; phone 991-3874 .
10-22-tfc

1960-1965 VOLKSWAGEN for TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
paris; phone 985-4118.
Courl ;
phone
992-3324.
10-10-3tc
10-22-lfc
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
organs, di shes, clocks, brass 12 X 60 MOBILE home ; adults
only ; call 992-5443.
beds, or complete households.
10-22-ffc
Wr ite M. D. Miller , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-tlc Mobile Homes For ~ale

UHEIL"

TWO bedroom m'ob ile home, in
good
condi tion ,
$1,600.
Zuspan's Trailer Court.
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason, W.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

10·12-15fp

Va .

·Air Conditioners
·Awnings
· • Underpinning

Window
Air Conditioners

Hot Watei\ Heaten
Plumbing
·Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

BIKES . -

MIDDLE PORT - 2 story
brick. 2 or 3 bedrooms, b~th,

ca binets in kitchen. Close to
radio station in Bradbury .

Phone 992·2602.

·MAPLE stereo-radio .com bination, AM-FM radio, •
speed changer, c spe~kel
sound system. Balance $73.45.
Use our . budget terms. Coli

m -7oes.·

. 992-2094

60~ E. f.1ain

H &amp; N DAY old or started .
level' lot. $8,500.00.
Leghorn pullets, Both floor or
cage grown available.
housing
lo
MIDDLEPORT - 2 · st orv I .- Poultry
automation. MOdern Poultry,
frame. Slarge bedrooms, 1•1:1
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992baths, ·dining, nice kitchen,
2164.
.
cellar. 2'glassed In pord•os·l
10-22·1fc

garage, carport.

POMEROY - 2 story frame,
2 bedrooms, bath,' nl
kitchen, carpeted, lust
renovated throughout.
$8,500.00.

.

MIDDLEPORT RURAL-.1
story, 3 bedrooms. utility,
bat~, · gas forced air furnace,

recreation

room,

USED

storage, paneling and tile. ·
$9,800.00.
WANT TO SE Lt.? LIST
WITH US, WE-ADVERTISE
YOUR
PROPERTY
THROUGH OHIO AND W.
VA.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Phone 992-2259

FIELD HARVESTER
Wli~ nearly new 1 row corn
head. This can use 2-row
unit.
1-Gehl
FIELD HARVESTER
Good condition.

Meigs Equipment
PH. 992-1176
POMEROY, OHIO

'complete

mobile

service -

plus giga!lfic

POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
and bath, 2 large porches, 30 ACRES with · some tarm
machi_nery; call 667;3333.
large lot, newly painted ;
10-17-5fc
outbuildings; land lays well;
phohe 991-3394.
has beautiful moun1a.inous
10-22-3tc
E LECTROLUX ' Vacuum
view In all dlr~ttions; apCleaner complete with atproximatelv 25 Miles from
tachments, cordwlnder and
Athens, Ohio and Parkers- 5 ROOM house and bath,
lacaled on Bt ic k Slreet,
paint spray. Used but In like
burg. W. Va .. 14 miles North
Rutland; interior being
new condttion. Pay $34.45
of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for
remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
cash 91' budget plan av,allable.
nice home(s) development,
10-20-12tp
Phone 992-5641 .
elc. Southeastern Ohio Real
10-17-6tc
Estate Company, Broker ;
phone Belpre, 423-6293 ; RACINE - 10 room house,
bath, basement, garage, two NEW 1972 Zig-Zag Sewing
Parkersburg, 485-7539 or 422·
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Machine in original factory
8905. Price $35,000; terms,
carton . Zlg - Z~g to make
' 4-5-tfp
cash. Ask directions at
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Millhone's Service Station at ~:----__.:._
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake
monOgrams and make fancy
Tuppers Plains.
designs with just the twist of a
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
10-22-9lp
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
single-dial. Left In lay-away
f or 119 mos . Vacation
and never been used. Will sell
2 STORY home. bath and •;,,
Paradise . Free Brpchure.
for only $.47 cash or credit
carpeted, may be had with
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
terms available . Phone 992·
basic furniture; for ap 5641.
pointment caii99H384 or 992- 1001DD, Alameda, California
94501.
10-17-6tc
7133.
10-22-31c
10-3-30tp
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-Z891.
Large 4 bedroom home, new bath upstairs,
4-12-tfc
very large living room, log burning fireplace,
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
large entrance hall, dining ·room, newly
Sewing Machine. Will sell tor
small balance of $36.21 or
remodeled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
payments .fnay be arranged.
downstairs, large corner . lot, loc&lt;~ted at 285
Phone ,992-53~1.
" ,~,
South l'hlrd .,·,stre-e·t-. Middleport , Ohio.
9-J-Hc
:-:::::---:----Financing available. Priced right to sell fast .
8 TRACK STEREO, freight
damaged, In beautiful walnut
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
console. Will sell tor $101.50or
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 9925331.
Real Estate Broker
9-7-tfc
Phone 985·4186 alter 4 P.M.
:P=oo=
D:L::E_p_u-pp:-i-es-.-s'il-ve-r:. -Toy,
HOUS.E in Long Bottom, phone Park view Kennels, Phone m985-3529.
5443.
8-15-ffc
6-11 -tfc

Virgil B.

hom&lt;

'display of mobile homes
alwa ys ~vallable at .. .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

system; InCludes farm house
in need of repair, two barns In
good
condition,
~everi!ll

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
i

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

ESTATE AUCTION
We will sell alllisled items a! auction from the Estate of
Mary Wright, Deceased, locatecl on Bedford Township
Road 253, take 143 out of Ha'rrisonville, 6 miles to County

Road 14, 3 miles on County Road 14 to 253 or 3 miles off
State Route 7 to County Road 14, tirst farm on right 011,
County Road 253 ; watch tor signs ; Saturday, October 28,

19n

SATURDAY, OCT. 28, 1972
ANTIQUES
!Shawnee Ware, butler dish , salt &amp; pepper set and relish
dish), insulatons all types ; Woodbury &amp; Mason tars with
lids: cut glass ; china; cups &amp; saucers; Iron ke111e wl.th
rack ; shoe lathe and attachments ; milk cans; bottles, all
types ; meat · chopper; coa t tree; wagon tack: wagon
wheel; buggie seal: spool and Iron beds; wood chest:
night stand; scales plussetof weights; 2 small iron Par_lor
stoves; driving lantern : woOd dinette with 4 matchtng
wicker chairs and hutch ; frames and pictures ; trunk;
lamp frame ; wooden barrels ; crocks,· other numerous
anfiques and collectors Items.

'
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS
Gold Velvet love seat with matching cha ir; couches;
swivel rockers; coffee tables ; end tables; bedroom
suites; child's roll -top desk ; kneehole desk and chair;
night stand; hutch with matching table and chairs;
tapeslr~ · wall hanging ; knick -knack shelves; black ·&amp;
white T.V. set ; solid state stereo; Unlco wringer washer;
G. E. dryer; G. E. retrigerator wltlt top freezer ; kitchen
stove ; double unit window fan ; natural gas and oil circulator heaters, from 40,000 to 65,000 BTUs; rug, 12x14;
various runners, wood room divider ; numerous silverware and k ltchen appliances .

ToQLS AND ANIMALS
.
.Cub Cadet riding lawnmower, mo&lt;lel 102-10 h.p. with 42" ·
mower, attachmenh are plows and cultivators; Allis
Chamber 2 row culllvator, wood molding, electric motors,
fencing, l.ocust po\1, shop tools, oil drum, 115 gal. squere
diesel fuel tank with pump, animal crates. 100 to 150 bales
of hay, 3 pon ies, stud, mare and colt, rabbljs, 'ducks,

AUCTION
I will sell the following morchlndlsell)at wu net sold 11

prior Auction, at my Ruldence, Stole Rt. 33, New Hoven,
West Va.
SATURDAY, OCT.28, 1972-IO:OOA.M.

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
$4,000.00
2 BEDROOMS - Stove and
refrigerator Included In this
sale . Living and dining
room, front .and back porches. 2 dug wells. 1/2 acres of
land.
BUSINESS RENTAL
BLOCK - 4 room business
building and a modern 3
bedroom paneled home with
bath, furnace heat, front
porch and view of the Ohio
River. Wood
burning
firepl~ce In living . Beautiful
kitchen. Large lot. All for
only $25.000.00.
COUNTRY
2 BEDROOMS - Bath,
plains water . Frontand back
porches. Garage and garden
spot. Only sc.ooo.oo.
MIDDLEPORT
MODERN 4 BEDROOMS 2 baths, nice kitchen with bar
and cook units. Garage and
rec . room In basement .

Large covered patio full
lel}gth of house . Asking
524.000.00.
.
165 ACRES
STOCK FARM - 2 houses,
farm ponds. Several ouft
buildings. All minerals. 0~
·school bus· and mall routes.
Want $25,000.00.
125 ACRES
120 IN WOODS - Good 9
room house with 2 baths. gas
heat, w~ter well, 3 porches, 2
large gardens, and all
minerals. $26,000 .00 .
liN ACRES
,
4' BEDROOM MODERN
HOME- Enclosed bath 'wllll
large utility. Boeullfuf.
kitchen, gas forced air

1

furnace and basement. 30

acres of · meadow. Garage
and ·•II minerals. $27,000.00.
guineas, ~ m~le peecocks.
HAVINGo TROUBLE
SELLING, THEN YOU
SHOULD CALl US FOR AN
Sale Startsl0:30 A.M. Sharp.
INTERVIEW.
TERMS : Cash
Lunch Will bo Served.
Register
. HELEN L. TEAFORD,
McCLOUD &amp; CHEVALIER, Autlionetrs
ASSOCIATE
l----ehlrten-l;ft-MIIer.etl-allmlnlstrtmr--~--H--'-'M225 or m-nn
Not Responsible tor Acddtnh.
No Sund1y Showings

Refrigerator, gas cook stove, gas heater, Kenmdre fuel oil
heater, living room furniture, lamps, record player, TV,
blankets, rugs, dresser. elect. heater, glass door dish
, cupboard, utility cupboard. COINS: Lincoln Pennies,
Indian Heads, Half Dimes, 2-Cent Piece, Sliver Dollars.
Curved glass china cupboard, round oak table &amp; chlln,
walnut drop-leaf table, wal. bed and dresser, brass bed,
wal. secretary, picture frames, rocking chairs, pie sole,
9un rack, pearl handle Western Six pistol, Muzzle loadl.ng
rifle, 12 gauge Acme shot gun, old sad Irons, milk cans,
fireplace tongs, Guys dropper container, cast Iron skillets,
dutch oven, Iron kettle, oak lamp stand, oak wash stend,
old books, lnsul~tors, school ball, 3 lanterns, east Iron toy
train, two baby cradles, ~nice oil lamps, stonelers, while
Carnival desert dish marked, Northwood Marigold cup,
two old Jim Beam bottles, R.S. Prussa celery dish,
depression glass, carnival fruit dish, covered butter dish.
AUCT. NOTE : Some consigned Items have been added to
this sale. ·
.
. TERMS: CASH
SIGNED: R. B. (John) Slyre
BRADFORD AUCTION CO.
R1dne, Ohio Box 116
PH. 614-949·3121

Nathan Biggs

FURNITURE "'
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

If I HAVE
To Go
Ta.ke Me To.

'5.55,

THE .SHOP

On Most Arneri(an cars
' - GUARANTEED. Phone 992·2094

PomeniJ Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturctay
606 E. Main , Pomeroy, 0 .

Let Dick and Dale

with Your Meat

You

..-------~--~~--, · SEE US FOR : Awnings. slorm
doors anq windows, carports,
· marquees! aluminum siding
and railing. A, Jacob, sales
r epresentative . For free
estimates, phon e Charles
Lis le, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

,fAR'JH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loa&lt;~er work,
·ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour ·or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
1rucks and low-boy for hire.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m . or phone 9925232.

tune up and brake serv ice.

READY -MIX

Wheel s balanced
Ironically.
All

CONCRETE

delivered right t o your
project . Fast and easy. Free

7-27-lfc

-=~~-=--­

For Sale
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
1972
STEREO 8 !rack in walnul
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446consol e with speaker balance
4782, Gallipoli s, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator .

and , base .
Take
over
paymen ts of $6.50 per month

5-11-flc
C.

Zag sewing machine. Thi s
machi ne ove rcasts. da rns,
embro iderie s and makes
button holes. Pay balance of

~,-------

WILL cut or trim trees,
reasonable; al so clean out
basements,
attics
and

$41.50 or pay $5.25 per month .
Call 992-5331.
cella rs; phone 949-3211.
10·19-6tc
10-4-301c
COME AND SEE . Have new
SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
shipment of fl owers for fa ll
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
and Christmas ; will make
flower ~rrangements; have
CLEANED, R EPA IRE D.
over 1,000 gift items, also
MILLER SAN ITATION ,
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
jewelry, Avon bottles , some
662·3035.
anliques; open 9 a.m. to 6
10·4-lfc
p.m ., except Friday, closed
Friday ; phone 985·3537 ;
Smalley's Gift Shop, Chester,
SEW ING MACHINES. Repair Ohio.
.
service, all make~ . •992-2184.
- • "'
•-- ".)p~~;J1\c
The. Fabric ·sliop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and -W_I_N_T_E~R-p-o"ta-fo-e~s-.ss""'a=100"-lb.;
Service. We Sharpen Scissors:
.Phone 247-2642.
J-29-ffc
10.18-6tc
D:O:D-:G-:E-:-.:-C-:-h-a-rg_e_r-.-p-ower
AUTOMOBILE insurance been :-19:-7-:-1-:
c ancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992-

- - - - --

CARNAHAN AUCTION 'IIIYICI
t4f.27-J. C.rNIIen

tlldM. 01111

D. Smltlt-f4f.-

Nol retp znllltte tw a C It II • llel el iN I~

If.

991·5072.

Central Air Condi1ioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
144-11
Vinton, Ohio

Satellite St. Wagon, local I owner tar, dark· green llnlsh,
good !Ires, V -8 engine; automatic, p. steering, tactory a ir
cond. Need Det~lllng . -Relall Book Value $157l.OO.

l971 OfEVROLET...... ;; ......... '3095 .
Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title, san-·
dalwood finish wlfh brown vinyl roof. vinyl saddle In-

GMAC Financing A~ailable

terior, 4.season air condltitlonlng, turb6hvdramatic,
power steering, white-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.
-

Pomeroy '

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1968 OfEVELLE ................... •1795

' You'll Like ('• •r Qua lity Wa y of Doing Business"

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

·--- - - -

Malibu Spt. Cpe, air conditioned, 307 engine power
' steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl top &amp; blk .
viny l Interior, radio, good w-w tires.

------

1968 CAMARO Convertible ..... •1795

steering;

gold

with

black

vinyl top; phone 949-5424.
10.18-6tc
6-15-tfc · - - - - - - - - -

Local 1-owner low mileage car~ beautiful cream finish
with black lop, bucket seats, with console, new white-wall
tires, power steering and automatic tr~nsmlsslon. Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME .
.
.

1966 OfEVROLET ................... '649

EXTERMINAT ING CO.

Coolv ille 667-6114.

M obi le

Homes

Termi te &amp; Pes t Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio

· 1
10-20·12lp .

for

YOUR

-;;:=========--,l,

Sale

1965 ATLAS mobil e home ,

CAR WINTERIZED
AT
SMITH NELSON MOTORS

$5.00 Serv ice Charge
Will rem ove your dead
hoi-se and cows

50)(10, two bedroom, front
kitchen, e)(cellent condition .

Phone 985-3555.

(all Jackson 286-4531 .

10·20-6tp ..

-

- --!.L

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell 's Plumbing, 446-4782

BOB

LA NE 'S

Comp lete

Bookkeeping and Tax Ser vi ce, 424 'h Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . Office hrs. 9 a.m .-1

85-lf

------

McGrath, Frances Young,

sta ll ation, backhoe. bulldozer
and boring machine' services ,

June Newhouse, Bessie
Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey, Tad and Karen, Mr .
and Mrs. Terry Whaley , Erin
and Chip of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Weaver
visited .the llunio~ Paynes.,On Oct. 17 there will be a
meeting at Mrs . Nellie
Borg•n 's for the senior
citizens. Mrs. Foil will be cosponsor.
Mrs. Arthur Goodin is
assisting Mrs. Paul Cottrill of
Albany with her fall cleaning.
Mrs. Minnie Foil spent a day
in Athens recently .

Buick

J . P. Holl ey , 245·5018 or D. R.

Why drive many miles looking tor a

V-8 onglne, sport custom cab, all side mldgs.,
radio, cab lights, chromo fr1 . bumper, R. step
bumper, H. duty tires, sprgs. a. helper sprgs.,
while over red finish, locally owned. Rtllll Book
Value 12200.00,

C&amp;S El ec trica l Servi ce &amp;
Re pai rs .
House
w ir ing,
electr\ ' heat, motor controls.
Free est imates . Ph . 446· 4561

OUR ·SPECIAL PRICE "'1795

or 675-3361.

22-tf

- -- - - -

BANKS TREE SERVICE

1t\1111Mt ID'i1 ~-lkzi,::;f;! ...JC

~ ~ ~~® ffli'"l

FREE est imates, liability in·
.'
sur ance. Pruning , tr immi ng Unscrambie these lour Jumbles,
and cavity work, tree and one letter to each aquare, to
stump r emoval . Ph. 446-4953 . form four ordinary worda .

,

II!.

cleani ng and repai r , also
house wrecki ng . Ph . 446-9499. t
Es tablished in 1940.

'--.--,---+""',.,..,;r---,

II

precialed. Ph: 446-0463.

------

7-tf

-

listed below ere taken from Saturday's
Columbus paper ... See us and save .
$$$$$... We have 12 cars in our

0
IO• J I

/,W;I.f;.\1

OFTEN Gr&lt;r!WS
SHA!&lt;:PER WITH USE.

IUJMfCl'

t o form

CARTER'S PLUMBING ,
AND HEATING

showroom, ou1 of the weather, sharp,

Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine

ready for your deal , '.. WE ARE
DEALING.

Ph on~ 446-3888 or

Now arranre t.ht circled !etten
the aurprloe anawer, u
I unetted by the above eutoon.

48-ff

- - - - - --

446-4477
165-ff

.

' - -Prill
----"-'
llie-"SIIII-'-'.PIIISI
.:.:..;A=NSWIR-=
Illre"------'1 A [

IIIII]
(Antwert ,\ tond•J)

Jumlol"' JADED IYLAW IUCKLI HIATUS

STA NDARD

\" " t l er4 l a~ · ~

Plumbi ng &amp; Heat ing

115 Thi rd Ave ., 446-3782
187·11

Anu.-.·r: ..f mupl'iu~·"l' ow•raticm. by rht Nntty- SWAI

~OU.fi'JOS

ACROSS
1-Turf
6-Strlkes ·
11-W• Iked
18-.l.rr•.na• •ealn
19-Doctrine
2D-Cio-th•sm•kers
21-Most cr•fty

OUR PRICE '1395

23-Conduct

24--Guido's hl1h

nolo

26-Solks

27-Nole of scale

Top of the line trom Pontiac, fully equipped. Columbus
Dealer listed price same equipment, $1895.

V-1 doubie · power; outomatlc, good for the year.
Col~mbus Dealer listed price, samio equlpm~t, S599.

OUR PRICE '495

These Are Just Five That the Big City Boys
hl!d Listed: There Were Many More:· N11mes
of De•lers Here For Comp•rison. We Also
Have 7 Specials at
E•ch, Good Trl!ns·
portatlon for A Year or So ... Hurry on These

suo

992-2151

32-Dine

.

.

33- Vitor (colloq.)
34-Burmlll

o.

"Your Chevy Dealer'"
Open
. Eves. ' Til&amp; .

Plumbing &amp; Heating

67-Be&amp;:lnnlns
69-Htvlns. e.rs
71-Burm• native
73-M•de unfnll n1
•74-Walkad on
76--Hindu JUitars
79-Reprnentatlve
81-Comp31S point
82-Roman bronze
84- Ardent

137-lntellect
138-Geometrlc
solid
139-Steamship

30-G!rl' s name
31- Cook slowly
33-Mel•l tubfs

(abbr.)
140- Rise and fall
ol ocean
141-Shlp cttannel
142-Sheltering

36-Ceue
37-Heatln&amp;: •

115-Misrepreaents
87- Woody plant

143-Fondle

(a bbr.)
101-Roman official

38-Ruultin&amp; from

104-Repalr

old ace
4o-,Underworld

105-Brlef
lOB-Pronoun
pO-Spool

Cod
41-Sound al1rm
42-The sweetaop
4:J-..Gr..k letter

45-Mo,. matura '

103-Brown klWI

112-Tldl.n•!ll

113-Footlike part
114-Piural endlnl

49--Sun-drled

115-Graln (pl.)
117-lcelandtc
wrltln1s
qa-oc.. ns
~· 1'19--observes

brick,

120-Ffllnch

46-While
47-ltellln coin
48-Bitckblrd
~1-Greek l•tter

53-N•IIve metst

con/unctio n
121-Unclolls,
123-Wltl'lout and

54-Sn•re
55-RaiN

(poet.)
124-Qu•rrel

52--;Bettoldl

57-A~e

Sll\lcture

14-4-Sidewlse

9tl-Diacour•••ment 146--Wur away
92-Man'a name
148--Eogine
(a bbr.)
l49r-Da, ,of week
93-Loeatlon
150-Takes one 's
95-Sword
part
97-tu• for,
151-Ejects

35-Space

36--0.nudes

125-Youn&amp;sters
126--Prtfix : before
127-AnJtl

DOWN

1-Supplles
2-Walkt.
unsteadily
3-The caama

4-Piace

5-Sa~nt (abbr.)

6-Vapor
7-S~re

8-Conjunction
9-Hebrew Jetter

10--Guldes
11-Stert off in
panic
12-Symbol for
tentalum
13- l rel'land

14-EntreatleS"
-1 5-Maker

Ot

,urthenware

16-Bitter vetch

35-Unusuai

94- 0mll hom
pronvnclttlon
9~Svn eod
98- Arm y meal
99- Selects
10Q-Baby's

device
napkins
39- Penpolnt·
102-Finlshed
41 - Metal strand
104-Protecth•e
42- Desert dweller
ditch
44-0tfitradt
· 105-Goll mounds
47-Learnlnl

48- Bakt r"s

, products

49-ChiJnge
50-Small stoves
54- Most e.act
55-DirectiOn
56- Weirder
59-Bay windows

60--Procteds
61-Symbot for
tin
63-Brlst le
~ Measure of

tenath (abbr.)
67-H)'pothetlcal
· force
68-0evlces lor

brOwning
70-Polnted
weapon
71-E•perimentll
room {colloq.)
72-twleturt

106-Prophetess
107-Holds In hlah

regard
109-cublc meter
111-Recklfssly
112-Ha ve on. one's
per1on
113-~an's

nlcknlme

II6-N.a hoor sheep
118-B.arr.acud.a
119-Traded for
money

122-Goblln.
124.;_Freahe!S

125-Pltch

t2~arpenter'J

tool

128--Underworld
l30-Edible ...d

lll-Nip' ,

73-Splrlted hOrses 132-Dstt
, 135-Fiock
77-Fem,le ruff
131- Fnhlon

75-Rely "on

78-Standlne room , . 13~ToP of hud
only . (&lt;"~bbr,)
· 140--Greek tell er
80-Keefl
142- Edlble fish
a·3 • 1 128 d
-..-u ver
J.43-PoUceman
rock
· (slan1)
t

17-Symbol for
•- dl y
• • th• rvu
5v-P.rta
dysprosium
In
21-Heelle u
~11~ 60--t•••ot-to,JVo.~ ..._129-t.cne ~~~ ............... f06tWI;;.;,;-~~.llBbMattb-hit.d-J-44~rmy-otfiCe ,........_
6l-PoHd fetr
13J-Tree trunk
:?2-G'o:between
aS-Noblemen
(abbr.!'
portr1it
132-Towerd the
23-Man 's. name
89-centra l
145-CoOied lave
American
62-.;SI•v..
sheltered side
2s-;..Hawa]lan
147-JJplnese
64-comp..s paint · 133-Befo,.

65-Note of SCIII
66--Unf•lr blow

134-CoiJeil Chllr

136-Tidy

wruth

'
.
musure

lree

27~1in;inates

9~Prefl• :

2S..:..'1en ai,!.

~1 -Cyprinold fish

dDW!l

,....

148-Manuscrfpt
(•bbr,)

I '

•
'

,\

'

-

~amplng

Pomeroy

Equipment

1973 lRAILERS and campers In
RUSSELL'S
slack. Fbr service, quality
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
and price - visit Camp
21 Galllo Ave. 446-4782
Conley Slarcraft Sales, 62
297-ff
North ot Point Pleasant
7
behind Red Carpel Inn.
--;:DE;:-W
~
IT=
T~'S-cP=L~U~M~B~I~
NG
230-tf
AND HEATING
-=
T::he_n
_a_m
_e~c=a~th:-e-rl:-n-e-co..,.
_mes
Route 160at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
187-1 from a Greek name mean-

ing "pure. "

98--Proncun
99-Civll Defense

demons

1965 Ford LTD 4 Dr. H- Top

.~R.' H.-Rawlings SOns fA».·

~~······
31-App. .r

3o-collei'• official

OUR PRICE '1695-.

OUR PRICE '1295

992-2126

SUN DAY, OCTOBER 22, 1972

OUR PRICE '2395

4 spe~, new paint, ready. Columbus Dealer listed price,
same equipment, $1495.

POMEROY MOTOR ·CO.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

V-8, double power, factory air, sharp. Actual Columbus
Dealer price for comparable car listed with same
equipment as ours $2599.

1969 Opel Kadetl Wagon

1969 OfEVROL£T..............!2295

Prompt Delivery on
'73 Cars &amp; .Light Trucks

- -- - D. P. MAR TIN &amp; Son Water

Delivery
Servi ce.
Your
patro nag e · will
be a p.

.

lTon, 102" cab to axlo, 292 cu. ln. englno, 15,000
lbs. 2-speed rear axle, 825x20, 10 ply tires, full
depth foam seat, heavy duty springs, solid cab.
Ready to go to work .

-:-:~,.--~----73·11 . . - - - - - .
GI LLE NWATE R'S septic tank I 1'0)1t'(;
' ~';;~•;.:;,·,~.~::J'"'...

· Ph . 446-1637.

I

1970 FORD 8' STYLESIDE .

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

111 ·11

Co!'ldilioning. 300 Fourth Ave.

bargain in a sharp used carT The pr1ces

OUR SPECIAL PRICE ~2495

Pontiac

169-11

Government Printing
in Washington, D.C.
nation's largest puband distributor of

blue finish .
Book Votue .!2150.00.

992-2174

Holley. 245-5006.

GENE PLANTS '&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heal ing &amp; Ai r

1 1970 Ford LTO Brougham 2 dr • . H·top.

full wh . covers, r. step bumpers, radio, chrome
W.C. mirrors, chrome frt. bumper. rear step
bumper, locall owner truck. Beautiful wh . over

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
COM PLETE wafe r line in -

_

307 V-8 engine, custom Delu•e cab, sldo mldgs.,

Ope~ Evenings til7 p.m. &amp; Sat. tilll2 Noon for .
Serv~ce &amp; Sales 5 p . m .

p.m. Ph. 446-1049.

..

Outstanding Truck Buys!
1971 QfEVROLET 8' FLEETSIDE

WE WILL WINTERIZE YOUR CAR
AND GUARANTEE OUR WORK.
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

297 ·11

Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son
of Logan spenl Sunday with the
Earl McGraths.
Recent callers of Ava Gilkey
were Mr . and Mrs. Doyle
Hudson , Mary Bolin, Minnie

BelAir St. Wagon. I owner, local car &amp; spotless vinyl Interior, good tires, V-8 englno, power steering, brakes.
automatic trans., radio. See this car as It Is priced low,
low, low.

DEAD STOCK.

Plumbing &amp; Heating

...

1969 PLYMOUTH OUR SPECIAL '999,

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

992-5342

I

ANOTHER SPECIAL!

---=----THOMAS FAIN

• c
10-20-31

plenty of luxury fry th is outstanding buy .

ONLY

KARR _
&amp;VANZANDT

Extermina l Term ite Sevice:
19 Bemont Dr .

,O.PPLES, Fitzpatri ck Or·
chards, Slate Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
8-30·1fc

OOZER and back hoe work, ANTIQUE pump organ, all
ponds and septic tanks, dit - original. except new bellows .
Over 80 years old. Made by
ching service; top soli, fill
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co ..
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex Worcester , Mass. One bellows
cavating . Phone 992 -5367,
type. Phone 992-3904.
The
Dick Karr. Jr .
10-13-lf Office
9-1-tfc
is the
lisher
books.

2nd Ave.

..

&amp;

'4000

TERMITE PEST Cd'NTROL
FREE inspectio•&gt;- Call 446-3245.
Merrill O' Dell, Operator bY.

. For Sale

Harrisonville
Society New~

5-1-ffc

2966.

tenor, factorv ~ir conditioned. luggage rack , r:adlo,
350 V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering &amp;
brakes, like new w-w tires. If you want a show piece

Sit.ver metallic finish. blue interior, full power equipment,
Climate Contro l air conditioni ng, AM-FM radio, one
owner new Cadillac trade .
· •.

267 11

LE FT IN lay.away Delux Zig

Phone 949-3821

Critt Bradford

1971 BUICK

,·sp~rtwagon . Beautiful coral finish wilh vinyl in.

7U:adillac Sedan DeVille

CIJ1t-tu~

·-----,---~

- - -- --

Complete Service

· 1968 Pontiac Grand f'l:ix 2 Or. H-top.

Gibson side by side refrigerator-freezer 16 cu.
ft .; Tappan gas range; Maytag wringer
washer and dryer; Earl Arm platform rocker;
new platform rocker; sofa bed; coffee table; 5
pc. dinette set; 3 pc. dinette set; Warm
Morning bottle gas heater, 65,000 BTU; • 2
Warm Morning coal stoves; king size bed; 4
dressers; 2 .Hobby beds; 4 ·pc. marie bedroom
sulte; chest of drawers; . meta wardrobe;
metal bed; lamps, pictures; pots', pana,
dishes; 2 wall tapestries; trunk; bookshetve•;
IJUn rack; 2 oak mantels; bull horns; .sm. stone
Iars; stone canning Iars; metal butter mold;
cast lrOfl bank, and other misc. Items.
Mit. ,AN!) MRS. JOHN BROGAN, Sit.
Terms: c..ll •
· .
. LIIIIC'Ievelllltlt

of ter.

poosslblt
1 Jeporl,

/

·We're Not Foolin'
Ybu Can't beai out .Used

See &lt;the 73 Oldsmobile

PHONE 992·2550

or pay balance of $101.50. Call
992-5331.
10-19-61c

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Racine, Ohio

•

*6500 .

TODAY FOR AFREE ESTIMATE
O'DELL
T.ERMIT .E SERVICE
Gallipolis, Ohio..

For Free Estimate

guaranteed.
Reas onable ' 1971 KAWASAKI 100, exce llent
rates . Phone 742 - ~232 or 992condition, ready to go .
3213 .
Sacrifi ce for on l y $235. Phone

estimates . Phone 992-3184.
Goeglein Ready -Mi x Co. ,
Middleporl, Ohio.
,
6-30-lfc

SATURDAY,OCT.21; 1972

"''of

lo"

•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CA.RPENTR.Y
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

. elec work

'
V-8, automatic. double power, very clean. Columbus
Dealer listed price same equipment, $1545.

Having moved to 1 mobile home we will sell the following
11 tht.resldence ~tod on Co. Rd. 4
Dexter, Ohio.
. Follow .. le sl111s from LangsviJie, Ohio on SR 124.

rid s

~ROOFING

WE CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY-!

fi

US£0 CARS

million dollars.

I ~::•,':.~! ~,~~·&lt;l~::•oo.; ,,,r, vou

Ph. 992-2174

~

AKC Toy Poodl es, Phone 742·
3-2.ffc
" HOT-SHOT" WASHMOBILE .
3871.
,--,---- - - -Wash , wax and degrea sing
10-19-6tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
with mobile unit. 446-4441.
Septic tanks installed. George 1950 11,.TON Ford pick up tru ck ; .
2JO .If
(Bill ) Pullins . Phone 992-2478.
Marlin .rifl e; 3 sows ,· phone
ALBERT EHMAN
4-25-lfc
147-2161 .
Water Delivery Service
10-10-3fc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Patriot Slar Rt., Gallipo lis
located at Crossroads, Rt . 12.4. REG ISTERED Engli sh Setter
Ph . 379.1133.
puppies, 6 weeks old; phone
Complete front end serv ice,
143.11

1969 Ford Fairlane 2 Or. H-top.

· 11100 A.M.

Lover

..

power equipment, T&amp; T wheel, AM-FM radio, Clima1e
Control ai r condi_tinnil'lg. Less thar- 10,000 m iles.

PEST CONTROL SERVICE
'""'.~''" Iotti prote..rio~ for S yt1r1
blcktd
.1 combined tuh

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

-

72 I Cadillac
Sedan DeVille
fln1slr.b1Kek viiWI l&lt;ip, 61acKliili&gt;r!ii;f.'lii;:-·f l

i

EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND

Radiator Specialis1

Clip Ad asltv!tlll not bucfv. but once.

PUBLIC AUQION

Av.o-if,a!J.Ie-A~-A·n y-'P.rlc•l

Cli"'l Ill lfi'OIII

'llcCormlek No. 50

fruit

20'.',

prices.
·
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7 ; Closed Mon~ys

Farm Equipment
McCormick No. 16
FIELD HARVESTER
Good Condition

From the largest
BulldoZer Radiator to
'PilU'li---1--ISmollest-Heater eore: :.......:.:..

..... . . - '

~-

Of Course You Can"

Your Valuable Properflu
Deserve T,.e Best Protection

Pomeroy

and

Murray 10 speeds - discount

l0-22-6fc

heat, storm doors and
windows, 2 .Porches, garage,

Huffy'

DON'T .
BE
.
. STOP
MIS~EAD ... , .
·

HOME &amp; 4UTO

Guaranteed appliances

on Tuppers Plains water

For Rent

unfurnished

Center

"OWN A
CADIIJ.AC,

e

POMEROY

Rt . 7 "a1 elution light"

good hard surfaced road; also

and the singers for the lovely 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
music ; also for the
flowers and cards.

Kuhl's Bargain

r-.,.-~------

. 10-19-3fp . dining room, gas forced a ir

10-13-12tp
10-21- lfc 1962 FORD Fulura, 2 door,
standard transmission, extra FARMLAND for sale by owner.
WE WISH · to thank friends,
good COI)diti on or will trade
82 acres of level land . Meigs
relatives, and neighbors who
for an automatic of equal
County, Ohio, on Count.y Road
he lped us during the death of
va lue; phone 949-3915.
46,
located 1 3-10 miles south
our mother, Mary Barnhart.
10·20-3fc of Tuppers Plains P.O. on
Special thanks to the Ewing
Funeral Home, Rev. Robert
~u hn for his consoling words

Real Estate For Sale

DeVille.

condd1o n , 4 wheel drive ;

Pomerov. 9hio

For Sa

DRIVE A LITTLE
- SAVE' A LOTI

16 FAT lambs, re~dy for the
treezer: phone 992-2630.
10-22-JtC
·

10-18-6tc

1942 JEEP, full cab; good

Or. Boon sue, nurses and aides

while hosp italized . Many
thanks to the Chester

'

after 5 p.m. !ill 7 p.m .
I0-17-5tp

Excelsior
Salt Works, Inc.

I WISH to extend my !hanks fo

Hospital , to my many friends
who sent cards and visited me

mechan1cally qood ; call after
6 p.m., ~wrence Donohue

phone 992-6383.

P.O. Box167

of the Veterans · Memorial

VOLKSWAGEN .

1 condition J phone 992 -6222

are . Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972 .

SHOTG UN shootiog malch,
Rulland Gun Club, Sunday,
Oct . 22. 1 p. m. All hand

19 67

1971 VOLKSWAGEN. super
bee tle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A

Saturday .

Notice

Auto Sales '

Phone 991·1730.

After 1hey

OFFICE HOU'Il$, '
a.m,. to S:OO,p.m. Da lly,
a. m. to 12·: 00 Noon

Business· Services
TUPPERS PLAINS

Per Hundred
Pounds

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

For Sale

CASH paid for all makes and WILL . DO . babysilfing tor 1%6 - · 266 CU. IN. V-8 In·
models of mobile homes .
ternatlonal engine, 4 speed
preschool Childre.n in my
· Phone area code 6U, 42J-9531.
transmission complete ;
home by the day_Reliable and
phone 992-7384.
·
•· lJ.Ifc
mature. Phone 949-5101.
10-22-JtC
10-18-&amp;ft

. 742.-3048.

Your Walnuts Will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We W.i II Pay You.

CARD OF THA·NKS
&amp; OBITUARY
.
Sl.50 for 50 word minlmurn .
Each additiona'l word 2c .

Wanted

.

·

/
·I

�·-:a or-:.·uM :Jt:~:tur,~~
u.-,e : .J. ''~·:· ••:itiltttaj' ~ ':L ,.,,,elJ'iiiiJ.Jt::llltll~l,
.
. ' Notice
Notice·
.NO'fiCE
WAN.T ADS
Wanted To
Mobile Homes for Sale Employment
i

'l

'

.

'

'

•

f

..

'

•

HAYMAN'S Auclion -- a good KOSCOT KOSMETICS (MINK V ~ . W . Shoo tin9 Ma't c h dl
Brnad Run Rod &amp; Gun Club .
01 L BASE I. We have many
place to qo each Friday
New H.wen ; Starts at noon,
new
producls
s.ince
the
for
·
evening. 1 p:m. at Laurel
Svn
dcty , Oc tober
22nd ;
malion
of
lhis
Company.
Also
Cliff on old Rl. 7, I n1ile wesl
of Rock Springs Fairground.

10-IO·lfc

several new ones th is month

plus monthly specictls . All
these in addition to the

s po nsO r'f' d by

Post

Ma ::-.on, W. Va .

9926.

10-19·3lc
Sale, Port: . originals. Ladles, we would
like very much for. you to try GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Oclober
land MethOdist Church ,
21. 1 p. m. Factory Choked
these c~mellcs and to serve
Thursday, Friday; October
gur,s onl'/ . Second· place
you , Phone Helen Jane, 992·
.26th and 27ih; baked gQods,
shoo ter s get free shot in ne;,.:t ·
5113.
Friday.
rn&lt;J1 ch. , Assorted . mea:ts.
10-1-tfc
• ~acine Gun ·Club.
7
P
=lA"Nc:O
"""T"u-nin_g_,"L
_a_n_e-=D-a-,
niel s,
-~~~-'I~Wn.LU..no.Ltie. responsible for
OCIP13ei"28ltllfirUDecember
· any debts contraded by ~ny
151h , 259 Broadway, Midone other than mvself .
Spain and Portugal rna~e
Signed: Larry R. Hubbard . dlpor! ; phone 992.2081 .
10-16-5lc up the Iberian Peninsula .
•I0-20-3tp
..
MISC~LLAN~OUS

\

.... ,. --

•• '

- - -- .. --.,

INFORMATIO"

, • DEAU!..INES .
,5 P .M . Dav BeJ()re PublicatloiT:.
Monday Deadline 9 a .m .
Caricellatlon - Correct ions
Wilt be aCC~:eptcd unljl 9 a.m. lor

Da v of P.ut-licafion

me

REGULATIONS

Bring Your Unhulled
.
1

Publisher reserves the 1
r ight to edit or reject any 11.ds ,
deemed
obiectional. . The ,
publisher will not be responsible.·
·far more than one incorrect
lnsert.lon..

12 cents
th ree
cor,secutive insertions.
18 cents per
secutlve insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.

WALNUTS .
TO OUR
MECHANICAL
HULLER

·8~30

8 : 30

lt1 ·11

choked and sleeved guns will

be handicapped . No alcoholic
beverages are allowed.

10·19-31c

Card of Thanks

Firemen and the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
Arthur Orr

'69 CADILLAC,

sed~n

air conditioned, green with
brown vinv l top. All power,,
automatic, good condition.

10-17-6fp

Real Estate For Sale
4 ROOMS &amp; bath, 3 acres of
land, two-thi rds basemen1,
bUilding '20' x 40', plus barn,
located in Long Bottom, citv
wa ler, partially remodeled;

992-3891

phon• 985-3539.

or Trade

10-19-3fp

1963 CHEV. Stat ion Wagon, 8 ROOM house and. bath, nice
'la rge lot, natural gas, built-in
excel lent condffion, sel l or
trade for Volkswagen of equal

va lue ; phone 985·4118.
10-20·31c

food,

The Barnhart Family
10-11-ltp
UNITED SteeiWorkersof Local
6197 gives many thanks for
consideration, kin(fness and
refreshments to the Pomeroy
Wine Store throughout our

strike. Many thanks.
10·22·1tc

apartments.

Phone 992·5434.

4-12-lfc

~~--:----

3 ROOM house and bath, fur ·
nished ; also trailer ; adults

only ; phone 992-5592.

10-17-lfc
12x.51 TRAILER in Syracuse
after Oct. 22 ; "Pr i vate

lot,

adults only . Phone · 985-3504
aller 5 p.m .

Wanted To Buy

10·22-31p

WOULD like fo buy used flute in 2 BEDROOM trailer, Bob's
goo~ condition; call after 6
Mobile Courl, Syracus-e;
p.m. 992-5224.
I0-21- 3tc , phone 992-2951.
10-22-tfc
200 BALE S ot' good Ihis year 's F:-U~R:-N-:-I~S;-:-H~E:-:D:---1--b-,:-droom
hav . delivered ; phone 742 ·

4459 ·

10 _20 .31c

apartment,

adults

only,

Middleport; phone 991-3874 .
10-22-tfc

1960-1965 VOLKSWAGEN for TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
paris; phone 985-4118.
Courl ;
phone
992-3324.
10-10-3tc
10-22-lfc
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
organs, di shes, clocks, brass 12 X 60 MOBILE home ; adults
only ; call 992-5443.
beds, or complete households.
10-22-ffc
Wr ite M. D. Miller , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
6-28-tlc Mobile Homes For ~ale

UHEIL"

TWO bedroom m'ob ile home, in
good
condi tion ,
$1,600.
Zuspan's Trailer Court.
Velma G. Zuspan , Mason, W.

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

10·12-15fp

Va .

·Air Conditioners
·Awnings
· • Underpinning

Window
Air Conditioners

Hot Watei\ Heaten
Plumbing
·Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

BIKES . -

MIDDLE PORT - 2 story
brick. 2 or 3 bedrooms, b~th,

ca binets in kitchen. Close to
radio station in Bradbury .

Phone 992·2602.

·MAPLE stereo-radio .com bination, AM-FM radio, •
speed changer, c spe~kel
sound system. Balance $73.45.
Use our . budget terms. Coli

m -7oes.·

. 992-2094

60~ E. f.1ain

H &amp; N DAY old or started .
level' lot. $8,500.00.
Leghorn pullets, Both floor or
cage grown available.
housing
lo
MIDDLEPORT - 2 · st orv I .- Poultry
automation. MOdern Poultry,
frame. Slarge bedrooms, 1•1:1
399 W. Main, Pomeroy, 992baths, ·dining, nice kitchen,
2164.
.
cellar. 2'glassed In pord•os·l
10-22·1fc

garage, carport.

POMEROY - 2 story frame,
2 bedrooms, bath,' nl
kitchen, carpeted, lust
renovated throughout.
$8,500.00.

.

MIDDLEPORT RURAL-.1
story, 3 bedrooms. utility,
bat~, · gas forced air furnace,

recreation

room,

USED

storage, paneling and tile. ·
$9,800.00.
WANT TO SE Lt.? LIST
WITH US, WE-ADVERTISE
YOUR
PROPERTY
THROUGH OHIO AND W.
VA.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Phone 992-2259

FIELD HARVESTER
Wli~ nearly new 1 row corn
head. This can use 2-row
unit.
1-Gehl
FIELD HARVESTER
Good condition.

Meigs Equipment
PH. 992-1176
POMEROY, OHIO

'complete

mobile

service -

plus giga!lfic

POMEROY - House, 6 rooms
and bath, 2 large porches, 30 ACRES with · some tarm
machi_nery; call 667;3333.
large lot, newly painted ;
10-17-5fc
outbuildings; land lays well;
phohe 991-3394.
has beautiful moun1a.inous
10-22-3tc
E LECTROLUX ' Vacuum
view In all dlr~ttions; apCleaner complete with atproximatelv 25 Miles from
tachments, cordwlnder and
Athens, Ohio and Parkers- 5 ROOM house and bath,
lacaled on Bt ic k Slreet,
paint spray. Used but In like
burg. W. Va .. 14 miles North
Rutland; interior being
new condttion. Pay $34.45
of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for
remodeled ; phone 742-3334.
cash 91' budget plan av,allable.
nice home(s) development,
10-20-12tp
Phone 992-5641 .
elc. Southeastern Ohio Real
10-17-6tc
Estate Company, Broker ;
phone Belpre, 423-6293 ; RACINE - 10 room house,
bath, basement, garage, two NEW 1972 Zig-Zag Sewing
Parkersburg, 485-7539 or 422·
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Machine in original factory
8905. Price $35,000; terms,
carton . Zlg - Z~g to make
' 4-5-tfp
cash. Ask directions at
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
Millhone's Service Station at ~:----__.:._
IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . Lake
monOgrams and make fancy
Tuppers Plains.
designs with just the twist of a
Conchas, New Mexico. $2,975.
10-22-9lp
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
single-dial. Left In lay-away
f or 119 mos . Vacation
and never been used. Will sell
2 STORY home. bath and •;,,
Paradise . Free Brpchure.
for only $.47 cash or credit
carpeted, may be had with
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
terms available . Phone 992·
basic furniture; for ap 5641.
pointment caii99H384 or 992- 1001DD, Alameda, California
94501.
10-17-6tc
7133.
10-22-31c
10-3-30tp
COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-Z891.
Large 4 bedroom home, new bath upstairs,
4-12-tfc
very large living room, log burning fireplace,
JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
large entrance hall, dining ·room, newly
Sewing Machine. Will sell tor
small balance of $36.21 or
remodeled kitchen, 112 bath, with shower
payments .fnay be arranged.
downstairs, large corner . lot, loc&lt;~ted at 285
Phone ,992-53~1.
" ,~,
South l'hlrd .,·,stre-e·t-. Middleport , Ohio.
9-J-Hc
:-:::::---:----Financing available. Priced right to sell fast .
8 TRACK STEREO, freight
damaged, In beautiful walnut
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
console. Will sell tor $101.50or
pay $1.50 per week. Phone 9925331.
Real Estate Broker
9-7-tfc
Phone 985·4186 alter 4 P.M.
:P=oo=
D:L::E_p_u-pp:-i-es-.-s'il-ve-r:. -Toy,
HOUS.E in Long Bottom, phone Park view Kennels, Phone m985-3529.
5443.
8-15-ffc
6-11 -tfc

Virgil B.

hom&lt;

'display of mobile homes
alwa ys ~vallable at .. .

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

system; InCludes farm house
in need of repair, two barns In
good
condition,
~everi!ll

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
i

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.

ESTATE AUCTION
We will sell alllisled items a! auction from the Estate of
Mary Wright, Deceased, locatecl on Bedford Township
Road 253, take 143 out of Ha'rrisonville, 6 miles to County

Road 14, 3 miles on County Road 14 to 253 or 3 miles off
State Route 7 to County Road 14, tirst farm on right 011,
County Road 253 ; watch tor signs ; Saturday, October 28,

19n

SATURDAY, OCT. 28, 1972
ANTIQUES
!Shawnee Ware, butler dish , salt &amp; pepper set and relish
dish), insulatons all types ; Woodbury &amp; Mason tars with
lids: cut glass ; china; cups &amp; saucers; Iron ke111e wl.th
rack ; shoe lathe and attachments ; milk cans; bottles, all
types ; meat · chopper; coa t tree; wagon tack: wagon
wheel; buggie seal: spool and Iron beds; wood chest:
night stand; scales plussetof weights; 2 small iron Par_lor
stoves; driving lantern : woOd dinette with 4 matchtng
wicker chairs and hutch ; frames and pictures ; trunk;
lamp frame ; wooden barrels ; crocks,· other numerous
anfiques and collectors Items.

'
HOUSEHOLD
GOODS
Gold Velvet love seat with matching cha ir; couches;
swivel rockers; coffee tables ; end tables; bedroom
suites; child's roll -top desk ; kneehole desk and chair;
night stand; hutch with matching table and chairs;
tapeslr~ · wall hanging ; knick -knack shelves; black ·&amp;
white T.V. set ; solid state stereo; Unlco wringer washer;
G. E. dryer; G. E. retrigerator wltlt top freezer ; kitchen
stove ; double unit window fan ; natural gas and oil circulator heaters, from 40,000 to 65,000 BTUs; rug, 12x14;
various runners, wood room divider ; numerous silverware and k ltchen appliances .

ToQLS AND ANIMALS
.
.Cub Cadet riding lawnmower, mo&lt;lel 102-10 h.p. with 42" ·
mower, attachmenh are plows and cultivators; Allis
Chamber 2 row culllvator, wood molding, electric motors,
fencing, l.ocust po\1, shop tools, oil drum, 115 gal. squere
diesel fuel tank with pump, animal crates. 100 to 150 bales
of hay, 3 pon ies, stud, mare and colt, rabbljs, 'ducks,

AUCTION
I will sell the following morchlndlsell)at wu net sold 11

prior Auction, at my Ruldence, Stole Rt. 33, New Hoven,
West Va.
SATURDAY, OCT.28, 1972-IO:OOA.M.

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
$4,000.00
2 BEDROOMS - Stove and
refrigerator Included In this
sale . Living and dining
room, front .and back porches. 2 dug wells. 1/2 acres of
land.
BUSINESS RENTAL
BLOCK - 4 room business
building and a modern 3
bedroom paneled home with
bath, furnace heat, front
porch and view of the Ohio
River. Wood
burning
firepl~ce In living . Beautiful
kitchen. Large lot. All for
only $25.000.00.
COUNTRY
2 BEDROOMS - Bath,
plains water . Frontand back
porches. Garage and garden
spot. Only sc.ooo.oo.
MIDDLEPORT
MODERN 4 BEDROOMS 2 baths, nice kitchen with bar
and cook units. Garage and
rec . room In basement .

Large covered patio full
lel}gth of house . Asking
524.000.00.
.
165 ACRES
STOCK FARM - 2 houses,
farm ponds. Several ouft
buildings. All minerals. 0~
·school bus· and mall routes.
Want $25,000.00.
125 ACRES
120 IN WOODS - Good 9
room house with 2 baths. gas
heat, w~ter well, 3 porches, 2
large gardens, and all
minerals. $26,000 .00 .
liN ACRES
,
4' BEDROOM MODERN
HOME- Enclosed bath 'wllll
large utility. Boeullfuf.
kitchen, gas forced air

1

furnace and basement. 30

acres of · meadow. Garage
and ·•II minerals. $27,000.00.
guineas, ~ m~le peecocks.
HAVINGo TROUBLE
SELLING, THEN YOU
SHOULD CALl US FOR AN
Sale Startsl0:30 A.M. Sharp.
INTERVIEW.
TERMS : Cash
Lunch Will bo Served.
Register
. HELEN L. TEAFORD,
McCLOUD &amp; CHEVALIER, Autlionetrs
ASSOCIATE
l----ehlrten-l;ft-MIIer.etl-allmlnlstrtmr--~--H--'-'M225 or m-nn
Not Responsible tor Acddtnh.
No Sund1y Showings

Refrigerator, gas cook stove, gas heater, Kenmdre fuel oil
heater, living room furniture, lamps, record player, TV,
blankets, rugs, dresser. elect. heater, glass door dish
, cupboard, utility cupboard. COINS: Lincoln Pennies,
Indian Heads, Half Dimes, 2-Cent Piece, Sliver Dollars.
Curved glass china cupboard, round oak table &amp; chlln,
walnut drop-leaf table, wal. bed and dresser, brass bed,
wal. secretary, picture frames, rocking chairs, pie sole,
9un rack, pearl handle Western Six pistol, Muzzle loadl.ng
rifle, 12 gauge Acme shot gun, old sad Irons, milk cans,
fireplace tongs, Guys dropper container, cast Iron skillets,
dutch oven, Iron kettle, oak lamp stand, oak wash stend,
old books, lnsul~tors, school ball, 3 lanterns, east Iron toy
train, two baby cradles, ~nice oil lamps, stonelers, while
Carnival desert dish marked, Northwood Marigold cup,
two old Jim Beam bottles, R.S. Prussa celery dish,
depression glass, carnival fruit dish, covered butter dish.
AUCT. NOTE : Some consigned Items have been added to
this sale. ·
.
. TERMS: CASH
SIGNED: R. B. (John) Slyre
BRADFORD AUCTION CO.
R1dne, Ohio Box 116
PH. 614-949·3121

Nathan Biggs

FURNITURE "'
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

If I HAVE
To Go
Ta.ke Me To.

'5.55,

THE .SHOP

On Most Arneri(an cars
' - GUARANTEED. Phone 992·2094

PomeniJ Home &amp; Auto
Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturctay
606 E. Main , Pomeroy, 0 .

Let Dick and Dale

with Your Meat

You

..-------~--~~--, · SEE US FOR : Awnings. slorm
doors anq windows, carports,
· marquees! aluminum siding
and railing. A, Jacob, sales
r epresentative . For free
estimates, phon e Charles
Lis le, Syracuse, V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.

,fAR'JH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loa&lt;~er work,
·ponds, basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour ·or contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
1rucks and low-boy for hire.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m . or phone 9925232.

tune up and brake serv ice.

READY -MIX

Wheel s balanced
Ironically.
All

CONCRETE

delivered right t o your
project . Fast and easy. Free

7-27-lfc

-=~~-=--­

For Sale
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
1972
STEREO 8 !rack in walnul
REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446consol e with speaker balance
4782, Gallipoli s, John Russell.
Owner &amp; Operator .

and , base .
Take
over
paymen ts of $6.50 per month

5-11-flc
C.

Zag sewing machine. Thi s
machi ne ove rcasts. da rns,
embro iderie s and makes
button holes. Pay balance of

~,-------

WILL cut or trim trees,
reasonable; al so clean out
basements,
attics
and

$41.50 or pay $5.25 per month .
Call 992-5331.
cella rs; phone 949-3211.
10·19-6tc
10-4-301c
COME AND SEE . Have new
SEPT IC TANKS AROBIC
shipment of fl owers for fa ll
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
and Christmas ; will make
flower ~rrangements; have
CLEANED, R EPA IRE D.
over 1,000 gift items, also
MILLER SAN ITATION ,
STEWART, OHIO. PHONE
jewelry, Avon bottles , some
662·3035.
anliques; open 9 a.m. to 6
10·4-lfc
p.m ., except Friday, closed
Friday ; phone 985·3537 ;
Smalley's Gift Shop, Chester,
SEW ING MACHINES. Repair Ohio.
.
service, all make~ . •992-2184.
- • "'
•-- ".)p~~;J1\c
The. Fabric ·sliop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and -W_I_N_T_E~R-p-o"ta-fo-e~s-.ss""'a=100"-lb.;
Service. We Sharpen Scissors:
.Phone 247-2642.
J-29-ffc
10.18-6tc
D:O:D-:G-:E-:-.:-C-:-h-a-rg_e_r-.-p-ower
AUTOMOBILE insurance been :-19:-7-:-1-:
c ancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 992-

- - - - --

CARNAHAN AUCTION 'IIIYICI
t4f.27-J. C.rNIIen

tlldM. 01111

D. Smltlt-f4f.-

Nol retp znllltte tw a C It II • llel el iN I~

If.

991·5072.

Central Air Condi1ioning
&amp; Heating
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
144-11
Vinton, Ohio

Satellite St. Wagon, local I owner tar, dark· green llnlsh,
good !Ires, V -8 engine; automatic, p. steering, tactory a ir
cond. Need Det~lllng . -Relall Book Value $157l.OO.

l971 OfEVROLET...... ;; ......... '3095 .
Malibu hardtop coupe, low mileage, new car title, san-·
dalwood finish wlfh brown vinyl roof. vinyl saddle In-

GMAC Financing A~ailable

terior, 4.season air condltitlonlng, turb6hvdramatic,
power steering, white-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio.
-

Pomeroy '

Open Eves. Til 6- Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1968 OfEVELLE ................... •1795

' You'll Like ('• •r Qua lity Wa y of Doing Business"

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

·--- - - -

Malibu Spt. Cpe, air conditioned, 307 engine power
' steering &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl top &amp; blk .
viny l Interior, radio, good w-w tires.

------

1968 CAMARO Convertible ..... •1795

steering;

gold

with

black

vinyl top; phone 949-5424.
10.18-6tc
6-15-tfc · - - - - - - - - -

Local 1-owner low mileage car~ beautiful cream finish
with black lop, bucket seats, with console, new white-wall
tires, power steering and automatic tr~nsmlsslon. Radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME .
.
.

1966 OfEVROLET ................... '649

EXTERMINAT ING CO.

Coolv ille 667-6114.

M obi le

Homes

Termi te &amp; Pes t Control
Wheelersburg, Ohio

· 1
10-20·12lp .

for

YOUR

-;;:=========--,l,

Sale

1965 ATLAS mobil e home ,

CAR WINTERIZED
AT
SMITH NELSON MOTORS

$5.00 Serv ice Charge
Will rem ove your dead
hoi-se and cows

50)(10, two bedroom, front
kitchen, e)(cellent condition .

Phone 985-3555.

(all Jackson 286-4531 .

10·20-6tp ..

-

- --!.L

SEPTIC TANKS
Cleaned and Installed
Russell 's Plumbing, 446-4782

BOB

LA NE 'S

Comp lete

Bookkeeping and Tax Ser vi ce, 424 'h Fourth Ave .,
Kanauga . Office hrs. 9 a.m .-1

85-lf

------

McGrath, Frances Young,

sta ll ation, backhoe. bulldozer
and boring machine' services ,

June Newhouse, Bessie
Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey, Tad and Karen, Mr .
and Mrs. Terry Whaley , Erin
and Chip of Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Weaver
visited .the llunio~ Paynes.,On Oct. 17 there will be a
meeting at Mrs . Nellie
Borg•n 's for the senior
citizens. Mrs. Foil will be cosponsor.
Mrs. Arthur Goodin is
assisting Mrs. Paul Cottrill of
Albany with her fall cleaning.
Mrs. Minnie Foil spent a day
in Athens recently .

Buick

J . P. Holl ey , 245·5018 or D. R.

Why drive many miles looking tor a

V-8 onglne, sport custom cab, all side mldgs.,
radio, cab lights, chromo fr1 . bumper, R. step
bumper, H. duty tires, sprgs. a. helper sprgs.,
while over red finish, locally owned. Rtllll Book
Value 12200.00,

C&amp;S El ec trica l Servi ce &amp;
Re pai rs .
House
w ir ing,
electr\ ' heat, motor controls.
Free est imates . Ph . 446· 4561

OUR ·SPECIAL PRICE "'1795

or 675-3361.

22-tf

- -- - - -

BANKS TREE SERVICE

1t\1111Mt ID'i1 ~-lkzi,::;f;! ...JC

~ ~ ~~® ffli'"l

FREE est imates, liability in·
.'
sur ance. Pruning , tr immi ng Unscrambie these lour Jumbles,
and cavity work, tree and one letter to each aquare, to
stump r emoval . Ph. 446-4953 . form four ordinary worda .

,

II!.

cleani ng and repai r , also
house wrecki ng . Ph . 446-9499. t
Es tablished in 1940.

'--.--,---+""',.,..,;r---,

II

precialed. Ph: 446-0463.

------

7-tf

-

listed below ere taken from Saturday's
Columbus paper ... See us and save .
$$$$$... We have 12 cars in our

0
IO• J I

/,W;I.f;.\1

OFTEN Gr&lt;r!WS
SHA!&lt;:PER WITH USE.

IUJMfCl'

t o form

CARTER'S PLUMBING ,
AND HEATING

showroom, ou1 of the weather, sharp,

Cor. Fourth &amp; Pine

ready for your deal , '.. WE ARE
DEALING.

Ph on~ 446-3888 or

Now arranre t.ht circled !etten
the aurprloe anawer, u
I unetted by the above eutoon.

48-ff

- - - - - --

446-4477
165-ff

.

' - -Prill
----"-'
llie-"SIIII-'-'.PIIISI
.:.:..;A=NSWIR-=
Illre"------'1 A [

IIIII]
(Antwert ,\ tond•J)

Jumlol"' JADED IYLAW IUCKLI HIATUS

STA NDARD

\" " t l er4 l a~ · ~

Plumbi ng &amp; Heat ing

115 Thi rd Ave ., 446-3782
187·11

Anu.-.·r: ..f mupl'iu~·"l' ow•raticm. by rht Nntty- SWAI

~OU.fi'JOS

ACROSS
1-Turf
6-Strlkes ·
11-W• Iked
18-.l.rr•.na• •ealn
19-Doctrine
2D-Cio-th•sm•kers
21-Most cr•fty

OUR PRICE '1395

23-Conduct

24--Guido's hl1h

nolo

26-Solks

27-Nole of scale

Top of the line trom Pontiac, fully equipped. Columbus
Dealer listed price same equipment, $1895.

V-1 doubie · power; outomatlc, good for the year.
Col~mbus Dealer listed price, samio equlpm~t, S599.

OUR PRICE '495

These Are Just Five That the Big City Boys
hl!d Listed: There Were Many More:· N11mes
of De•lers Here For Comp•rison. We Also
Have 7 Specials at
E•ch, Good Trl!ns·
portatlon for A Year or So ... Hurry on These

suo

992-2151

32-Dine

.

.

33- Vitor (colloq.)
34-Burmlll

o.

"Your Chevy Dealer'"
Open
. Eves. ' Til&amp; .

Plumbing &amp; Heating

67-Be&amp;:lnnlns
69-Htvlns. e.rs
71-Burm• native
73-M•de unfnll n1
•74-Walkad on
76--Hindu JUitars
79-Reprnentatlve
81-Comp31S point
82-Roman bronze
84- Ardent

137-lntellect
138-Geometrlc
solid
139-Steamship

30-G!rl' s name
31- Cook slowly
33-Mel•l tubfs

(abbr.)
140- Rise and fall
ol ocean
141-Shlp cttannel
142-Sheltering

36-Ceue
37-Heatln&amp;: •

115-Misrepreaents
87- Woody plant

143-Fondle

(a bbr.)
101-Roman official

38-Ruultin&amp; from

104-Repalr

old ace
4o-,Underworld

105-Brlef
lOB-Pronoun
pO-Spool

Cod
41-Sound al1rm
42-The sweetaop
4:J-..Gr..k letter

45-Mo,. matura '

103-Brown klWI

112-Tldl.n•!ll

113-Footlike part
114-Piural endlnl

49--Sun-drled

115-Graln (pl.)
117-lcelandtc
wrltln1s
qa-oc.. ns
~· 1'19--observes

brick,

120-Ffllnch

46-While
47-ltellln coin
48-Bitckblrd
~1-Greek l•tter

53-N•IIve metst

con/unctio n
121-Unclolls,
123-Wltl'lout and

54-Sn•re
55-RaiN

(poet.)
124-Qu•rrel

52--;Bettoldl

57-A~e

Sll\lcture

14-4-Sidewlse

9tl-Diacour•••ment 146--Wur away
92-Man'a name
148--Eogine
(a bbr.)
l49r-Da, ,of week
93-Loeatlon
150-Takes one 's
95-Sword
part
97-tu• for,
151-Ejects

35-Space

36--0.nudes

125-Youn&amp;sters
126--Prtfix : before
127-AnJtl

DOWN

1-Supplles
2-Walkt.
unsteadily
3-The caama

4-Piace

5-Sa~nt (abbr.)

6-Vapor
7-S~re

8-Conjunction
9-Hebrew Jetter

10--Guldes
11-Stert off in
panic
12-Symbol for
tentalum
13- l rel'land

14-EntreatleS"
-1 5-Maker

Ot

,urthenware

16-Bitter vetch

35-Unusuai

94- 0mll hom
pronvnclttlon
9~Svn eod
98- Arm y meal
99- Selects
10Q-Baby's

device
napkins
39- Penpolnt·
102-Finlshed
41 - Metal strand
104-Protecth•e
42- Desert dweller
ditch
44-0tfitradt
· 105-Goll mounds
47-Learnlnl

48- Bakt r"s

, products

49-ChiJnge
50-Small stoves
54- Most e.act
55-DirectiOn
56- Weirder
59-Bay windows

60--Procteds
61-Symbot for
tin
63-Brlst le
~ Measure of

tenath (abbr.)
67-H)'pothetlcal
· force
68-0evlces lor

brOwning
70-Polnted
weapon
71-E•perimentll
room {colloq.)
72-twleturt

106-Prophetess
107-Holds In hlah

regard
109-cublc meter
111-Recklfssly
112-Ha ve on. one's
per1on
113-~an's

nlcknlme

II6-N.a hoor sheep
118-B.arr.acud.a
119-Traded for
money

122-Goblln.
124.;_Freahe!S

125-Pltch

t2~arpenter'J

tool

128--Underworld
l30-Edible ...d

lll-Nip' ,

73-Splrlted hOrses 132-Dstt
, 135-Fiock
77-Fem,le ruff
131- Fnhlon

75-Rely "on

78-Standlne room , . 13~ToP of hud
only . (&lt;"~bbr,)
· 140--Greek tell er
80-Keefl
142- Edlble fish
a·3 • 1 128 d
-..-u ver
J.43-PoUceman
rock
· (slan1)
t

17-Symbol for
•- dl y
• • th• rvu
5v-P.rta
dysprosium
In
21-Heelle u
~11~ 60--t•••ot-to,JVo.~ ..._129-t.cne ~~~ ............... f06tWI;;.;,;-~~.llBbMattb-hit.d-J-44~rmy-otfiCe ,........_
6l-PoHd fetr
13J-Tree trunk
:?2-G'o:between
aS-Noblemen
(abbr.!'
portr1it
132-Towerd the
23-Man 's. name
89-centra l
145-CoOied lave
American
62-.;SI•v..
sheltered side
2s-;..Hawa]lan
147-JJplnese
64-comp..s paint · 133-Befo,.

65-Note of SCIII
66--Unf•lr blow

134-CoiJeil Chllr

136-Tidy

wruth

'
.
musure

lree

27~1in;inates

9~Prefl• :

2S..:..'1en ai,!.

~1 -Cyprinold fish

dDW!l

,....

148-Manuscrfpt
(•bbr,)

I '

•
'

,\

'

-

~amplng

Pomeroy

Equipment

1973 lRAILERS and campers In
RUSSELL'S
slack. Fbr service, quality
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
and price - visit Camp
21 Galllo Ave. 446-4782
Conley Slarcraft Sales, 62
297-ff
North ot Point Pleasant
7
behind Red Carpel Inn.
--;:DE;:-W
~
IT=
T~'S-cP=L~U~M~B~I~
NG
230-tf
AND HEATING
-=
T::he_n
_a_m
_e~c=a~th:-e-rl:-n-e-co..,.
_mes
Route 160at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735
187-1 from a Greek name mean-

ing "pure. "

98--Proncun
99-Civll Defense

demons

1965 Ford LTD 4 Dr. H- Top

.~R.' H.-Rawlings SOns fA».·

~~······
31-App. .r

3o-collei'• official

OUR PRICE '1695-.

OUR PRICE '1295

992-2126

SUN DAY, OCTOBER 22, 1972

OUR PRICE '2395

4 spe~, new paint, ready. Columbus Dealer listed price,
same equipment, $1495.

POMEROY MOTOR ·CO.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

V-8, double power, factory air, sharp. Actual Columbus
Dealer price for comparable car listed with same
equipment as ours $2599.

1969 Opel Kadetl Wagon

1969 OfEVROL£T..............!2295

Prompt Delivery on
'73 Cars &amp; .Light Trucks

- -- - D. P. MAR TIN &amp; Son Water

Delivery
Servi ce.
Your
patro nag e · will
be a p.

.

lTon, 102" cab to axlo, 292 cu. ln. englno, 15,000
lbs. 2-speed rear axle, 825x20, 10 ply tires, full
depth foam seat, heavy duty springs, solid cab.
Ready to go to work .

-:-:~,.--~----73·11 . . - - - - - .
GI LLE NWATE R'S septic tank I 1'0)1t'(;
' ~';;~•;.:;,·,~.~::J'"'...

· Ph . 446-1637.

I

1970 FORD 8' STYLESIDE .

MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

111 ·11

Co!'ldilioning. 300 Fourth Ave.

bargain in a sharp used carT The pr1ces

OUR SPECIAL PRICE ~2495

Pontiac

169-11

Government Printing
in Washington, D.C.
nation's largest puband distributor of

blue finish .
Book Votue .!2150.00.

992-2174

Holley. 245-5006.

GENE PLANTS '&amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heal ing &amp; Ai r

1 1970 Ford LTO Brougham 2 dr • . H·top.

full wh . covers, r. step bumpers, radio, chrome
W.C. mirrors, chrome frt. bumper. rear step
bumper, locall owner truck. Beautiful wh . over

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
COM PLETE wafe r line in -

_

307 V-8 engine, custom Delu•e cab, sldo mldgs.,

Ope~ Evenings til7 p.m. &amp; Sat. tilll2 Noon for .
Serv~ce &amp; Sales 5 p . m .

p.m. Ph. 446-1049.

..

Outstanding Truck Buys!
1971 QfEVROLET 8' FLEETSIDE

WE WILL WINTERIZE YOUR CAR
AND GUARANTEE OUR WORK.
OUR WORD IS OUR BOND

297 ·11

Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son
of Logan spenl Sunday with the
Earl McGraths.
Recent callers of Ava Gilkey
were Mr . and Mrs. Doyle
Hudson , Mary Bolin, Minnie

BelAir St. Wagon. I owner, local car &amp; spotless vinyl Interior, good tires, V-8 englno, power steering, brakes.
automatic trans., radio. See this car as It Is priced low,
low, low.

DEAD STOCK.

Plumbing &amp; Heating

...

1969 PLYMOUTH OUR SPECIAL '999,

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

992-5342

I

ANOTHER SPECIAL!

---=----THOMAS FAIN

• c
10-20-31

plenty of luxury fry th is outstanding buy .

ONLY

KARR _
&amp;VANZANDT

Extermina l Term ite Sevice:
19 Bemont Dr .

,O.PPLES, Fitzpatri ck Or·
chards, Slate Route 689,
Phone Wilkesville 669-3785.
8-30·1fc

OOZER and back hoe work, ANTIQUE pump organ, all
ponds and septic tanks, dit - original. except new bellows .
Over 80 years old. Made by
ching service; top soli, fill
Taylor and Fraley Organ Co ..
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex Worcester , Mass. One bellows
cavating . Phone 992 -5367,
type. Phone 992-3904.
The
Dick Karr. Jr .
10-13-lf Office
9-1-tfc
is the
lisher
books.

2nd Ave.

..

&amp;

'4000

TERMITE PEST Cd'NTROL
FREE inspectio•&gt;- Call 446-3245.
Merrill O' Dell, Operator bY.

. For Sale

Harrisonville
Society New~

5-1-ffc

2966.

tenor, factorv ~ir conditioned. luggage rack , r:adlo,
350 V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power steering &amp;
brakes, like new w-w tires. If you want a show piece

Sit.ver metallic finish. blue interior, full power equipment,
Climate Contro l air conditioni ng, AM-FM radio, one
owner new Cadillac trade .
· •.

267 11

LE FT IN lay.away Delux Zig

Phone 949-3821

Critt Bradford

1971 BUICK

,·sp~rtwagon . Beautiful coral finish wilh vinyl in.

7U:adillac Sedan DeVille

CIJ1t-tu~

·-----,---~

- - -- --

Complete Service

· 1968 Pontiac Grand f'l:ix 2 Or. H-top.

Gibson side by side refrigerator-freezer 16 cu.
ft .; Tappan gas range; Maytag wringer
washer and dryer; Earl Arm platform rocker;
new platform rocker; sofa bed; coffee table; 5
pc. dinette set; 3 pc. dinette set; Warm
Morning bottle gas heater, 65,000 BTU; • 2
Warm Morning coal stoves; king size bed; 4
dressers; 2 .Hobby beds; 4 ·pc. marie bedroom
sulte; chest of drawers; . meta wardrobe;
metal bed; lamps, pictures; pots', pana,
dishes; 2 wall tapestries; trunk; bookshetve•;
IJUn rack; 2 oak mantels; bull horns; .sm. stone
Iars; stone canning Iars; metal butter mold;
cast lrOfl bank, and other misc. Items.
Mit. ,AN!) MRS. JOHN BROGAN, Sit.
Terms: c..ll •
· .
. LIIIIC'Ievelllltlt

of ter.

poosslblt
1 Jeporl,

/

·We're Not Foolin'
Ybu Can't beai out .Used

See &lt;the 73 Oldsmobile

PHONE 992·2550

or pay balance of $101.50. Call
992-5331.
10-19-61c

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Racine, Ohio

•

*6500 .

TODAY FOR AFREE ESTIMATE
O'DELL
T.ERMIT .E SERVICE
Gallipolis, Ohio..

For Free Estimate

guaranteed.
Reas onable ' 1971 KAWASAKI 100, exce llent
rates . Phone 742 - ~232 or 992condition, ready to go .
3213 .
Sacrifi ce for on l y $235. Phone

estimates . Phone 992-3184.
Goeglein Ready -Mi x Co. ,
Middleporl, Ohio.
,
6-30-lfc

SATURDAY,OCT.21; 1972

"''of

lo"

•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CA.RPENTR.Y
•SPOUTING
•PAINTING

. elec work

'
V-8, automatic. double power, very clean. Columbus
Dealer listed price same equipment, $1545.

Having moved to 1 mobile home we will sell the following
11 tht.resldence ~tod on Co. Rd. 4
Dexter, Ohio.
. Follow .. le sl111s from LangsviJie, Ohio on SR 124.

rid s

~ROOFING

WE CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY-!

fi

US£0 CARS

million dollars.

I ~::•,':.~! ~,~~·&lt;l~::•oo.; ,,,r, vou

Ph. 992-2174

~

AKC Toy Poodl es, Phone 742·
3-2.ffc
" HOT-SHOT" WASHMOBILE .
3871.
,--,---- - - -Wash , wax and degrea sing
10-19-6tc
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
with mobile unit. 446-4441.
Septic tanks installed. George 1950 11,.TON Ford pick up tru ck ; .
2JO .If
(Bill ) Pullins . Phone 992-2478.
Marlin .rifl e; 3 sows ,· phone
ALBERT EHMAN
4-25-lfc
147-2161 .
Water Delivery Service
10-10-3fc
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Patriot Slar Rt., Gallipo lis
located at Crossroads, Rt . 12.4. REG ISTERED Engli sh Setter
Ph . 379.1133.
puppies, 6 weeks old; phone
Complete front end serv ice,
143.11

1969 Ford Fairlane 2 Or. H-top.

· 11100 A.M.

Lover

..

power equipment, T&amp; T wheel, AM-FM radio, Clima1e
Control ai r condi_tinnil'lg. Less thar- 10,000 m iles.

PEST CONTROL SERVICE
'""'.~''" Iotti prote..rio~ for S yt1r1
blcktd
.1 combined tuh

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

-

72 I Cadillac
Sedan DeVille
fln1slr.b1Kek viiWI l&lt;ip, 61acKliili&gt;r!ii;f.'lii;:-·f l

i

EXTERMITAL TERMITE AND

Radiator Specialis1

Clip Ad asltv!tlll not bucfv. but once.

PUBLIC AUQION

Av.o-if,a!J.Ie-A~-A·n y-'P.rlc•l

Cli"'l Ill lfi'OIII

'llcCormlek No. 50

fruit

20'.',

prices.
·
LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 7 ; Closed Mon~ys

Farm Equipment
McCormick No. 16
FIELD HARVESTER
Good Condition

From the largest
BulldoZer Radiator to
'PilU'li---1--ISmollest-Heater eore: :.......:.:..

..... . . - '

~-

Of Course You Can"

Your Valuable Properflu
Deserve T,.e Best Protection

Pomeroy

and

Murray 10 speeds - discount

l0-22-6fc

heat, storm doors and
windows, 2 .Porches, garage,

Huffy'

DON'T .
BE
.
. STOP
MIS~EAD ... , .
·

HOME &amp; 4UTO

Guaranteed appliances

on Tuppers Plains water

For Rent

unfurnished

Center

"OWN A
CADIIJ.AC,

e

POMEROY

Rt . 7 "a1 elution light"

good hard surfaced road; also

and the singers for the lovely 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
music ; also for the
flowers and cards.

Kuhl's Bargain

r-.,.-~------

. 10-19-3fp . dining room, gas forced a ir

10-13-12tp
10-21- lfc 1962 FORD Fulura, 2 door,
standard transmission, extra FARMLAND for sale by owner.
WE WISH · to thank friends,
good COI)diti on or will trade
82 acres of level land . Meigs
relatives, and neighbors who
for an automatic of equal
County, Ohio, on Count.y Road
he lped us during the death of
va lue; phone 949-3915.
46,
located 1 3-10 miles south
our mother, Mary Barnhart.
10·20-3fc of Tuppers Plains P.O. on
Special thanks to the Ewing
Funeral Home, Rev. Robert
~u hn for his consoling words

Real Estate For Sale

DeVille.

condd1o n , 4 wheel drive ;

Pomerov. 9hio

For Sa

DRIVE A LITTLE
- SAVE' A LOTI

16 FAT lambs, re~dy for the
treezer: phone 992-2630.
10-22-JtC
·

10-18-6tc

1942 JEEP, full cab; good

Or. Boon sue, nurses and aides

while hosp italized . Many
thanks to the Chester

'

after 5 p.m. !ill 7 p.m .
I0-17-5tp

Excelsior
Salt Works, Inc.

I WISH to extend my !hanks fo

Hospital , to my many friends
who sent cards and visited me

mechan1cally qood ; call after
6 p.m., ~wrence Donohue

phone 992-6383.

P.O. Box167

of the Veterans · Memorial

VOLKSWAGEN .

1 condition J phone 992 -6222

are . Hulled

Start Buying October 2, 1972 .

SHOTG UN shootiog malch,
Rulland Gun Club, Sunday,
Oct . 22. 1 p. m. All hand

19 67

1971 VOLKSWAGEN. super
bee tle, cheap, 24,000 miles, A

Saturday .

Notice

Auto Sales '

Phone 991·1730.

After 1hey

OFFICE HOU'Il$, '
a.m,. to S:OO,p.m. Da lly,
a. m. to 12·: 00 Noon

Business· Services
TUPPERS PLAINS

Per Hundred
Pounds

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement .

For Sale

CASH paid for all makes and WILL . DO . babysilfing tor 1%6 - · 266 CU. IN. V-8 In·
models of mobile homes .
ternatlonal engine, 4 speed
preschool Childre.n in my
· Phone area code 6U, 42J-9531.
transmission complete ;
home by the day_Reliable and
phone 992-7384.
·
•· lJ.Ifc
mature. Phone 949-5101.
10-22-JtC
10-18-&amp;ft

. 742.-3048.

Your Walnuts Will be
Hulled Free of Charge
and We W.i II Pay You.

CARD OF THA·NKS
&amp; OBITUARY
.
Sl.50 for 50 word minlmurn .
Each additiona'l word 2c .

Wanted

.

·

/
·I

�I-

'J'11e~y l iJ~l1(1$'.,.~flUrJel, :Swtday1 UC(, fl.[f72

•.

.

'' .""'

..

__..;..,;

...J.

~:...,;_ - ..,_.}.

')

..:.~

- -

""" "';' - - --·- . _,,:...:, - - ._ M • •. -

-

,_.-. .,""-

~-.

'*

-

-

~ _.,~---

Mlo -

....k ....:o""~;l:-liliOI""~""'~~
· I

.

For. Fast Results Use Th.e Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate For Sale

Reai Estate For Sale

•

.1/;JJlfliiPNL.
REAlTY
25 .Lo cus t St. ·
Broker

STROUT
.. EAlTY

HOward.

Eve .

•

~~~6 - 1226

1HfLEADE R SINCE 1900 IN
. S~RVING THE. NATI.ON'S
'4UYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph, 446·P008

GREATLY, R~DUCED
THE SUY
.
OF THE MONT H!
A BE AUTIFUL br ick home BEAUTIFUL P.,L EASANT
toca lcd on a well -landsca ped ,\ lALlEY ESTATES - NEW
one &lt;l crc lot in Kyger Creek
L ISTIN G . 3 BR brick , w-w
School. Dls1rid. 3 l"rge BR
ca rpet. 11 1 baths. 2 car
c1nd ti le br~lh , la undr y room, a g_arag c, ccnl. t'l ir , gar . disp.,
woman's dream Lome tru e tfi shwo;1 s her , tovety b1rch
kit chen, d eep pile carpe t cr'lbin e ls . Ow ner being tran sthr oughout, large LR , rural ,fcrred .
Wc'li Pr , owne r stu d sel l. NoJ
.1
many homes o/ thi s qua Illy al 3 M t . OUT
QU 1CK
. thi s pri ce in Ga llia Co. Call POSSESS ION - Love ly 3 BR
no w ~ it won'J las t.
.brick a11 d fr ame wit h full
16 ACRES
base ment, ga rage , large
~26 , 500 - BE AUTIFU L 1 BR ,
family rm .. dini ng rm , 2 WB
· ill I elellri c home re fl ec ts fireplaces, large :&gt; 4 A. lot.
te nder loving care, CO li ·
ven ienl kitchen and din ing R·i'O - L1 KE NEW - Brick
room, la rge LR ·' wi th . ,ncher, HW floors , air cond ..
fire pl ac e, enclosed bi'ICk
complete kitchen, util ity rm ..
porc h, 1 ? basement, ca rpet
$11.000
th roug hout. all appliances go
'. wdh hom e, pond , large 30' x ADD ISO N ~ Modern 6 rm. I
60' buildi r)g, ? car garag e,
t1ome wi th brick fr onL leve l
num&lt;?rOl)S s had e trees,
lot wit h 110ft . fronl. cent. air,
minutes from Gallipolis or
CC~ rp ort, oWner anxio us to
· ldunl-i ng lon. .; .
5C II
JUST LISTEO
CHILDRE N ARE WELCOME. MIDDLEPORT ~ 12 f&lt;M ..
, In fact , chil drer:t are f1 eeded to
BRICK - Could be used as 2-3
make thi s 4 bed room house a
or &lt;1 family home . Pr iced tor
happy home . Bea utiful stone
below re pl ace ment cos t.
fireplace in LR, all electric
dr eam . ktlc he n, pa neled. POME RO Y - REMODE1ED2
s tory
home
wit h full
d ining room , comfort-able
fam ily room , P 1 bath ,
basement. Buy noW and start
laundry room, larg e hobby
collecting rent.
sh op fo r the creative m.1n ,
• -- 11 BERGER AVE. carp orf , lenced lawn , owner CITY
rn oving
west.
quick
Love ly 1 BR home with full ·
possessi on. Price $19,500.
basernent. Lots of shade
FALL SPECIAL
trees .
• BEDROOM, large country
~dchen , . plenty cab in e ts, NEI GHBORHOOD RD. - 3 BR
range, dtsposal and dou ble , rnodu tar home 2 yrs. old, air
oven, off ki tchen laundry
&lt;;and ., partly furn ished, a
r ~iOill. lormal OR , one BR on
bargain at $14,500 .
fi r-Sitr.. ,.flaor, porch, garage.
aluminum siding , located on STATE ROU TE 160 - 3 yrs. old ,
,. Jl 1 corner lots. $18,800 buys
7 rm . brick. 2 car garage, all
this bea utif ul wei! shaded
elect
ric , cent. air , 2 baths, w·
home.
w· car pel, WB firep lace .
W-A-N-T-E-D
'
LISTINGS!!!
CLOSE
TO NEW MINE - 1970
WE NEED YOUR PROP ERTY

·

Real Estate t-or ~are

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE

THE WISEMAN
.
.
~

i

·"

..

.

AGENCY
'

'

Wi~Pman

. Realty, 32 St'ate St
Tel. 446,1998

'

' Office 446-3643
. Evenil)gs .call
E. M . "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796

E. N.

,•

446-4500

Real Estate For Sale .

For Sale

6 y(..t-.r · old 3 16 FT. CRESTLINER and
l)l:dnlf~rH house. wall to wall
trailer 80 hp. Evinrude motor.
t M pl] ling . large built in
1962 4 wheel Jeep station
k1 1 :.. IJcn, lull ba sement . AI·
wagon.
Call 446-0142.
lr\t:;l1cd q;-.raqe plus e:.:lra lot.
248-3
'•146 0026 . .
~,.-----249-6 '7 1 HONDA d . 70 looks and runs
.like riew $250. Phone 4&lt;16-3345.

HY

UWNE~

'

BIDWELL - Modern, 6 big
rms ., utility and bath. Carpet
in liv. rm. , plenty cabinets in
kitc hen , lots of paneling, new
storm doors and windows.
Barn 40' x 60'. Located on 2
big, fl at lots. Priced to sell.
MILL CREEK - 4 rm. house.
fur . heat, garage and 1 A.,
$8,000.

car
garage.
1400 fl. of
living space downstairS, and
space for 3 roo ms in un.
finished upstair's, large acr,
lot with more land available,
!98-8722 .

.

.

·.,

'

248-3

.. _ __
-c-:-=-.::._

248-3

- $90.
JEEP, new motor, new tires,
new transmission, 388-9991
after 4 p.m .
r
248-6

For Sale

;.;;_·----~--,
'

USED FURNITURE

MER CERV IL LE Cheap 2 nice liv ing room suites - 3
housing , real nice, 3 bd . rm .• • dinette sets . 2 rockers .
large · tiv . rm .• nice bath , Vinal couch . J . pie~e white
copper ~tum bing , al l tile bedroom suite, maple chest
ceilln!=l, od fur ., 2 cck 9arage. of drawer s, whi te youth bed
Large shaded. lot. Wal~ to
school. Only $12,500.
with springs and mattress

R·ICE' s

FOR SALE or trade, German
Shepherds, AKC registered,
Jlf2 months . old. 1 male, 2
fefnal es, call Jackson, 9882601.
248·5·

SMITH.

SALE ENDS OCT. 30!

j

SAYS

Beat the Price tnc;rel$tl No
Interest Until M.rch 1973!
Buy or Trade Nowt
· AI

1972 PONTIAC

GAliiPOUS
!RAC"QR .·
. 1

I

MF=

NEAR Clay School - Extra. .
nice, 3 bdrm ., new carpet in
. liv. rm. , din . area, and hall. It
, has new Aerobi c Septic tank ,
fu ll base.. with part ial
finished rec. rm., attached
gar. and located on &gt;;, A.
shaded lot. Pr. ice reduced for
qui ck sale.

and matching dresse r.
,

J

s. .

. A UNIQUE' INTRODUCTION In the pickup truck market Is this 1973
·Dodge Club Cab. Ideal fot:..commercial and recreational aJIPiic;atlons; the
new entry offers 34 cubic feet of secure, weather protected interior
stora?e space. Typical uses of the new Dodge Include tool and equipment
storage_and space for certain types of camping equipment requiring
retdy access. Two. optional fold down seats are available offering tem porary transportation for additional passengers. When- not In use, the
seats fold up Into depressions In the trim panels. The Oub Cab Is
available on either a 133-inch or 149-inch wheelbase with a 6\12-foot or 8·
foot pickup body. Heavy slide-on campers can be accommodated by the
optional7500 lb. and 9000 lb. Camper Specials. A full range of six and eight
cylinder j)Owerplants are offered Including a 225 cu. ln. Slant· Six and a
318, 360, and «10 CJD V-8's.
·.
· ·

Neal Realty

- - - - --

- -- - - --

------

~,

OHIO RIVER
Realty

- -- - - - -

- - -- - - -

'I•

------

...

RUSSELL

REALTOR

446·1066

;.:. i l
-r'

:J

ADMI'NISTRATORS SALE--

PAY 'ONLY ONE UTiLITY

SATURDAY, OCT. 28 • 11:30 A.M.

STAU • •

) e0

1

,.46·0001

....
.Datsmn ...

r,~i::7;: you to.compare the quality
and the price of our automobiles. We
know that we have a better deal for
· you and we would like the opoot"furJitv to demonstrate this:

-JIMME SAYRf.

TARA

AllcmNE£1

..·PH. 446-3444·

.~

*"'"''*• ,

APARTMENTS

'

'

...

"

I

,.

new.

'2495
1971 BUICK

'3395: .
1970 BUICK

Skylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.,
white. black v inyl top. Worth
more.

Skylark Cust., 2 dr. hdtp., lime
green, green vinyl top, balance
factory warranty. $harp.

'2695
1969 CADILlAC

--',

Eldorado, air cond., 'AM-FM
· radio, rosewood with ltn·
-dalwood top, power windows.
power liMt,

V-1 engine, standard.shift, radio, w&amp;·w tires, fancy ,whHis.

of

· IIIW, .....,_ .ond 1011.: For
' lht - · al ,..CIIUrllfllltllt,
. ' - · ~lndn••· COIIiH~~ratlon
. f"'•ym]lllhy 111o1- u-n
0 Ul.

. ' '· ;': .,•

·'\

in•

he
illl

. ))e

.

For 1111.' btlutllvl ·llaWtn, ·
lilt menr lood · ollerlnos
llrought.lo lht homt. For IN ·
- f Hall tho iptclal Kit
of ltlllllf is '
.'
.
To lht ~.Hal!e'f·Watll'
·· Fun•" HOme lor - tile
CO\Irlti\1, · lliVICI
4111d .
trrlln,::n~t~~II · JII. our lime ol
bf lilt IIMulliUI rnut1c .
and to lilt ' .....I ful •lldn
lor thotr ·. 1tm1 and lilt
llt,luti!VI m•1••os llltt · ~ · .
give~~
''
.
.
· W. · w.lt .'.tri think. :,;,.,
:f:t••~lilt 'JWtllll'ltlan If
k~J
n ""·
anc1

All

ed
he
ed

*"·

row

~c"-' " Mn. loti.·

'·-·lrlke
•"'·. '

;
Mrs.
D. · Loll -·lnd
F-lly, Mrt. tltlllort. Loft &amp;
. F.mly , .
1

taliii~,-~~~~~
In lllllirJ , . .

dllldrtn.
. ' '
-~~._,.-....:...__..;2..1 '
Malla.a

,•

I

-lllil!l· .. ' ' ' ' :" ' .
IARN· 1101 ..... 'Mit'. lllil .
lumllllell. ND lmMitntl•ll.
Clll iolltcl IIIII . ta.Oill
bel 11111 1111411
C.S;T. M.
a- of. ,...• .Midllnt
C..p, or wrlfw ft, 0. lllll171:1.

.

,•

ee-

I lot MIMOR.Y If -~ C. Gilkey .
who~fWiy-~ - · .
Mel
, oet. 12, lt6S; WJII
lfllllll,
lldrtn ond. III'W·

'1895

72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .
TWISTER

rly

""·1:

"

Tudor, auto. trans., radio. new
Prem tires, power steering,
white, extra nice.

UIBastler.

ler

Ulln ..., ...., dwlng
ol fNt WGildlrtvl ·lluiiYnd.

l.eSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air .cond.•, 17,233 miles, 73
leSabre trade. Like

1970 -NOVA ·.

,,

Dts
ion
WI THJ FAMilY oi ll~o
Loti _ , ta · lhlnlt II! .tho
Wandtrtl!! PtGPl4 'who htl

1971 BUICK

'

'2995'

- -- - - -

.

·o..

•

.

WOOD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

dr;

4
hdtp.,
air cond., AM,. F M radio, light
blue, black vinyl top. Nice,

Tudor, auto. trans., radio, 2,783
miles; Tutone, white-walls,
showroom condition .

CARROLL.NORRIS .DODGE INC.

- -- - - -

I.eSabre, Cust~

1972 NOVA

PRICES START FROM '3051.00
50, ITATl STREET

1972 BUICK

Catalina Brougham, 4 dr .,
black with black vinyl top,
cu:;tom · black Interior, air
cond., a beautiful car. 7,900
miles.

'.

1968 CAMARO R.H.. P.S. ~~::;:E~iR~t.~7=:.
Bill .
Owner ...
Automatic console, 446-4740.
",
248-3 JOHN Deere Oozer and Ford
truck. $2,20C. 367-7202.
JUST received a truckload of &gt;;, \
2&lt;16·6
in . plyWOild paneling . Selling ·- :=::;::::;:::;:::;::::;::::;:::;:::.__,
NEW&amp; USED FURNITURE
at bargain prices. 6 various 1
color ~. Can 1;&gt;e seen .at corner
854 SECOND, 446 _9523
ANTIQUES
of 1920 North Main St. and
•• ·-- · · 'i.o
· ·
Pop lar St., Point Pleasant or
DE ER CR . RD . - Near new 4 ,CORBIN &amp;
YQ~R, cal l 67S-3762 after 8 p.m.
Antique sofa bed, 2 full size
rms. and ba th, fur . hea t, 2 SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses•
Everett Rayburn , Jr .
iron beds, 1 twin size. Gas
rms. , carpeted, plus 2 A. good and box springs s29 up. 955 t
248-tf
cooking stove. Phone 992·
land. Good Spring water. Only Second Ave. 446-1171.
. ---,---- - - , - 3647.
$10,000.
'67 VW BUS. New engine, new
FAi:TORY made pickup tires, good shape. 446-3784.
INVESTM ENT - In city, good
cam per. Near new on 1964
245-6 AKC toy poodle puppies, "6
business location, piUs 2 Aprt.
weeks old, 1chocolate female,
pick up truck. Sacrifice priced P UMPKIN S, ap pl es. aott~.
rentals (could be J). Busin·ess
2 black males. 675-2242.
Sl,550 for. both . Phone 446ciders.
Wells
orcha
rd
1 mi le
bldg . includes grocery and. 29 6
·. 239-tf
0 .
South of Wilkesville on State
meat processing equipment.
248_6
Potential income from Apt . -------~Route 160.
NEW CHURCH pews and pulpit
249-3
renta ls S225 per mo. Price FACTORY mad e pi ckup
furniture. Write for a fall and
$21,500.
ca mper. Near new on 1964 LOTS, any size you want on
winter special . Stevens
New Listing 3 Bedrooms Full Basement
pi ck up truck. Sacrifice priced
Church
Supply Co., P. 0 . Box
RODN EY - 3 yr . old. 6 rm .
OWNER HAS THt'S ONE PRICED WELL UNDER
$1,550 for both. Phone 446- good blacktop . road . Als o
781, Huntington, W. Va.
rural water llne, three and
home, all carpet, all Elec .. 11
MARK ET OR APPRAISED VALUE. THREE LARGE
2906.
22~·26
ha lf miles out of town . Phone
mo
.
budget
at
$26
per
mo.
BEDROOMS, DINING AREA, VERY NICE KITCHEN
248-6
446-2947.
Th is property has a large
WITH RANGE &amp; OVEN. FULL BASMENT, LARGE
garage and loca ted on a J;,. 1971 YAMAHA mini Endu ro 60
249-3
FLI?-T LOT AND GARAGE. THIS WILL SELL FAST.
-acre flat tot . Pr iced for a
cc. 1970 Yamaha 175 cc exFOR SALE
Vacuum cleane r
quic k sale at 121.500.
cellent condition, 1968 50 cc DELUXE
1967
Chevelle
Malibu. Ex sales and service on all
Honda, 446-1941.
cellent
condition.
P.S., air,
makes
.
Phone
256-6457.
CENTENARY - Extra nice 3
248-3
automatic
transmission
.
249-12
or 4 bdrm. ranch , with H.W.
Very
sharp.
Two
door.
Phone
fl oors and carpet. If ha s a
446-9242 or 446-1261.
2 RE DDISH brown pontes
large liv . rm ., some paneling
answer
ing
to
th
e
names
of
thai
would
and a kitchen
Popic and Britis h lost In
SchU lt z 12 x 65 with 4 x 12 tip
please a ny woman. On ci1y For Rent
NOW. We have an active
Cheshire -Addis on area . If IF YOU are building a new
ou t rm., com pl etely fur ·
wat er &amp; nat. gas. Pr ice
home or remodeling , see us.
demand for homes and sma ll
UNF . 5 rooms and ba th apart- tound ca ll 367-7708.
n!shcd, ce nt. air, patio, cellar,
123.500.
'
We
are builders. Distributor
ac reagE!. R~al Esta te is ovr
ment.
secon
d
floor,
adu
lts
barn, utility building, buy
249-2
Hotpolnt Applian ces,
for
on ly busi ness. LI ST WITH
only
.
527
Second
Ave.
Ph
.
446wi th t A or 30.
-- - -- -ADAMSVILLE - Older home
Allison
Electric.
' THE BRANNON RE ALTY
1575.
1962 CHEVROLET $300; 1965
made new, 5 big rms. all
•M
154-tf
TOO AY - IT WILL PAY .
240-lf
GTO Pontiac $400 ; 1964 Ford
CHIL LI( - ' 0 RD . - 4 rm.
ca rpe ted. new 2 car garage
New
Listing
3
Bedroom
Brick
-'
Pi ckup tru ck. $400. 446-0368. SIGNS
and loca ted on a big flat lot.
block $-(}.l·D , ith full
&amp; POSTERS,. Custom
AP ARTMENT for 2 men . Call
base ment . .... .
WITH FULL DRY BASEMENT. IT'S IN BEAUTIFUL
Cheap at $1S,750.
249-3 .made, 1 copy or in quantity.
992-3975 or 992-2571 .
CONDITI ON. VERY NICE KITCHEN WITH RANGE ,
Hand painted. Silk Screen.
146-3 SUEDE Coat Man's Size 42
PATRIOT - 2 story. older
ETC. FLAT LOT IN EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD.
VINTON .
Comp letely
Instan t signs . Please phone
RIVER VIEW
home. sound. on water line. 2 - - -- -Brown. Practi cally new. 446·
remodeled. 2 story home, new
OW NER MOVING OUT OF STATE.
Gal l ipo l is 446 · 0706 .
I)IE J UST listed a beautiful 4 built-in kitchen , formal dining
FURN ISHED mobile home in 4566.
A. flat lot ; price 113,000.
209-tf
1 bedroom
home on Lower
Gallipolis, 446-0338.
249·3
rm , l...f'! wfth fir eplace, full
New Listing
We Need Listings
r River Road . This house is
227-tf
GREEN ACRES -'- Pr ice
·- - - - - - ba sement, sHady l awn .
~ o nly 6 years old an d was buill
5 Bedroom
TO P quality AKC Min . puppies.
reduced on this beauty, 4 yr. --~--SEL LING at the rate o f 2 or 3·
AT SPECIAL
f by
Ernest Brown. Special TRA ILER PARK - 18 units ,
Schnauze rs , Bass ~ tts , and
proper ties each week makes
old ranch, H.W. · floors .. SLEE PING rooms for rent.
Owner Leaving Area
, features are the beautiful
Ga ll ia Hote l. 446-9715.
LOWER PRICES
it d ifficult to keep enough
Aust ral ian terriers . K&amp;P
beauliful kitchen, 3 Bd. rms .•
sm all
laundry,
large
, view of the Ohio River. den
listings . If you want yours DON'T BUY UNTil YOU
181-tf
Kenne ls. 388-8274,
1''' baths. This house is like
workshop, plen ty water ,
NEW &amp; USED
so l d , call t h e Wiseman
SEE THI S NEARlY NEW
wi th woad bur ni ng fir eplace,
new. Only $22,500.
249-1 I-BEAMS, Channel, angle,
11atural
gas,
7 tnob il e homes
ncy
.
.Age
BEAUTIFU
L
4
OR
S
formal dining room an d
SL EEPING ROOMS , weekly
sheet and plate steel, rounds,
go with sa le.
BEDROOM HOME . VERY
FARMS .
par ti al basement. Lof is 114' x
FURN ITURE , living roo m ,
rates . Park Central Hotel.
tlats,
reinforc ing bars and
NICE
KIT
CHE
N
WITH
ALL
92.5 A. 9 mi. tr om town. all flat
In Cheshire
290'. Ca ll today for an ilp- 1 ACRES IN CITY - Road
308-tf
kit chen· and bedroom fr om
mesh, ran , pipe, culverts and.
THE
BUILT -IN
AP and
gentle
slo
pe
;
-45
A.
poiillrnent .
1 t
t f
es tat e. Cal l 446-2833.
PL I ANCES ,
HUGE
- - - -Need An Investment
equipment. Prompt cirltllng,
• . ., NEW LISTING
ron age,. wa .: r· ro~tage, 15
till ab le, tab . base. rural FA M'ILY ROOM , CARAPA~TME NT for construction .
249-3
Neiman Co, ' Nelsonvit.te.fj
~~s
-~~
d
K~"'
ren
lat
un&gt;ls
.
•
,,,
...
:
...
..
,
~ -,..,, And A ~d
9 Ac. ~ ·vat. til II •ufl On t.""l'l'll '"' , .. , ~ ~ li r O,.i,... · 'j
..:.~ w~ler, 6 rm . house wift) bel! h ..
u -~~ PETED u
"fHROl:.IG.»OUl ,
·~~me - Ph~ .ro16-07S6.
• -=·~~--:-:-=--~-:::--Ohio,
P. 0 . BoY 298, Ph. 753- 1
stOrm
dr
.s
and
wi
ndows.
CE NTRAL AIR. GARAGE , 4
Place To Live?
''Road nelir towrt. Less lhan UPPER ROUTE 7 - 4 houses
'
267-tf '60 MODEL Harl ey Da vidson
1554.
Call
collect.
'
Pr ice reduced, $31 ,;,00 .
FRUI T TREES, FlAT LOT
74.
$900.
388-9963.
S300 an acre·
and 5 mobi le homes now being
181
-tf
VERY ATTRACT IVE 2 NEAR NEW HO SPITAL.
249-6
ren ted . Buy and s tart
ST ORY
HOME
WITH
30 A. LOCATEO at Bidwell. all SLEEPING rooms, week ly
LO T 67' x 112' located at 511
MOBILE HOMES
coll
ecting
rent.
park
ing.
_
_
G
_
T_
O-P
B
P
S
rates,
free
BA
TH
,
MODERN
F
UR
garage
ti
llable
or
develop.
8
rm
.
Garfiel d Avenue . $1.000.
New Listing
1971
'
'
.,
'
"
.
"
25,000
FOR SALE
NACE
.
LOVE
LY
KITCHEN
Libby
Hote
l.
modern h':lme, all carpet,
Office Phone 446· 1694
_tf
miles. New lif'es . Automatic:
RECONDITIONED
IBU
ILT
-IN
CAB
.
AND
MANUFAC
TURING
Plant
241
4
Bedrooms
much paneling, storm drs . - - - - - - - - Evenings
A-1 condition . '446-1267.
MOBILE HOMES
APPL IANCES! .
E)(ccllen t business. Call for
and
windows, oi l fur . Th is is
Charles M. Nea l 446-i546
H
ERE'S
A
REAL
BUY
FOR
BASEME NT . ALL NEW
249-3
tl ppointment.
1968
Roycraft
12x51
an ideal set-up for a larg e FURNISHED Apt. , uti li t ies -- - - - - J. Michae l Neal 446-1503
ALUMI NU M SIDING. 2 SO ME LUCKY FAMILY .
1966
Shutt
12x50
paid, fr ee garage parking, 1966 FORD, for sale or trade for
family with child ren in
LIVING AN D
CA RPORT ON .7 ACRE LARGE
FARMS
1968 Elcona 12x50
Adul ts onl y. Libby Hotel.
DINING
ROOMS,
SUIL
T
·IN
sc
hoo
l.
Price
upper
thirti
es.
WITH 3 MODERN MOBILE ' k' ITr.HFN IRANGE. OI.C',H .
motorcycle. 1968 Chevell e 146 A.. modern home wi th ful J
1968 Etcona 12x60
2411-tf
HOMES . ALL WITH PATIO
exccellent condition. 1971 all 1973 Peerless 12x60
base ment , 2 barns, silo, pond,
WASHER,
ETC
.),
2
143
A.
CORA,
80
A.
flat
and
SID EWALKS. ETC. AND CE RAMIC BATHS , EN electri c fr ai ler 12 x SO, 446- 1960 Whitney 10x46
creek, HT rd ., new fen ces,
Rac coon bo·ttom . · 5 rm. FUR NI SHED Apt. park ing ,
ALL
REN
TE
D.
PRESENT
0668.
TIRE
HOU
SE
IS
CAR
tab. ba se, corn base, 25 A.
B&amp;S MOBILE -HOMES
ce ntr al hea t, two adults only.
modern hou se, extra nice
INCOME $480 .00 PER PETED , GARAGE AND
249-4
corn goes wi th sa le.
Second &amp; Viand St.
S140 per month Lease. 446·
klfche!), pl enty storage, some
MONT H.
RENT
THE lARGE FlAT LOT NEAR
45'2 SeCond Ave .
Pt. Pleasant
HOU SE AND IN CREASE NEW HO SPITAL. CE N ·
0338.
paneling . Good barn. It has a
NewGMC
163 A., 56 A. Bottom, 100 A.
(Next
to Heck's)
446-3434 446-4775
INCOME
TO
$6SO .OO . TRAL
AIR .
PRICE
248-tf
producing gas we ll with free
·
Truck
Headquarters
pastur e, lo~J ely 7 rm . home
DE VELOPER' S DR EA M - 18
242-lf
YOU'LL
AGREE
IT'S $28,000.00.
gas piped to the house.
wi th large shady lawn, plenty
acr es of good land !.u ilable lor
WELL
WOR TH
THE
SLEEPIN G room. family 1966 •; , ton GMC Pickup
outbuildings . Can be used for
BASSET pup AKC Reg istered S
ASKI NG PRICE .
severa l houses. Count y water
privileges. Ca ll evenings, 446· 1969 Otds 88
49 A. GOOD 7 rm . house. flenty
Don't Wait- Now's
1969
Dodge
Stallon
Wagon
al mos t any ty pe farming
mo. old female. Wormed and
on site. Four mi l es fr om town .
3219.
s torage room, ca rpe and
The Time To Buy
operation .
shots completed $35. 446-9836.
248-3 1971 3 ton Chevrolet truck
Bui Iding Lol$
paneling . Big ba rn, plenty
1967 Jeep $taft on Wagon
FA RM NEA R MI NE 44 acr e
246-6
good water, near 12 A. bottom
AND HERE ' S ONE THAT
1 ACRE LOT FLAT . EX ·
f a r m w i lh four bed r oom 11.1 ACRES - 55 acres bottom, 9
land. It has 1,5191b. lob. base. TRA ILER on Rt. 160 nea r 1964 1h T. GMC PU
MAY
PlEASE
YOU
.
J
CELLE NT
LOCATIO N BEDROOMS WITH FULL
1967 'h r. Chev. Pickup
rrn . home, good barn , creek
2 BE DROOM, liv ing room, and
hou 5c wilh buth. Pr iced tor
Pr ice of $19.000, inc ludes near
Porter 1135 month . Utilit ies 1967
1
WITH
WATER
55,000 .00 .
lronlage,
t
?
mi
le
frontage
on
kitchen furniture for sale and
quirk selc .
T. Chev. PU
BAS EMENT ON LARGE
2 ton tob., tractor and other
paid . Phone 388-8688 or 446- 1968 'h T. GMC PU
stc1 le rd., comple te line of
Miscellaneous glass and
LOT ( 100xS75 1 WASHER,
tools
.
9369.
12
A CRE
FLAT
TO
DRYER ,
, OV EflLOO K OHI O RIV ER f,;~rm mach inery included in
RANGE
&amp;
1968 'h T. GMC PU
clothing. Bronze ref., stove,
RO'LLINC.
STREAM
AND
249-3 New 11 11, camper
REFR
IG.,
CE
NTRAl
AIR,
9Q
A.
plus,
30
A
tillable,
barn
,
Thr(IC bedroom hou !&gt;c on S. R.
sill e. owner will help finan ce.
washer, dinette set wtlh 6
WOODS . EXCE LL E NT GARAGE AND LOTS OF
-- - - ---'-plenty water , good fences.
chairs, 2 brass gloss lamps.
7 wilh beuulllul view ot river.
1966 'I• T. .GMC
SPOT FOR YOUR NEW SHRUBB5RY. COULD BE
2 BEDROOM Tra iler . Adults 1968 v, T. GMC PU
95 A. - Rolling grass land,
many
young
walnut,
lob.
base
also
large rug, 12 x 15 olive
HOME .
USE D FOR COMMERC IAL
only. Hen de r~on , W. Va . 675- 1960 1 Ton Ford flat .
limber, 'pon d, we ll , co unty
and
most
underlaid
with
coa
l.
LIST WITH US -- It you want
green.
Also few antiques. 49
PURPOSES ijECAUSE OF
4130.
$1~,750 .
a c li on, li !.! yvil h Ohio River,
water a \Ia IIabi e, BT rd ., la rge
1967 &gt;i&gt; T. GMC Plc ~up
Chillicothe Road. &lt;IM-0016.
ITS
EXCEL
lENT
The Home You
249-4 1964 CO 1600 International
call ·1•16 31\34.
home 10 mi. from town .
LOCATIO N.
2&lt;16-5
163
A.
5
mi.
from
Cheshire,
on
-Eveni ng s
truck
Dreamed of Owning
Ward Rd ., no bldgs., un - LARGE furnished apartment 2 1967 •t, T. GMC PU
Oscar Baird. 446-4632
38 A. Beautiful wooded
LOGS for fireplace. Ph. 256•
IS IN AN EXCEllENT
bedroo m, downtown location. 1966 '\1, .T. GMC PU
. derlald with coal. Pr ice
Do You Need
D. J . Weatherholt, 446 -4244
homesi tes over lookin g the
6574.
NEIGHBOR HO OD
IN
Adu lts, no pels, Water paid 1967 •t, T. GMC Pickup
reduced to $19,500.
Steven R. Betz , 446-9583
..Ohio River, city school di st.
A Large ·
·TOWN . HUGE OLD OAKS
243-26
and deposit. 446-1680.
1968 ''' T. GMC Pickup
' SHAD E
THIS
WEll
ANY
HR.
446·1998
Comfortable
Home?
249-3 t967 v, T. GMC Pickup
Ranny Blackburn
LANDSCAPED LOT . IT'S A
3 BEDROOM SPLI T LEVEl
FOR SALE b
-SOMMERSG.M.C.
Branch Manager
Y owner, 2 s tory SORRY Sal is now a merry gal.
TRUCKS, INC.
WITH F IREPLA CE IN ONE 5 MILE OUT ON A 5
' ACRE LOT WITH A LARGE ' brick house at 452 First Ave. 7
d
133 Pine st.
LIVING
ROOM
,
NI
CE
RANCHO
REALlORS
STREAM AND WATER
roon1s , 2 baths, gas ho t air
She used Blue Lustr e ,rug an
,
DI
NING
AREA,
LAR
GE
44 .,.. 2532
,;..... "';'o ' ~
FALLS
IN
YOUR:
FRONT
1
urn
ace
.
pr
esent
uph
olstery
cleaner
.
Rent
SUN PORCH , 2 BATHS ,
Headquarters tor Gallia County
arrangement 2 apartments.
elect r ic shampooer ' 11 • TYPEWR ITERS ,
Smtih,
GARAGE . IT 'S IQYRS . OL D YARD ? HU GE RUSTIC
Real Esta te . Lis tings needed.
AND YOU'LL JUST lOVE
LIVING
AND
DINING,
Easily
conve
r
ted
to
on
,
e
Central
Supply
.
Corona,
Royal
,
Olivetti
.
ROOM, MODERN KIT 2491
IT . IT'S THE HOME YOU
CHEN
WITH
ALl
THE
family
dwelling
,
Asking
-Unde
rwood
,
manual
anc
MU ST SEE .
BUILT .IN5 . 1 BATHS ,
130,,000, show n by ap VATE I .1
I
electric. Simmons Printing
TWO FOR ONE
CENTRAL AIR , ALL KINDS
poin tment. 446-0208.
PRI
ra te r space. a so 2
and Ottice Equipment.
·
riO USE NO. 1: Custom bui lt
OF BEDROOMS ? IS THAT
_11
1, 500 Down Payment
249 _1 bedroom home. Call 446-0508.
235
new 3 BR home featuring
WHAT YOU WANT? WELL
249-3 =-:-::-:::--:-----30 Years to Pay
farllily roon1, air cond., slid .
WE HAVE IT . · IT EVEN
2 BEDROOM house. Gas fur - - -- .,.-.,.,---.,--,PIPES PI
PI
GBO
HA S A BASEME NT 1
TH IS spot, that Spot, traffic
•
pes, tpes,
'
$28,900 Total Price
glais doo r to pat io and 2 car
Dl ETS ar·e fo r pt-oplc wh o are
FIRE
PL
A
CE
S
A
N'D
MANY
nace,
'
!'
i
ma
ll
basement
'
wtth
spots
too,
re
moved
with
BlUe
Cheratan,
BBB
,
Jobey,
garage .
th ick and tired of il .
0 THE R An R A c r 1v E
garden. SB.SOO. 245-5535 or
Lustre carpet shampooer. $1
Hilson, and other.. Tawney's
HOUSE NO. 2: Very good 6
BEAUTIFU L N EW LARGE
FEA
TuREs
.
you
•
R
E
contact
C.
U.
Miller
at
Rio
G.
C.
Murphy
Lower
Slore.
Pipe and Trophy House , 422
room country home, part
3 BEDROOM HOME WITH
13 AC RES of 11ill gro und at
porch
and
ce
llar
RIGHT
,
THE
PRI
CE
IS
IN
Grande
Barber
Shop.
249-1
~~Se
•c•o•nd_A.ve_._ _ _ _::,..;::;;
basemt.,
lARGE
FA
MilY
ROOM
,
1
E t~reka . Pr ice $5, 000.
FORT IE S,
BUT
249'3
199-tf
BATHS , DINING AREA , THE
house . Both homes tor the
YO~
'
RE
WRON~
IF_
~O
V
··~-~
;;~~~;;;;;;;;_~~~~~-~~~~,
LOV ELY KITCHEN WITH THINK YOU CAN MAT CH
price of one.
I
NEW LiSTING :
All THE •BUlL T-IN S.
GREEN TOWNSHIP
21 7 ACRE S lev elland with City
CARPET
TH ROU GHOUT
and acrea:ge for
IT ANYWHERE ELSE.
wa ter and gas. close. to City . LOTS
PLU S 2 CAR GARAGE .
residential
or
commercial
on
"Schools, chur ch, grocery
YOU 'LL LIKE IT . HONE ST.
Rt. 35, near hospital.
Store Bldg .
ELECTRICITY
~ lore. has T. B. smull barn .
WE HAVE OTHERS THAT
2
Very nice 3 bedroom , large
WILL PLEASE YOU IF
On nd Ave.
We furnish Water . Sewage . Garbage Colloctton - Ampto
living room , knotty pine NEW 3 bedroo&gt;T) home, bath,
THIS
ONE
OOESEN'T
.
garage, large lot, city water
Pirklng • :rv Antenna· . Waii-Jo.\Vall Corpetlng •
... kitchen , 2 full ba th s, 2
2 S P LIT L VELS ...- 3 BY
and sc hoo ls.
Draperies · Rarigel . Rofrlgorotors • A!r Conditioning •
lireplaces , ful l basement and
LEVELS AND MANY , 2 STORY BRICK 30x60 ON
LEON, W. VA.
LARGE DEEP LOT WITH
O.r1N111 Olspo~als . Oiallwolllors. Ht1l LlmPt · Privott
MANY RANCHES . MOST
carp ort with concrete drive. ADD ISO N TOWNSHIP
PARKING
.
EXCELLENT
NEAR NEWA bedroom home,
l'aliH • lwlmllll.. l'atf • ChollilouM.
CAN BE PURCHASED
LOCATION - PRESENTLY'
ba th and half. S22.000.
_ WITH
SMALL
DOWN
2' ' ACRES with all electric
The Est a to of Cloyd A. Barnlllo, llec:Msed
PAYME NT AN D LOW , lOW RENTED FOR S\65.00 PER
home, niCe kitchen , new 1
MO .
Store
stock,
fixtures, guns, truck,. 10 ft. meat case, 8 ft.
2
J
ACRE
lot,
rural
water.
MONTHLY
PAY
MENT
S.
rl!frigerttl or and stove, large
beaut iful setting.
vegetob!t calf, ~preuor, . pop case~ ~ ~etllng stovH,
living room, bath. and double
computer scales, platform scales, butcher block, meat
garage. Pric.e ·Sl7 ,000.
39 ACRES·. 3 bedroom story. and
grl"der, stlc:er, cash register, electric fans , small freezer.·
half home. garage, barn. HOUSE by owner, 8 roomo. 2
Tobacco. canned goads, staples, sh-, galollles, ladles'
1 BEDROOM house in Cheshire.
$15,000,
"
baths. 446-0762.
and men's wear, &amp;undrl....
Ohio on•State Route 7, ba th,
la rg e li vin g room and kitchen .
227-tf
McCulloch chel" sew, rolotltler, 1961 JHp !ruck with 4·
I
Price Sl4,900.
wheel drive. hand toots, etc.
'
5 Guns: ,Roberts rifle No. 257 wtth Douglas barrel and
l BEQROOM all electric home
9-tO ACRES . .with 8 room home.
Wtowr Scope No. K3, Stevens double barrel 20 ge.
with basement. Ph. 992,3975
several bu itd, in gs. Owner
shotgun Model 311A. Marlin 22 automoHc Glenfield rtflo
or 992-2571.
wants It ~ol d this week . Call
model60 with Tuco Scope, Bay State single blrroll2 ge.,
for ~tppo i ntm~nl.
Wtnc:htstor 12 ge. Modtl37. Thlslsan oxtrtmely nice set
2 IIDROOM TOWNHOUSES
ttiiiATHS
of guns, In perfect condition, oil wHh CIHI.
FARM. 257 acres on blacktop
NEW 3 bedroom custom built
. STEPHIN MOORI,ADMR.,.._,W.Yo.
~.
road. large house and 2 barns, '
home/'jlorch. garage on large
Jolin
Mc,...tl,
Aud. Hart, R't!IIIIHIJ!!!~.m. I;Jtri&lt;L
T~ B. base, .8 mll~s from city.
to t. 119.950, 2!/hmlles !rom
-Siiii lilocaftd In
Ill liltclr oil U.te It!.
Oflice 446-1066
new holpital on Fairfield·
No. 62'
Evenings Call
Centenary Road. Shown by
O.SIIId J..,wlll lllltftlll'"' 11f 11M ... M.
Ron (:.l naday 446-3636
appointment only . Call Lee
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
·
Nlott
lltmufstore
stadl wlllhllld lllllltlf IIIII.
Construction,
Syracuse,
Ohio
Russell 0 . Wood, 446·46)8
Denver K. Higley 446-0002
For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250
John t. Richards, 446-01iO
992-3454.
Wanda ~· Eshenaur 446-0003
2-l:l-6
'
. t'rtced Ri9ht Near Cheshire Lovely Ranch
ON ROUSH RD. YOU' LL FINO THIS PREH:Y REDWOOD RANC H WI TH 3 BEDROOMS, NICE-K ITCHEN
(BU ILT-INS!. BATH. FULL BAS'EMENT, WOOD BURN.
FIREPLACE ANO LARGE FLAT LOT. OWttER .
MOVI NG OUT OF AREA AND HAS IT PRICED SO THE .
FIRST ONE TO SEE IT WILL BUY. HONEST, YOU
WON'T FIND ONE NEAR CHESHIRE P~ICED LIKE
THIS OI"F
I'
.

'

Final .Week of Ma'sse1rl
Ferguson Fall 'Tr,acl&gt;orl
Sale1 .
-I ---

CU'rT IN G torch, hoses, three
ga09e and regulators. 4ol6. "1143.
248-3

=-=-::-:-~--­

..

'

G.allt'poiiS'_.

Tractcrr

~~---­

For_ Sale

-..

"

6:.

'2295

Del Mal-. 1owll .... ..
'

2A7-l

In

71 CHEV. Y2 TON PICKUP
I ft. style-side bOdy, radio. 307 V-8
engine, 16,000 certified mites.

'2495

--

y,

P' I ..................~~-.
I
-

Jt~~Y~IJI~
2 dr. vinyl roof, 250 CIO, 6 cyf.
engine, p. sl-Ing, rod(o, 16,000 act.
miles, lotolly owned. A-1 bumper to
bumper.

SMITH AUTO SALES

2 Dr. hlrdtop, green wtlh g,_
vinyl bucket seats. 350 V-1 engine, 4
speed trans., lac. tachometer. This
car 11 a real cle11n shlrp cer.

f J,ftft~
77/f~

'

'69 CHIV, IMPALA
Custom coupe. 327 V-8 engine, auto. ·
Irons., "p, stwerlng. w-s-w tires·,
wheel COW!rs, radio. This hes got to
lie tho shorpost Chevy In low~.

J

J,69.;1/l..
· •·

'71 CHEVROLET IMPALA

~

Custom coupe, radio, auto. transmission, 350
cu. Inch engine, p. steering. p . disc. brakes,
gold metallic finish with mat. interior, w·s· w
tires. 21,000 actual mles. Looks a runs like
new.

69 CHEV. Y2 TON PICKUP
I fl. bed. style-side bOdy, :107 V-1
!11111111, radio, dlluxe cab, auto.
lrans., 29,1100 certlfltd miles.

'1895

10 pouonger slattonwagon, V-1
~~~gino, auto. trans., p, ar-tng, p•
llrlk&amp; w-s-w tires. Clten.

'1195

'

2 Dr. herdlop, V.. engt111, auto.
.tr11111., p. aletrlng. Good cond. .
'

'11-95

'

'495

the .......

We still ~ve
In Stock. Year

I

good Mlection of 1972 F«i11
end diiiCOunls ant In effect.
As you know, .• our policy- No S.ltsm111,
No S.lts Commission to Ply- mHns ev•

·m .,.

discount than

,..m.

P.S., P.B. .

1973 FuRY Ill 4 DR. SEDAN
mCKER PRICE 14706.05

OUR

WOOD MOTOR SALES

~3925

PRICE

you would othtrwiM

For Sale

..t'::'

lf72STERI:OIIracfllnwllnut 1971 PONTiAC Catallnt.
console wllll IIPf!!lker lilltnct Umtklet
lilack vinyl

=~~';·

..1:;: ,:

-. •IIIYMI
. -oiiOlJD. CIII
6IUfJ5
~
2&lt;17·5

OhiO. . :us.

.'
'

-·:-, DAY CAitl
. SUit VALLIY Nintl'v Schoo!,
IICIIIMCI 1W .$feft·ol bhlo, IY,
. mlltl • t -ot I!OIPtlal.
577 5lrn Valley Dr •. I'll . .....,

f
I
' J

: .· wr..!!'Y care .lllot uys·'!wt
·.. care. . Ml-.t Hluld•lll,

·, · ~~~.~:'~~:~.' John
··
· , ' ·· · · , .
114-tf .

home- adiu:::: · .

®.~• ~
pttnfl ' · ·
"'.....• .reoflrlt. 1111
~week . Rtloronces
• ' l'fJ1tl1nt• . Clmtnl ' weir~. •
II ...._9239,
, 241.6 .'· ......,·llllflol, or gjr~~ge,_
=::-:--::---:-:-:-·'"':-" -CII'IIOI'I, tiC.?. You name · Itt
TWO MEN wtnlad to clfii'JIIid · , wt'IJ flo II. R~sonoblt rtlet. ·
close .to Gallti!Qils. S1.60 .IIfl' . · .~ 1 4\t-IP~ .. ·. : · 11, 11
hour to slart. Call Hunttngtan . . _ · .
.·· .
' .
522-2353 allor 6 p. !"·_.. a.;~· ROOF IN~ .llid autier work.

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth .

ij" "'"' .. _..

Wlir

'l
a

e

'

0

t·
~

)

.

I'

'

.I

I

____

------

-

..

Gil.tTAA

Gatll~ · I~

HELP WANTED

. :.

::-rr.'l.:

-----

':f.-.rrs. mu:.· 'r.c:i =r:,;:.ts:;t•'. C:::-rn 1: ~~'!.1:-~ ~:Y~'\:1~ . Business O~ities

--·-··"'~IWIM.....__5
- - ...,, p. m.

110-11

Gallipolis,

room

'.

ti-

ll,

. TWO-W"Y lladliit S.ln •.a.
. s./vk:lt: ,.._ lllld Ultd Cl's;
pillfc...ntonlt,.; Jlllllllill,
el¢ ... 1ob'l , QII~s land
llldlo ltfl·• Os• "sl Crttt
"d , ,
011 •
' " ' ".,.IJ
pOlls,
lo• ...._4517.
' ' '
'212-lf

siKyNroldchlld. ~or.~~~z: ·

waoan:

F11 Sale

TNc,lllng, llltt IUPtlfVItten
or
public
rtltllel!s
beck ground? · Ltadl~l
eorvlco , oreenlullon
requires oltractlve per.
_..,,,
woman lor loail
ublic
s-ekl""
P
•• ..• ··"',;··
ments. urremaly .· II·
tertsllny work. Proparld
materia lurnlsllld. -One
tvtnllll per - "· Sa'-ry. ,
l,nterilstld?
hnd
f~.
formation
on . your ·
lil=ound to , Mn: Lynn
Jo
, m carriage Hill
Aptrtmenll, .AIIIent. Ohio.
11 YEAR OLD GIRl or.ofdlt
womtn to sloy oven~lghl will\

,. '

le

For

64 FORD THUNDERBIRD
2 Or. hlrdtop, lac. air cond. , hault

SPICIAL TAliiiTS

· -;-·.......;· . Wllllom l\lllchtfT, •U01.
---~::·-;:;·::
WOMEN .
·. . ~ · ..
· . .
. (7·tf
DO YOU like to llavt ytur . .
.·
,
· ,
trtond1 In? Goodl WoUld you _RALPH'S CarDtl a. ;(Jphotstory
tlke to Hrn ..,.. ntca 1111"111 ·.Cii..nlllf ·s.rvlco. Frtt
0,
Ave.
for Chrlstml&amp;?· Lel me come 'MIImeltt. Pll •..w6-0294. Ralph ,
and ahow you oow nice !tnt ril A:. Dl!vls. .
.·
toya, and ttlll 1""'' :!rom · ·· ,'·.. ·
· ,
t ;it
Pl•rhou .., tooav.
nor? . ... :. '·. · uu : .
For Sale
For Sale
Cal BariNra, ...._S.. I ' lor
1970 CHEVY EI -Camlno. Auto. 1970 MOBILE Home, all elec·
~latta.
·, . N
,. L
or rtltrtd .RN to ·,
Trans., P.S., P.B Big "45-4"
1639
Eastern
Avt.
Gallipolis
m11
:
·
work
tnnursing
homt. can
446-3273
trlc, 2 bedrooms. 60x 12. Call
·.
engine. Vinyl roof. Tonne.'lu
.
·· · Nve In If dtllrtil: Write Box
388-8480.
cover. Excellent condition.
CLEANING women, tiOC!d _.y,
111 lrellif9n, Ohio" Rt. 1. ·
247-6
Shorp, cfaosy pickup truck.
apply In person. French
··
.2Gf.tf
12,59$. Firm, no trades. Phone MO TOW LIFT fork -tift, 4,1100
Quarlor afler 11 a.m..
. ..
.
·
For
Rent
or
Sale
Sale
.
446,4929 after s ·p.m .
..
~41-5 TOOL . i' lhlrpenlno. · saws,
1970"3 br. Trailer. ,o\lmost 3
lb. capaclly, Good condition.
GOOD CLEAN LUMP ond
-:-:-:-:-==--·
.
.· . :sclsl&lt;n.
- ~. hOme lind
acres.
Due
to
Ill
heallh
owner
675-1320.
~~--------~246-4
CARRY
OUT
htJpwon~,
mlill
gerdtcl
·
taols.
Shorp Shop,
stoker
coat.
Carl
IYinfors,
Rio
leaving
slate,
256-6m.
247-tf
AKCn19rsttrtd tor poodle. 2 yr.
W
-J
·
be
21,
day
or
,nlgM
lhlllf,
·
..
Alloy
,
_
1&lt;11
S.CO.Id.
Grandt. Phone 245-5115.
old female. AI while, with
apply In penon , French
' ·,. · .· · · " 216-11
__::.__
'•
6-11 - - - - - - - - - - ,
Quarltr 'lllor llo.m. _ ,
·
·
111.,.,. Mrs, pom-pom, and CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
tall. HouMbroke and lovH
Sewing Mlchllll Stln
241-f Ali MODELING, buUilnu n.wo\
FURNITURE · SiNG.ER
children sso. Pllono 446-4929
&amp;
Serv)C11.
'All
modtls
In
------~-. rQOms, -·Ctl!itnt, -.roofing,'
USED: Phllco auto. washer,
alter 5 p.m.
IMMEDIA'TE
.
Opoftlng
tor
~~; fumkt Int. J . . Ft
stock.
FrH
ell~~Service
good shape, WhriPOOI etr
exporloncad
...,.ly.
Good
:
I&gt; Son.- ...._9271. · ·
246-4
guwtnleed.
s
priced
conditioner 18,500 BTU, tx·
condiiiOM,
·
11•11
:'
·
....tf
working
fro111 U9.95. French City ·
=cH-:A~N~E="v"'·"'s-G-rocer
- ., ..y,-E-.,.-,k • .:..
cetlent condition ; occasional
benefit
progrem,
cGmpttltlvt
·
-=::-::;;;';:::;;-:ri--:-:"'"::"--::-_
Shappe,
Singer
a_p·
Fabric
chltr; Temco floor fumaca,
... Mttllf form gotes 1~ ft. Ill. 16
"'lllt scale. can, Wl'lhl cir BABY$1-TTI,.G In ,my home.
11roved delfor, 5I COurt St.
70.000 BTU,
ft. 120. Permllltnt lypo Antt
apply : Personnel Dt~fl ·
Can· W:2UI•.'
Ph.
446-925$.
FI'NIAI S1.39 1111. Vlnylln rug 9 NEW: Chairs for your comfort.
mont,
Plo
..
anr
Volley
..
··
_
.
.,.·_._ ·.....,·....,...,__ _~
.
301-11
Recliner(, rocken, Swhttl
x 12, U .95 tech. RC Cola 1-16
Hospllet.
Veil~ Or.; Polnl "
rockers and love seats, and
01. 79c plus tu and bottles,
Pleaoant, Wut Vlrgt"'a. ·•· @ _
_. _..·_.. ·.: '_::·
·
occasional
choirs. A lerge ALL TYPES of building
PhOM 67H3.0.
· ,
_...
•
Suni!Mm Brfld 6 - 16 or.
materlal1,
block,
brick,
ltwtr
to
Ill
.your
need,
Mltcllon
loaves 11. Kraft jelly 3 - 11
~lpes, windows, linitis, etc.
.
S'I'IIOENTS. CHtldftn ·
Open Friday till 8, plenty of
Ol. $1.
- ..,.-----:---241-3
Claudl
Winters, Rio Gr1111de,
•
.
·
o" ,
ot ·MuH1. ·Mrs. Frtdtlenti ·
fr"
porklng,
955
Second
2.46-3
0 . ·Phone 245-S12i offer 5.
Avenue, ..... 1111.
Wanted To Bl!r.~ .. ·.. :.: ~~··,.::;,.~~·Ct&lt;..,.~ .
123-tl
:'::
. ,:-:A~fi;";S;;:O::N::._:--:n_--:,ur--:-;,n;lture.
' 221-11
JUNK
aulos •IJd tcrap molal. ··: .'.
:
· · ·
:W-211 ·
ICMauaa, Olifo. 2 miles above
~
--;N;,;sd!AA;n.~n~ww~il~wt~.?~·
381-1776.
'
:.•
.
'~
·.
..
.
Sllvor ar1dgt Is hiving an old JUST whet you're tooi&lt;lnt for SEE our tlumlnum bldg1.
·
·
·.
2e11
·
wA~r.Eo
·
•',,..
to
~•·v-~
fashioned tradl-ln week.
'65 Oldsmobile station
Heavy duly, with flooring ,
3 T:-:A-:Trldt In your · old fit' new.
9 pa~ . Air conclfflonlng,
:-R:-EN
L-or_
busl
___ntll_;___,.......;:ty ,
~f'J,'.;, l:n:
wlrod
lor electric. Also Weir
Don't mlq our" 6 pltca living
P.B.. P.S., one owner cor,
Ytrgtnle chunk coal, droln
. In or neer
"'. s:30 p. m: _.::: ·" , ·1 "'·
sui" fit' anly llfUS:
low mtreage, good sl\ape, 446lilt, boll . tile, _ , and
owner. Phone 416 .tOt. , . . .. , ·, ,.
. .
. · :W.J
Don't forgo!,.. *'lvtr frtt 1171 afler 5, 446-4:105.
mort•. Galli DOl II Blocri. i.
" ' '
2e-6 ., ...
..
10 shop this week ancl - •·
241-tf
Coat Co., 123'/:i P1111, .w~-m:r.
~_; ANYOMii llillhlng 'to 'g •w.-r
FARM 1creage with or w1 ...
207-tf
•._. .....au paj:t. '01 ·Air ~ •
~~------~~· ~
. --------~
ANTIQUE
pump organ, . all
ELECTRDLUX Vocuvm
original except new btllowo,
house. call .....ms. MancltY
Unflarlllli 1o 1M~
- 'lllltl
lhru Fri.
· , · . ._, tli 0:-"- ~ cep,. ' 1 ,.:
o - complete wllll llf. Over .. ~s old. Medt by
DELIVERY
·)~·' GM
or-., '' c.mtl
11
7' -y,- MI
W
~
-:
AN-::T-::E:O~
Io-llu
..1·-o r- tr
:;,;.i ;,·~,' '" 01 ~ 1 • .. ·'-"·
,.
.,
•- r-· Pay-· ..
t•pt -whon-e
992390' .
..
toy oleclrlc l(atn, ...._-11¢
· · · · ':
J4f.l
;;;i.«~~vc~~etrp.ltnaval- s'yr.,CUM,'"o
• •• SERVICE Statlan for ......
Phone ...._.
·
••coltont lcicotjon, ,.td
I
•
241-lt
245-6' J O 350 dozor, 67 mooal wlfh
trtlnlng. PINM call 441GI5
blldt lind wrench. 66 model
1-S p.m. Evtnlnga ......_,_,
DRIVER SALES Want~ To Rett.
., . .
. ~~=~:
2• 12
NEW 1f72 ZIG·UG Sewing
'1600 serln lnlornallonat
M&amp;clllue In or'-tnal factory
lr·-'- "~
-----~-:--- _
"'"n In A-1 condltlort .
4 ROOM tloust or ep~rlmtftt '
1
car on, lg- •• to make
Call 2M...,,
""ALt'"IEO ln-._. .............
downsfoln. 1 adult. can ......
bullor.llals1, on bultans.
1 1 '""
,.
...... • ,.......,
1f42.
.
managrams.llldn~~llerancy - - - - - - - - = - 52- t _ for • NEW canca,t In the
dtiiL"'t.':lfllllllt lilt twist o1 a 1 _ 16 FT. PULL
··-per· marketing field, 'iilth retail
$3.57 PIR HOUR - - - , - - - ; - - - ' IAif In
outlet avallllflle _ , In tho
_...._ ___,
and 1 .IGhn DNA ush hog. Gallipolis are~~ . C.111-221-~
, OR 4 BEDROOM
-·-·
Can lie 1ttn et William MtdMit R~D. 7~ E. City
Excolltnl roltroncH. c.ll
~ut.;r.:~ lur!loll miJshU, tc.vshint Strttt, Co1111111M. Ollie 021:1•

Eastern

67 MIICURY COUGAR

;::.======__, '·=-.:~10 Gr~.

1970 DoDGE 4 DR, H. T, _ _ _ _ _ $1995
Air and all the extras.
t969 FORD WAGON-- - - - -St495
I0 Passenger.
1972 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE _~---J:2695
4 Door sedan. P.S., P. B.
1969 CHEV. 4 DR. HT- - - - - - S1595
Air and ail the extras.
1972 VEGA GT- $2295
1968 BUICK,2 DR. HT---~-- 51195

'2695

61 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN

ld

CATS and ~llttnt lo lli¥1 -Y·
HeIp lattlcl
, . . c.•1 2M *''» , . ,
.
WAN"ft"Cl River emploo,-. ' .;.... ~ ;.. · ' ' · ' ~3 ,
opply lllut fountain Motel, · 111r . 111 . ·Miil, · ......,.
room M.
·..,,• ..., ....,_ ct11m1.
24Doll
IIUM'lllllullr'vlcl,,.. Pint

If you., ar,e Interested
in a riew or used car,
be sure you check
with us before you
buy.

'1995

'70 CHIVIOI.IT CHEVIW
.

1n
id
tg
1e

"' "''"'
2A7·3

:-'::::=::-:-:--:----:-:-

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tmlirol"·re aft'd ma•"
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:W-.1
· t4l.•G!'J!t!r&amp;U5permtllfll.
c.tl -.qt.
66
Iuick Eleclro 225.
·
· ' :W-5 ·
l!anltilfo, 111w
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.

For. Fast Results Use Th.e Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate For Sale

Reai Estate For Sale

•

.1/;JJlfliiPNL.
REAlTY
25 .Lo cus t St. ·
Broker

STROUT
.. EAlTY

HOward.

Eve .

•

~~~6 - 1226

1HfLEADE R SINCE 1900 IN
. S~RVING THE. NATI.ON'S
'4UYERS &amp; SELLERS.
Ph, 446·P008

GREATLY, R~DUCED
THE SUY
.
OF THE MONT H!
A BE AUTIFUL br ick home BEAUTIFUL P.,L EASANT
toca lcd on a well -landsca ped ,\ lALlEY ESTATES - NEW
one &lt;l crc lot in Kyger Creek
L ISTIN G . 3 BR brick , w-w
School. Dls1rid. 3 l"rge BR
ca rpet. 11 1 baths. 2 car
c1nd ti le br~lh , la undr y room, a g_arag c, ccnl. t'l ir , gar . disp.,
woman's dream Lome tru e tfi shwo;1 s her , tovety b1rch
kit chen, d eep pile carpe t cr'lbin e ls . Ow ner being tran sthr oughout, large LR , rural ,fcrred .
Wc'li Pr , owne r stu d sel l. NoJ
.1
many homes o/ thi s qua Illy al 3 M t . OUT
QU 1CK
. thi s pri ce in Ga llia Co. Call POSSESS ION - Love ly 3 BR
no w ~ it won'J las t.
.brick a11 d fr ame wit h full
16 ACRES
base ment, ga rage , large
~26 , 500 - BE AUTIFU L 1 BR ,
family rm .. dini ng rm , 2 WB
· ill I elellri c home re fl ec ts fireplaces, large :&gt; 4 A. lot.
te nder loving care, CO li ·
ven ienl kitchen and din ing R·i'O - L1 KE NEW - Brick
room, la rge LR ·' wi th . ,ncher, HW floors , air cond ..
fire pl ac e, enclosed bi'ICk
complete kitchen, util ity rm ..
porc h, 1 ? basement, ca rpet
$11.000
th roug hout. all appliances go
'. wdh hom e, pond , large 30' x ADD ISO N ~ Modern 6 rm. I
60' buildi r)g, ? car garag e,
t1ome wi th brick fr onL leve l
num&lt;?rOl)S s had e trees,
lot wit h 110ft . fronl. cent. air,
minutes from Gallipolis or
CC~ rp ort, oWner anxio us to
· ldunl-i ng lon. .; .
5C II
JUST LISTEO
CHILDRE N ARE WELCOME. MIDDLEPORT ~ 12 f&lt;M ..
, In fact , chil drer:t are f1 eeded to
BRICK - Could be used as 2-3
make thi s 4 bed room house a
or &lt;1 family home . Pr iced tor
happy home . Bea utiful stone
below re pl ace ment cos t.
fireplace in LR, all electric
dr eam . ktlc he n, pa neled. POME RO Y - REMODE1ED2
s tory
home
wit h full
d ining room , comfort-able
fam ily room , P 1 bath ,
basement. Buy noW and start
laundry room, larg e hobby
collecting rent.
sh op fo r the creative m.1n ,
• -- 11 BERGER AVE. carp orf , lenced lawn , owner CITY
rn oving
west.
quick
Love ly 1 BR home with full ·
possessi on. Price $19,500.
basernent. Lots of shade
FALL SPECIAL
trees .
• BEDROOM, large country
~dchen , . plenty cab in e ts, NEI GHBORHOOD RD. - 3 BR
range, dtsposal and dou ble , rnodu tar home 2 yrs. old, air
oven, off ki tchen laundry
&lt;;and ., partly furn ished, a
r ~iOill. lormal OR , one BR on
bargain at $14,500 .
fi r-Sitr.. ,.flaor, porch, garage.
aluminum siding , located on STATE ROU TE 160 - 3 yrs. old ,
,. Jl 1 corner lots. $18,800 buys
7 rm . brick. 2 car garage, all
this bea utif ul wei! shaded
elect
ric , cent. air , 2 baths, w·
home.
w· car pel, WB firep lace .
W-A-N-T-E-D
'
LISTINGS!!!
CLOSE
TO NEW MINE - 1970
WE NEED YOUR PROP ERTY

·

Real Estate t-or ~are

Real Estate For Sale

MASSIE

THE WISEMAN
.
.
~

i

·"

..

.

AGENCY
'

'

Wi~Pman

. Realty, 32 St'ate St
Tel. 446,1998

'

' Office 446-3643
. Evenil)gs .call
E. M . "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796

E. N.

,•

446-4500

Real Estate For Sale .

For Sale

6 y(..t-.r · old 3 16 FT. CRESTLINER and
l)l:dnlf~rH house. wall to wall
trailer 80 hp. Evinrude motor.
t M pl] ling . large built in
1962 4 wheel Jeep station
k1 1 :.. IJcn, lull ba sement . AI·
wagon.
Call 446-0142.
lr\t:;l1cd q;-.raqe plus e:.:lra lot.
248-3
'•146 0026 . .
~,.-----249-6 '7 1 HONDA d . 70 looks and runs
.like riew $250. Phone 4&lt;16-3345.

HY

UWNE~

'

BIDWELL - Modern, 6 big
rms ., utility and bath. Carpet
in liv. rm. , plenty cabinets in
kitc hen , lots of paneling, new
storm doors and windows.
Barn 40' x 60'. Located on 2
big, fl at lots. Priced to sell.
MILL CREEK - 4 rm. house.
fur . heat, garage and 1 A.,
$8,000.

car
garage.
1400 fl. of
living space downstairS, and
space for 3 roo ms in un.
finished upstair's, large acr,
lot with more land available,
!98-8722 .

.

.

·.,

'

248-3

.. _ __
-c-:-=-.::._

248-3

- $90.
JEEP, new motor, new tires,
new transmission, 388-9991
after 4 p.m .
r
248-6

For Sale

;.;;_·----~--,
'

USED FURNITURE

MER CERV IL LE Cheap 2 nice liv ing room suites - 3
housing , real nice, 3 bd . rm .• • dinette sets . 2 rockers .
large · tiv . rm .• nice bath , Vinal couch . J . pie~e white
copper ~tum bing , al l tile bedroom suite, maple chest
ceilln!=l, od fur ., 2 cck 9arage. of drawer s, whi te youth bed
Large shaded. lot. Wal~ to
school. Only $12,500.
with springs and mattress

R·ICE' s

FOR SALE or trade, German
Shepherds, AKC registered,
Jlf2 months . old. 1 male, 2
fefnal es, call Jackson, 9882601.
248·5·

SMITH.

SALE ENDS OCT. 30!

j

SAYS

Beat the Price tnc;rel$tl No
Interest Until M.rch 1973!
Buy or Trade Nowt
· AI

1972 PONTIAC

GAliiPOUS
!RAC"QR .·
. 1

I

MF=

NEAR Clay School - Extra. .
nice, 3 bdrm ., new carpet in
. liv. rm. , din . area, and hall. It
, has new Aerobi c Septic tank ,
fu ll base.. with part ial
finished rec. rm., attached
gar. and located on &gt;;, A.
shaded lot. Pr. ice reduced for
qui ck sale.

and matching dresse r.
,

J

s. .

. A UNIQUE' INTRODUCTION In the pickup truck market Is this 1973
·Dodge Club Cab. Ideal fot:..commercial and recreational aJIPiic;atlons; the
new entry offers 34 cubic feet of secure, weather protected interior
stora?e space. Typical uses of the new Dodge Include tool and equipment
storage_and space for certain types of camping equipment requiring
retdy access. Two. optional fold down seats are available offering tem porary transportation for additional passengers. When- not In use, the
seats fold up Into depressions In the trim panels. The Oub Cab Is
available on either a 133-inch or 149-inch wheelbase with a 6\12-foot or 8·
foot pickup body. Heavy slide-on campers can be accommodated by the
optional7500 lb. and 9000 lb. Camper Specials. A full range of six and eight
cylinder j)Owerplants are offered Including a 225 cu. ln. Slant· Six and a
318, 360, and «10 CJD V-8's.
·.
· ·

Neal Realty

- - - - --

- -- - - --

------

~,

OHIO RIVER
Realty

- -- - - - -

- - -- - - -

'I•

------

...

RUSSELL

REALTOR

446·1066

;.:. i l
-r'

:J

ADMI'NISTRATORS SALE--

PAY 'ONLY ONE UTiLITY

SATURDAY, OCT. 28 • 11:30 A.M.

STAU • •

) e0

1

,.46·0001

....
.Datsmn ...

r,~i::7;: you to.compare the quality
and the price of our automobiles. We
know that we have a better deal for
· you and we would like the opoot"furJitv to demonstrate this:

-JIMME SAYRf.

TARA

AllcmNE£1

..·PH. 446-3444·

.~

*"'"''*• ,

APARTMENTS

'

'

...

"

I

,.

new.

'2495
1971 BUICK

'3395: .
1970 BUICK

Skylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.,
white. black v inyl top. Worth
more.

Skylark Cust., 2 dr. hdtp., lime
green, green vinyl top, balance
factory warranty. $harp.

'2695
1969 CADILlAC

--',

Eldorado, air cond., 'AM-FM
· radio, rosewood with ltn·
-dalwood top, power windows.
power liMt,

V-1 engine, standard.shift, radio, w&amp;·w tires, fancy ,whHis.

of

· IIIW, .....,_ .ond 1011.: For
' lht - · al ,..CIIUrllfllltllt,
. ' - · ~lndn••· COIIiH~~ratlon
. f"'•ym]lllhy 111o1- u-n
0 Ul.

. ' '· ;': .,•

·'\

in•

he
illl

. ))e

.

For 1111.' btlutllvl ·llaWtn, ·
lilt menr lood · ollerlnos
llrought.lo lht homt. For IN ·
- f Hall tho iptclal Kit
of ltlllllf is '
.'
.
To lht ~.Hal!e'f·Watll'
·· Fun•" HOme lor - tile
CO\Irlti\1, · lliVICI
4111d .
trrlln,::n~t~~II · JII. our lime ol
bf lilt IIMulliUI rnut1c .
and to lilt ' .....I ful •lldn
lor thotr ·. 1tm1 and lilt
llt,luti!VI m•1••os llltt · ~ · .
give~~
''
.
.
· W. · w.lt .'.tri think. :,;,.,
:f:t••~lilt 'JWtllll'ltlan If
k~J
n ""·
anc1

All

ed
he
ed

*"·

row

~c"-' " Mn. loti.·

'·-·lrlke
•"'·. '

;
Mrs.
D. · Loll -·lnd
F-lly, Mrt. tltlllort. Loft &amp;
. F.mly , .
1

taliii~,-~~~~~
In lllllirJ , . .

dllldrtn.
. ' '
-~~._,.-....:...__..;2..1 '
Malla.a

,•

I

-lllil!l· .. ' ' ' ' :" ' .
IARN· 1101 ..... 'Mit'. lllil .
lumllllell. ND lmMitntl•ll.
Clll iolltcl IIIII . ta.Oill
bel 11111 1111411
C.S;T. M.
a- of. ,...• .Midllnt
C..p, or wrlfw ft, 0. lllll171:1.

.

,•

ee-

I lot MIMOR.Y If -~ C. Gilkey .
who~fWiy-~ - · .
Mel
, oet. 12, lt6S; WJII
lfllllll,
lldrtn ond. III'W·

'1895

72 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .
TWISTER

rly

""·1:

"

Tudor, auto. trans., radio. new
Prem tires, power steering,
white, extra nice.

UIBastler.

ler

Ulln ..., ...., dwlng
ol fNt WGildlrtvl ·lluiiYnd.

l.eSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air .cond.•, 17,233 miles, 73
leSabre trade. Like

1970 -NOVA ·.

,,

Dts
ion
WI THJ FAMilY oi ll~o
Loti _ , ta · lhlnlt II! .tho
Wandtrtl!! PtGPl4 'who htl

1971 BUICK

'

'2995'

- -- - - -

.

·o..

•

.

WOOD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

dr;

4
hdtp.,
air cond., AM,. F M radio, light
blue, black vinyl top. Nice,

Tudor, auto. trans., radio, 2,783
miles; Tutone, white-walls,
showroom condition .

CARROLL.NORRIS .DODGE INC.

- -- - - -

I.eSabre, Cust~

1972 NOVA

PRICES START FROM '3051.00
50, ITATl STREET

1972 BUICK

Catalina Brougham, 4 dr .,
black with black vinyl top,
cu:;tom · black Interior, air
cond., a beautiful car. 7,900
miles.

'.

1968 CAMARO R.H.. P.S. ~~::;:E~iR~t.~7=:.
Bill .
Owner ...
Automatic console, 446-4740.
",
248-3 JOHN Deere Oozer and Ford
truck. $2,20C. 367-7202.
JUST received a truckload of &gt;;, \
2&lt;16·6
in . plyWOild paneling . Selling ·- :=::;::::;:::;:::;::::;::::;:::;:::.__,
NEW&amp; USED FURNITURE
at bargain prices. 6 various 1
color ~. Can 1;&gt;e seen .at corner
854 SECOND, 446 _9523
ANTIQUES
of 1920 North Main St. and
•• ·-- · · 'i.o
· ·
Pop lar St., Point Pleasant or
DE ER CR . RD . - Near new 4 ,CORBIN &amp;
YQ~R, cal l 67S-3762 after 8 p.m.
Antique sofa bed, 2 full size
rms. and ba th, fur . hea t, 2 SERTA &amp; Bemco Mattresses•
Everett Rayburn , Jr .
iron beds, 1 twin size. Gas
rms. , carpeted, plus 2 A. good and box springs s29 up. 955 t
248-tf
cooking stove. Phone 992·
land. Good Spring water. Only Second Ave. 446-1171.
. ---,---- - - , - 3647.
$10,000.
'67 VW BUS. New engine, new
FAi:TORY made pickup tires, good shape. 446-3784.
INVESTM ENT - In city, good
cam per. Near new on 1964
245-6 AKC toy poodle puppies, "6
business location, piUs 2 Aprt.
weeks old, 1chocolate female,
pick up truck. Sacrifice priced P UMPKIN S, ap pl es. aott~.
rentals (could be J). Busin·ess
2 black males. 675-2242.
Sl,550 for. both . Phone 446ciders.
Wells
orcha
rd
1 mi le
bldg . includes grocery and. 29 6
·. 239-tf
0 .
South of Wilkesville on State
meat processing equipment.
248_6
Potential income from Apt . -------~Route 160.
NEW CHURCH pews and pulpit
249-3
renta ls S225 per mo. Price FACTORY mad e pi ckup
furniture. Write for a fall and
$21,500.
ca mper. Near new on 1964 LOTS, any size you want on
winter special . Stevens
New Listing 3 Bedrooms Full Basement
pi ck up truck. Sacrifice priced
Church
Supply Co., P. 0 . Box
RODN EY - 3 yr . old. 6 rm .
OWNER HAS THt'S ONE PRICED WELL UNDER
$1,550 for both. Phone 446- good blacktop . road . Als o
781, Huntington, W. Va.
rural water llne, three and
home, all carpet, all Elec .. 11
MARK ET OR APPRAISED VALUE. THREE LARGE
2906.
22~·26
ha lf miles out of town . Phone
mo
.
budget
at
$26
per
mo.
BEDROOMS, DINING AREA, VERY NICE KITCHEN
248-6
446-2947.
Th is property has a large
WITH RANGE &amp; OVEN. FULL BASMENT, LARGE
garage and loca ted on a J;,. 1971 YAMAHA mini Endu ro 60
249-3
FLI?-T LOT AND GARAGE. THIS WILL SELL FAST.
-acre flat tot . Pr iced for a
cc. 1970 Yamaha 175 cc exFOR SALE
Vacuum cleane r
quic k sale at 121.500.
cellent condition, 1968 50 cc DELUXE
1967
Chevelle
Malibu. Ex sales and service on all
Honda, 446-1941.
cellent
condition.
P.S., air,
makes
.
Phone
256-6457.
CENTENARY - Extra nice 3
248-3
automatic
transmission
.
249-12
or 4 bdrm. ranch , with H.W.
Very
sharp.
Two
door.
Phone
fl oors and carpet. If ha s a
446-9242 or 446-1261.
2 RE DDISH brown pontes
large liv . rm ., some paneling
answer
ing
to
th
e
names
of
thai
would
and a kitchen
Popic and Britis h lost In
SchU lt z 12 x 65 with 4 x 12 tip
please a ny woman. On ci1y For Rent
NOW. We have an active
Cheshire -Addis on area . If IF YOU are building a new
ou t rm., com pl etely fur ·
wat er &amp; nat. gas. Pr ice
home or remodeling , see us.
demand for homes and sma ll
UNF . 5 rooms and ba th apart- tound ca ll 367-7708.
n!shcd, ce nt. air, patio, cellar,
123.500.
'
We
are builders. Distributor
ac reagE!. R~al Esta te is ovr
ment.
secon
d
floor,
adu
lts
barn, utility building, buy
249-2
Hotpolnt Applian ces,
for
on ly busi ness. LI ST WITH
only
.
527
Second
Ave.
Ph
.
446wi th t A or 30.
-- - -- -ADAMSVILLE - Older home
Allison
Electric.
' THE BRANNON RE ALTY
1575.
1962 CHEVROLET $300; 1965
made new, 5 big rms. all
•M
154-tf
TOO AY - IT WILL PAY .
240-lf
GTO Pontiac $400 ; 1964 Ford
CHIL LI( - ' 0 RD . - 4 rm.
ca rpe ted. new 2 car garage
New
Listing
3
Bedroom
Brick
-'
Pi ckup tru ck. $400. 446-0368. SIGNS
and loca ted on a big flat lot.
block $-(}.l·D , ith full
&amp; POSTERS,. Custom
AP ARTMENT for 2 men . Call
base ment . .... .
WITH FULL DRY BASEMENT. IT'S IN BEAUTIFUL
Cheap at $1S,750.
249-3 .made, 1 copy or in quantity.
992-3975 or 992-2571 .
CONDITI ON. VERY NICE KITCHEN WITH RANGE ,
Hand painted. Silk Screen.
146-3 SUEDE Coat Man's Size 42
PATRIOT - 2 story. older
ETC. FLAT LOT IN EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD.
VINTON .
Comp letely
Instan t signs . Please phone
RIVER VIEW
home. sound. on water line. 2 - - -- -Brown. Practi cally new. 446·
remodeled. 2 story home, new
OW NER MOVING OUT OF STATE.
Gal l ipo l is 446 · 0706 .
I)IE J UST listed a beautiful 4 built-in kitchen , formal dining
FURN ISHED mobile home in 4566.
A. flat lot ; price 113,000.
209-tf
1 bedroom
home on Lower
Gallipolis, 446-0338.
249·3
rm , l...f'! wfth fir eplace, full
New Listing
We Need Listings
r River Road . This house is
227-tf
GREEN ACRES -'- Pr ice
·- - - - - - ba sement, sHady l awn .
~ o nly 6 years old an d was buill
5 Bedroom
TO P quality AKC Min . puppies.
reduced on this beauty, 4 yr. --~--SEL LING at the rate o f 2 or 3·
AT SPECIAL
f by
Ernest Brown. Special TRA ILER PARK - 18 units ,
Schnauze rs , Bass ~ tts , and
proper ties each week makes
old ranch, H.W. · floors .. SLEE PING rooms for rent.
Owner Leaving Area
, features are the beautiful
Ga ll ia Hote l. 446-9715.
LOWER PRICES
it d ifficult to keep enough
Aust ral ian terriers . K&amp;P
beauliful kitchen, 3 Bd. rms .•
sm all
laundry,
large
, view of the Ohio River. den
listings . If you want yours DON'T BUY UNTil YOU
181-tf
Kenne ls. 388-8274,
1''' baths. This house is like
workshop, plen ty water ,
NEW &amp; USED
so l d , call t h e Wiseman
SEE THI S NEARlY NEW
wi th woad bur ni ng fir eplace,
new. Only $22,500.
249-1 I-BEAMS, Channel, angle,
11atural
gas,
7 tnob il e homes
ncy
.
.Age
BEAUTIFU
L
4
OR
S
formal dining room an d
SL EEPING ROOMS , weekly
sheet and plate steel, rounds,
go with sa le.
BEDROOM HOME . VERY
FARMS .
par ti al basement. Lof is 114' x
FURN ITURE , living roo m ,
rates . Park Central Hotel.
tlats,
reinforc ing bars and
NICE
KIT
CHE
N
WITH
ALL
92.5 A. 9 mi. tr om town. all flat
In Cheshire
290'. Ca ll today for an ilp- 1 ACRES IN CITY - Road
308-tf
kit chen· and bedroom fr om
mesh, ran , pipe, culverts and.
THE
BUILT -IN
AP and
gentle
slo
pe
;
-45
A.
poiillrnent .
1 t
t f
es tat e. Cal l 446-2833.
PL I ANCES ,
HUGE
- - - -Need An Investment
equipment. Prompt cirltllng,
• . ., NEW LISTING
ron age,. wa .: r· ro~tage, 15
till ab le, tab . base. rural FA M'ILY ROOM , CARAPA~TME NT for construction .
249-3
Neiman Co, ' Nelsonvit.te.fj
~~s
-~~
d
K~"'
ren
lat
un&gt;ls
.
•
,,,
...
:
...
..
,
~ -,..,, And A ~d
9 Ac. ~ ·vat. til II •ufl On t.""l'l'll '"' , .. , ~ ~ li r O,.i,... · 'j
..:.~ w~ler, 6 rm . house wift) bel! h ..
u -~~ PETED u
"fHROl:.IG.»OUl ,
·~~me - Ph~ .ro16-07S6.
• -=·~~--:-:-=--~-:::--Ohio,
P. 0 . BoY 298, Ph. 753- 1
stOrm
dr
.s
and
wi
ndows.
CE NTRAL AIR. GARAGE , 4
Place To Live?
''Road nelir towrt. Less lhan UPPER ROUTE 7 - 4 houses
'
267-tf '60 MODEL Harl ey Da vidson
1554.
Call
collect.
'
Pr ice reduced, $31 ,;,00 .
FRUI T TREES, FlAT LOT
74.
$900.
388-9963.
S300 an acre·
and 5 mobi le homes now being
181
-tf
VERY ATTRACT IVE 2 NEAR NEW HO SPITAL.
249-6
ren ted . Buy and s tart
ST ORY
HOME
WITH
30 A. LOCATEO at Bidwell. all SLEEPING rooms, week ly
LO T 67' x 112' located at 511
MOBILE HOMES
coll
ecting
rent.
park
ing.
_
_
G
_
T_
O-P
B
P
S
rates,
free
BA
TH
,
MODERN
F
UR
garage
ti
llable
or
develop.
8
rm
.
Garfiel d Avenue . $1.000.
New Listing
1971
'
'
.,
'
"
.
"
25,000
FOR SALE
NACE
.
LOVE
LY
KITCHEN
Libby
Hote
l.
modern h':lme, all carpet,
Office Phone 446· 1694
_tf
miles. New lif'es . Automatic:
RECONDITIONED
IBU
ILT
-IN
CAB
.
AND
MANUFAC
TURING
Plant
241
4
Bedrooms
much paneling, storm drs . - - - - - - - - Evenings
A-1 condition . '446-1267.
MOBILE HOMES
APPL IANCES! .
E)(ccllen t business. Call for
and
windows, oi l fur . Th is is
Charles M. Nea l 446-i546
H
ERE'S
A
REAL
BUY
FOR
BASEME NT . ALL NEW
249-3
tl ppointment.
1968
Roycraft
12x51
an ideal set-up for a larg e FURNISHED Apt. , uti li t ies -- - - - - J. Michae l Neal 446-1503
ALUMI NU M SIDING. 2 SO ME LUCKY FAMILY .
1966
Shutt
12x50
paid, fr ee garage parking, 1966 FORD, for sale or trade for
family with child ren in
LIVING AN D
CA RPORT ON .7 ACRE LARGE
FARMS
1968 Elcona 12x50
Adul ts onl y. Libby Hotel.
DINING
ROOMS,
SUIL
T
·IN
sc
hoo
l.
Price
upper
thirti
es.
WITH 3 MODERN MOBILE ' k' ITr.HFN IRANGE. OI.C',H .
motorcycle. 1968 Chevell e 146 A.. modern home wi th ful J
1968 Etcona 12x60
2411-tf
HOMES . ALL WITH PATIO
exccellent condition. 1971 all 1973 Peerless 12x60
base ment , 2 barns, silo, pond,
WASHER,
ETC
.),
2
143
A.
CORA,
80
A.
flat
and
SID EWALKS. ETC. AND CE RAMIC BATHS , EN electri c fr ai ler 12 x SO, 446- 1960 Whitney 10x46
creek, HT rd ., new fen ces,
Rac coon bo·ttom . · 5 rm. FUR NI SHED Apt. park ing ,
ALL
REN
TE
D.
PRESENT
0668.
TIRE
HOU
SE
IS
CAR
tab. ba se, corn base, 25 A.
B&amp;S MOBILE -HOMES
ce ntr al hea t, two adults only.
modern hou se, extra nice
INCOME $480 .00 PER PETED , GARAGE AND
249-4
corn goes wi th sa le.
Second &amp; Viand St.
S140 per month Lease. 446·
klfche!), pl enty storage, some
MONT H.
RENT
THE lARGE FlAT LOT NEAR
45'2 SeCond Ave .
Pt. Pleasant
HOU SE AND IN CREASE NEW HO SPITAL. CE N ·
0338.
paneling . Good barn. It has a
NewGMC
163 A., 56 A. Bottom, 100 A.
(Next
to Heck's)
446-3434 446-4775
INCOME
TO
$6SO .OO . TRAL
AIR .
PRICE
248-tf
producing gas we ll with free
·
Truck
Headquarters
pastur e, lo~J ely 7 rm . home
DE VELOPER' S DR EA M - 18
242-lf
YOU'LL
AGREE
IT'S $28,000.00.
gas piped to the house.
wi th large shady lawn, plenty
acr es of good land !.u ilable lor
WELL
WOR TH
THE
SLEEPIN G room. family 1966 •; , ton GMC Pickup
outbuildings . Can be used for
BASSET pup AKC Reg istered S
ASKI NG PRICE .
severa l houses. Count y water
privileges. Ca ll evenings, 446· 1969 Otds 88
49 A. GOOD 7 rm . house. flenty
Don't Wait- Now's
1969
Dodge
Stallon
Wagon
al mos t any ty pe farming
mo. old female. Wormed and
on site. Four mi l es fr om town .
3219.
s torage room, ca rpe and
The Time To Buy
operation .
shots completed $35. 446-9836.
248-3 1971 3 ton Chevrolet truck
Bui Iding Lol$
paneling . Big ba rn, plenty
1967 Jeep $taft on Wagon
FA RM NEA R MI NE 44 acr e
246-6
good water, near 12 A. bottom
AND HERE ' S ONE THAT
1 ACRE LOT FLAT . EX ·
f a r m w i lh four bed r oom 11.1 ACRES - 55 acres bottom, 9
land. It has 1,5191b. lob. base. TRA ILER on Rt. 160 nea r 1964 1h T. GMC PU
MAY
PlEASE
YOU
.
J
CELLE NT
LOCATIO N BEDROOMS WITH FULL
1967 'h r. Chev. Pickup
rrn . home, good barn , creek
2 BE DROOM, liv ing room, and
hou 5c wilh buth. Pr iced tor
Pr ice of $19.000, inc ludes near
Porter 1135 month . Utilit ies 1967
1
WITH
WATER
55,000 .00 .
lronlage,
t
?
mi
le
frontage
on
kitchen furniture for sale and
quirk selc .
T. Chev. PU
BAS EMENT ON LARGE
2 ton tob., tractor and other
paid . Phone 388-8688 or 446- 1968 'h T. GMC PU
stc1 le rd., comple te line of
Miscellaneous glass and
LOT ( 100xS75 1 WASHER,
tools
.
9369.
12
A CRE
FLAT
TO
DRYER ,
, OV EflLOO K OHI O RIV ER f,;~rm mach inery included in
RANGE
&amp;
1968 'h T. GMC PU
clothing. Bronze ref., stove,
RO'LLINC.
STREAM
AND
249-3 New 11 11, camper
REFR
IG.,
CE
NTRAl
AIR,
9Q
A.
plus,
30
A
tillable,
barn
,
Thr(IC bedroom hou !&gt;c on S. R.
sill e. owner will help finan ce.
washer, dinette set wtlh 6
WOODS . EXCE LL E NT GARAGE AND LOTS OF
-- - - ---'-plenty water , good fences.
chairs, 2 brass gloss lamps.
7 wilh beuulllul view ot river.
1966 'I• T. .GMC
SPOT FOR YOUR NEW SHRUBB5RY. COULD BE
2 BEDROOM Tra iler . Adults 1968 v, T. GMC PU
95 A. - Rolling grass land,
many
young
walnut,
lob.
base
also
large rug, 12 x 15 olive
HOME .
USE D FOR COMMERC IAL
only. Hen de r~on , W. Va . 675- 1960 1 Ton Ford flat .
limber, 'pon d, we ll , co unty
and
most
underlaid
with
coa
l.
LIST WITH US -- It you want
green.
Also few antiques. 49
PURPOSES ijECAUSE OF
4130.
$1~,750 .
a c li on, li !.! yvil h Ohio River,
water a \Ia IIabi e, BT rd ., la rge
1967 &gt;i&gt; T. GMC Plc ~up
Chillicothe Road. &lt;IM-0016.
ITS
EXCEL
lENT
The Home You
249-4 1964 CO 1600 International
call ·1•16 31\34.
home 10 mi. from town .
LOCATIO N.
2&lt;16-5
163
A.
5
mi.
from
Cheshire,
on
-Eveni ng s
truck
Dreamed of Owning
Ward Rd ., no bldgs., un - LARGE furnished apartment 2 1967 •t, T. GMC PU
Oscar Baird. 446-4632
38 A. Beautiful wooded
LOGS for fireplace. Ph. 256•
IS IN AN EXCEllENT
bedroo m, downtown location. 1966 '\1, .T. GMC PU
. derlald with coal. Pr ice
Do You Need
D. J . Weatherholt, 446 -4244
homesi tes over lookin g the
6574.
NEIGHBOR HO OD
IN
Adu lts, no pels, Water paid 1967 •t, T. GMC Pickup
reduced to $19,500.
Steven R. Betz , 446-9583
..Ohio River, city school di st.
A Large ·
·TOWN . HUGE OLD OAKS
243-26
and deposit. 446-1680.
1968 ''' T. GMC Pickup
' SHAD E
THIS
WEll
ANY
HR.
446·1998
Comfortable
Home?
249-3 t967 v, T. GMC Pickup
Ranny Blackburn
LANDSCAPED LOT . IT'S A
3 BEDROOM SPLI T LEVEl
FOR SALE b
-SOMMERSG.M.C.
Branch Manager
Y owner, 2 s tory SORRY Sal is now a merry gal.
TRUCKS, INC.
WITH F IREPLA CE IN ONE 5 MILE OUT ON A 5
' ACRE LOT WITH A LARGE ' brick house at 452 First Ave. 7
d
133 Pine st.
LIVING
ROOM
,
NI
CE
RANCHO
REALlORS
STREAM AND WATER
roon1s , 2 baths, gas ho t air
She used Blue Lustr e ,rug an
,
DI
NING
AREA,
LAR
GE
44 .,.. 2532
,;..... "';'o ' ~
FALLS
IN
YOUR:
FRONT
1
urn
ace
.
pr
esent
uph
olstery
cleaner
.
Rent
SUN PORCH , 2 BATHS ,
Headquarters tor Gallia County
arrangement 2 apartments.
elect r ic shampooer ' 11 • TYPEWR ITERS ,
Smtih,
GARAGE . IT 'S IQYRS . OL D YARD ? HU GE RUSTIC
Real Esta te . Lis tings needed.
AND YOU'LL JUST lOVE
LIVING
AND
DINING,
Easily
conve
r
ted
to
on
,
e
Central
Supply
.
Corona,
Royal
,
Olivetti
.
ROOM, MODERN KIT 2491
IT . IT'S THE HOME YOU
CHEN
WITH
ALl
THE
family
dwelling
,
Asking
-Unde
rwood
,
manual
anc
MU ST SEE .
BUILT .IN5 . 1 BATHS ,
130,,000, show n by ap VATE I .1
I
electric. Simmons Printing
TWO FOR ONE
CENTRAL AIR , ALL KINDS
poin tment. 446-0208.
PRI
ra te r space. a so 2
and Ottice Equipment.
·
riO USE NO. 1: Custom bui lt
OF BEDROOMS ? IS THAT
_11
1, 500 Down Payment
249 _1 bedroom home. Call 446-0508.
235
new 3 BR home featuring
WHAT YOU WANT? WELL
249-3 =-:-::-:::--:-----30 Years to Pay
farllily roon1, air cond., slid .
WE HAVE IT . · IT EVEN
2 BEDROOM house. Gas fur - - -- .,.-.,.,---.,--,PIPES PI
PI
GBO
HA S A BASEME NT 1
TH IS spot, that Spot, traffic
•
pes, tpes,
'
$28,900 Total Price
glais doo r to pat io and 2 car
Dl ETS ar·e fo r pt-oplc wh o are
FIRE
PL
A
CE
S
A
N'D
MANY
nace,
'
!'
i
ma
ll
basement
'
wtth
spots
too,
re
moved
with
BlUe
Cheratan,
BBB
,
Jobey,
garage .
th ick and tired of il .
0 THE R An R A c r 1v E
garden. SB.SOO. 245-5535 or
Lustre carpet shampooer. $1
Hilson, and other.. Tawney's
HOUSE NO. 2: Very good 6
BEAUTIFU L N EW LARGE
FEA
TuREs
.
you
•
R
E
contact
C.
U.
Miller
at
Rio
G.
C.
Murphy
Lower
Slore.
Pipe and Trophy House , 422
room country home, part
3 BEDROOM HOME WITH
13 AC RES of 11ill gro und at
porch
and
ce
llar
RIGHT
,
THE
PRI
CE
IS
IN
Grande
Barber
Shop.
249-1
~~Se
•c•o•nd_A.ve_._ _ _ _::,..;::;;
basemt.,
lARGE
FA
MilY
ROOM
,
1
E t~reka . Pr ice $5, 000.
FORT IE S,
BUT
249'3
199-tf
BATHS , DINING AREA , THE
house . Both homes tor the
YO~
'
RE
WRON~
IF_
~O
V
··~-~
;;~~~;;;;;;;;_~~~~~-~~~~,
LOV ELY KITCHEN WITH THINK YOU CAN MAT CH
price of one.
I
NEW LiSTING :
All THE •BUlL T-IN S.
GREEN TOWNSHIP
21 7 ACRE S lev elland with City
CARPET
TH ROU GHOUT
and acrea:ge for
IT ANYWHERE ELSE.
wa ter and gas. close. to City . LOTS
PLU S 2 CAR GARAGE .
residential
or
commercial
on
"Schools, chur ch, grocery
YOU 'LL LIKE IT . HONE ST.
Rt. 35, near hospital.
Store Bldg .
ELECTRICITY
~ lore. has T. B. smull barn .
WE HAVE OTHERS THAT
2
Very nice 3 bedroom , large
WILL PLEASE YOU IF
On nd Ave.
We furnish Water . Sewage . Garbage Colloctton - Ampto
living room , knotty pine NEW 3 bedroo&gt;T) home, bath,
THIS
ONE
OOESEN'T
.
garage, large lot, city water
Pirklng • :rv Antenna· . Waii-Jo.\Vall Corpetlng •
... kitchen , 2 full ba th s, 2
2 S P LIT L VELS ...- 3 BY
and sc hoo ls.
Draperies · Rarigel . Rofrlgorotors • A!r Conditioning •
lireplaces , ful l basement and
LEVELS AND MANY , 2 STORY BRICK 30x60 ON
LEON, W. VA.
LARGE DEEP LOT WITH
O.r1N111 Olspo~als . Oiallwolllors. Ht1l LlmPt · Privott
MANY RANCHES . MOST
carp ort with concrete drive. ADD ISO N TOWNSHIP
PARKING
.
EXCELLENT
NEAR NEWA bedroom home,
l'aliH • lwlmllll.. l'atf • ChollilouM.
CAN BE PURCHASED
LOCATION - PRESENTLY'
ba th and half. S22.000.
_ WITH
SMALL
DOWN
2' ' ACRES with all electric
The Est a to of Cloyd A. Barnlllo, llec:Msed
PAYME NT AN D LOW , lOW RENTED FOR S\65.00 PER
home, niCe kitchen , new 1
MO .
Store
stock,
fixtures, guns, truck,. 10 ft. meat case, 8 ft.
2
J
ACRE
lot,
rural
water.
MONTHLY
PAY
MENT
S.
rl!frigerttl or and stove, large
beaut iful setting.
vegetob!t calf, ~preuor, . pop case~ ~ ~etllng stovH,
living room, bath. and double
computer scales, platform scales, butcher block, meat
garage. Pric.e ·Sl7 ,000.
39 ACRES·. 3 bedroom story. and
grl"der, stlc:er, cash register, electric fans , small freezer.·
half home. garage, barn. HOUSE by owner, 8 roomo. 2
Tobacco. canned goads, staples, sh-, galollles, ladles'
1 BEDROOM house in Cheshire.
$15,000,
"
baths. 446-0762.
and men's wear, &amp;undrl....
Ohio on•State Route 7, ba th,
la rg e li vin g room and kitchen .
227-tf
McCulloch chel" sew, rolotltler, 1961 JHp !ruck with 4·
I
Price Sl4,900.
wheel drive. hand toots, etc.
'
5 Guns: ,Roberts rifle No. 257 wtth Douglas barrel and
l BEQROOM all electric home
9-tO ACRES . .with 8 room home.
Wtowr Scope No. K3, Stevens double barrel 20 ge.
with basement. Ph. 992,3975
several bu itd, in gs. Owner
shotgun Model 311A. Marlin 22 automoHc Glenfield rtflo
or 992-2571.
wants It ~ol d this week . Call
model60 with Tuco Scope, Bay State single blrroll2 ge.,
for ~tppo i ntm~nl.
Wtnc:htstor 12 ge. Modtl37. Thlslsan oxtrtmely nice set
2 IIDROOM TOWNHOUSES
ttiiiATHS
of guns, In perfect condition, oil wHh CIHI.
FARM. 257 acres on blacktop
NEW 3 bedroom custom built
. STEPHIN MOORI,ADMR.,.._,W.Yo.
~.
road. large house and 2 barns, '
home/'jlorch. garage on large
Jolin
Mc,...tl,
Aud. Hart, R't!IIIIHIJ!!!~.m. I;Jtri&lt;L
T~ B. base, .8 mll~s from city.
to t. 119.950, 2!/hmlles !rom
-Siiii lilocaftd In
Ill liltclr oil U.te It!.
Oflice 446-1066
new holpital on Fairfield·
No. 62'
Evenings Call
Centenary Road. Shown by
O.SIIId J..,wlll lllltftlll'"' 11f 11M ... M.
Ron (:.l naday 446-3636
appointment only . Call Lee
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
·
Nlott
lltmufstore
stadl wlllhllld lllllltlf IIIII.
Construction,
Syracuse,
Ohio
Russell 0 . Wood, 446·46)8
Denver K. Higley 446-0002
For Information Call Shirley Adkins-367-7250
John t. Richards, 446-01iO
992-3454.
Wanda ~· Eshenaur 446-0003
2-l:l-6
'
. t'rtced Ri9ht Near Cheshire Lovely Ranch
ON ROUSH RD. YOU' LL FINO THIS PREH:Y REDWOOD RANC H WI TH 3 BEDROOMS, NICE-K ITCHEN
(BU ILT-INS!. BATH. FULL BAS'EMENT, WOOD BURN.
FIREPLACE ANO LARGE FLAT LOT. OWttER .
MOVI NG OUT OF AREA AND HAS IT PRICED SO THE .
FIRST ONE TO SEE IT WILL BUY. HONEST, YOU
WON'T FIND ONE NEAR CHESHIRE P~ICED LIKE
THIS OI"F
I'
.

'

Final .Week of Ma'sse1rl
Ferguson Fall 'Tr,acl&gt;orl
Sale1 .
-I ---

CU'rT IN G torch, hoses, three
ga09e and regulators. 4ol6. "1143.
248-3

=-=-::-:-~--­

..

'

G.allt'poiiS'_.

Tractcrr

~~---­

For_ Sale

-..

"

6:.

'2295

Del Mal-. 1owll .... ..
'

2A7-l

In

71 CHEV. Y2 TON PICKUP
I ft. style-side bOdy, radio. 307 V-8
engine, 16,000 certified mites.

'2495

--

y,

P' I ..................~~-.
I
-

Jt~~Y~IJI~
2 dr. vinyl roof, 250 CIO, 6 cyf.
engine, p. sl-Ing, rod(o, 16,000 act.
miles, lotolly owned. A-1 bumper to
bumper.

SMITH AUTO SALES

2 Dr. hlrdtop, green wtlh g,_
vinyl bucket seats. 350 V-1 engine, 4
speed trans., lac. tachometer. This
car 11 a real cle11n shlrp cer.

f J,ftft~
77/f~

'

'69 CHIV, IMPALA
Custom coupe. 327 V-8 engine, auto. ·
Irons., "p, stwerlng. w-s-w tires·,
wheel COW!rs, radio. This hes got to
lie tho shorpost Chevy In low~.

J

J,69.;1/l..
· •·

'71 CHEVROLET IMPALA

~

Custom coupe, radio, auto. transmission, 350
cu. Inch engine, p. steering. p . disc. brakes,
gold metallic finish with mat. interior, w·s· w
tires. 21,000 actual mles. Looks a runs like
new.

69 CHEV. Y2 TON PICKUP
I fl. bed. style-side bOdy, :107 V-1
!11111111, radio, dlluxe cab, auto.
lrans., 29,1100 certlfltd miles.

'1895

10 pouonger slattonwagon, V-1
~~~gino, auto. trans., p, ar-tng, p•
llrlk&amp; w-s-w tires. Clten.

'1195

'

2 Dr. herdlop, V.. engt111, auto.
.tr11111., p. aletrlng. Good cond. .
'

'11-95

'

'495

the .......

We still ~ve
In Stock. Year

I

good Mlection of 1972 F«i11
end diiiCOunls ant In effect.
As you know, .• our policy- No S.ltsm111,
No S.lts Commission to Ply- mHns ev•

·m .,.

discount than

,..m.

P.S., P.B. .

1973 FuRY Ill 4 DR. SEDAN
mCKER PRICE 14706.05

OUR

WOOD MOTOR SALES

~3925

PRICE

you would othtrwiM

For Sale

..t'::'

lf72STERI:OIIracfllnwllnut 1971 PONTiAC Catallnt.
console wllll IIPf!!lker lilltnct Umtklet
lilack vinyl

=~~';·

..1:;: ,:

-. •IIIYMI
. -oiiOlJD. CIII
6IUfJ5
~
2&lt;17·5

OhiO. . :us.

.'
'

-·:-, DAY CAitl
. SUit VALLIY Nintl'v Schoo!,
IICIIIMCI 1W .$feft·ol bhlo, IY,
. mlltl • t -ot I!OIPtlal.
577 5lrn Valley Dr •. I'll . .....,

f
I
' J

: .· wr..!!'Y care .lllot uys·'!wt
·.. care. . Ml-.t Hluld•lll,

·, · ~~~.~:'~~:~.' John
··
· , ' ·· · · , .
114-tf .

home- adiu:::: · .

®.~• ~
pttnfl ' · ·
"'.....• .reoflrlt. 1111
~week . Rtloronces
• ' l'fJ1tl1nt• . Clmtnl ' weir~. •
II ...._9239,
, 241.6 .'· ......,·llllflol, or gjr~~ge,_
=::-:--::---:-:-:-·'"':-" -CII'IIOI'I, tiC.?. You name · Itt
TWO MEN wtnlad to clfii'JIIid · , wt'IJ flo II. R~sonoblt rtlet. ·
close .to Gallti!Qils. S1.60 .IIfl' . · .~ 1 4\t-IP~ .. ·. : · 11, 11
hour to slart. Call Hunttngtan . . _ · .
.·· .
' .
522-2353 allor 6 p. !"·_.. a.;~· ROOF IN~ .llid autier work.

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth .

ij" "'"' .. _..

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.

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Gil.tTAA

Gatll~ · I~

HELP WANTED

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-----

':f.-.rrs. mu:.· 'r.c:i =r:,;:.ts:;t•'. C:::-rn 1: ~~'!.1:-~ ~:Y~'\:1~ . Business O~ities

--·-··"'~IWIM.....__5
- - ...,, p. m.

110-11

Gallipolis,

room

'.

ti-

ll,

. TWO-W"Y lladliit S.ln •.a.
. s./vk:lt: ,.._ lllld Ultd Cl's;
pillfc...ntonlt,.; Jlllllllill,
el¢ ... 1ob'l , QII~s land
llldlo ltfl·• Os• "sl Crttt
"d , ,
011 •
' " ' ".,.IJ
pOlls,
lo• ...._4517.
' ' '
'212-lf

siKyNroldchlld. ~or.~~~z: ·

waoan:

F11 Sale

TNc,lllng, llltt IUPtlfVItten
or
public
rtltllel!s
beck ground? · Ltadl~l
eorvlco , oreenlullon
requires oltractlve per.
_..,,,
woman lor loail
ublic
s-ekl""
P
•• ..• ··"',;··
ments. urremaly .· II·
tertsllny work. Proparld
materia lurnlsllld. -One
tvtnllll per - "· Sa'-ry. ,
l,nterilstld?
hnd
f~.
formation
on . your ·
lil=ound to , Mn: Lynn
Jo
, m carriage Hill
Aptrtmenll, .AIIIent. Ohio.
11 YEAR OLD GIRl or.ofdlt
womtn to sloy oven~lghl will\

,. '

le

For

64 FORD THUNDERBIRD
2 Or. hlrdtop, lac. air cond. , hault

SPICIAL TAliiiTS

· -;-·.......;· . Wllllom l\lllchtfT, •U01.
---~::·-;:;·::
WOMEN .
·. . ~ · ..
· . .
. (7·tf
DO YOU like to llavt ytur . .
.·
,
· ,
trtond1 In? Goodl WoUld you _RALPH'S CarDtl a. ;(Jphotstory
tlke to Hrn ..,.. ntca 1111"111 ·.Cii..nlllf ·s.rvlco. Frtt
0,
Ave.
for Chrlstml&amp;?· Lel me come 'MIImeltt. Pll •..w6-0294. Ralph ,
and ahow you oow nice !tnt ril A:. Dl!vls. .
.·
toya, and ttlll 1""'' :!rom · ·· ,'·.. ·
· ,
t ;it
Pl•rhou .., tooav.
nor? . ... :. '·. · uu : .
For Sale
For Sale
Cal BariNra, ...._S.. I ' lor
1970 CHEVY EI -Camlno. Auto. 1970 MOBILE Home, all elec·
~latta.
·, . N
,. L
or rtltrtd .RN to ·,
Trans., P.S., P.B Big "45-4"
1639
Eastern
Avt.
Gallipolis
m11
:
·
work
tnnursing
homt. can
446-3273
trlc, 2 bedrooms. 60x 12. Call
·.
engine. Vinyl roof. Tonne.'lu
.
·· · Nve In If dtllrtil: Write Box
388-8480.
cover. Excellent condition.
CLEANING women, tiOC!d _.y,
111 lrellif9n, Ohio" Rt. 1. ·
247-6
Shorp, cfaosy pickup truck.
apply In person. French
··
.2Gf.tf
12,59$. Firm, no trades. Phone MO TOW LIFT fork -tift, 4,1100
Quarlor afler 11 a.m..
. ..
.
·
For
Rent
or
Sale
Sale
.
446,4929 after s ·p.m .
..
~41-5 TOOL . i' lhlrpenlno. · saws,
1970"3 br. Trailer. ,o\lmost 3
lb. capaclly, Good condition.
GOOD CLEAN LUMP ond
-:-:-:-:-==--·
.
.· . :sclsl&lt;n.
- ~. hOme lind
acres.
Due
to
Ill
heallh
owner
675-1320.
~~--------~246-4
CARRY
OUT
htJpwon~,
mlill
gerdtcl
·
taols.
Shorp Shop,
stoker
coat.
Carl
IYinfors,
Rio
leaving
slate,
256-6m.
247-tf
AKCn19rsttrtd tor poodle. 2 yr.
W
-J
·
be
21,
day
or
,nlgM
lhlllf,
·
..
Alloy
,
_
1&lt;11
S.CO.Id.
Grandt. Phone 245-5115.
old female. AI while, with
apply In penon , French
' ·,. · .· · · " 216-11
__::.__
'•
6-11 - - - - - - - - - - ,
Quarltr 'lllor llo.m. _ ,
·
·
111.,.,. Mrs, pom-pom, and CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
tall. HouMbroke and lovH
Sewing Mlchllll Stln
241-f Ali MODELING, buUilnu n.wo\
FURNITURE · SiNG.ER
children sso. Pllono 446-4929
&amp;
Serv)C11.
'All
modtls
In
------~-. rQOms, -·Ctl!itnt, -.roofing,'
USED: Phllco auto. washer,
alter 5 p.m.
IMMEDIA'TE
.
Opoftlng
tor
~~; fumkt Int. J . . Ft
stock.
FrH
ell~~Service
good shape, WhriPOOI etr
exporloncad
...,.ly.
Good
:
I&gt; Son.- ...._9271. · ·
246-4
guwtnleed.
s
priced
conditioner 18,500 BTU, tx·
condiiiOM,
·
11•11
:'
·
....tf
working
fro111 U9.95. French City ·
=cH-:A~N~E="v"'·"'s-G-rocer
- ., ..y,-E-.,.-,k • .:..
cetlent condition ; occasional
benefit
progrem,
cGmpttltlvt
·
-=::-::;;;';:::;;-:ri--:-:"'"::"--::-_
Shappe,
Singer
a_p·
Fabric
chltr; Temco floor fumaca,
... Mttllf form gotes 1~ ft. Ill. 16
"'lllt scale. can, Wl'lhl cir BABY$1-TTI,.G In ,my home.
11roved delfor, 5I COurt St.
70.000 BTU,
ft. 120. Permllltnt lypo Antt
apply : Personnel Dt~fl ·
Can· W:2UI•.'
Ph.
446-925$.
FI'NIAI S1.39 1111. Vlnylln rug 9 NEW: Chairs for your comfort.
mont,
Plo
..
anr
Volley
..
··
_
.
.,.·_._ ·.....,·....,...,__ _~
.
301-11
Recliner(, rocken, Swhttl
x 12, U .95 tech. RC Cola 1-16
Hospllet.
Veil~ Or.; Polnl "
rockers and love seats, and
01. 79c plus tu and bottles,
Pleaoant, Wut Vlrgt"'a. ·•· @ _
_. _..·_.. ·.: '_::·
·
occasional
choirs. A lerge ALL TYPES of building
PhOM 67H3.0.
· ,
_...
•
Suni!Mm Brfld 6 - 16 or.
materlal1,
block,
brick,
ltwtr
to
Ill
.your
need,
Mltcllon
loaves 11. Kraft jelly 3 - 11
~lpes, windows, linitis, etc.
.
S'I'IIOENTS. CHtldftn ·
Open Friday till 8, plenty of
Ol. $1.
- ..,.-----:---241-3
Claudl
Winters, Rio Gr1111de,
•
.
·
o" ,
ot ·MuH1. ·Mrs. Frtdtlenti ·
fr"
porklng,
955
Second
2.46-3
0 . ·Phone 245-S12i offer 5.
Avenue, ..... 1111.
Wanted To Bl!r.~ .. ·.. :.: ~~··,.::;,.~~·Ct&lt;..,.~ .
123-tl
:'::
. ,:-:A~fi;";S;;:O::N::._:--:n_--:,ur--:-;,n;lture.
' 221-11
JUNK
aulos •IJd tcrap molal. ··: .'.
:
· · ·
:W-211 ·
ICMauaa, Olifo. 2 miles above
~
--;N;,;sd!AA;n.~n~ww~il~wt~.?~·
381-1776.
'
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.
'~
·.
..
.
Sllvor ar1dgt Is hiving an old JUST whet you're tooi&lt;lnt for SEE our tlumlnum bldg1.
·
·
·.
2e11
·
wA~r.Eo
·
•',,..
to
~•·v-~
fashioned tradl-ln week.
'65 Oldsmobile station
Heavy duly, with flooring ,
3 T:-:A-:Trldt In your · old fit' new.
9 pa~ . Air conclfflonlng,
:-R:-EN
L-or_
busl
___ntll_;___,.......;:ty ,
~f'J,'.;, l:n:
wlrod
lor electric. Also Weir
Don't mlq our" 6 pltca living
P.B.. P.S., one owner cor,
Ytrgtnle chunk coal, droln
. In or neer
"'. s:30 p. m: _.::: ·" , ·1 "'·
sui" fit' anly llfUS:
low mtreage, good sl\ape, 446lilt, boll . tile, _ , and
owner. Phone 416 .tOt. , . . .. , ·, ,.
. .
. · :W.J
Don't forgo!,.. *'lvtr frtt 1171 afler 5, 446-4:105.
mort•. Galli DOl II Blocri. i.
" ' '
2e-6 ., ...
..
10 shop this week ancl - •·
241-tf
Coat Co., 123'/:i P1111, .w~-m:r.
~_; ANYOMii llillhlng 'to 'g •w.-r
FARM 1creage with or w1 ...
207-tf
•._. .....au paj:t. '01 ·Air ~ •
~~------~~· ~
. --------~
ANTIQUE
pump organ, . all
ELECTRDLUX Vocuvm
original except new btllowo,
house. call .....ms. MancltY
Unflarlllli 1o 1M~
- 'lllltl
lhru Fri.
· , · . ._, tli 0:-"- ~ cep,. ' 1 ,.:
o - complete wllll llf. Over .. ~s old. Medt by
DELIVERY
·)~·' GM
or-., '' c.mtl
11
7' -y,- MI
W
~
-:
AN-::T-::E:O~
Io-llu
..1·-o r- tr
:;,;.i ;,·~,' '" 01 ~ 1 • .. ·'-"·
,.
.,
•- r-· Pay-· ..
t•pt -whon-e
992390' .
..
toy oleclrlc l(atn, ...._-11¢
· · · · ':
J4f.l
;;;i.«~~vc~~etrp.ltnaval- s'yr.,CUM,'"o
• •• SERVICE Statlan for ......
Phone ...._.
·
••coltont lcicotjon, ,.td
I
•
241-lt
245-6' J O 350 dozor, 67 mooal wlfh
trtlnlng. PINM call 441GI5
blldt lind wrench. 66 model
1-S p.m. Evtnlnga ......_,_,
DRIVER SALES Want~ To Rett.
., . .
. ~~=~:
2• 12
NEW 1f72 ZIG·UG Sewing
'1600 serln lnlornallonat
M&amp;clllue In or'-tnal factory
lr·-'- "~
-----~-:--- _
"'"n In A-1 condltlort .
4 ROOM tloust or ep~rlmtftt '
1
car on, lg- •• to make
Call 2M...,,
""ALt'"IEO ln-._. .............
downsfoln. 1 adult. can ......
bullor.llals1, on bultans.
1 1 '""
,.
...... • ,.......,
1f42.
.
managrams.llldn~~llerancy - - - - - - - - = - 52- t _ for • NEW canca,t In the
dtiiL"'t.':lfllllllt lilt twist o1 a 1 _ 16 FT. PULL
··-per· marketing field, 'iilth retail
$3.57 PIR HOUR - - - , - - - ; - - - ' IAif In
outlet avallllflle _ , In tho
_...._ ___,
and 1 .IGhn DNA ush hog. Gallipolis are~~ . C.111-221-~
, OR 4 BEDROOM
-·-·
Can lie 1ttn et William MtdMit R~D. 7~ E. City
Excolltnl roltroncH. c.ll
~ut.;r.:~ lur!loll miJshU, tc.vshint Strttt, Co1111111M. Ollie 021:1•

Eastern

67 MIICURY COUGAR

;::.======__, '·=-.:~10 Gr~.

1970 DoDGE 4 DR, H. T, _ _ _ _ _ $1995
Air and all the extras.
t969 FORD WAGON-- - - - -St495
I0 Passenger.
1972 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE _~---J:2695
4 Door sedan. P.S., P. B.
1969 CHEV. 4 DR. HT- - - - - - S1595
Air and ail the extras.
1972 VEGA GT- $2295
1968 BUICK,2 DR. HT---~-- 51195

'2695

61 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN

ld

CATS and ~llttnt lo lli¥1 -Y·
HeIp lattlcl
, . . c.•1 2M *''» , . ,
.
WAN"ft"Cl River emploo,-. ' .;.... ~ ;.. · ' ' · ' ~3 ,
opply lllut fountain Motel, · 111r . 111 . ·Miil, · ......,.
room M.
·..,,• ..., ....,_ ct11m1.
24Doll
IIUM'lllllullr'vlcl,,.. Pint

If you., ar,e Interested
in a riew or used car,
be sure you check
with us before you
buy.

'1995

'70 CHIVIOI.IT CHEVIW
.

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id
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2A7·3

:-'::::=::-:-:--:----:-:-

LIFT IN layoway, dlluxt REGISTERED l!ottlllll Sel'tl'
...... Mwlng madllllt. This pup1 and rtlllls ed 1
IIIIChlat •-ceJis, arne, ~oldUirldor ..het-:
tmlirol"·re aft'd ma•"
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:W-.1
· t4l.•G!'J!t!r&amp;U5permtllfll.
c.tl -.qt.
66
Iuick Eleclro 225.
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l!anltilfo, 111w
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·Plaque awarded
By United Press lntematlonal

the touching strains of· the
BACHTEL STADIUM During the half-time activities Wahama Alma Mater, Gerald
ol the Wahama-Ra.venswood Simmons, director of bands at
football game on Friday night, Wahama, washpnored with the
as the 180 member Ravens. presentation of a plaque in
wood Red Devil band played · connection with Outstanding
'·
Bandmaster Award for the
State of ·west Virginia given .
Court sets up
him In March, 1972 at the West
Virginia Music Educators
tax , ~epeal · wte
convention in Parkersburg.
'
The plaque is ·in recognition
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The of the fine bands Mr. Sinunons
Ohio Supreme Court Friday . has brought to Wahama during
rejected three · separate athis years as director. Mr. Jim
tempts by op)lOilentll of the
.Porter, director of the Ravensincome tax repeal movement
wood band and Vice President
and ruled Issue 2should stay on
of
TAU Chapter, PHI Beta Mu,
SIMMONS HONORED - Gerald Slmlnons, Wabama '
the Nov. 7 ballot.
·
National Music · Organization,
Band Director, was honored with a· plaque given to him for
Both Gov. John J. Gilligan made the presentation.
being
selected Outlltanding Bandmaster of the Year at the
and Ohioans for Fai" Taxation . · Mr. Simmons joined the
West Virginia Mqsic Educators Convention In Parkersburg.
I,Yelcomed the high court's
facul ty at Wahama in the fall of
At left is Mr. Sinunons and Jim Porter, Band Director .of
decision, confident that by 1966 as director of bands. Since
Ravenswood High School. -Photo by sam Nichols Ill.
election day the people will find
that time both the Junior and
the tax reform program fair Senior bands have brought
and vote the Issue down.
many trophies and honors to
their school. Some of the many as Covington-Holmes and won superior ratings In both conactivities they have par- first in their class, first in cert music and marching. The
ticipated in are the Elkins parade marching, and cat·ried Wahama Band during the
Forest Festival, Spencer Black home the coveted honor band years of 1970 and 1971 sealed
Walnut Festival, Glenville trophy . They participated for more of itll members in the All
N&gt;\ME PALLBEARERS
Homecoming, Ohio University the first time thi.s ye~r in the State Band than any other high
GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers Band Day, Marshall Univer- Tri-State · Marc.hing Band school band In the state,
for saturday morning's ser- sity Band Day, Virginia Beach Festival sponsored by ·Mar- regardless of class or size. The
vices of John Churchhill were Band Festival, Mariatta, Ohio shall University and came Band also has the distinction of
named Saturday by the Waugh- Band-0-Rama in which they home with first place in their this year being chosen Honor
Halley-W,ood Funeral Home. won first in field maneuvers; class and the honor band Band for the State of West
They are Jim Davidson , The Annual Eastern Kentucky trophy .
Virginia. '
George Ossman, . Lonnie Marching Band Festival in
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald SimThe band participates each
Burger, •lim Churchill, Bill which this year they competed year in the Regional Ratings mons niake their home in New
·Lakin, and Oscar Cain.
againslsuch outstanding bands Festival and consistently wins Haven. ·

RepOrts persisted today that
a cease-fire agreement in the .
Vietnam War might be near.
The Communist delegations to
the .Paris peace talks said
conditlons for peace were at.
hand but ttiat basic .issues
.~emained unsolved.
uRwnor$ are rwnor:s, but
bombs are bombs," said Ly
Van Sau, the Viet Cong
spokesman in Paris:
U.S. Presidential Adviser
Henry A. Kissinger today
ended five days of talks with
South Vietna.mese President
Nguyen Van Thieu tn Saigon
an~ flew back to Washington lo
report to President Nixon. The
U.S. embassy would say only
that the talks " made
progress."
. Some South Vietnamese
government sources said Thieu

.

QUEEN AND &lt;XlURT - M\18 ((1m Pope, 1972 Soutll·
western Homecoming Queen, is shown with members of her
court. They are, left to right, Carolyn Baker, Barbara Hailey,
Diane Terry, ~ella Blevins, and Sherry Peck. Not shown,
Linda Coilier, flower girl, and Mary Ruff.

,------------------.--------1·
I

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I

I 'D ateline

!·.

I

!

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I

GalliJJ

By Hobart Wilson }r.

THE long-awaited boom predicted for thiS inunedlate area
has arrived. Traffic in downtown Gallipolis resembles Broad and
.High In Columbus most of the time. Newcomers are out in full
force searching for homes to rent or buy. Local merchantll,
llfOcers, schools, business establlshmentll and especially utility
firms are feeling the impact.
· -

++++
THREE or four years ago development officials said there
would be some "growing pains" as the area moved forward.
Local officials spent many hours, days and even months
preparing for the big change. like everything e.Jse, however,
there's always the unexpected, and this tends to curtail overall
acUvlUes. Tbese problems are being met headon, and hopefully
will be worked out, eventually.

++++

KIM POPE, a senior, wucrowlll41he IJ'/2bomecomlng
&lt;queen Friday night at ~thwesleJ'!I Hilh Sdlool.

t

'

.'

++++

'

.

·Amendment endorsed
'

, PT. PLEASANT- The Point
Pleasant-Mason County
Cbal'hber of Commerce in a
brd · of Directors luncheon
mee Ung Friday noon endorsed
the Better School Buildings

PoUution control
project approve,d
PT. PLEASANT - The
Mason ·County Court has
authorized a poUution control
project at Foote Mineral
Company's Ne)V Haven Plant,
to be financed by Industrial
Development B.onds.
. Tbese ·bonds are payable
solely by the Company and the
County Government has no
cost or liability as these bonds
will be issued pursuant to the.
New Industrial Development
Bond Act.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Daniel
Paxton, Patriot, 0., Vernon
Johnson, Racine; Mrs. Earl
Freeman, Lakin ; Oden
Pearson, Point Pleasant;
Robert Strange, Letart; Mrs.
George Glll, Letart; Patricia
Con dee, Henderson; Mrs .
Bonnie \!aldie, Point Pleasant,
and Mrs . Roy Bauer, Point
Pleasant.

Bring the Children To

NEW(X)MERS, or anyone for 'til at matter nee ling
aulstance, shoillll contact tbe G•llia County Area Information
Service, ~9266, between 9 a.m., and 5 p.m., or 446-4952. RQbin
Johruion, a member of the GAHS Cooperative Office E&lt;;lucation
OaiS, 1s on duty in the afternoons to follow up individual calls to
tee that the person l}eeding aaslstance ge!B it. The project is
being conducted by tbe Firat United ·fresbyterlan Church In
coollfation with the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce.

MRS. Vaughn Glassburn, Gallipolis, received a newspaper
clipping recently from Peekskill, N.Y., telling of the retirement
of M~ Dorothy Raymond, former Gallla County District
Ubrary employ!lf.

Amendment. In doing so, the
++++
cc jJlned eubernatcir.tal
MISS Raymond was a member ol the Gallia library staff for
candidates and ~y others in
five
years (1!KIU7). While bere, she was active in tbe Business
support of the amendment
which ivlll face voters in the and Professional Women's Club, Episcopal Cburch and many
General ElecUon, Noy~mber 7. other community activities. She· was also Instrumental in obPaul Crabtree, cc president, taining bookmobile service for rural Gallia County.
++++
presented the proposal to
directors. He said Ibis would
MISS Raymond's retirement as librarian of tbe Field .
amount to $3.5 million for Ubrary in Peeksklll became effective last Sunday (Oct. 1; ). She
~ason County.
had served the profession 51 years in five states. Miss Raymond
The ,•purpose of the amend- plans to "take It easy" and visit areas where she has practiced
ment. is to authorize the her profession during the pS,t half century.
legislature to issue and sell
++++
state bonds in an amount not ' A GRADUATE of the Ubrary School at the University of
exceedlJlg $200 million for Buffalo, Miss Raymond later continued her study in the field at
distribution to county boards of Detroit. Her first job was in Troy, Ohio, then her native
education for use by such Binghamton, N. Y.,followed by al4-yearstay (~erlongest at any
boards for 'the co111truction, one location) atOlean, N.Y. From Olean she went to Savannah,
renovation, remodeling and Ga., then to Gallipolis. From here, she went to Ft. Walton Beach,
equipping -of ·elementary. and Fla., then to DeKal~, Ill., where she -.as before going to Peekssecondary school buildings and kill. She plans to reside in Savannah.
facilities and . for acquisition
++++
and preparation of sites
ADD LOOSE NOTES- During the recent recognition tea at
therefore.
the Gallipolis State Institute, tbe Gallipolis Junior Women's Club
and James Rose were presented certificates. Somehow, tbey
were omitted from the story which appeared In the Tribune the
day after the ceremony took place.
PALLBEARERS NAMED
++++ .
GALLIPOLIS - Pallbeare~"S
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune
for Laura Clark's I p.m.
and
w,eekly Gallla Times .. . Pt. Pleasant Register printed in
Sunday services at Mt. Zion
Church were announced . Parkersburg after blaze destroys newspaper plant in downtown
Saturday by the Waugh-Halley- Pt. Pleasant ... Glen Patiley, 19, loses lltile finger, part of ring
Wood Funeral Home. They finger in C()rn picker acci&lt;lent ... Temperature dips to 20 degrees,
are: Carl Montgomery, Lee Gallia records first snowfall of season ... Dr. Donald R.
Montgomery, Calvin Layne, Warehime to build $75,000 clinic next to city building ... Boosters
Clarence Layne, Junior invite 1932 SEOAL championship Blue Devils to attend 1952
homecoming game with Atbens ... GAHS slaps 13-0 upset lo.Ss on
McGuire and Johnny Ward.
defending league champion Wellston.

.

reminded Sen. M. Morris Jack- iilg that death is a "cruel and been, prepared, and th~ comson, a committee member and unusual" penalty the way it is mlttee is to select tbe best one.
Deaih is ·pre84lrlbed for kill·
a black Democrat from Cleve.- now carded out.
land wllo believes "any indlv!·May be Restudied
ing Qigh state and federal of-.
dual who hu a handgun is a
The capital punishment sec. flclals, kllllng for hire or for a
potential criminal." ·
lion Is part of an enUre new ' crime syndicate, mass mut·
"Jesus said to forgive .70 criminal code on which the der, killing prison guards or
times seven," countered L. D. commlllee is working. U it is law enforcement or court of- ·
Pollard, a black prisoil chai&gt;" not approved, by the end of the ficers, or murdering. defenJain representing the ~hio year, tile pr~posed code wlll seless babies, old people or the
Council of Churches wlio have to start all over again in physically ,or mentally ill..
claimed he could forgive next year's General As$embly.
The dlriiculty in making such
somebody who murdered a
While members of the Judi- a list .is deciding_who should
member of his own family, ciary Committee complain· be 9h it. As Sen . . &gt;1e"1'
given a lltUe imie.
·
· ·eVen they'- mostly lawyers:.... O'Shaugmessy·, O.Cohqnbus, a
The Judiciary Comniittee Ia cannot' fully Interpret the committee member, said:
not out to e'llract anY eyf!l and &amp;lpreme Court's narrow 5-4 "You can't judge the qualitY ol
teeth, nor.lrill It have the In- rullng, the lawmakers are a human life by the status of
finite ,patience reconunended proceeding on these assuml&gt;" the person living 11." ..
by ·Re'l'. Pollard. M with.Q!oet tloos:
·
Wllether death shOuld be exlellalation, : the answer · Is
- KUling of ~rpose and not lracted 1n return for death in
somewhere lti bet"!veen.
of passion rate the death penal- those epeclal cases is a quesThe committee is faced with ty.
.lion for the committee to pondmodify~ OlllQ'a old law on
- Among the cruelties of er. .
ln.uropce. Contoot capital puria~JWent to conform death are the agonizing
The three pfliPOI&amp;ls also rec.
~with a u.s. &amp;upreme.Court.rul· procesB .of exhaulling all-letlal- IIJllllelld death for. llllll'llers
hopes and the falllblllty of 12 motivated by.L 'racial · or
human beings pronouncing a rellcloqa hatred, killings
sentence of such finality on designed to advance or deter
R..,t Estate for sale
another of their ldnd.
political lntereat lab« unions
CHARMI.NG. older brick and Swift death, unlfonnly but ot a poUtlcll PldloeoPIIY.
·
frame home across fr.om liumanely applied to those who
When the coiiUlllttee retllrnl
Syracuse trade school - 4 perpetrate wWful and heinous after the election. It wiD have
~f:~: ;.:o:;~~~~~~1; murders, might meet the .Su- 1o decldi whether a per10n'1
many extr~1 , $11,000. For preme ()pll't pldellnes, the thouahll, ofttn IJI1II'ky n,n to
;a~'• show'.~ c:au 1-111- lawmakaibelieve.
· trallled ]ll)'eblatrllill. Clll be
lll-22_3fc
And 10 I trlo of · CIJII~ Jlllde cllar
lo .-vi! M
n~-:--:::t.:::::--~.:.:
Plllhlt••t
~-.LIIioolilltil

Devoted To The lnlere&amp;l&amp; OJ The Meig.,·Mason Area

McGovern will

VOL. XXV NO. 133

See all the wonderful .
. tQy~ for boys and girls
of all ages. They'll en joy
seeing the excellent
selection and you can
. use our lay-away plan to
hold · the .toys your
children want . Bicycles
- Tricycles - Wagons Games · Books - Pool
Tables - Fish~r Price ·
Playskool · - Tonka .
' Doll..s · Gun and Holster
sets ·. Erector - Sets •
Chemistry - Romper
. Room · Arts and Crafts -·
Doll Furniture - Chairs ·
Table ·and ' Chair Sets
and ma,ny, many other
Items.

You'll enjoy a trip to the
Toy Store to see what's
new for, Otrllfmas '72.
:

...

.,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENS,·

~;:::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:!:&gt;.::Z!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;~~=~

take to tube

!r!:

Deadline to kill passengers.extended

:.: .:.

SOFIA, Bulgaria (UP!) - Four Turkish hijackers extended their deadline for the
release of 12 political prisoners from Turkish jails today, saying that if Turkey refu~d
they would blow up their planeload of hostages. The gang's first deadline pass(jd as,the
plane sat on the runway at Sofia Airport and Radio Sofia announced that "thanks to the
intervention of Bulgarian authorities, the deadline has been extended." The radio did not
announce the new deadlirie.
In Ankara the Turkish Interior Ministry said the hijackers had set the new deadline
as 7:30p.m. (1:30 p.m. EDT.). Turkey, in a note to the Bulgarian government, said it
would under no circumstances agree to negotiate with the hijackers. The Turkish cabinet
has been meeting in emergency ,session to consider the incident. The hijackers, who
commandeered the ,Turkish Airlines Boeing 707 over Turkey on a flight to Sofia early
Sunday morning, demanded freedom for a dozen political prisoners and sweeping social
reforms in Turkey.
H their orders were not carried out, the hijackers said, they would blow up themselves
and their 66 hostages.
During an inftight shooting shortly before landing Sunday, the hijackers wounded a
crew memberianald a pusenger. They were taken off the piJine lor emergency treatment
at a city hosp t .
Sunday's snowst~rm made it difficult for witnesses to keep track of the activity going
on around the plJ!ne as passengers were permitted to walk in small groups for exercise.

~l
·:·:
.M
:;:;
::::

WASHINGTON (UP!)- GeorgeS. McGovern, who says he
is confident of an upset victory by a narrow margin, plans to
concentrate on television appearances in poplilous industrial
states in the waning days of his campaign.
The Democratic presidential cundidate flies today to
Philadelphia where he wlll pay a Veterans Day call on wounded
servicemen in a U. S. naval hospital. He planned a television
appearance before leaving Philadelphia for New York City,
where another in a series of telethons is scheduled.
The focus on television in the last two weeks of his uphill
campaign reflected McQovern 's need to reach mass audiences
oofore the Nov. 7 b811oting. On election eve, he will hold another
marathon telethon and on tbe.day of the balloting he will be home
in Sioux Falls.
In an interview on ABC's Nguyen Van) Thieu down the
"Issues and Answers" Sunday, river" after standing by him
McGovern aaid the alleged for four years.
bugging of Democratic headMcGovern objected mildly
quarters
and political when told that the White House
espionage indicate that had suggested some of the
President Nixon knew what questions for the TV interview
was happening or "has lost and said he thought it was
control of his campaign."
"interesting that the President
Either explanation, he said, himself is afraid, apparently,
. for such "scandalous, illegal, to come on this program with
unconstitutional behavior" me, or to come on any other
was p~oof Nixon "is not television program and raise
qualified to serve as his own question&amp;".
With peace rumors circlilating around the world, McGovern also told interviewers
that he was "still very skeptical that Mr. Nixon is going to
negotiate an end to this war
before the election ."
But, he added, ''now It may
be that he is trying to figure out
some way to sell General
(South Vietnamese President

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slalebo- Reporter
OOLUMBU~ (l:I.PI) - The
Senate Judiciary Committee,
before It pu,t off untU after the
election a decision on restoring
the death penalty ' in Ohio,
heard last week from both ex•
tremes on the matter.
"The Bible aays 'an eye for
an eye and a tooth for a tooth/"

1

,.

Pr~sident."

Committee hears both ·extremes
'

NO S'l'OP PROJECT- Work on the ground near Meigs High
School at Rock Springs continued Sunday as huge equipment
moved diri in preparation for a baseball park, track .facilities,
football practice field, band practice field and physical education
area. The Shelly and Sands Construction Company is donating
El'!uipment, Jaymar Coal Company equipment and operators,
Local 18 of the operating engineers, operators, and City Ice and
Fuel the diesel fuel n.eeded. ·

final 3 weeks

lberfelds
Toy Store

..

and Kissinger had reached an UP! correspondent George
agreement in principle for an Sibera, repeated the Commu- 1
Indochina cease.f11e before the nisi position : "more than ever, ·
U.S. presidential elections 15 Thleu must go." Both delega.
days away, but neither f$!.~in- · tions said Thieu was blocking
ger nor the embassy would plans for a South Vietnamese
comment on these reports.
.goverriment "of national aclndications in Saigon and cord" -{)ne that would include . ·
Paris were that the chief ob- the Communists.
stacle to an Immediate
The Coiillllunist statements
agreement was Thieu's opposi- ' coincided with the publication
lion to a coalition .government of bold French newspaper
that would include the Commu- headlines predicting an early
nists. There were no official cease-fire and peace agreestatements on this because of ment.
·· 1
the secrecy of the Thieu"Vietnam on the verge of
Kissinger talks, but the Peace," said 1.3 milllongovernment-controlled Saigon circulation · France-Soir. The
radio and television repeated paper's Saigon correspondt!llt
previous Thieu speeches op- said:.an agreement In principle
posing a· coalition with the on ·a cease-fire throughout ·
Communists. · ·
Indochina wolild be announced
The Viet Cong and North before Nov. I but that all the
Vietnamese Paris delegations, ll'oblems have not been settled
in telephone interviews with · (Continued on page 10)

But in res)lOilse to one White
House question submitted,
McGovern denied . ever
coparing Nixon to Adolf Hitler.
He said, however, that Nixon's
policy of dropping "several
mlllion tons" of bombs on
North Vietnam "is the most
barbaric thing that has happened since World War II since the days of Adolf Hitler."

ews.. in Briefi

~

.,

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,~

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:.:~.:

15 days left for
•

McGovern's race

...
By United Press International
.·.:,.i_•.r_..;.
George S. McGovern, who
Insists
he will beat President
::;:
:::: Nixon, has 15 days to make up
~ what pollster Louis Harris
:;:;
estimates at a 26 percentage
:;:; points deficit.
·
;:;;
Harris said Sunday Nixon
i:~~ was leading McGovern 59 to 34
·.~.·.:_:. per cent on the basis of a
·,. survey conducted Oct. 17-19.
:;l But the pollster said in an In·

t,
~

Eagle
award
made
Cow,deer die on roads .

Three accldentll were investigated by the Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach's
Department over the weekend.
Saturday al8 :30 p.m. on SR
7, one-tenth of a mile south of
Hidden Lakes Road, Ellen A.
Wirth , Charleston , was
traveling northeast when a cow
ran into the path of her car, and
was killed. In .a~Qther accident
a deer was killed.
Mrs. Wirth had visible in.
jUries but was not immediately
treated. There was heavy
damage to the front end of the
car .

The cow, valued at $300, was
owned by Jennings Beegle,
Minersville, Rt. I.
Sunday at 2:40a.m. on SR 7,
al the junction of Old Chesler
Road, Larry A. Eblin, 29,
Pomeroy, was traveling southwest when he came into a
curve al the end of the old Dark
Hollow Road. The truck he was
driving went off the road,
struck and tore. out 8 posts
and 100 feet of guardrail,
turned upside down to go
another 100 feel on its top
and into a creek. Eblin apparently was thrown from the

Citizens' assembly hour
on Wednesday changed

, County but 1·n Oht' o Recom
A Meigs County Citizens
·
•
·
·
11
m
ndations
and
opinions
ob
A
bl
Sch
I
shot down three Ruaslan-built MIG2ls, the fastest jets in the
ssem yon
oo s ortgma Y e
·
North Vietnamese air arsenal, in a dogfight over the Hanoi area, announced for 8 p.m. Wed- tai ned from citizens at the local
the U.S. command said today. No U. S. planes were damaged in nesd ay wt'11 be held a1 the seminars have been directed to
· ·•·
Metgs
nlgh Sch oo1a t 7:30 p.m. a te n tat·Jve se t of goa1s for
the fight, the command said. The ..aerial battle occurred Oct. 15,
·
c t ed uc atJ·on ·,n Ohio ·
Wd d
e nes ~Y. Met~s oun Y
but the story was released only today because ''we just got
Superintendent of Schools
confirmation" of the MIG kills, the command said. A command
Robert
Bowen said today.
spokesman said he had no explanation of why it took so long to
The
assembly
will provide
make the confinnation,
.. In the ground war, field reports said VietCong commandos Meigs Countians a convenient . Showers, windy and mild
launched a fuWe attack in the village of Suol Giua only 11 miles way to participate in fixing today. Highs in the low to mid
north of Saigm before dawn today and were beaten off by goa ls for elementary and 60s. Showers, windy and tursecondary schools in ' Ohio ning cooler tonight. Lows in the
government troops. The reports said two Communists were .
during the bicentennial era to 40s. Tuesday cloudy and colder
killed In the fighting.
climax in 1976, Bow~n said.
with a chanee of showers north
· The county meeting follows portions. Highs in the upper 40s
WASHINGTON - A DEMOCRATIC congressman says he ·the
la local citizen seminars
. held to low 60s.
(Continued on Page 10)
. sl May, not only in Meigs
.
·- ·: · ,,.. ~~:::::::::::::::=::::;~::::::;:::o~:::::::;*::::;:::~:::~-;::;:-;;:;:;:~::::::::::;:~.;::;;::::~!?.'f.f~m::::o»"U:;9".:-;:::::::::~:

Wea'ther

LANGSVILLE - The Eagle
award, highest in scouting, was
vehicle. He was lying on the presented to Robert Council, ·
opposite side of the road.
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
He was taken to Veterans Council , at the Langsvi lle
Memori a l Hospital by the Church of Christ here Sunday.
Pomeroy E-R squad where he
Robert is a member of Exwas treated and released. The plorer Post 239, Langsville, of
accident is still under in· which his father is advisor. He

~:~~r:~~~-

The truck was
Sunday at 11 :30 a.m. on
County Road 32, Eagle Ridge
Road, three-tenths of a mile
east of SR 7, Shirley Bentz
. Long, Minersville, Rt. I, was
traveling west when a small
buck deer jumped into the path
of the pickup truck and was
killed . There was minor
damage to the truck.

~~o~~phomore at Meigs High

Young Council bega n in
scouting in November, 1966,
with Pack 240 In Rutland. He
was In Cub Scouting and
Webel.os for 2\'.! years, then
went into U1e Boy Scouts in
May, 1969 until February, 1971.
In March, 1971, he joined
Explorer Posl 239. He has held
offices in post and Troop 239 as
::-.::r.::-;o;~·:~·:::•:·l~::·::=::-::;::·~:·:-::.:::·:o.:::···:·:-:·····» well as being a den chief in Cub
OUTLOOK...... Scouting. He presenlly is a
Ohio Extended Outlook
member of the Order of the
Arrow. He has served on the
Wednesday Through Friday:
slaff of Camp Arrowhead with
Cold WedneRday through
Friday. Chance of showers
the kitehen crew and as an
.
archery instructor.
Wednesday night and Thnr..
..,.
Scout Troop 239 and Post 239
day. Highs In the upper 50s.
members served as the color
Low• near 40 early Wedguard for Sunday's ceremonies
nesday and In the low to mid
in leading the Pledge of
40s Thunday and Friday.
Allegiance to the Flag. Robert
::~~~,:~:::f.~&lt;'::ff.f~§J='~*'-::~7&amp;::::* presented his mother the Eagle
pin and his father a tie bar.

·EXTENDED

HQ bSQfi ,.W ~
11
,
speak here
·
~...!

Ray Hobson, vice president
of Ohio Landmark, Inc., will be
k.
1 th
th
1
spea
er
a
e
29
annua
dinner meeting of the Meigs

ww 2 no

·~

Robert was presented his · district level.
medal by former scoutmoaster
Jane Ann Bobo presented the
Robert Swick of Troop 239.
organ prelude and Carl Gorby, ·
Glen Crisp, an Eagle Scout, post institutional represenalso served on the Court of !alive, was · master of
·Honor as well as Harlin ceremonies. A reception was
Newsome, Lyle Dunsmoor and held in the church fellowship
William R Knight from the room following the court.

Bike-a-Thon set
Bicycle riders will have fun
and at the same lime earn
money for the Meigs County
Chapter of the American
Cancer Society Sunday.
Mrs . Ferman Moore,
president, said "blke-a-lhon"
will be sponsored Saturday
from the Cancer Society
headquarters on Cole St. in
Middleport, beginning at9a.m.
to Point Pleasant.
Everyone from eight to 80 is
invited to take part. No motor
bikes will be permitted. Bike
riders are asked to secure
sponsors who will agree to
contribute a sum of money to
in be
f th
the ~apter I name o e
individual making the trip.
F a m i 1y ,
I r i e nd s ,
businessmen or the individual
may serve as sponsors. Any

.OVer,
. quz
- •o-t-e- ~

amoun l from a penny up Is
accepl.able, Mrs. Moore sal&lt;!. It
is suggested sponsors pledge a
figure "per mile" ridden by the
participants. Everyone wllling
to sponsor a rider is asked to
call Mrs. Moore.
The event wiJJ start at 9 a.m.
Saturday. Riders wlll repor·t 'to
the Cancer HQ building on Cole
· Sl. where they wlll pick up
name carda .and sign an accident release form. The ride
not only. will be from Middleport lo Point Pleasant, but
also will include the return
trip. Free Royal Crown Colli
will b~ provided riders at
various points along the way.
This is the first time the local
unit has attempted the blke-alhon. Mrs. Moore niay be
contacted at 992-7231.

One]ap "ghting

Soil and Water Conservaliun
District at 7:30p.m. on Thurs.

LUBANG . ISLAND, . PhUipo

;
Williamsburg, Ohio, grew up
" The Eisenhower Ad another holiday 10 relax on. on a farm · in warren county.
ministration, following the This may delight lhe tourist He . attended Wilmington
Soviet Leninist tradition of ·industry,. but it ·is api mmoral College and the University of
renaming sacred traditions, example for youth.
Cincinnati.
changed the hame from Ar·
·Entertainment at the dinner
mistice Day to Veterans Day·
,;If elected to Congress, 1will will include numbers from the
. Now this is . followed by the sponsor legislation to restore "Fall Follies" of the Big Bend
Ntxonaclion mmoving the day the real name and meaning of Minstrel Association 's new
from II Nov.e.mber to 1111llL...Al'IT!lsUce- Day on Novemoor-snoWllni("tlierewnJ~lie an
Monday .in October, so that 1) . This shoul~ be done to help election or two supervisors.
people could .forget the . real raise the moral tone of our
Recognition will· be given
· mea~mg of war and J.l"ace, and · society which 'is already ou Is tanding · .cooper a tors
of ·the .~ce _foll~mg World suffering ·. from an excess ol durins the past year and a
War I 'n particular·
pleasure and a lack of political door prize will be awarded. The
:·.Now we just have another and historical judgment.'!
Salisbury PTA will serve the
long weekend tn October,
·
·
dinner.

.for oneoftwo holdout Japanese
soldiers authorltles say may
have killed and wounded ·130
personsina27-year-oldprlvate
war.
The defense department said
in Manila today that despite
this, ltmlght forgive the man If
and wben he is captured. His
comrade - lilthejungJesof
· Lubang Island died Thursday
in a clash with' pollee.
"World War n would have
ended · (for both men) on
•Thursday, but one man got
·away," said Lt. Col. Pedrlto de
Guzman, ,,f!ief of the national

-Veterans'' Day shift .a ssailed · I~!~:~~~~![a::sbur:C -~l~:r:~;:~z!E~~

I
l

later telethon appearance in
New York City. Nixon
schedliled an afternoon and
evening motorcade swing
through three counties in the
suburbs of New York City,
Westchester, Suffolk and
Nassau counllea.
On Sunday, Nixon. made
another .campalp raclio addreaaea from hia Camp David,
(Conilnuect on Page 10)

\%:::::::::::::~:::::::::::8:8~:~=~~:;;;;;:;:::;:;:::::::::~::::::::::'-:!:=::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=~:8!:?.::::i8::~:::;;;:::::~:: :;~:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;d!l:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~1;i

By United Press International
SAIGON - U. s: F• PHANTOM jet fighter-OOmbers have

Tent!l CongreSsional District Veterans Day was originally
· Democratic candidate Bob known as Armistice Day, and
Wbealey today assailed the was the one 'day in the year
Nixon Administration's action America celebrated peace,
of putting Veteran's Day 011 an because it was on the lith hour
October Monday ao that peDP.le of tbe lith day ',of the lith
could have one mll'e long month of 1918 .that the brutal
weekend. He released the four years' trench warfare in
--- ~lo.wi!!J 'l'.e.ten._l!!' ....D,. ac3-Y....,.o:Frcuan..,ce fi,!!lll!y came IQ l!!! mi.
statement.
"As a historian and the son.of
a World War I veteran, and,as
''Our veterans ol aU wars,
a veteran myself, I personally
who acrlflced their Uves that
resent what some politicians In
othen mJcbt live are properly
recent yesrs ])ave done to
remembered on Me:mcrlal Day dishonor
the moral meaning of
in ]IJlly. The FaD celebration of ArrnisUce Pay.

terview that "we still have
over two weelis to go and there
could be some shifts."
McGovern said In another
Interview that he believed ''we
are going to )\'In the election by
a narr.ow margin."
Today, the South Dakota
aenator scheduled a Vetera111
Day call upon WQWlded servicemen In a U.S. naval
hospital at PhUadelphla and a

pollee on the Wand.
Authorities tentatively
identified the . surviVQr stlll
fighting the - war' with a
Japanese army rlfle used a
generation ago as 2nd 'Lt. H1roo
Onoda, 50. He was listed by
authorities u the J~st holdout
ofthe Pacific war which ended
officially In 1945. ·
Searchers atepped ·up their
hunt on the .102-equare-mlle
Wand located 7S miles 10uthwest ofMiillliliybt'iifglng- lil
helicopters to track down the
man.
The man and his companion,
l'fc. Kirlshlchi Kozub, were
accused by Wand mWtary
authorities of killing_30pereoll8
and wounding more than 100

others during the past 'l1 years.
.Kozuka, 51, wai llaln in an
encounter with a five-lilan
patrol Thursday ·while his
wounded companion fled,
armed with a .25 caliber World
War, II Japanese rlfle. Kozukli
was identlfled Sunday by his
lrother.
·
, Defense ~cretary Juan
Ponce Enrile wu asked what
would happen to the remaiDlng
holdout In llght of the 3!1
murder.ch11J11es.
"It depends on what hu
· happened," be'aald. "We will ·
bave lo deal with him with a
certain drlree ol camp rdon.
Having beta in the jungle for 10
lOIII,maybebe hu '*n..actlnc
to 111'1111 ve hhn'llf"

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      <name>bailey</name>
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      <name>barringer</name>
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      <name>cochran</name>
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    <tag tagId="2506">
      <name>jividen</name>
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      <name>long</name>
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      <name>miller</name>
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    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
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      <name>williamson</name>
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