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c

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IZ-'l'ho llallySenttnei,MldcueiJPI't-P(IIldroy,O.,Dec. l, 1972

Health .planning
has .new ·concept
/
...

"

:~:w.w~».:::§;::::;;::;..::;~~

Gas ·executive says demand·s .excessive

I;RUSAOE PLANNED
Dr. HobPersooo, In charge
of the Southern Ohio
Crusade, said Thursday a
series of meetings will be
· conducted again In. Gallla
and .Meigs. counties. Dates
will lie announced.
·
Dr. Persons said helpers
are needed lor this next
"«:ounldown '73." They
should contact Cr usade
Headquarters on Little
Kyger Road, Rt. 1, Cheshire.

.
sid~ ratlon . of the en· useofth~landfor the terminaL c:;on~olidaledNatilraiGas Co., Calvert County to develop as
WILMINGTON, Dei. - vir&lt;mmental and land use
The two· environmental l l is Important, Partrtdge said, much of~ open space lands
Pre§~nt demands of the Sierra aspects or the terminal. The groups have ~ppealed. the FPC ·that they knuw what Columbw for !ecr~twnal purposes as 1S
/
Club ~~d the Maryland Con. two rou s do not charge that decision in Federal court and has offered in order that the . feastble.! .
COLUMBUS · ·
Two Care Facilities Service, IJ. S.
servallon. Council for changes the ~roj~cl has any adverse hav~ threatened to seek an project move forward.
. . P~rtridge noted that the
nationally
recogpized Departmeht of Health,
'" pl.ans for a liquefied gas environmental effect on water injunction to stop construction ·For this reason he detailed Sierra Club has been
.
authorities .In health care Education and Welfare, in·
tern~mal
at Cove Point, Md., and ir quality but of all the of the facility . The delay in. the major concessions which that the Calvert Cdilnty zonmg
legislation yesterday told . a dicate that 21 states have
threaten to .deny millions of
/
in olv~ _ county vo lved in such litigation Columbia bas made to the two resolution covering ap·
alate-wide · comprehensive already adopted Certification
homeowners badly 'needed new ~~t;e:nd ;ederal _ they ar~ threatens the ·preservation of groups in order to induce them proximately 325 acres of the
health planning conference of Need which prohibits the
suppl!es . of clean-bur ning the onl ones that object to the the present favorable . LNG to termina.te the litigation:
site restricts its use for LNG
here that Ohio's rising health construction of new health care
nat.ural gas and would further
Y
·
1.
Colwnbla
would
"take
storage
and regasiflcation. .
contract. This oontract con,
care coots caiJ be co]ltrolled facilities without prior apcompound
.the
national
energy
Ia
ins
prices
much
lower
than
.
steps
.for
th~
redesign
of
the
..-.,
After
conscienUous,
through a new regulatory proval of. health planning ;~:..&gt;.'l. . UJ ' W"NfV~~ I'I!l.
criSIS, John W. Partridge,CJ
the prices in contracts which facilities so that instead of the · diligent effort, we have m~de
concept called "Certification of agencies.
Ohio consumer a great deal of chairman of Columbia Gas . UeS
have been recently negotiated proposed dock and trestle ?f ever~ ,possible con~ession,"
Need. "
John F. O'Leary, a Boston
.
System,
sa1d
today.
.
by
other compani es for approXImately 6,000 feet m Partridge staled. ' Anything
money," the State ''II spokes.
· OVer 100 participants from attorney who has held severa 1 man on health pointed out. "We
• Algerian LNG
Plans for the terminal to
·
length, we would build the further at this time would not
0
Ohio's 11 regional com- key positions in Massachusetts . are at a cross-road ·where we handle 650 million cubic feet of
"Columbia has offered in . prop(ISed docking facilities at be in the public i.nterest. But as
prehensive health planning state govern,ment, spoke on the must make some significant gas datly from Algeria have
· ·
writing to make a number of appruxlmalely the location . our offer states, . we _have
agencies, inclllding William H. application of certification of decisions to be able to take been approved by the Federal
major concessions to meet presently planned (about 6,000 agreed to work ~lth County
Allen, M.D., and James I need to Ohio's health care
Power Commtsslon and other m• CJ"dent
expressed concerns of the two feet off shore) and connect the and State authQrities to utilize
advantage
Boyce of Athens, heard Dr. system
·r· t' of f concepts
d d liket Feder~!. State and County
,
groups .. Partridge said dock and the land based for recreational p11rposes
"Th e· Introd uc.tion .of Cer- some
cert1 1ca
10n mto
. o nee
~n pu
Harald Graning, Assl' Surgeon
Ieeth
plannmg
the agenc1es after careful con·
"howev~r, the demands of the facilities via a tunnel under the whatever portions of .the open
Gen.eral and Director; Health tificallonofNeedmOhlowould · f 1
h ith
d .
Ga llipolis police . were two groups have gone well water .that :-vould eon tam the lands thai 0peratlng ex.
. 'I'
d u ure ea
care· e1IVery
,
Improve
the
avallabl
lty
an
le
r
Oh'
,
searching
· for clues this beyond what we can agree to vanous ' .ptpe~ and other perience 1nd1cates to be
1
accesS!'bil't
1y of hea lth care sys m or 10,
morning in a shooting incident and still protect the public necessary eqUipment related feasible ."
resources at prices the con.
POMEROY LANES
at the Walter Cham per interest."
to the unloading and operations
sumer could afford, " O'Leary
Womeil's i
Tonight &amp; Saturday
residence,
26
Garfield
Ave.
Because
of
the
importance
of
of
the LNG tankers 'at the
Thursday Afternoon
said . " It will discourage C a p t u r e d
Oecembor 1:2
According to officers, at 3: II this Cove Point project to four dock...
HOUSe
Nov.2, 1972
traditional practices which
Standings
a.m.
today,
someone
fired
five
million
customers
served
by
2.
"In
connection
with
the
(Conti~ued
from
page
I
)
BLOOD F. ROM THE
have resulted in inappropriate
New York Clothing
50 30 shots into the Champer home. Columbia, including more than land use plan developed by the
MUMMY'S TOMB
around Quang Tri, South Pullins Excavating 42
utilization
of
facilities
and
(T odtnh:olor)
Officers found four bullets a million customers of State of Maryland and the U.S.
Pomeroy Lanes
40 38
insufficicerit use of health Vietnam's highly contested Helen's
AndrewKelr
Beauty
Shop
38
!~
inside
the house. Three -\'ere Columbia Gas of Ohio and Ohio Department of Interior ,
northernmost provincial Pomeroy Motors
Valerie Leon
manpower."
r: 36 "
located
in the bedroom, one Valley Gas Co. in Ohio, and Columbia has agreed to
James Vllllers
3.:1
The ' two-day conference, capital. Communist and Si mons Markel
I PGJ
High Team IJ games) 36 slug was dug out of the wall three million served by the maintain the so-called fresh·
government troops are trying
by
the
Ohio
sponsored
water marsh of approximately
NIGHT OF THE
Pomeroy Motors 1711 , He len's approximately three fee l
Department of Health, Office to seize as much of • the Beauty Shop 16 59, Pul lins above Mrs. Champer's head.
BLOOD MONSTER
190acresand the beach barrier
ITechnicolor)
of Comprehensive Health province as possible in ad- Excavating 1607.
damageasawildlifepreserveunderthe
High Team Game - Helen's A~other shot w~nt through
Christopher Lee
COLUMBUS (UP!)- House
Planning, was also addressed vance of an inplace cease-fb;e. Beau
wmdow
lodgmg
m
the
wall
on
.
jurisdiction of the Department Republicans rushed into action
fy Shop 585, Helen's
Marla Schell
Nea.r
Saigon,
military
by Dr. John W. Cashman, State
Beauty Shop 580, "Pomeroy the opposioo room. A third slug
of Natural Resources of the
lPG)
Thursday with a proposal to
Health Director, and James J. sources said a small boy was Motor s 579.
was
found
on
the
floor
inside
SU.le
of
Maryland
and
to
killed
and
14
other
persons
· High Ind. Series - Ju lie
spend $69 million worth of
Hughes, Columbus City atSun., Mon .. Tues.
the bedroom. The shots
maintain the approximately federal revenue-sharing funds
Boyles
490,
M
arlene
Wilson
438,
were
wounded,
four
of
them
O.cember J.4-5
torney, who was recently
Smith 433.
awakened Mr. Champer. He
600 remaining acres not
Americans hurl in the April
· FUZZ
for 1972.
High Ind. Game - Julie was not injured.
named
chairman
of
health
No one was injurlid or cited rezoned for use of the terminal
ITechnicolor)
scramble
for
safety,
in
a
Boyles
177,
Drema
Smith
175,
Republicans have oniy three
department's task force on
Burt Reynolds
It was the second similar in a single car accident at 8 as open space - so long as it
Charlotle Dillard 169.
Communist
rocket
barrage
at
weeks
left to control the flow of
hospital licensure and cer.
Jack Weston
shooting incident in the past a.m. Thursday on HI. 33, three owns the property."
Bien
Hoa
Air
Base
early
the
state appropriations since
(G P) ti'fieation of need.
November 9, 1972
two days. Wednesday, Gallia te nths of a mile north of Rt. 681
3. "Columbia Gas System
today. ·
Colorcarloons:
Standings
"Limited health servi·ces
County sheriff's deputies in· in Meigs County.
will file with the appropriate Democrats won a majority of
New York Clothing
Who's Watching You
54
Other
field
reports
said
Viet
the House seals Nov. 7.
planning ·efforts in Ohio by
Pomeroy Lanes
46 ~~ vestigated an in cident in·
According to the Gallia·· authorities of Calvert County
What's on Your Min~?
Cong
guerrillas
ambushed
a
A federal check for $34.5
individual institutions and
Pullins Excavating
44 44 volving the firing of shots at a Meigs Post State Highway and-or the State of Maryland a
7p.m.
battalion-size
provincial
Pom eroy Motors
42
million is due In Ohio next week
communities have cost the
40 &lt;6 worker on the Finley Cotton Patrol, Charles Vaughan, 21, commitment that if the for the first six months of 1972,
militia convoy-about 500 men Helen's Beauty Shop
,·
38 ~~ farm on German Ridge Rd.
Pomeroy, traveling soUth on Columbia Gas System should
with vehicles-near Vung Liem Simons Mkt.
High Team IJ games)
City police also inves tigated . Rt. 33 lost control of his car cease to use the site as a ler· and another check will arrive
In the Mekong Delta at sun- Pomeroy Lanes 161 8, Simons
the first week In January to
down
Thursday .
Ten Mkt. 1581, New York Clothing the theft of $4 in change taken which ran off the right side of minal, it will at that time offer cover the last half of 1972,
from a popcorn machine at the the highway striking a guard· the total site of approximately
militiamen were reported 1579.
according to House Speaker
High
Team- Game killed and one wounded. The Pom er oy Lanes 556, New York E·Z Laundry on Vine St. Entry rail. There was minor damage 1100 acres as a gift to Calvert Charles F. Kurfess, R-Bowling
County and-or the State of
dead iqduded the battalion Clothing 5.45, Pomeroy Lanes was made by prying the door to his car. ·
Green.
541.
.
open with a small tool.
·
A Gallia County mishap Marylandfortheuseoftheslte
commander.
'
Gov. John J. Gilligan and
High Ind. Series - Drema
occurred al5:45 p.m. Thursday for parkland, open space or a leg islative Democrats ,
Sm ith 457, Julie Boyles 445,
DEER KILLED
on MI. Tabor Rd., one and one wildlife refuge."
San dy Phalin 418.
however, are expected to have
High Ind. Game - Julie
Ayoung buck deer was killed tenth miles south of Rt. 160
4. "As soon as the terminal their own ideas of how ~
Boyles 161 , Vicky Adkins 159, Thursday at 5:45p.m. when it where an auto driven by Ruth facilities are operated so that it
(Continued from page 1)
allocate the federal revenueDrema Smith lSI .
ran into the path of ·a pickup J. Weddington, Rt. 2, Vinton, is possible to make a better
November 16,1972
5.5 last June.
sharing fllflds.
truck driven by Donald E. struck a cow which enoored the determination as to what
Standings
The lower jobless rate has New York Clothing
Asked what would prevent
62 34 Smith, RaCine , on county road roadway.
buffer
zone
is
needed
around
been reflected in the number of Pullins Excava ting
Gilligan
from vetoing the GOP
50 · 46
35,
the
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
The
animal
owned
by
such
facilities,
Columbia
Gas
Pomeroy
Lan
es
46
50
major cities with substantial
proposal, Kurfess answered:
Dept.
reported.
There
was
H
elen's
B
eauty
Shop
46
50
William
R.
Dee!
of
Rl.
2,
System
will
work
with
the
park
unemployment, which peaked Pomeroy Motors
44 52 damage to the Iron l of the Vinton , suffered minor in. authorities of the State of " His very good judgment
at 65 in October, 1970 and has Simons Mkt.
should prevent him from doing
40 56
truck.
juries.
No
charge
was
filed.
Maryland
and
authorities
of
High
Team
Series
New
that."
befll falling month-by-month.
York Clothing 1705, Pomeroy
There are 150 cities on the Lanes
1572, Pullins Excavating
major statistical list.
1521.
High Team Game - New
Unemployment has perslsted
York
Clothing 581 , New York
longer in smaller urban areas Clothing
572, Pomeroy Motors
with November's reported de- 564.
cline being the first since
High Ind. Game - Norma
September, 1!169. The list stood Amsbary, 188, Julie Boyles 173.
Eileen Searls 168.
at a record-high 835 last OcHigh Ind. Series - Norma .
tober
and
slipped
to
~
last
Amsbary.
520, Vicky Adkins
Just ask. Our experts will oo to work.
462, Sandy Phalin 452.
month.
And give you sound advice. Absolutely free.
The record for major cities
· It's good to know.
and
five major areas on the
Shop Every Floor - Visn Every Department For A Tru~ Excellent Selection of
when you need financial advice, we'll be there!
Early Sunday Mixed
substantial unemployment list
November 26, 1972
In September, 1!169 when the
Won Lost
Christmas Gifts For Everyone On Your List
Tom's Carry.Out
66
38
jobless rate began to rise.
Mark V
59
45
Eagles Club
54 50
Racine Food Markel 50 54
PLEASANT VALLEY
Team3 ·
45 59
DISCHARGES - Harold Farmer's Bank
42
62
High
Ind
.
Game
Larry
Whittington, Point Pleasant;
Dugan 212 ; Helen Van Meter
Cheryle Deweese, Leon ; 190; Second High - Jr. Phelps
Be sure to visit the
William Hurst, New Haven; 205 ; Helen Van Meier 182.
High
Series
Jr.
Phelps
564;
pomeroy pomeroy
furniture
department
Kimberly Oliver, Gallipolis
Helen Van Meter 514.
rul/and nationa
Ferry; Mrs. Dennis Kimes,
for unusual appreciated
Second High - Larry Ougan
bank
Hartford; Charles Thornton, m and Maxine Dugan 469.
gifts . smokers· chairs ·
Team High Game - Mark V,
the bank of
Leon; Mrs. Gladys Neal, Point
lamps · desks · hassocks
694 .
lt'le ce ntury
P Pleasant.
· infants turn iture ·
Team High Series - Tom's
eslobli'Shed 1872
Carry Out 1941.
living room suites ·
. ~

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'

Thousands welcome Santa .Claus
in.do·w ntown Christmas_.Parade

.

.

ht
soug
in shootmg

GOP

•

scurrymg
into action

"Auto
only minor

·When you need.
advice

Jobless

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

be there!

Open Friday and Saturday Nights Until 9

'

FDIC

W L Pis
Top Cats
26 10 70
Team 2
18 18 48
Bombers
17 19 46
Twin Clly
11 19 46
Craw's Comets
18 18 42
Team 1
12 24 36
High Series Team - Team 2.
2089. Twin City 1968, Team 4
1892. '
'
High Tea m Game - Team 2,
717, Twin City 710, Team 2 704.
High Ind . Series - L. Wolfe
605, Jr. Phelps 569, R. Bowen
524.
High Ind. Game - L. Wolfe
223, L. Wolfe 213, Jr. Phelps
206.

TilE

MEIGS INN
PO~ROY,

OHIO
PHONE 992-3629

. IN HOSPITAL
Mary Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Lewis 1 Smith,
Pomeroy Route 2, is confined
lo University Hos~ital for
observation. Cards may . be .
sent to room 217, Upham Hall,
in care of University Hospital,
Columbus.

PRESENTS

Saturday Night
10:00 TIL 2

Many new toys just received ptu• on
excellent selection otthe Items your
ch lldren will want this year un~er
the tree. Famous brands like
PtayskOOi · Fisher .Price : Mattei .
Mar~ . and many others. S.elllt line
select!'"' o1 books . puzztn • blkts ·
wagons etc. You rtally should make
1 visit t. the Toy Store - ·

Bruce Stalnaker.
and

The Aristocrats

ElBERFELD$ 'IN PO

A.lays The Beat In Live Entenainment
1'1 '"·"'ff • ~ ~~
(,

'•

•

A&lt;..J J.),.,,JI\ I

~j 1•' Lf '[; -~df~rM;1,'· \t~L,\

'

GALLIPOi.JS - Bright sunshine and
Most Original float honors was cap.
56·degree. temperatures greeted Santa lured by the GSI Nurses. Mrs. 'Rita Kiser
Claus upon his arrival in &lt;:;alii~ County accepted the trophy on behalf of the
Saturday aflcrnoon hi ghlighting this winners.
year's Hnnual Christmas Parade spon·
Best Theme float honor{ went to the
sored l)y lhe Gallipolis Mer chants . die!Jtry department at the GSI. Accepting
Association.
·
!he trophy on behalf of the departmen t
Thousands pf viewers jined the streets' were Ernest Syrus, Juani!Jl Hatfield,
. curbs to watch this year's parade. Thirty- Henry Sheline and Virginia" Bailey.
six units participated, niarking one of the
most successful Christmas parades in the
Prettiest fl oat honors went to lhe GSI's
community's history .
male and female supervisors. Accepting
Co-chairmen were David Tawney and Ihe trophy for this department were Carl
Marga ret Price. Charles Bostic, president Waugh,' Mrs. Margaret Wolfe and Mrs.
of the merchants association, served as Kathleen Thompson . Bernard Guinther, of
parade coordinator . City Manager D. the Gallipolis .Stale Institute's recreation
Kenneth Morgan was the .1972 parade , depa rtment, presen ted the trophies.
marshal.
Downtown at the Upstrea Public Use·
The parade formed at the Gallipolis Are~. thousands greeted Sanf.a Claus as
State Institute. Judging of floats took place Jolly Ole' St. Nick and his helpers passed
on !he GSI grounds. Judges were out goodies to the kiddies.
Marian ne Campbell, Clyde Evans ,
Listed below are the parade units in
Georgiana Jenkins and Rev. Ralph Scott. the urder in which they appeared:
Theme this year was. "Christmas Around
City police cruiser, Ft. Knox, Ky.,
the World."
color gua rd, U. S. Army; parade l)lar·

~_\&gt;

\

11 . } 11'

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r.'! "

• J

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Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,500
Families

Devoted To The Greater Jlfiddle Ohio Valley

38 PAGES

FOUR SECliONS

VOL. VII NO. 43

NO. 44

Pomeroy.Middleporl

Lawmen will
use horses
GALLIPOLIS - Two special posses,
new in southeas tern Ohio if not
· everywhere east of perhaps Dodge City,
Kan., will be ready for action Jan. I when
Sheriff-elect James W. Saunders takes
office. in Gallia Coqn ty. .
Sheriff. elect Saunders, a former
Ieder~! ag~nt, who Saturday appointed his
deputies, said he will have a horse
mounted posse for special assignments in
search and rescue in billy, wooded areas of
· thel!l~Unty .
' ., ·
Anoth er special posse will be
mobilized with fouf-Wiiffi"ftfl\'le vehicles.
It will be used in conjunction with the
Gallia County Civil Defense in
emergencies, search and rescue. Pete
Nibert of Galllpolis will command it.
Harley George of Rl. I, Gallipolis, wlU
head the horse-mounted unit.
The new sheriff said Saturday he also
expects to use trained dogs in his police
work. Deputy John Knapp of Thurman has

.

sha l's ca r; president of merchants
association car; ,Dr. Bernard Niehm and
Dr. A. R. Chdstehsen's· ·car ; City and
County Superintendents Paul Kuhn and
Clare nce Thompson; Miss Gallia County
I Kala Sue Waugh); GSI Snow Queen (Miss
Sa ndra Lee Rich); two units of Gallia
County Emergency Squad; fire truck No.
64 ; four units or Gallia County Civil
Defense ; Hanna~ Trace High School !land;
five units or Pt. Pleasant Nlitiontil Guard;
fire truck No. 61; Kyger Creek Higl] SchQOI
marching band; the ·French City ~trul·
ters; Gallipolis Shrine fire truck; antique
ca r; Tom Siders and his wagon ; OS! Cub
Scouts, Troop ~; Boy Scout Troop 20li
float; Galli polis Elks float; GSI recrea~lof!
department float; Education float; OS!
Kitchen float; GSI supervisors float; GSI ·
nurses flqat;. OS! behavior deparbnent
II oat: Gallia Academy High School
marching band ; Ann Rie~er'~ I;Jaton
group; Glo-e ttes; fire truck No. 62; fire
truck No. 65 and fire truck No. 63, with
Santa and his helpers.

tmts~

a dog trained to find marijuana and other
illicit drugs. Another dog will be trained ·
for riot control. Knapp's will be assigned to
tracking jobs.
Saunders listed these appoiniments :
Ivan Fife of Eureka, former deputy
sheriff for Oscar C. Baird and Denver A.
Walker, will serve as chief deputy. Fife,
known as "Barney" will work the day shift
with James Crace of Vinton and Cliff
H~hde,rson of Gallipolis.
.,.
Crace has been· a deputy the. past two
yea rs. Henderson , a formei"' resident
fireman and present police dispatcher for
the city, will be the jailer.
Silas Hamilton , a member of the
Gallipolis Police Department 20 years and
former postal employee, will work the
evening shift with John Knapp of Thurman .
Deputy Knapp formerly served as an
investigator lor the Lawrence County
Prosecuting Attorney's Office. He will also

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VIsit The Toy Store

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Cloudy and turning cooler
Sunday, highs in the 50s south.
Chance of ram in the south and
snow central and north Sunday
night and Monday . Lows
Sunday night in the 30s south.
Highs ·Monday in the 40s soul h.

VIsit The Warehouse On Mechanic Street
Whirlpool Appliances on sale at
Elberfelds
Warehouse · on
Mechanic St. - plenty of .fr.ee
parking and a ramp for easy
loading. Whirlpool Automatic
Washers · Whirlpool Electric
Dryers · Whirlpool Gas Dryers ·
Refrigerators · Freezers · Gas
Ranges . Electric Ranges- also
metal cabinets. linoleum, car·,
peting and many Items you'd ·!Ike
to buy.

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Weather

bedroom suites · gun
cabinets · dinettes ·
clocks · pictures and
many other gifts.

Beand league
November 27, 1972

LOCAL TEMP
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Friday was 42 degrees under
sunny skies.

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parade. Santa is pictured in his sled, permed atop a
Gallipolis fire engine. Santa and his helpers (on right) passed
out candy to parade viewers and kiddies.

HO, HO, HO! - SantaClausmade.hisflrslofftcial visit to
Gallia C~nly during Saturday's annual Qallipolls Christmas

Furniture On The 3rd Floor

Member

- -

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Local Bowling

MEIGS THEATRE

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SUNDAY DECEMBER 3, 1972

Gallipolis·Poinl Pleasant

Youtlts. ·
in.court

$6,230 Subsidy here
POMEROY ~ Meigs County
received $6,Z30.03 as its share or a
$7.203,838.32 general reliel subsidy
distributed to the 88 counties of Ohio
lor November, State Auditor Joseph
T. Ferguson announced Saturday.
The general relief subsidy Is a
state nuanced program to give
counties . support for their local
·' welfare programs. The money is in
addition to the programs financed
by federal funds such as · ai.d for
dependent children, aid for the bllod
and aid for the aged.

be the night investigator.
Kenny Deckard, youngest member of
the stall, will handle tjie daytime in'
vesligating. Deckard will handle all
breaking an.d_enter!ngs and oth~r crimihal
ac hon .
'-.
Deputy sheriff Jack Owens, who
served under Baird and Walker, will again
work the night shift. Two other deputy
appoinooes, Derry Hemphill and Joe
Blazer, have returned to their jobs at the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Plant at Apple
Grove.
Sheriff Saunders said he wants nine
deputies. They would also . serve as
dispatchers replacing the untrained
private citizens who have been working as
dispal.chers.
Saunders indicated he will have
several special deputies, but those men, as
in the past, will not be paid unless they are
called to duty .
Since Saundbrs is a licensed airplane
pilot, he plans to use aircraft in law en·
forcement.
Current plans call for the jail matron,
Ruth Cross, to move her office to the first
floor of the courthouse. It will be located in
the old Civil Defense office in the old part
of the courthouse. The jail's front room has
been paneled and will be used by Deckard.
Another room which has served as a
'storage room will be used by the chief
deputy.
·
All officers will be in uniform and all
prisoners staying live or mote days will be
issued white coveralls to wear.

Wrong medici.ne!

POMEROY - Carolyn Charles,
Minersville, fined $25 and costs by County
. JAMES(~eep) Holley,left,onbehalfofaalarledemployees of the Pl. Pleasant
Coutt
Judge Frank'W. Porter Friday, has
Goodyear Tire &amp;. Rubber Co., plant, presents Sgt. Bill Mitchell of the Gallla County
been found guilty of attempting to convey
Volllflteer Emergency Squad a sum of $676 for the unit's program. The squa~ IS
illegal articles into a jail.
.
seeking addilional funds to purchase a new ambulance for the Ul·week old sernce.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. sa1d
the woman had brought a package to a
county prisoner 'identified as Robert
Jeffers earlier (n the week. However,
deputies, upon inspecl;lng the package,
found a medicine-type bottle in a coffee
GALIJPOIJS - The second largest emergency squad answered 48 emergency can which contained an alcoholic subsingle contribution to Gallia County's calls, with 31 calls in the county and 17 stance.
Volunteer Emergency-Rescue Squad, calls In the city of Gallipolis. There were 37
$676, was presented to Sgt. );lill Mitchell, calls for squad No. 1and 11 calls for squad Two plead innocence
chairman of the squad's fund-ralsing
2.
GALLIPOLIS - Tommy Loucks, 46,
campaign, by James (Jeep) Holley, No. A
total of 48 patients were transported and Ronald Fairchild, 34, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
Quality Control Oeparlr1lent, Goodyear to local hospif.als. Forty-lour patients were indicted Tuesday by the Gallia County
Tire and Rubber Co., Pt. Pleasant, W. Va., taken to the Holzer Medical center. Two Grand Jury entered not guilty pleas when
here Saturday.
patients were taken to.th~ Pleasant Valley arraigned Friday.
The M. T. Epling firm of Gallipolis Hospital in Point Pleasant, one to Veterans
Loucks, charged with forgery, Is lrl the
donated $1,000 earlier this year.
Memorial HOSpital in Pomeroy, and one county jaiL-Fairchild was 'charged with
Holley, who coordinated the drive for emergency transfer from the Holzer beingahabitualcriminal,andisalsoin the ·
Goodyear's
salaried
employees, M¢ical Center to St. Mary's Hospital in county jall. Faltchild has been sente~ced
challenged other industrial firms in the Huntington, W. Va. after a senous to a oorm in the Ohio Penitentiary on a
immediate area to follow suit.
automobile accident in Mason County· . forgery conviction.
The voluQteer organization, now in its Two patients were dead-on-arrival to the
third , month of operation, is currently ·hospital. ·
seeking addiUonal funds to purchase a new
The .emergency squad has answered a
Deer count at 96
ambulance.
total of 125 emergency calls since it has
Sgt. Mitchell announced Saturday that been in operation nearly 10 weeks ago.
GALIJPOIJS - Six deer were killed
on Dec. 16, a youth band will sponsor a
Tbe volun~r !quadrnen are still in Gallia County Friday increasing the
dance at the Catholic Youth Cente~ In a~eepting cash a.nd cheek donations to help
total to ill taken in the county during the .
GalUpolis. All proceeds will go ~lrd the pay for a new emergency squad vehicle
lirst
five days of the gun deer lle&amp;son.
Emergency Sqtlad fllfld raising camii'lgn. and pay for needed emergency equipment.
· Four were checked at Bob Saunders'
Mltcball saki llie new ambulanee Ill
Al)yone wlahlng to dolll!te funds should Quaker State Service Center here and two
expected to be availa bl~ for RfV!ce send contributions to: The GaUls County
were checked at Barry Bias' Union 76
. ".within three or four weeks. "
Volunteer Emergency Squad, Courthouse, Station In Vinton.
The Gallla . County Volunteer Gallipolis,. Ohio UQI. Any size donation
Wednelday, Dec. 6, Ls l/1e last day ol
Eme11ency Squd Saturdiy relnled Ill will be 'greaUy appreciated. ·
the 19'12 bucks only deer season.
monthly caD report" for N09einber. Tbe

ER tJnit ~ gets $675

I '

15 CENTS .

.

MRS. PHYLLIS BEARHS, seated, is Meigs Collflty's conununlly worker for
Family PlaMing of southeaat Ohio. She is assisted in the office located In the
Meigs County Courthouse by Mrs. Betsy Aubrey, R.N., in doing follow-up work
with clinic patients, scheduling clinic visits, and contacting families who may need
the service but are not participating. Family Planning clinic services are free.

GAI,.LIPOLJS - Six Juvenlles·•1hfe
given suspended sentences to tht Ohio
Youth Commission and Juvnlle
Diagnostlc center Friday in Gallla County
Juvenile Court.
Acting Judge. Wray Bevens of Pike
Coupty sentenced a 15-year old boy to the
Ohio Youth Commission then suspinded
the senoonce and placed him on problltion.
He must obey •!I laws and attend !lcllool.
Two juveniles arreslell fOil fighting at
the Burger Chef had thelt •case heard
Friday. One was sentenced to the Juvenile ·
Diagnostic center. He, howaver, wati nn.cl
$50 and costs and the sentenced.,' was
• ~uspended. The •lh•~ fllllld PI aqd
~ osts. ~ofb were Qt'derld to Obey .lli·I.ws
and Ui alteild school regularly.
Two juveniles charged with larctl)' In
the theft of equipment frpm Cartet •!iel
Evans, Inc., received suspended sent,r\cal
to tile Juvenile Dlaghoetlc cepter. 'l'bay
were placed on probation. Each . 111118t
attend school regularly.
Two others charged with truancy
received suspended 5entences to , the
Juvenile Diagnostic center. They were
also ordered to attend school regularly.
Five juveniles received 15 license
suspensions on traffic charges.
They were Bill Ray Thomas, 16,
Galilpolls, David Thomas Sima, 17,
Gallipolis, Karen M. Johnston, 17, and
Dean T. Epling, 17, both of Gallipolis and
John Paul Roberts, 16, Rt. 1, Gallipolll.

Clinic serving mothers
HY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Nearly 200 Meigs
County women have sought -out the services of Family Planning, a leder~lly
funded program designed to curb
population growth. Family Planning is
available in bi.monthly clinics at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Initiated less than a year ago, the
famil y planning clinics ha ve been
unquestionably successful In reaching
, women who need birth control information
and assistance, sa id Mrs . Kar en
Laakaniemi, R.N., clinic supervisor.
Mrs. Laakaniemi explained that
women are coming Into the clinic who
either have been putting ~If seeing a
doc tor because they can't alford it or
simply because they can't get in to see one
at a convenien t lime.
· The supervisor said the clinic's services are available to all women without
cos t. This service provides information on
contraceptives and the birth control
supplies !or whatever method each woman
prerers. Income or lack of it is nut considered in de termining whether a woman
is eligible for services.
Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs is the "community wo.rk~r" for the progr~here. She

foiUD AND OOLD

mainU.ins an of11ce 10 tne Metgs County
Cou~thouse .
Working here with her several days
each week is Mrs. Betsy Aubrey of Athens.
Their primary job Is to see the patients
who have visited the clinic to determl~e
the effectiveness and sa tisfaction of the
prescribed program of birth control, to
make home visits when ne_cessary, to
schedule clinic appointments, to reach out
to those who should be receiving the
Services but are not coming to the clinics,
and to make whatever referrals have been
recommended by the clinic doctor, Dr.
Roger Daniels.
Approximately 20 patients are seen at
each of the clinics which are held from 8
a.m. until noun on the first and third
Thursdays of each month.
AppolntmcnLI are to be made through.
the Family Planning office in Pomeroy, or
by telephoning 992-5912.
A visi t lo a Family Planning clinic is
not much different from a visit to any
other clinic.
Patients are assisted in completing a
brief Information sheet by a nurse or one of
the assistants ; given whatever counseling
is requested, ~n examination, and con.
traceptive supplies needed.

we~lber,

there'• lola of
activity on Pomeroy'• Ealtl Main St'. where constrilctloh ls
I.

DESPitE

Clinic scvices Include Information
about child spacing, lab testa for cancer,
venereal disease, u,rinalysls and
pregnancy, breast and
pelvic
examinations by the clinic phylli:iaJI,
referral for pre-natal care, and treatlllent '
or referral in cases of inferl!llty. ,
Since many women attendlnf the
clinic already have one, two or three small
children, a nursery Is provided for thelt
care while their mothers go through the
clinic. Mrs. Becky Teaford, an office
employe of Family Planning, has charge
of the nursery which is equipped with toys.
Mrs. Jean Braun Is !be clinic receptionist and also asslsll In maintaining
records. ' Mrs. Barbara Siirunons, an
employe of the- Tri.COIIflty Community
Action Program, helps with the lab work
and assists the doctor.
Once some method of contraception
has been determined for a clinic patient,
follow-up visits are made. to determine any
contra-indications or problelJlS.
lfo reach even more people In 1973 is
the objective of Family Planning, Mrs.
Laakanleml envisions more frequent
clinics at Veterans Memorial Hospital or
in a new location outside town.

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. BEST TIIEME honor was won by the GaUipolis State Institute's dietary department during
Saturday's annual Gallipolis Christmas parade. Accepting the trophy (left to right) were
Ernest Syrus, Juani\a Hatfield, Henry Sheline and Virginia Bailey. "0 Holy Night" was this
. Doat's theme.

Dear Desperate :
The long term way out is plain : When you're on your own
(and you can leave home at age 18) you'll make your own
decisions.
· But we hope your parents will swing around to reason while
you're still in high school.
Ask them why tliey distrust the way they brought you up . Are
they so sure they haven't instilled right standards that you'll play
bed for the first guy you meet in the dark? And while you've got
them off-center bring in a relative or friend who will plead your
case.
If they don't understand now that overprotection is worse
than overpermissiveness; they will next year, when they may
have lost you. - HELE.N AND SUE

+++

·

! 'Dateline
! By Gallia

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!

I

Hobart Wilso11 }r.

MOST ORIGINAL FLOAT WINNER - The GaUipolis State Ilistitute Nurses float, "Ye
'Oide Toy Shoppe," captured Most Original honors in Saturday's annual Gallipolis Christmas
parade. Accepting the trophy was Mrs.
Kise lO M 'il:i

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C hc)p&lt;J 1

PltX- Humb,;~r-d 16. Ora l

J

Church Se~V·I €e 4 : Faith

lO . OO

Ia'·

Cartoons 10.

Today 15, Cvno&lt;..lty Shop 6,

13 ; This is the Lile 3; Arch t•~'s Fun HouSe B M9vie '' The·
l d Ue Shepar.d ol Kingdom Come'', 10.
10: 30 Thi s. i s t he Life 15 . lns ighl .1. Ci1pf&lt;l in Noah 3: Nofre Dame
Highltghls 8.
Jl ·OO TV Chapel 3: Jo y in Li vi ng 13, Consumer Report 15;
F ocu s on Columbu !-. 4, Brol hN Bun 6
11 · 30 M aki! a Wi sh'6'~ 13 ; Rex Humbard 8 Outrea Ch I S. This is
I he An s\.,'P.f J; 'O&lt;;U F:oot.ba_ll H 19hllCJhf &lt;; .1 S-port s (ha II~Jngf' 1.
17 : 00 CBPA 6owl1ng 6; Colum bus Towr1 M e-elinq 10. Rev .
Calvm !;: Van ... lJ'; At lsoue 3, Sncr;·:d HP(I rf 15
1? .30 Re'Jival Fi res 13 . Pro Foolbuli Pr1~ CM"'f' 91-0w:. 8. Meet
the Press J . ·1, !5.
.
1 00 ·· PrO Foothall3,·4. 10. 1)·; l o-:.er Liq btfoo;.ne l1
1 30 1'JS\Je';i and An \W€' 1' \ 6, 13
l 00 Poiot of View 6"; C o H cg~:: Fo(l\ boll '/2, 13,

2:30 Jake's Place 1&gt;
·
3· 00 -Uoyd Bridges 6 · FMrn er 's Daughte r 13.
J. 30 Rookies 13; F Troop 6
.t·OG--Uvinq 33 , What ilre: yDu Saymq J, 15 ; Wacky World of
Jonathan Winters 6: G ram!J iinq Foo tball -4: Pro Football 8, 10.
4: 30 ·- World of Surviv(1l6, 11 ; Aq1 o f AnxiP.ty 33.
5: 00 GrJ'!en Ac r es :); l&lt; lppl c:r, J:l· Prim us 4, The Midni9h l Ride
ol . Pau l Rever ~ ~ ·· FCJllh l or TrKl oty 15. M ovie, "W~1r of the

13.

St. 11

N"\'.'S. W•:i1 °1r.,•J,\pn r+ .,6 II ':de. •~ rlh.; ,·8.,.Ji.J'Jf•ntle Jury
Cons•; rner R':l)ort' l ·1. ,
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I &lt;1 Vif'C• rit. 'N1!ik l -1 '1,r!or ·.ltJ- i,.J;,;r,j. f'r. 3 [, ~~ ,. (our
l_;i~ !, Wi ld K~"lqJ6r'J: , ,'V
~ dl Yc f 1 ·11her C• !·, ~!o ntP6 ,

DpNVER IIYSELL

6-00
1:

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Hysell ending
long service as
bus driver

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Movu::. "In !)ld Cl l il or'\lil

:\n u!&lt;l w.n of nti S'll'd hi'\~ ifP

for &lt;:I\. ·t'Cl'

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TEc;HNK:OLOR' N.N.lVISION'

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Cartoon

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Colorcartoons :
Who's Watching You
What 's on Your Mind?
Show Starts 7·p. m .

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Small Deposit Holds Your Christmas Tree

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"11M Chilti,. •)r' 13
b'i'1'1

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DURABLE, BETTER QUALITY
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.11lwr ',pr,;-t.
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The Shopping Days Are Rapidly Passing By

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Makes think,ln~.Jamlly fun I .

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.
. SCOTCH PINE

''·-' ·NI-'i,' 1· 31/v''s

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YAHTZEE•

ARTIFICIAL TREES
SCOTCH PINE
1 FT. 55 MAIN BRANCH TIPS

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and Decorations

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Gallipolis, Ohio

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FT. 122 MAIN BRANCH TIPS

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As Christmas nears, eve1J011e becomes more rushed to
complete their shopping.

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upp_ly Co.

POINT PlEAsANT

EXTRA
Twinkling
SPECIAL

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Reg . 59c
525 to Pkg.

38~

Reg. 29c

19~

200 to Pkg .

We at the First National Bank urge you to patronize our
Local Merchants.

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Ont of lh• world'• mo'l popular gam~1.
Hovn of fun whethr you Win or oo broke.
Bily oot for lh• kid1, 1h.n
borrow lt.

Now you can thoroughly enjoy a thick 1reen tree
after year . These beautiful artlriclat pine• make II IUYI
Needlea ne•er drop and they art completely lire
shtant.

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FISHER-PRICE

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parker brothers .
monopoly

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APPLIANCES
FROM MURPHY'S
•DISCOUNT PRICES
d YEAR REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE
PROCTOR DRY

IRON-

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MURPHY'S
COMPLETE

IT PAYS TO GIVE

USE YOUR CONVENIENT • • •

AIRPORT ,~..

DEPARTMENT
'1.00 DOWN HOLDS

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REG. $13.96
LIMIT 1

TOY

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IIGULAI $12.99 Table Model

MOST LAYAWAYS

Pln[ball Game
(save sa)

- - - $6 59

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COFFEE MAKER- - - -$1

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tighfl floshl

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Bell• rinQI

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Action fvn for

PROCTOR
2 SLICE

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•GREEN

12 FT. WIDTHS$

35 Lite

Our local merchants have made eveiJ effort to offer you
almost anythin'g that you may have on your list

Indoor-Outdoor
CARPET

•RED ·

.Co.

ICICLES

Large A.ssortment

''

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•SAPPHIRE

LIGHT SETS

Why go to the added time and expense of traveling to a
distant city for your shopping.

1

312 6th ST.

422 Second Ave.

Layaway for a Decorative Holiday

..

f:." ac¢1d~t

·TAWNEY STUDIO

have suffered a heart attack.
He was taken to and admitted
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.

•

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10. 30
Fh 11 Don'lhUP.•I. Prier· I·_, f..!H,"JI •tt 1\i r·L·,U'IIIr-almn 3. 15 .
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J,·o;\1:-rt·.· 1. 1.', Pcl SsJ,l1rd ,,, Bob Br (1u n '5 ~0 '11 1 Cl u h . r ;

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THE CHRISTMAS STORES FOR THIS AREA

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QUANTITIES lAST

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School Sr rnr&gt; 10 ;

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Four deer, pony are killed

call at 12:01 a.m. Saturday 'to
Mincr·svi ll e for
Junior
Aulherson who was believed to

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o Auto...,llc Thru-tho lena
CdS expooure control
o Shorp f/1.7 zoom lena
o Bright reftu viewfinder
o Low~lghtwemlng algnol
o Aim puiH lndlcotor
o Cqrnlortoblo plolol grtp
o Eny-lo-hondle, comPIICI
doalgn
o Eleclrfo motor dil..

GAHS DHOSTUDENTS for 1972-73 are&lt;front row, I tor, Debra Barr, Paula Butler, Sue
Adkms, Janet Warren, an~ Maria Hanson; second row 1Cathy Musgrove, Sally Winters, Debra
Russell, and JanetYoho; th1rd row, Donna Pugh, Donna Patrick, Lynn Mitchell, Patsy Haner,
and K1m Elcessor; fourth row, Mindy Frazier, Denise Lanier, Elizabeth Martin, coordinatorInstructor Mrs. Janet Wetherhoit,and Deborah Johnson . Not pictured are Deborah Maione and
lanatha Garnes.
·
AUTI!ERSON ILL
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad answered a

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CAVE CITY,Ky. (AP ) - Mammoth Cave , long acclaimed as r-liilrl n·rr
I o
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one of the six natural wonders of the world, has been more than
H~ ··L·ll 1: 1:r:nklrr . ('' t 1·•.'
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doubloo in length as a result or a discovery announced Friday. for lh J,.,,. "' · 'i
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The discovery, made by seven spelunkers, was of a 6,000 foo t n·~·t · i .,· • ·tl l\ ~"' 1' \'l'dr I.(
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corridor linking the 58-mile Mammoth Cave system with tbe dri ving· ·1hi 1 11 Ill ~; • r\
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P:;nderos"
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nearby Flint Ridge Cave system, the longest in the world at 87 fi r't '" "' .,;
5. 30 Elo:'c Co. J1: M.lr~h-dl Dt!lon .~ Dr a gn('t8; (,(1 If:~" Pyle '
miles. Mammoth Cave was the third-largest cave system in the
~ut. Irk•· 1• ·•·
13 , HQdgProdqe lOdg(' W
rnou gl.
6·00
N1..•wsJ.-~.B. 1 0 Tr ul ha r (onr."'il !;· ~· ·•s' J,\
Aroun d
world, behind 72-mile Holoch Holle i~ Switzerland.
ThP kPnr! 11 · Ses,.., m&lt;: Sf .'0
The discovery wOL not mean much for the general public,
t• .Jl•
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H.lf h .?I&gt;&lt;''Ji'1 13: I Dn.wm of .karH•:t• 13
however, because the corridor linking the two cave systems is
7 ilO
N~.,..j·'i fl: Ciu:.u&lt;;l 11, lnc;ight JJ, Wh,)• • (lll.y Lnw 8 RP.trl
too rigorous to be opened to tourists.
Your W&lt;.Jv IJp-13. [:let ( I'J /0; S il rnt'!.~; L•Jtl,·Wr;mpn.t
SIX 1:\ Jl l&lt;'1 ED
In discovering the passage way, the exploration team had to
I:&gt;
T,)-~!IITheTru!h"i rnflir Cn•JdlC t., •&lt;:mlPt1C'Irnn33;
CLIW E!.ANP liP I 1
A 'I(
.lc1 r-V'lC•( Squ al••:i .J Y·:LHl(J Or. Kdr\ ... n b
loJgcpodqe
wade
through
chin~eep
water
with
headroom
to
the
ceiling
at
••
feder al graud JUr y Friday
Lodgr;
o
?0;
Mnv1e
Tdr'Mn t h~ Fe11r'less 13 .
tilnes coming to just 12 inches. The water in the passageway was indicted six persuns on charges 3:00 - Rowan &amp; Martin's Lauqh In 3, ,J ; UFO 6; Dr.· Seuss
"
12 to 15 feet deep Friday.
Cartoon 8, 10.
of possession and conspiracy to
Frosty the Snawm t=~ n B. 10
I
The discovery was made last Sept. 9 by a team led by Dr. distribute 300 pounds of marl- 8: 30
q DO
Pro Foo tball 6, 11.. Movi e ''The Hired Hand " 3, 4. 15 ;
John Wilcox, 35, of Columbus, Ohio, which started from the Flint juana .
Perry Como Wi nler Show 8, 10.
9:30 - Book Beai 20. 33.
Ridge system. The discovery was not announced until now
l~di ctm ents were handed
because the spelunkers wanted to map the area and verify their down to Arthur Earl Bird, 26, 10:00 - Flili Cosby 8. 10; NowslO ; Chess Tournament 33.
1LOO - News 3. 4. 8. 10, 1;.
findings.
Doylestown; Robert George 11 30 -Jo hn ny Carson 3. d, IS , Movie-s uThe Chairman" 8; "Duel
In Jhe Ju ngle" 10.
Wilcox told a news conference at Mammoth Cave National Bowman, 32 , Wa dsworth ;
12
:00
News 6, 13.
Park Friday that he realized the team was onto something big William and Betty !.aakma n, 12 : 30 .. Mov
ies "Croo&lt;' Anony mo us" 6;. "Fancy Pal\ts' 13.
'Vhen he noticed the ceiling was getting higher.
Larry Albert Mollner, 26, and 1:00 - Focus On Columbus 4.
·
I.
30
New5
4.
Linda
Lee
Sanderson,
24,
ail
of
Then he went through a hole and emerged into what at firsl
2. 30 - News 13.
was total blackne.ss, preventing him from seeing either ceiling or Phoenix, Ariz .
PRE'ITIEST FLOAT honors in Saturday's Gallipolis Christmas parade was captured by
walls.
the Gallipolis State Institute's male and female supervisors entry. Accepting the trophy for
As his eyes became accustomed to the blackness, with the
''The Littlest Angel" were Carl Wiugh, Mrs. Margaret Wolfe and Mrs. Kathleen Thompson.
aid of his lantern, he picked out a .handrail across the .room and
Bernard Guinther, left, presented the trophy.
realized he was In Mammoth Cave.
"I see a tourist trail," he shouted to his colleagues behind him
to signal their success.
.
Spelunkers have been searching for a cormecting passage
between the two huge cav'e systems for 18 years, never being
GALLIPOLIS - Four deer 554. Of£icers reported the Hunwr, 26, Gallipolis, was certain there actually was one.
The aetual discovery of the passageway in September was
were killed •nd a pony was animal ran into the path of an involved in an accident at 6:18
set
up Aug. 9 when another member of the team, Patricia
aeriously injured in a rash of auto driven by Charles Ken- a.m. Saturday on Rt. 35, one
COLORS:
traffic accidents investigated neth Burris, 28, Rt. 2, Vinton . and six tenths miles west of Rt. O'owther, 29, of Arlington, Mass., squeezed through a narrow
canyon
and
found
an
initial
"H"
scratched
on
the
wall.
Friday by the Ohio State High-·
Vern S. Clark, 49, Ripley, W. 160. Hunwr's cruiser struck
Alongside the initial was an arrow pointing in the direction
'fl'ay Patrol.
Va ., was charged with failure and killed two deer which
The, first occurred in Meigs to stop within the assured clear entered the highway. There the team was going. Since spelunkers always use such arrows to
County on County Rd., nine distance following an accident was minor. damage to the point to the exit of a cave, the sign indicated that it bad been '
made by someone coming from the other direction - the
~nths of a mile east of Rt. 7 at 1:40 p.m. Friday on Rt. 35,
cruiser.
Mammoth
Cave side.
where a deer ran into the path two miles east of Rt. 588. The
The team assumed the letter and arrow were made by Peter
ol a car operated by Clayton L. patrol said Clark's- car struck
HansOn, who had done considerable exploration in the area - all
' Johnson, 32, Rt. 1, Reedsville. the rear end of a pick-up truck
PLEASANT VALLEY
Moderate damage resulted driven by William E. Lockhart,
from the Mammoth Cave side - from 1937 to ·around 1942.
In a deer~r accident on Rt. 7, 65, Crown City.
ADMISSIONS: Robin White, Hanson was killed iri action during World War II.
line and eight tenths miles
The other members or the spelunker t e h t made the
Edsel Durham, 30, Rt. I, Wilkesvllle, 0.; o-.K. Burdette,
tKc1h of Crilwn ll,ty. Officers Vinton , was charged with Point Pleasant; Teddy discoveries were Thomas Brucker, 19, Yellow Springs, Ohio;
•kl the animal ran into the · passing without the assured Hickman, Evans; Mrs.· Max · Richard Zopf, 21, Yellow Springs; P. Gary Eiler, 25, Atlanta;
.
path of an auto driven by clear distance following an Heslep, · Point Pleasant; Ga.; Cleveland F. Pinnix, 28, Raleigh, N.C., and Stephen Wells,
Wlllllm A. Gardner, 31, Rt. 1, accident at 12:35 p.m. on Rt. Kimberley Newsome, Vlnion; · 23, 9lnelnnat1.
CalllpoUs. There wa s ·160, two miles ~out~ of Rt. SM. Merle. Kiggins, GaLLipolis
++ +
nlodlrale damage 'to his car. Durham attempted to pass just Ferry; Mrs, Robin Brum!leld,
, TWENTY Y~ARS AGO, from the files of the Daily TribUne
A pony owned by John M. as an auto driven by Gary Ashton;, Flora McKinney, and weekly Gallla Times ... Ground-breaking ceremonies set
alenft. Lower River Rd., was McClaskey, 22, Rt. I, Vinton, Point Pleasant: Mrs.-Bernard Dec. 4 at Cheshire to IaurlCh $14S,OOO,OOO Kyger Creek Power
arkn"y lnjUNCI when struck was making a lelt turn.
. Frazier, Point Pleulnt; Mrs: Plant ... Cherles S. (Major) Benedict, 85, claimed by death.
., • - operated by David
State Patrolman Dennis M. Roy Dowell, Racine; Mrs. L. Was &lt;Illy Gallla resident ever to take part in Olympics. Major
~llftll Klaeaid, 21, Rt. 3,
H. Kincaid, Point Pleasant; Benedict waa a member of the !90a U.S. Rifle Team iJl Bisiey,
firoelllrvllle. The mishap
~:~.~~!~J:;h:~: England, and was high man on that world champions)lip team
ie Uhlhtt:G p.m. on Rl. 7,
Mason; James Stanley, Point .•. Oleshire may get new high school ... Holzer Hospital now
• laMr IIIII 1M11 lenthl mtlel
•
Pleasant. Sharon Wolfe - has complete dtal telephone system .. . Rio Grande Redmen
...... crl Rt, lB. The J!OIIY had . The first true mechanical Gallipolis;
Keith Newberry: defeat University of Dayton Frosh 9:1-W, Wilberforce University
111M ~ \ b
clocks, mnde in the 13th cenJ'IH
oc- tury, often lacked hinds and Barberton, o.; Char tea , liM! and Bluefield 93.63 as Bevo Francis scores 35, 69 and 21
!llltt:id -' ':00 p.m. Friday 011 faces and merely Jtrucll: the Ungerfelt, Mrs. Lora' siurm points ... Jeep Holley, Pete Nibert and Morris HOjlan win GAHS
and Jean Dou, Point Pleasant. ·grid awards at annual post season banquet.
il-. n mile f1GI'III of Rt. hour.

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P r • n i ~&gt;rny.

Burt Reynolds
Jack Weston

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FUZZ
( Technicolor)

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Bernard
Wilson, Vinton; Ronald Bostic,
Puint Pleasant; Mary Weaver,
Syracuse; Ella Goodin,
Pomeroy; Arthur Goodin ,
Pomeroy ; Danny Burbridge,
Albany; Mary Ford, Letart, W.
Va.
DlSCHARGt~D - John An&lt;l er~on . Pearl Hysell, Iris Carr,
Jewell Curtis, Keith Brogan,
Rurus Browning, Hattie Elam. ·

here against &lt;ittethein at 8
p.m. 1
Wilbur force - Boy kin 4-1-12,
Boddie &lt;1-2-2, Hill 2-&lt;1-4, Purdue
4.0:8 McBeth 13.()..26 · MariQw
3-0-6:·sl&lt;\nley 4-I-9, Cr~ss &amp;-1-17.
Totals 38-8-84.
· Rio Grande - Iiartrum 1~
23, Hart 4-1-9, Thompson 6-0-12,
Frausnaugh 2-11-4, Williams 2.()..
· 4, Clark 2-2-li, M. Rouse 6-0-12,
Bollinger 6-1-13, Lambert ll~
22, Wade ().J-1. Totals 49:11-100.

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ti me. "

Town s hip
Tru slee. he pht!h ·to l't'!ll.al n
ac tiv1' dt''-iplt(' ~ivin ~~ \l fl tl i.s
sc hoo l ln1s I'I J!l \ t '. II.\ "l'll !\'! Is
thi s slorv in 1datiqn f•l !11:.;

Tonight , Mon .; Tues .
DecE!mber 3-4-5

3.0D News 13

6. 30

S:.1!1~hury

MEIGS THEATRE

Pr:1i-cr: Sur9•·')n

c·omr and gu in his luug sprv i!'f'
and !w s \\ -' Wkt!d '" lth ;.;otll!'

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r.t~.r.) k c· A De ar 6, Thr· flr-u'.f 'v'·lll hu1,1 'I Chriq ma•, T1h' 8, 10.
R 10 Fr.,nc t- Chef ?0, 31 t l·-ClL·IJd :!, i, 1J.
fJ 00- V\ '1s!~ro 11:~ce .'Th6 at r.-. ''-1 '"l INk VAn D·ykr g, 1'• Mov1c,
In Hn r: ~ sWay ". 6. 1!
9:30 M Jnn iX. a, 1 0.
·
10 .00 - F 1r in11 ! ine ,0 . 33
~ o 30- · Pro le.ctors .t; E\'il ro11 1• 1-J 11 ;(!h Ro~1rl to AdvC:"1tu r e 10 ;
I~ w,. 1 h;l'r, '1.1, ',hC•!_II:j Vnn 11 3
11 !.(. r.;,:_,",','&gt; 1/'./t ,11' . ·r Spr:&gt;rh :t .•~ , .- 1 1·; 1
11 o J:Jh' .J'Y r;.,..-•;q ·1. •. ~~ Af• _ rJ, .-:· ·, 1 Mm·l~&gt;,
f 1e+ r ihr!f.l fr,rT~.·' 1 ~ cl'-'
h1 I ~~~," \!'

Lanham's Rio Grande College
Rudmen trouni-ed Wilburforce
Un i v e r s i IY's B u II dog
basketball . learn 106 !o _84
before 1,100 ·wildly cheering
homecoming fans in Lyne
Center Saturday night.
Guard Steve Bartrum, of
Ironton, led Rio's attack with
23_ pomts. Henry McBeth of
Wl!burforce was high wilh 26.
Rw led 49-34 ~t halftime, never
h:aqrng.

.

a.

Wr~d Gll c:.' ' ,
) · 30 -·Sesa m~

Rio
wins 106llio'stonext84
RIO GRANDE - Coach .Art
game is Tues&lt;!ay

al

·

· Robe rt s 10 , Old T1me Gospel HQIJ( E.
9'30 Church by Sodc•ol Ro.xl ;, Good Now' 13,

The old 1111111 oa irl. .. y"' ·
Til t jllri;.:L :r&lt;k&lt;•rl, '\\'!i ·
Th e
'd "'"" rPp!r ,
"E noug l.
is '''11Jug 11 ,,f
any lhing."
·
+ ++
. • ,
il rn:rr··irr\ th" t"' " r
FRID1iY, United Press International (the Tithe. :Sentlne'l's Frailc'L'' Sll'id; '" 1'r. 1'1 •
wire service) carried a feature on the discovery. The Associated . hn \ e ,.l llr t'l' da u~ 11t,,,. . ,f 's .
PressJollowed it up Saturday.
'
.... . Hai\lh ; \1 ,,~,·l11w , l',,;:oi&lt;T
+ ++
.\1 idrll--r•
'
. "
DR. Wilcox, well-known in Gallia County, spent mosl of his 1Fvrl:- ''•'"
lor
summers as a youngster visiting his grandparents. He is the son ~ l ro . Earl r Huln • ~,,,,_,m:m.
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wilcox, Columbus. Here's what the AP Pul\ler".': tlr·r" "' ''· t,
article had to say Saturda.y;
H &lt;·~ · · r '" I . r ''I'\. ;oil of
DR. JOHN Wilcox, 35, Columbus, grandwn of Mr. and Mrs.
Clem C. Wilcox, Vinton, and nephew of Mr . and Mrs . James
Clark, Rio Grande, received nationwide attention Friday and
Saturday as a result of a new passage way discovery at tllammoth Cave, located at Cave City, Ky .

.

9;00' Sm!J irtg JubileeJ; Cartle

seen a Jut nf g (ltl{!

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Th-h~6

Dear Rap :
POM EHO Y
D&lt;•rll·t·r
Can male and female ever he "just friends"? Sure they can, Hysell, Pmnrroy Roulc +. who
and who knows better than I, who Jived with a girl for six months retirc'tl a~ i~ school hus dr in•r
· on a "friends" basis. That is, we shared a two-bedroom apart- Tllur ~d(ly . had (' Omplt~trd :n :~
• ment, and we each had our Love intereSt elsewhere, off and on. yet1 r s of acciden t-fr~"'L' dnrt ng ,
No one would believe it, so we· just said nothing, but the fact llu.: l;-~ o;;t fr'w ~ · rar s in ihP 1\lk it;;;
was we were good pals and didn 't want to spoil it. Besides she J,(wnl School Di strict H~·:--.\'11
was engaged to a guy overseas.
h.l'~ an
drivi n!-: rSalisb ur}
Distnd
b
usP~ in Jq4l, ~: pt ·n dtn;..,
Oh yes, I said "off and on" didn 't I? Well, it tu rns out the guy
1
broke the engagement and I discovered I wasn;t so crazy about lfi :! .~ears nnt only dt:l' lllf' f•~l'
U\e girll thought I loved, and one thing led to another, so now we .tdso ft'!Jatring bu ses.
Hvsel\ ;d tr&gt;sts that Jw · !-;~;..;
are still sharing the apartment as - MR. AND MRS. X

r---~---------------------1

GALLIPOLIS - A simp!~. Killen, R.N ., public health Dl•b u r&lt;~h Johnson , Deborah
valuable program to help some nurse with the city of Malu.nt.• and Jariet Warren
Gallipolis teenagers decide Gallipolis: Mrs. Mary Ellis, Nulrilion De partment
where their energies should be general manager of the Hoir.er Medical Center; Donna ·
headed is. wrapped up in ihe . Medical Plna; Mrs. Barbara . Palrick and · Sally 'Winters, ·
llj'eal big·, complicated souii· Belz. ll.N., assistant director Physical T~erapy Department
ding title, Diversifie&lt;( Heallh ur Nursing Service of Holzer al Holzer Medical Center ;
Occupation {DHO ) Program . Medical Center, and Rober! Debra llussell, A. Keith Sheets,
Big or little, intricate or not Fanning, vice-president for D.D.S.. and Evan C. Roderick,
20 students are in DHO in it.s · proressional services for D.D.S.;
Maria Hanson,
second year here at Gallia Holzer Medical Center.
Washington School, and ranlha
Academy High School.
Coordi nator-instructor or the Garnes, Mr. and Mrs. William
This v&lt;icational program is · program is Mrs . Janel Steele.
designed to give sen ior Welherlluit.
In lhe DHO program
sludent.s practical experience .students and -cooper a ling sludenls work half a day with
m health related jobs, thus employers this year are their employers and attend
' remainder. In school
enabling them to make an Elizabeth Martin with Gordon school the
inwlligent decision about their · K. Amsbary, D.D.S.; Paula I hey have p,, class periods o!
future careers.
Buller and Minday !'razier, sludy related directly to their
A DHO advisory committee Gallipolis
City . Health heallh field . Upon graduation
is composed of Miss Virginia Department; Patsy Haner, these sludents have had both
Clay School; Kim Ellcessor, on-r he-j ob training and
Lynn Mitchell and Janet Yoho, educa tional ex perience in
Community Early Child C.re fields related to hea lth care.
Center; Cathy Musgrove,
The DHO program is Qne of
Gillingham Drugs; Sue Adkins, the expandi ng vocationa l
Debra Barr and Donna Pugh; s rvices oHered by lhe
Tonightthru
Nursing Service at Holzer , ilipolis City Schools to meet
Wednesday
--Medical Ce nter ; · Denise mor adequa tely the needs or
Lamer, Hume Health Service · lhe population of the area .
al Holzer Medical Center;

SUNDAY, DECEMBER J
R ~ .Leo.naf-d Repass 8 Go~pe l CMJ 11fln 6, (hurcl1 Se&gt;rvice 13 ;
M ormon (h rJ r 3 r1M J of Dr't~''~4:r·,. l
8 )0 Or al ~ 9b'(:'d S 1 Your Hb,lth .,:, [Jdl oi DI'S&lt;Over.,. !L Rex
Hurnl;)Md l3: ReV iyill t rr es 13'. K;&gt; thryn Yuh lmrm. 4; CMi1~"&gt;M

Mothers a,nd Fathers: LF;TGO!
Dear Heien and Sue :
I'm going on 18, and my parents still won't lei me date. My
father has an idea if! walk out the door with a boy I'll come back
pregnant.They say "It isn't you we distrust, it's those sneaky
males!" Sometimes! wonder if they'd rather l'ddate girls.
1Mylet one boy visit me for about four months, and after they
had spent all that time in the living room, watcl)inthim and me,
they fmally let me go to a walk-in movie with him - but only if
my younger brother went along. The guy gave up.
My senior year is one-third over,' and .! won't be able to go to
any of the'ilances or parties. A boy is-interested in me, but wha't •
can I say? - "My parents wouldn't let me date;even if they had
known you all their Lives." Andthat will be the end of that.
Can either of you possibly -think of a way out of this mess? DESPERATE

•

•

20·En-rolled in ·DHO

Television Log·

" ~' .

By Hd(•n anrl Sue. Bottd

-.

3- The Sunday Times- Sentinel,'sunday, Dec. 3, t972

'·

w«·&gt;W,.W.:s:&gt;)',h)O.::::,''X'"''·······:.:·:•:•:•:•:•:•;.:·:·:·:·:·· .·:'·:•:·:•:·:•:•:·:-:·~W.·:-».W.&lt;-&gt;::;_.kW·:

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OPEN EACH NIGHT
UN'J:IL CHRISTMAS

TIL

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. BOTH STORES IN GAUIPOLIS - OPEN DAILY TILL 9 PM

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. BEST TIIEME honor was won by the GaUipolis State Institute's dietary department during
Saturday's annual Gallipolis Christmas parade. Accepting the trophy (left to right) were
Ernest Syrus, Juani\a Hatfield, Henry Sheline and Virginia Bailey. "0 Holy Night" was this
. Doat's theme.

Dear Desperate :
The long term way out is plain : When you're on your own
(and you can leave home at age 18) you'll make your own
decisions.
· But we hope your parents will swing around to reason while
you're still in high school.
Ask them why tliey distrust the way they brought you up . Are
they so sure they haven't instilled right standards that you'll play
bed for the first guy you meet in the dark? And while you've got
them off-center bring in a relative or friend who will plead your
case.
If they don't understand now that overprotection is worse
than overpermissiveness; they will next year, when they may
have lost you. - HELE.N AND SUE

+++

·

! 'Dateline
! By Gallia

I

!

I

Hobart Wilso11 }r.

MOST ORIGINAL FLOAT WINNER - The GaUipolis State Ilistitute Nurses float, "Ye
'Oide Toy Shoppe," captured Most Original honors in Saturday's annual Gallipolis Christmas
parade. Accepting the trophy was Mrs.
Kise lO M 'il:i

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+++

C hc)p&lt;J 1

PltX- Humb,;~r-d 16. Ora l

J

Church Se~V·I €e 4 : Faith

lO . OO

Ia'·

Cartoons 10.

Today 15, Cvno&lt;..lty Shop 6,

13 ; This is the Lile 3; Arch t•~'s Fun HouSe B M9vie '' The·
l d Ue Shepar.d ol Kingdom Come'', 10.
10: 30 Thi s. i s t he Life 15 . lns ighl .1. Ci1pf&lt;l in Noah 3: Nofre Dame
Highltghls 8.
Jl ·OO TV Chapel 3: Jo y in Li vi ng 13, Consumer Report 15;
F ocu s on Columbu !-. 4, Brol hN Bun 6
11 · 30 M aki! a Wi sh'6'~ 13 ; Rex Humbard 8 Outrea Ch I S. This is
I he An s\.,'P.f J; 'O&lt;;U F:oot.ba_ll H 19hllCJhf &lt;; .1 S-port s (ha II~Jngf' 1.
17 : 00 CBPA 6owl1ng 6; Colum bus Towr1 M e-elinq 10. Rev .
Calvm !;: Van ... lJ'; At lsoue 3, Sncr;·:d HP(I rf 15
1? .30 Re'Jival Fi res 13 . Pro Foolbuli Pr1~ CM"'f' 91-0w:. 8. Meet
the Press J . ·1, !5.
.
1 00 ·· PrO Foothall3,·4. 10. 1)·; l o-:.er Liq btfoo;.ne l1
1 30 1'JS\Je';i and An \W€' 1' \ 6, 13
l 00 Poiot of View 6"; C o H cg~:: Fo(l\ boll '/2, 13,

2:30 Jake's Place 1&gt;
·
3· 00 -Uoyd Bridges 6 · FMrn er 's Daughte r 13.
J. 30 Rookies 13; F Troop 6
.t·OG--Uvinq 33 , What ilre: yDu Saymq J, 15 ; Wacky World of
Jonathan Winters 6: G ram!J iinq Foo tball -4: Pro Football 8, 10.
4: 30 ·- World of Surviv(1l6, 11 ; Aq1 o f AnxiP.ty 33.
5: 00 GrJ'!en Ac r es :); l&lt; lppl c:r, J:l· Prim us 4, The Midni9h l Ride
ol . Pau l Rever ~ ~ ·· FCJllh l or TrKl oty 15. M ovie, "W~1r of the

13.

St. 11

N"\'.'S. W•:i1 °1r.,•J,\pn r+ .,6 II ':de. •~ rlh.; ,·8.,.Ji.J'Jf•ntle Jury
Cons•; rner R':l)ort' l ·1. ,
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~ dl Yc f 1 ·11her C• !·, ~!o ntP6 ,

DpNVER IIYSELL

6-00
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Hysell ending
long service as
bus driver

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Cartoon

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Colorcartoons :
Who's Watching You
What 's on Your Mind?
Show Starts 7·p. m .

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Small Deposit Holds Your Christmas Tree

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DURABLE, BETTER QUALITY
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The Shopping Days Are Rapidly Passing By

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Makes think,ln~.Jamlly fun I .

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. SCOTCH PINE

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ARTIFICIAL TREES
SCOTCH PINE
1 FT. 55 MAIN BRANCH TIPS

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and Decorations

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Gallipolis, Ohio

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FT. 122 MAIN BRANCH TIPS

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As Christmas nears, eve1J011e becomes more rushed to
complete their shopping.

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upp_ly Co.

POINT PlEAsANT

EXTRA
Twinkling
SPECIAL

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Reg . 59c
525 to Pkg.

38~

Reg. 29c

19~

200 to Pkg .

We at the First National Bank urge you to patronize our
Local Merchants.

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Ont of lh• world'• mo'l popular gam~1.
Hovn of fun whethr you Win or oo broke.
Bily oot for lh• kid1, 1h.n
borrow lt.

Now you can thoroughly enjoy a thick 1reen tree
after year . These beautiful artlriclat pine• make II IUYI
Needlea ne•er drop and they art completely lire
shtant.

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LIMIT 1

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FISHER-PRICE

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parker brothers .
monopoly

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APPLIANCES
FROM MURPHY'S
•DISCOUNT PRICES
d YEAR REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE
PROCTOR DRY

IRON-

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MURPHY'S
COMPLETE

IT PAYS TO GIVE

USE YOUR CONVENIENT • • •

AIRPORT ,~..

DEPARTMENT
'1.00 DOWN HOLDS

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REG. $13.96
LIMIT 1

TOY

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IIGULAI $12.99 Table Model

MOST LAYAWAYS

Pln[ball Game
(save sa)

- - - $6 59

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COFFEE MAKER- - - -$1

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Bell• rinQI

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Action fvn for

PROCTOR
2 SLICE

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•GREEN

12 FT. WIDTHS$

35 Lite

Our local merchants have made eveiJ effort to offer you
almost anythin'g that you may have on your list

Indoor-Outdoor
CARPET

•RED ·

.Co.

ICICLES

Large A.ssortment

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•SAPPHIRE

LIGHT SETS

Why go to the added time and expense of traveling to a
distant city for your shopping.

1

312 6th ST.

422 Second Ave.

Layaway for a Decorative Holiday

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·TAWNEY STUDIO

have suffered a heart attack.
He was taken to and admitted
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.

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THE CHRISTMAS STORES FOR THIS AREA

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QUANTITIES lAST

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School Sr rnr&gt; 10 ;

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Four deer, pony are killed

call at 12:01 a.m. Saturday 'to
Mincr·svi ll e for
Junior
Aulherson who was believed to

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o Auto...,llc Thru-tho lena
CdS expooure control
o Shorp f/1.7 zoom lena
o Bright reftu viewfinder
o Low~lghtwemlng algnol
o Aim puiH lndlcotor
o Cqrnlortoblo plolol grtp
o Eny-lo-hondle, comPIICI
doalgn
o Eleclrfo motor dil..

GAHS DHOSTUDENTS for 1972-73 are&lt;front row, I tor, Debra Barr, Paula Butler, Sue
Adkms, Janet Warren, an~ Maria Hanson; second row 1Cathy Musgrove, Sally Winters, Debra
Russell, and JanetYoho; th1rd row, Donna Pugh, Donna Patrick, Lynn Mitchell, Patsy Haner,
and K1m Elcessor; fourth row, Mindy Frazier, Denise Lanier, Elizabeth Martin, coordinatorInstructor Mrs. Janet Wetherhoit,and Deborah Johnson . Not pictured are Deborah Maione and
lanatha Garnes.
·
AUTI!ERSON ILL
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad answered a

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CAVE CITY,Ky. (AP ) - Mammoth Cave , long acclaimed as r-liilrl n·rr
I o
.. ,,
one of the six natural wonders of the world, has been more than
H~ ··L·ll 1: 1:r:nklrr . ('' t 1·•.'
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doubloo in length as a result or a discovery announced Friday. for lh J,.,,. "' · 'i
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The discovery, made by seven spelunkers, was of a 6,000 foo t n·~·t · i .,· • ·tl l\ ~"' 1' \'l'dr I.(
'lf&lt;i•l' JPr-·
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corridor linking the 58-mile Mammoth Cave system with tbe dri ving· ·1hi 1 11 Ill ~; • r\
'_If' I [ I
P:;nderos"
:1.
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nearby Flint Ridge Cave system, the longest in the world at 87 fi r't '" "' .,;
5. 30 Elo:'c Co. J1: M.lr~h-dl Dt!lon .~ Dr a gn('t8; (,(1 If:~" Pyle '
miles. Mammoth Cave was the third-largest cave system in the
~ut. Irk•· 1• ·•·
13 , HQdgProdqe lOdg(' W
rnou gl.
6·00
N1..•wsJ.-~.B. 1 0 Tr ul ha r (onr."'il !;· ~· ·•s' J,\
Aroun d
world, behind 72-mile Holoch Holle i~ Switzerland.
ThP kPnr! 11 · Ses,.., m&lt;: Sf .'0
The discovery wOL not mean much for the general public,
t• .Jl•
NBCN·.'ISJ, .~.10: frotl·or(('ln!:&gt;(Q f, ("•St-h.,~8 IQ ;
H.lf h .?I&gt;&lt;''Ji'1 13: I Dn.wm of .karH•:t• 13
however, because the corridor linking the two cave systems is
7 ilO
N~.,..j·'i fl: Ciu:.u&lt;;l 11, lnc;ight JJ, Wh,)• • (lll.y Lnw 8 RP.trl
too rigorous to be opened to tourists.
Your W&lt;.Jv IJp-13. [:let ( I'J /0; S il rnt'!.~; L•Jtl,·Wr;mpn.t
SIX 1:\ Jl l&lt;'1 ED
In discovering the passage way, the exploration team had to
I:&gt;
T,)-~!IITheTru!h"i rnflir Cn•JdlC t., •&lt;:mlPt1C'Irnn33;
CLIW E!.ANP liP I 1
A 'I(
.lc1 r-V'lC•( Squ al••:i .J Y·:LHl(J Or. Kdr\ ... n b
loJgcpodqe
wade
through
chin~eep
water
with
headroom
to
the
ceiling
at
••
feder al graud JUr y Friday
Lodgr;
o
?0;
Mnv1e
Tdr'Mn t h~ Fe11r'less 13 .
tilnes coming to just 12 inches. The water in the passageway was indicted six persuns on charges 3:00 - Rowan &amp; Martin's Lauqh In 3, ,J ; UFO 6; Dr.· Seuss
"
12 to 15 feet deep Friday.
Cartoon 8, 10.
of possession and conspiracy to
Frosty the Snawm t=~ n B. 10
I
The discovery was made last Sept. 9 by a team led by Dr. distribute 300 pounds of marl- 8: 30
q DO
Pro Foo tball 6, 11.. Movi e ''The Hired Hand " 3, 4. 15 ;
John Wilcox, 35, of Columbus, Ohio, which started from the Flint juana .
Perry Como Wi nler Show 8, 10.
9:30 - Book Beai 20. 33.
Ridge system. The discovery was not announced until now
l~di ctm ents were handed
because the spelunkers wanted to map the area and verify their down to Arthur Earl Bird, 26, 10:00 - Flili Cosby 8. 10; NowslO ; Chess Tournament 33.
1LOO - News 3. 4. 8. 10, 1;.
findings.
Doylestown; Robert George 11 30 -Jo hn ny Carson 3. d, IS , Movie-s uThe Chairman" 8; "Duel
In Jhe Ju ngle" 10.
Wilcox told a news conference at Mammoth Cave National Bowman, 32 , Wa dsworth ;
12
:00
News 6, 13.
Park Friday that he realized the team was onto something big William and Betty !.aakma n, 12 : 30 .. Mov
ies "Croo&lt;' Anony mo us" 6;. "Fancy Pal\ts' 13.
'Vhen he noticed the ceiling was getting higher.
Larry Albert Mollner, 26, and 1:00 - Focus On Columbus 4.
·
I.
30
New5
4.
Linda
Lee
Sanderson,
24,
ail
of
Then he went through a hole and emerged into what at firsl
2. 30 - News 13.
was total blackne.ss, preventing him from seeing either ceiling or Phoenix, Ariz .
PRE'ITIEST FLOAT honors in Saturday's Gallipolis Christmas parade was captured by
walls.
the Gallipolis State Institute's male and female supervisors entry. Accepting the trophy for
As his eyes became accustomed to the blackness, with the
''The Littlest Angel" were Carl Wiugh, Mrs. Margaret Wolfe and Mrs. Kathleen Thompson.
aid of his lantern, he picked out a .handrail across the .room and
Bernard Guinther, left, presented the trophy.
realized he was In Mammoth Cave.
"I see a tourist trail," he shouted to his colleagues behind him
to signal their success.
.
Spelunkers have been searching for a cormecting passage
between the two huge cav'e systems for 18 years, never being
GALLIPOLIS - Four deer 554. Of£icers reported the Hunwr, 26, Gallipolis, was certain there actually was one.
The aetual discovery of the passageway in September was
were killed •nd a pony was animal ran into the path of an involved in an accident at 6:18
set
up Aug. 9 when another member of the team, Patricia
aeriously injured in a rash of auto driven by Charles Ken- a.m. Saturday on Rt. 35, one
COLORS:
traffic accidents investigated neth Burris, 28, Rt. 2, Vinton . and six tenths miles west of Rt. O'owther, 29, of Arlington, Mass., squeezed through a narrow
canyon
and
found
an
initial
"H"
scratched
on
the
wall.
Friday by the Ohio State High-·
Vern S. Clark, 49, Ripley, W. 160. Hunwr's cruiser struck
Alongside the initial was an arrow pointing in the direction
'fl'ay Patrol.
Va ., was charged with failure and killed two deer which
The, first occurred in Meigs to stop within the assured clear entered the highway. There the team was going. Since spelunkers always use such arrows to
County on County Rd., nine distance following an accident was minor. damage to the point to the exit of a cave, the sign indicated that it bad been '
made by someone coming from the other direction - the
~nths of a mile east of Rt. 7 at 1:40 p.m. Friday on Rt. 35,
cruiser.
Mammoth
Cave side.
where a deer ran into the path two miles east of Rt. 588. The
The team assumed the letter and arrow were made by Peter
ol a car operated by Clayton L. patrol said Clark's- car struck
HansOn, who had done considerable exploration in the area - all
' Johnson, 32, Rt. 1, Reedsville. the rear end of a pick-up truck
PLEASANT VALLEY
Moderate damage resulted driven by William E. Lockhart,
from the Mammoth Cave side - from 1937 to ·around 1942.
In a deer~r accident on Rt. 7, 65, Crown City.
ADMISSIONS: Robin White, Hanson was killed iri action during World War II.
line and eight tenths miles
The other members or the spelunker t e h t made the
Edsel Durham, 30, Rt. I, Wilkesvllle, 0.; o-.K. Burdette,
tKc1h of Crilwn ll,ty. Officers Vinton , was charged with Point Pleasant; Teddy discoveries were Thomas Brucker, 19, Yellow Springs, Ohio;
•kl the animal ran into the · passing without the assured Hickman, Evans; Mrs.· Max · Richard Zopf, 21, Yellow Springs; P. Gary Eiler, 25, Atlanta;
.
path of an auto driven by clear distance following an Heslep, · Point Pleasant; Ga.; Cleveland F. Pinnix, 28, Raleigh, N.C., and Stephen Wells,
Wlllllm A. Gardner, 31, Rt. 1, accident at 12:35 p.m. on Rt. Kimberley Newsome, Vlnion; · 23, 9lnelnnat1.
CalllpoUs. There wa s ·160, two miles ~out~ of Rt. SM. Merle. Kiggins, GaLLipolis
++ +
nlodlrale damage 'to his car. Durham attempted to pass just Ferry; Mrs, Robin Brum!leld,
, TWENTY Y~ARS AGO, from the files of the Daily TribUne
A pony owned by John M. as an auto driven by Gary Ashton;, Flora McKinney, and weekly Gallla Times ... Ground-breaking ceremonies set
alenft. Lower River Rd., was McClaskey, 22, Rt. I, Vinton, Point Pleasant: Mrs.-Bernard Dec. 4 at Cheshire to IaurlCh $14S,OOO,OOO Kyger Creek Power
arkn"y lnjUNCI when struck was making a lelt turn.
. Frazier, Point Pleulnt; Mrs: Plant ... Cherles S. (Major) Benedict, 85, claimed by death.
., • - operated by David
State Patrolman Dennis M. Roy Dowell, Racine; Mrs. L. Was &lt;Illy Gallla resident ever to take part in Olympics. Major
~llftll Klaeaid, 21, Rt. 3,
H. Kincaid, Point Pleasant; Benedict waa a member of the !90a U.S. Rifle Team iJl Bisiey,
firoelllrvllle. The mishap
~:~.~~!~J:;h:~: England, and was high man on that world champions)lip team
ie Uhlhtt:G p.m. on Rl. 7,
Mason; James Stanley, Point .•. Oleshire may get new high school ... Holzer Hospital now
• laMr IIIII 1M11 lenthl mtlel
•
Pleasant. Sharon Wolfe - has complete dtal telephone system .. . Rio Grande Redmen
...... crl Rt, lB. The J!OIIY had . The first true mechanical Gallipolis;
Keith Newberry: defeat University of Dayton Frosh 9:1-W, Wilberforce University
111M ~ \ b
clocks, mnde in the 13th cenJ'IH
oc- tury, often lacked hinds and Barberton, o.; Char tea , liM! and Bluefield 93.63 as Bevo Francis scores 35, 69 and 21
!llltt:id -' ':00 p.m. Friday 011 faces and merely Jtrucll: the Ungerfelt, Mrs. Lora' siurm points ... Jeep Holley, Pete Nibert and Morris HOjlan win GAHS
and Jean Dou, Point Pleasant. ·grid awards at annual post season banquet.
il-. n mile f1GI'III of Rt. hour.

...

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mov1e camera
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That ulc1, &lt;lnt! \'.~Jnt ;1 lll\''11 (

P r • n i ~&gt;rny.

Burt Reynolds
Jack Weston

·'file

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FUZZ
( Technicolor)

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Bernard
Wilson, Vinton; Ronald Bostic,
Puint Pleasant; Mary Weaver,
Syracuse; Ella Goodin,
Pomeroy; Arthur Goodin ,
Pomeroy ; Danny Burbridge,
Albany; Mary Ford, Letart, W.
Va.
DlSCHARGt~D - John An&lt;l er~on . Pearl Hysell, Iris Carr,
Jewell Curtis, Keith Brogan,
Rurus Browning, Hattie Elam. ·

here against &lt;ittethein at 8
p.m. 1
Wilbur force - Boy kin 4-1-12,
Boddie &lt;1-2-2, Hill 2-&lt;1-4, Purdue
4.0:8 McBeth 13.()..26 · MariQw
3-0-6:·sl&lt;\nley 4-I-9, Cr~ss &amp;-1-17.
Totals 38-8-84.
· Rio Grande - Iiartrum 1~
23, Hart 4-1-9, Thompson 6-0-12,
Frausnaugh 2-11-4, Williams 2.()..
· 4, Clark 2-2-li, M. Rouse 6-0-12,
Bollinger 6-1-13, Lambert ll~
22, Wade ().J-1. Totals 49:11-100.

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f&gt;..'( Ot..IOAY Uf;C. 4. ]'172
f, 0(1

goud· sch&lt;•(•l f)1!}1 rds dUJtll i~
ti me. "

Town s hip
Tru slee. he pht!h ·to l't'!ll.al n
ac tiv1' dt''-iplt(' ~ivin ~~ \l fl tl i.s
sc hoo l ln1s I'I J!l \ t '. II.\ "l'll !\'! Is
thi s slorv in 1datiqn f•l !11:.;

Tonight , Mon .; Tues .
DecE!mber 3-4-5

3.0D News 13

6. 30

S:.1!1~hury

MEIGS THEATRE

Pr:1i-cr: Sur9•·')n

c·omr and gu in his luug sprv i!'f'
and !w s \\ -' Wkt!d '" lth ;.;otll!'

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UF OS : ln lh•:! l-:1iov :[) l r.· rn&gt;O. -,
i 30 Ju &lt;ot Gem" FJI·or" .'U .. u · ·wc'r !•.1 1;! Oi.~ney 3, ,J, l.? Le t's
r.t~.r.) k c· A De ar 6, Thr· flr-u'.f 'v'·lll hu1,1 'I Chriq ma•, T1h' 8, 10.
R 10 Fr.,nc t- Chef ?0, 31 t l·-ClL·IJd :!, i, 1J.
fJ 00- V\ '1s!~ro 11:~ce .'Th6 at r.-. ''-1 '"l INk VAn D·ykr g, 1'• Mov1c,
In Hn r: ~ sWay ". 6. 1!
9:30 M Jnn iX. a, 1 0.
·
10 .00 - F 1r in11 ! ine ,0 . 33
~ o 30- · Pro le.ctors .t; E\'il ro11 1• 1-J 11 ;(!h Ro~1rl to AdvC:"1tu r e 10 ;
I~ w,. 1 h;l'r, '1.1, ',hC•!_II:j Vnn 11 3
11 !.(. r.;,:_,",','&gt; 1/'./t ,11' . ·r Spr:&gt;rh :t .•~ , .- 1 1·; 1
11 o J:Jh' .J'Y r;.,..-•;q ·1. •. ~~ Af• _ rJ, .-:· ·, 1 Mm·l~&gt;,
f 1e+ r ihr!f.l fr,rT~.·' 1 ~ cl'-'
h1 I ~~~," \!'

Lanham's Rio Grande College
Rudmen trouni-ed Wilburforce
Un i v e r s i IY's B u II dog
basketball . learn 106 !o _84
before 1,100 ·wildly cheering
homecoming fans in Lyne
Center Saturday night.
Guard Steve Bartrum, of
Ironton, led Rio's attack with
23_ pomts. Henry McBeth of
Wl!burforce was high wilh 26.
Rw led 49-34 ~t halftime, never
h:aqrng.

.

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Wr~d Gll c:.' ' ,
) · 30 -·Sesa m~

Rio
wins 106llio'stonext84
RIO GRANDE - Coach .Art
game is Tues&lt;!ay

al

·

· Robe rt s 10 , Old T1me Gospel HQIJ( E.
9'30 Church by Sodc•ol Ro.xl ;, Good Now' 13,

The old 1111111 oa irl. .. y"' ·
Til t jllri;.:L :r&lt;k&lt;•rl, '\\'!i ·
Th e
'd "'"" rPp!r ,
"E noug l.
is '''11Jug 11 ,,f
any lhing."
·
+ ++
. • ,
il rn:rr··irr\ th" t"' " r
FRID1iY, United Press International (the Tithe. :Sentlne'l's Frailc'L'' Sll'id; '" 1'r. 1'1 •
wire service) carried a feature on the discovery. The Associated . hn \ e ,.l llr t'l' da u~ 11t,,,. . ,f 's .
PressJollowed it up Saturday.
'
.... . Hai\lh ; \1 ,,~,·l11w , l',,;:oi&lt;T
+ ++
.\1 idrll--r•
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DR. Wilcox, well-known in Gallia County, spent mosl of his 1Fvrl:- ''•'"
lor
summers as a youngster visiting his grandparents. He is the son ~ l ro . Earl r Huln • ~,,,,_,m:m.
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wilcox, Columbus. Here's what the AP Pul\ler".': tlr·r" "' ''· t,
article had to say Saturda.y;
H &lt;·~ · · r '" I . r ''I'\. ;oil of
DR. JOHN Wilcox, 35, Columbus, grandwn of Mr. and Mrs.
Clem C. Wilcox, Vinton, and nephew of Mr . and Mrs . James
Clark, Rio Grande, received nationwide attention Friday and
Saturday as a result of a new passage way discovery at tllammoth Cave, located at Cave City, Ky .

.

9;00' Sm!J irtg JubileeJ; Cartle

seen a Jut nf g (ltl{!

I

·w

Th-h~6

Dear Rap :
POM EHO Y
D&lt;•rll·t·r
Can male and female ever he "just friends"? Sure they can, Hysell, Pmnrroy Roulc +. who
and who knows better than I, who Jived with a girl for six months retirc'tl a~ i~ school hus dr in•r
· on a "friends" basis. That is, we shared a two-bedroom apart- Tllur ~d(ly . had (' Omplt~trd :n :~
• ment, and we each had our Love intereSt elsewhere, off and on. yet1 r s of acciden t-fr~"'L' dnrt ng ,
No one would believe it, so we· just said nothing, but the fact llu.: l;-~ o;;t fr'w ~ · rar s in ihP 1\lk it;;;
was we were good pals and didn 't want to spoil it. Besides she J,(wnl School Di strict H~·:--.\'11
was engaged to a guy overseas.
h.l'~ an
drivi n!-: rSalisb ur}
Distnd
b
usP~ in Jq4l, ~: pt ·n dtn;..,
Oh yes, I said "off and on" didn 't I? Well, it tu rns out the guy
1
broke the engagement and I discovered I wasn;t so crazy about lfi :! .~ears nnt only dt:l' lllf' f•~l'
U\e girll thought I loved, and one thing led to another, so now we .tdso ft'!Jatring bu ses.
Hvsel\ ;d tr&gt;sts that Jw · !-;~;..;
are still sharing the apartment as - MR. AND MRS. X

r---~---------------------1

GALLIPOLIS - A simp!~. Killen, R.N ., public health Dl•b u r&lt;~h Johnson , Deborah
valuable program to help some nurse with the city of Malu.nt.• and Jariet Warren
Gallipolis teenagers decide Gallipolis: Mrs. Mary Ellis, Nulrilion De partment
where their energies should be general manager of the Hoir.er Medical Center; Donna ·
headed is. wrapped up in ihe . Medical Plna; Mrs. Barbara . Palrick and · Sally 'Winters, ·
llj'eal big·, complicated souii· Belz. ll.N., assistant director Physical T~erapy Department
ding title, Diversifie&lt;( Heallh ur Nursing Service of Holzer al Holzer Medical Center ;
Occupation {DHO ) Program . Medical Center, and Rober! Debra llussell, A. Keith Sheets,
Big or little, intricate or not Fanning, vice-president for D.D.S.. and Evan C. Roderick,
20 students are in DHO in it.s · proressional services for D.D.S.;
Maria Hanson,
second year here at Gallia Holzer Medical Center.
Washington School, and ranlha
Academy High School.
Coordi nator-instructor or the Garnes, Mr. and Mrs. William
This v&lt;icational program is · program is Mrs . Janel Steele.
designed to give sen ior Welherlluit.
In lhe DHO program
sludent.s practical experience .students and -cooper a ling sludenls work half a day with
m health related jobs, thus employers this year are their employers and attend
' remainder. In school
enabling them to make an Elizabeth Martin with Gordon school the
inwlligent decision about their · K. Amsbary, D.D.S.; Paula I hey have p,, class periods o!
future careers.
Buller and Minday !'razier, sludy related directly to their
A DHO advisory committee Gallipolis
City . Health heallh field . Upon graduation
is composed of Miss Virginia Department; Patsy Haner, these sludents have had both
Clay School; Kim Ellcessor, on-r he-j ob training and
Lynn Mitchell and Janet Yoho, educa tional ex perience in
Community Early Child C.re fields related to hea lth care.
Center; Cathy Musgrove,
The DHO program is Qne of
Gillingham Drugs; Sue Adkins, the expandi ng vocationa l
Debra Barr and Donna Pugh; s rvices oHered by lhe
Tonightthru
Nursing Service at Holzer , ilipolis City Schools to meet
Wednesday
--Medical Ce nter ; · Denise mor adequa tely the needs or
Lamer, Hume Health Service · lhe population of the area .
al Holzer Medical Center;

SUNDAY, DECEMBER J
R ~ .Leo.naf-d Repass 8 Go~pe l CMJ 11fln 6, (hurcl1 Se&gt;rvice 13 ;
M ormon (h rJ r 3 r1M J of Dr't~''~4:r·,. l
8 )0 Or al ~ 9b'(:'d S 1 Your Hb,lth .,:, [Jdl oi DI'S&lt;Over.,. !L Rex
Hurnl;)Md l3: ReV iyill t rr es 13'. K;&gt; thryn Yuh lmrm. 4; CMi1~"&gt;M

Mothers a,nd Fathers: LF;TGO!
Dear Heien and Sue :
I'm going on 18, and my parents still won't lei me date. My
father has an idea if! walk out the door with a boy I'll come back
pregnant.They say "It isn't you we distrust, it's those sneaky
males!" Sometimes! wonder if they'd rather l'ddate girls.
1Mylet one boy visit me for about four months, and after they
had spent all that time in the living room, watcl)inthim and me,
they fmally let me go to a walk-in movie with him - but only if
my younger brother went along. The guy gave up.
My senior year is one-third over,' and .! won't be able to go to
any of the'ilances or parties. A boy is-interested in me, but wha't •
can I say? - "My parents wouldn't let me date;even if they had
known you all their Lives." Andthat will be the end of that.
Can either of you possibly -think of a way out of this mess? DESPERATE

•

•

20·En-rolled in ·DHO

Television Log·

" ~' .

By Hd(•n anrl Sue. Bottd

-.

3- The Sunday Times- Sentinel,'sunday, Dec. 3, t972

'·

w«·&gt;W,.W.:s:&gt;)',h)O.::::,''X'"''·······:.:·:•:•:•:•:•:•;.:·:·:·:·:·· .·:'·:•:·:•:·:•:•:·:-:·~W.·:-».W.&lt;-&gt;::;_.kW·:

Ge~~;~ti~n R~p-·

'

IF YOU'RE SHORT ON CASH!

$799

' THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

BLENDER ---'---- -WEST BEND
30 CUP

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PLUS MANY, MANY OTHERS

.•

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BRAND NAMES!
LOW PRl.CES!

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$}499
.

1 Year
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11

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••to9 YEARS OF SERVICE'"

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FIRST 4 WHEEL CYCLE FOR.
BEGINNERS.
.

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$888

AGES 2·4
SUPER WIDE Reg.
tRACK
$10.99

·

&lt;Ill

REG. $7.44 1Sll'' TALL
"DrOWSY,'' Doll

'

UNTIL DEC. 22 TO PAY
SHOP AND SAVE

-·

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BEGINNERS
CYCLE

USE MURPHY'S EASY
LAYAWAY fii.AN

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...•
•

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includtd) .

$2288

7 SPEED

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botltri11 (not,

TOASTER- - - WARING

rl~
n1'1

all. Automat ic

St:oring hand.
Optrqles on .of

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.

•11\1
i ttH
11M

~-~(;v•)J66 .
-

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138

l!'ll

rt)

Aootod hoir. Slupy holf-shul
She con ••r II P''"'"'·
Droned in llqnnot,l.. pell.
.

•Y"·

'

OPEN EACH NIGHT
UN'J:IL CHRISTMAS

TIL

'
'··J•)

9

;Q~

ll~
.•,.,q

P.M.

··901

. ~~~'

E EASY 1AfAY·CHARGE l'tf

•.l%
\'l

. BOTH STORES IN GAUIPOLIS - OPEN DAILY TILL 9 PM

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Sibley, Mrs . Bonnie Tawney',
Mrs . Edna Tawney, and Mrs.
Evalee Myers.
'Rcfre, htnents · of cake,
ru lnl&lt;, nuts and punch• were
served to Ag nes Myers, mother
('I I) (Jr~ of gr een 3nd yeiJOW wer e &lt;~f Mrs. Ramey; Mildred
used for the decorating Gr e~or y, Tammy and Mike;
Slrra 'Bailey, Carol Zbbcvich,.
scheme.
Hostesses Y{ere Mrs. Ina belle Virginia Kemper , Midge
f: ALU POLIS -- Mrs. James
f•:. P. IPal) Ramey I former
[jntJa Myers 1 of Gallipolis,
was honored Thursday, Nov .
16, with. a baby shower· at the
home yf ~:d na Tawney.- The

Shwmaker, Jean Fisher, Andy
Sibley . Jean Hanki.ns, Etla Sue
FoSl"f, M~ ry . Ellis, Francis
S k idmo r e,
B on i ta
Hlllon, Esther Danner, ferry
Danner. Lisa Taw ney, Sharon
Kittrell and Penny Schultz.
Sending gifls we re Lil a
Merola , Donna Wiggins, Nel
Taw ney, Nancy Houck,

Mrs. Marie ·Hawkins
GSI employee, retires ·

GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs. John Cornett on Nov, 13.
Mrs. J. Howard Neal gave a
·review of the interesti ng and
beautifully illu~ lrat ed bcok,
"Our Country," developed by
the Book Division of U. S. News
and World Report.
This book is about our
remarkable n_alion, the United
States of America and tells the
trul y dramatic story of the.
good things of America in

Engagement announced
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. D. Virgil Halley, 502
Fourth Ave., are announcing
the engagement and approaching wedding of their
daughter, ,Miss Diana Kay to
Brian Lee Lintala, 217 East B.
Sl., Well$ton, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donsld E. Lintala, 10
Henkle Ave., Gallipolis.
11lj! wedding will be an event
of Dec. 23, at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 541 Second
An ., Gallipolis. The Rev.
Father A. H. MacKenzie will
perform the double ring
ceremony and the gracious

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Dec. 3, the
338lh day of 1972 with 28 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American portrait painter
Gilbert Stuart was born Dec. 3,
1755.
On this day in history:
In 1818, Illinois entered the
Union as the 21st state.
In ·1833, Oberlin College in
Mra, Qlarlea All111111.
s, , Ohjopp~ned Wii/J an enrollm~ n 1
John Byers presided and the of 29 men and 15 wome"- ·lhe
garden club prayer w¥ recited
by ilo;n( ·~· melliberl:'.~"·Fall
arrangements were exhibited
by Mrs . Un Young. Mrs. Bill
Davis and Mrs . John Reese.
Mrs, Lin Young gave the
following December Ups :
I. Dig out any volunteer tree
and shrub seedlings in hedges
or flower beds. They are
seldom the kind you will want
to keep.
.
2. Make a list of plants you
want to gcow next year and
read llbcut them. Check their
hardiness on the U. S.
Depar.tment of Agriculture
Plant Hardiness Zone Map.
3. If a live Christmas tree ls
being used for the holiday
season, spray the branches
with Wilt Pruf to reduce loss of
moisture 'through the needles
and to lessen the danger of fire
hazard.
4. Keep the soil ball of your
Christmas tree moist at all
times and set the tree in its
permanent location, as soon as
possible.
Refreshment.&lt; were served.
Reservations have been made
for the Christmas dinner at The·
Red Carpet at 7:30 p.m. Dec.
14. There will also be a gift and
corsage exchange.

Mrs. joseph Bolin speaks
GAL!,JNUS -4Mn::J.osepll
Bolin was eqest speaker at Ye
Olde VIllage O.rden Club
l Thursday · evening. She
demonstrated making corn
tiusk roses and rosebuds. She
placed the dried corn husks In a
bcwl of hot water for a few
minutes, shook off the excess
water and blotted them with a
paper towel. She tore off strips
of corn husk, looped them In
her fingers for the center of the
rose and wrapped It several
limes with fine florists wire.
. After Sl'tting the center aside
·~temporarily, she cut various
sized, elongated, heart shaped
petals, -with shallow indents at
the top, from the corn husks.
Then starting with the smaller
petals, she spaced them evenly
around the center with the
petal point toward the stem
and wired them in place. Using
a heavier wire for the stem, she
covered it neatly with florists
tape. She then curled the petal
topa over a large nail and
enhanced the beauty of the rose
by adding a corn husk leaf and
rosebud to the stem.
Mrs. Bolin · also exhibited
some grapes she had made
from buckeyes and several
. dried flower arrangements In
miniature oval frames.
The club met at the home of

SHO·P-A-RAMA 1 I 1

FREE TICKETS! I I

ALL PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

WIN $1000 WIN
00

ALL DRAWING TO BE HELD
IN CITY PARK
, 8:05· P.M.

h·.

FRI., DECi 8......................$10tr
WED., DEC. 13 .................~20000

o

can documenl' had been found
in a hollow pumpkin on the
Maryland farm of former
magazine editor Wh ittaker
Chambers, allegedly for delive·
ry to a Communist power .

.·

MON., DEC. 18 ................. ~50000

A thought for the da y: British

writer Jan.e Austen said, "rt is
GALLIPOLIS RETAIL MERCHANTS
a , truth universally acknow•
ledged that ·a single man in
OPEN ALL DAY lHURSDAY
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
MUST BE PRESENT TOWIN!
posse~sio? or ~ - ~ood _ fortunel'p-="C~~~~lC:f:I=&lt;=~~!C.~.~.~?'c::!OC-OC\?CIOC-oe;c,?, 9C~.,Ci'li.~,:;r=:~::rc=&gt;Q4=&lt;=~0~1 .,~,-~.,u~''"~.,ijl,iji,1;C,:It;~~
must !Je m want of a wr e." ·

1

I''· ''

and

, .1ily.

• • •

Whippany

Twill Flair

•

Accutron•
by Bulova
The ~utron .,.te~ hoi no balonce whoel, no malnsprln&amp;, no
lurlrsprin1. lnitud It ~as a tiny electronl~lly·driven tu~lna
folk. The tunlnc fort&lt; splits a second Into 360 precise little
pelts. Tho on ordinary wotch ~n do is divide a second
Into 5 or 10 perts.

AUL DAVIES JEWELER

VELVET
SOLIDS

)

McGregor knlll Arnet®

~!\ · Ot~

·j\

••o

McGregor full fashions this
ribbed knit of Arne!® triacc·
tate and nylon and styles It

with deep four buuon placket.
Mu chlne washable and dryable.

;m.

uiacetate with ribs to spare in
this handsome turtleneck pullover. Full fashioned . Machine
wuhable and dryable. $17.

VELVETEEN ·

~ $100

}Q% ~

SOLIDS

Per
Yd.
40" Lots of Colors

36" Many Colors

POLVESTER CREPE

Reg. $2.95

45" KLOPMAN'S

priced model at $ll0 or a 14K solid
gold date and day model at $700. the

MRS. MARK ELLIOTT NEAL

HOLIDAY BROCADES

spl it second timins is the same.

Guara nteed accurate to within a

:Hutchins-Neal
Exchange
.
Vows
..

" PATRIOT - The Trinity
Wesleyan Church, 529 North
Elm St., Oak Hill, was the
~lting for the marriage of
Miss Adrah Louise Hutchins,
·youngest daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Hutchins of
Patriot, Ohio and Mark Elliott
Neal, eldest son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey E. Neal of Oak
Hill, Ohio on Nov. 4.
The impressive open church
ceremony was solemnized by
The Rev. Froman Gollihue, at
' :30 o'clock.
• The church was decorated
\vith yellow roses, white mums,
't!;lndelabras and greenery.
The bride was given in
marriage by her brother ,
Forrest R. Hutchins. She was
rlillllnft lh'li"whit{ peau sole
satin fioor length gown with an
empire waistline, scoop
eekfiiie .and ·long bishop
leeves tied at the wrist. Her
•headpiece of net and lace was
~aisl
length. She carried a
....
~ascade bcuquel of yellow
lf.osebuds with touches of lace
~4nd ivy.
; ,. The bridal attendants were:
:~!lss Penny McNeal, Oak Hill,
•cousin of the bride as maid of
'::~onor; Miss Leah Neal, Oak
tHi!l, sister of the groom as
':Jimior bridesmaid. Miss Mc'tNeal's gown wa-s of moss
.l8reen, dotted swiss, high neck
t'"tline, the sleeves were short
With long matching gloves,
'4111pire waistline with a band of
ID1lti-colored flowers em.
oldery patterns. Her
\'-'Piece was of net and lace
~ matching color.
·• IIIss Neal wore a light yellow
anpe prlncess style gown with
bishop sleeves wilh white
rl buttons of heart .shape.
headpiece was a wide
~yellow velvet band.
• The maid of honor and junior
;bridesmaid each carried one
h se wllh·ribbon and greenery
!of color matching their gowns.
. Mr. Timothy· A. Neal,
tprolher of lhe groom, per~ormed the duties of best man.
~atirig the guests were JerTy
p. Myers, cousin of the groom,
p nd Bob Miller. Registering

ae

Lovely Setection.ot Metallics

minute a month."

F

PERMANENT

Accutron price range. So give him
the watch he wants ... Accutron

by

!he g ~ests was Mrs. Jerry D.
Myers.
The program of organ music
was presented by Mrs. Harry
Collis using selections: ''We've
Only Just Begun," "The Impossibl e Dream," " Speak
Softl y Love, " and th e
traditional Wedding March.
Solos by Mrs. Curtis Nunnery,
"0 Prorpise Met "Beca use, "
and "Melody of Love."
For the occasion, the bride's
mother wore a green knit dress
wi th black accessories. The
groom's mother wore a light
blue knit dress with black
aocessori es.
Following the wedd ing, a
reception was held in the social
room of the church.
The bride ' graduated from
Southwestern High School in
1971 and Nationwide Beauty
Academy. She is employed by
Eva 's Bea uty Salon in
Gallipolis.
The groom graduated from
Oak Hill High School in 1971
and is employed by the Charles
E. Simpson Sheet Meta l
Company, Jackson.
The couple is residing on
RL 1, Oak Hill.

PRESS
PRINTS

Bulova.

Open Monday
and Fridar
.TUPM

.I

SCARF AND
TIE
ANIMAL
CUTOUTS

:·:\lflitZ$~&gt;;:~

ounty

Co-Ordinator,
lllftOUII(.'ell the Bend Area
CGmmunlty Adlon Group will
· ~ve their orJI!Iiza\ional
J!lleui.g Wednadly at 7;30

p,m.

25

·15%

QUILTED
&amp; PLAIN
CO-ORDINATES

SWEATER
KNITS

F
F

OUTING
FlANNEL
PRINTS

25~ea .

BONDED

25%

F

NYLON
NET 5 yds.

o

FELT
10~
SQUARES · ea..

1h ~
JERSEY
100110 P.RINTS 10% ~
.

F

o

PLAID &amp; SOLID

OFF

0

F
F

$1

A. Sl•i nlm t leel. Blue dill and str111. $1111.

B. Stai nless stee l. GrMll grey dial. $1:fll.
C. TWO·tone case and band . Bura:undy dial. $115.
0. 14K solid go ld case an d alt&amp;ched band . $700.

Singer Gift
eenter

e USE OUR LAY-AWAY

Clark's Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
~ we

Gallipolis. Ohio

will adjust lo this tolerance, If necessery. Guarantee Is for one year.

'

ABEAUTIFUL CABINET WITH
THE EXCLUSIVE TOUCH &amp; SEW
SEWING MACHINE FOR HER!
SEE IT TODAY!

FREEl

SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICES THIS WEEKI

"Escapade" by

SINGER HAS A MACHINE FOR
EVERY BUDGET AND WOMAN

· afRWB~BBee

PRICES START AT

•5800

CHECK THIS LIST
• FREE DELIVERY . • FREE LESSONS
•SERVICE GUARANTEED 90 DAYS.TO PAY

LAY·A·WAY TODAY Ill
ASK FOR A DEMONSTRATIONI

SCISSOR SPECIAL
ORITZ TWO:SPEEO

$800

ELECTRIC SCISSORS
Reg . $12.00 Guaranteed
BE LDING-CORT IC ELL I

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New soft-sided zippered luggage. lfs bold 'n sassy.

GREAT FOR KNITS

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The daringly different non-conformist luggage that makes
you itch to wander.

W~kender

4i2-414 Second Ave.

$599

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FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
OPEN 'fll 8 P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS

Men's 27" Wardrobe .134.80

•

•

FOR A WIDE VARIETY OF
FABRICS IN A MULTITUDE
OF DESIGNS SEE US!

OPEN EVERY NITE 'TIL 8:00 P.M.

.27" Wardrobe. ••••••'34.80
Menr.s Companion s19.80

'19.80

FOR THE AREA'S BEST
AND BIGGEST SELECTION
IrS FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

'

Blue - Green - Burnt Orange for ' her and
Brown for him.
\..•'

Cosmetic Case .••.• n 8.80

SEWING SCISSORS

TRIMS • TRIMS • TRIMS

Reg . 58.00

EXTRA SHARP

21"
Mrs. Pauline L. Marshall,

0! o
·. 10 ~

MANY MORE GREAT SAVINGS ON YOUR
FAVORITE FABRICS!

.

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OFF

SLEEPwEAR '
FABRICS

45" Reg. to $2.98 ycl.
Many _.Unique Patterns

a

t'

15%

We have a great selection in every

•

· GALLIPOUS - A surprise
birthday party \Vas held
Saturday, Nov. 25, for Carol
Bosworth.
Many games were played
ith prizes going to Becky
CeMaster and Teresa Sheline.
Refreshments of cake, punch,
arrd pizza were served.
• Atlendmg were her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. James R.
Bosworth, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas While, S&amp;Jldy Bradbury, Aldeth White, Waneta
Clark, Teresa Sheline, TerTy
Eihenalir, Becky LeMaster,
Barbara Gay; Scarlet Crablfee, and Debbie Fraley.

10.
,,.~

LARGE SELECTION 60"

..

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QIV8

Ted Flood, Watchman .on Premisles

MONDAY, DEC. 4 THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 9

POLYESTER
KNIT

Birthday honored

For
Christmas,
•

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JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAYS ,

Accutron®
byBulova

t'

- ~.,

SALE OF'FABRIC AND SI-NGERS

prec ise. So whether you buy the loy.·.

,,

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

WITH A GIGANTIC

makes every Accutron watch · so

a man should
Ukeaman.

Ar:cuttoli tlmo It 10 neorty perfect that we auarantee monthly
KCUf8CY to within 60 seconcli. • We also guaranttt a fine Mlectlon If you do your keutron shopplna noW. From $110:

'

For Christmas ~
give him the precision
he wants ...

GALLIPOLIS RETAIL MERCHANTS

ALE.

·FRENCH,CITl
FABRIC
SHOPPE
.
CELEBRATES ITS THIRD YEAR

, Despite material .progress. Ma ry Matt hews, Martha RC&gt;se,
human lrfe has never had a Luri lle Lemon , Marcella
great.e r sense of rnsec urjly H· .. ·
L' ll' S· d
than it is eXperiencing toda Y. . di J.rson, l . !an aun ~ r ~,
- Kurt " 'al.dh ·,n S . t : Maxr nc Ca llr coal, Herman
"
. et . ec? e a&gt;y P· .. II
d J 'ta G
Gene rat of tire Unit ed Na- "' ce an . uanr
eorge.
tiO?!.'l, calling fo r U.N . ac- · Mrs. Hawkms was presented
tion to cope w itlr a world - a gift and best wishes for a long
wide " crime crisis."
and enjoya ble retirement.

WIN. .A
TUR.KEY!

We know the
1,

ANNIVERSARY

BmokinS, Marianna Jdfer:s,

COORDINATE YOUR MANS CHRISTMAS

•

l.ew•a -Whitt. Elsie Ours, Jane
An n .I.liyne, Violet Jeffe rs,
GraL'C Myers, Lucille Rees,
[)(,,.., Waddell, Mary' Lon~.
was honored with a din ner by a Helen Walters, Vivia n Tope,
group of her co· wor·ke rs Grace II.Lkii1 8UII , ~ y r lle Queen,
n•&lt;:f' n tl~·.
Vera Miles, Elizebelh .Daniels,
Present were the following: Mabel Henry, Inis Corbin,
Eu nil"l•
Sh;:wc.. Ma ud e

rl.!-.11'1!1------------_,

'

Let

GA LLIPO!.IS - Mrs. Marie
Hrtwkins , who is retir·ing afte r
,I \\ enty"'mt!-)icat"S-ef. serv ice at
!he Gallipolis Slate Institute,

narrati ve fo rm. We usually see
10 TO BE GIVEN
screaming headlines on our
many problems, instead-of the
AWAY DEC. 18th
bigger, brighter .side of our
country as shown iri this book.
ALL YOU HAVE TO DO
Three new members were
introduced. They are Mrs.
IS COME IN AND REGISTER;
Herman Koby, Mrs. John
No 'Purchase Necessary-Need Not Be Present
Ca r ty and Mrs. Neal J .
Prendergast.
At the . conclusion of the
program, the hostess served a
lovely dessert 'course. Mrs.
Corner of Second &amp; Olive
Gallipolis; o.
James
.•
table. Orr presided at the lea .._,ll!llt'l!\l!rtM
,.
· · · · ·

nation's first truly co-educational school.
In 1929, the For·d Motor Co .
raised daily wages from $6 to
$7 despite the collapse of the
slock market.
In 1948, the nation learned
'j'
!hat microfilm of secret Ameri- I- ~

f

rd:

The tun tns fork movement is what

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. Hollis P. Johnson, Crown
City, are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Wanda Kay, to Barry Roberts,
son of Mr. and Mfs. Densil Roberts, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. The
wedding will be an event of Dee. 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Providence Baptist Church. The gracious custom of open
church Will be observed. Miss Johnson is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and is employed at Robbins and
Myers, Inc. Mr. Roberts is a graduate of Gallia Academy
High Sehpo! and is employed as a carpenter .

custom of open church will be
observed. A reception will
follow in the church parlor.
Miss Halley, a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and the Huntington School of
Beauty Culture, is employed at
Lanna's Salon o( Beauty in
Gallipolis.
Mr. Lintala is also a
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and attended
Miami University, Oxford,
Ohio. He is presently employed
by the Wellston City High
School System .

~.

.•

..

'

Georgia Cook, Bonnie Gooldin,
Janel Wealherhol_d, Francis
Sa unders, Wanda Johnson,
.Shirley Cummons, Judy · McCul ly , Ju ne Kemper , Joe
Phillips, Lois Young, Lynn
Tawney ; Pauline White, Kate
Dobbins, Ruth Hood, Anita
·Blanton, Naomi Wirlh, Ruth
Fiske and Salley Rayburn.

'Mrs. Cornett hosts
Thursday ·Club

DIANA 'KAY HALLEY

4

.

.Mrs. Ramey hon~red with baby shower

Wanda Kay johnson

.

bmmn
I

Gallipolis,

.o.

'

'·

sa

'

,

-

Court Sf.

1'

2 toMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS&amp; ~OTJONS
SIMPLICITY; McCits, buHerlck, vogue pattersn
WE DO CUSTOM DRESS MAKING
.. SINGER SALEU. SERVICE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
I

.

'

444-9255

�..

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Sibley, Mrs . Bonnie Tawney',
Mrs . Edna Tawney, and Mrs.
Evalee Myers.
'Rcfre, htnents · of cake,
ru lnl&lt;, nuts and punch• were
served to Ag nes Myers, mother
('I I) (Jr~ of gr een 3nd yeiJOW wer e &lt;~f Mrs. Ramey; Mildred
used for the decorating Gr e~or y, Tammy and Mike;
Slrra 'Bailey, Carol Zbbcvich,.
scheme.
Hostesses Y{ere Mrs. Ina belle Virginia Kemper , Midge
f: ALU POLIS -- Mrs. James
f•:. P. IPal) Ramey I former
[jntJa Myers 1 of Gallipolis,
was honored Thursday, Nov .
16, with. a baby shower· at the
home yf ~:d na Tawney.- The

Shwmaker, Jean Fisher, Andy
Sibley . Jean Hanki.ns, Etla Sue
FoSl"f, M~ ry . Ellis, Francis
S k idmo r e,
B on i ta
Hlllon, Esther Danner, ferry
Danner. Lisa Taw ney, Sharon
Kittrell and Penny Schultz.
Sending gifls we re Lil a
Merola , Donna Wiggins, Nel
Taw ney, Nancy Houck,

Mrs. Marie ·Hawkins
GSI employee, retires ·

GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club met at the home of
Mrs. John Cornett on Nov, 13.
Mrs. J. Howard Neal gave a
·review of the interesti ng and
beautifully illu~ lrat ed bcok,
"Our Country," developed by
the Book Division of U. S. News
and World Report.
This book is about our
remarkable n_alion, the United
States of America and tells the
trul y dramatic story of the.
good things of America in

Engagement announced
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. D. Virgil Halley, 502
Fourth Ave., are announcing
the engagement and approaching wedding of their
daughter, ,Miss Diana Kay to
Brian Lee Lintala, 217 East B.
Sl., Well$ton, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donsld E. Lintala, 10
Henkle Ave., Gallipolis.
11lj! wedding will be an event
of Dec. 23, at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 541 Second
An ., Gallipolis. The Rev.
Father A. H. MacKenzie will
perform the double ring
ceremony and the gracious

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Dec. 3, the
338lh day of 1972 with 28 to
follow .
The moon is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Saturn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
American portrait painter
Gilbert Stuart was born Dec. 3,
1755.
On this day in history:
In 1818, Illinois entered the
Union as the 21st state.
In ·1833, Oberlin College in
Mra, Qlarlea All111111.
s, , Ohjopp~ned Wii/J an enrollm~ n 1
John Byers presided and the of 29 men and 15 wome"- ·lhe
garden club prayer w¥ recited
by ilo;n( ·~· melliberl:'.~"·Fall
arrangements were exhibited
by Mrs . Un Young. Mrs. Bill
Davis and Mrs . John Reese.
Mrs, Lin Young gave the
following December Ups :
I. Dig out any volunteer tree
and shrub seedlings in hedges
or flower beds. They are
seldom the kind you will want
to keep.
.
2. Make a list of plants you
want to gcow next year and
read llbcut them. Check their
hardiness on the U. S.
Depar.tment of Agriculture
Plant Hardiness Zone Map.
3. If a live Christmas tree ls
being used for the holiday
season, spray the branches
with Wilt Pruf to reduce loss of
moisture 'through the needles
and to lessen the danger of fire
hazard.
4. Keep the soil ball of your
Christmas tree moist at all
times and set the tree in its
permanent location, as soon as
possible.
Refreshment.&lt; were served.
Reservations have been made
for the Christmas dinner at The·
Red Carpet at 7:30 p.m. Dec.
14. There will also be a gift and
corsage exchange.

Mrs. joseph Bolin speaks
GAL!,JNUS -4Mn::J.osepll
Bolin was eqest speaker at Ye
Olde VIllage O.rden Club
l Thursday · evening. She
demonstrated making corn
tiusk roses and rosebuds. She
placed the dried corn husks In a
bcwl of hot water for a few
minutes, shook off the excess
water and blotted them with a
paper towel. She tore off strips
of corn husk, looped them In
her fingers for the center of the
rose and wrapped It several
limes with fine florists wire.
. After Sl'tting the center aside
·~temporarily, she cut various
sized, elongated, heart shaped
petals, -with shallow indents at
the top, from the corn husks.
Then starting with the smaller
petals, she spaced them evenly
around the center with the
petal point toward the stem
and wired them in place. Using
a heavier wire for the stem, she
covered it neatly with florists
tape. She then curled the petal
topa over a large nail and
enhanced the beauty of the rose
by adding a corn husk leaf and
rosebud to the stem.
Mrs. Bolin · also exhibited
some grapes she had made
from buckeyes and several
. dried flower arrangements In
miniature oval frames.
The club met at the home of

SHO·P-A-RAMA 1 I 1

FREE TICKETS! I I

ALL PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

WIN $1000 WIN
00

ALL DRAWING TO BE HELD
IN CITY PARK
, 8:05· P.M.

h·.

FRI., DECi 8......................$10tr
WED., DEC. 13 .................~20000

o

can documenl' had been found
in a hollow pumpkin on the
Maryland farm of former
magazine editor Wh ittaker
Chambers, allegedly for delive·
ry to a Communist power .

.·

MON., DEC. 18 ................. ~50000

A thought for the da y: British

writer Jan.e Austen said, "rt is
GALLIPOLIS RETAIL MERCHANTS
a , truth universally acknow•
ledged that ·a single man in
OPEN ALL DAY lHURSDAY
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
MUST BE PRESENT TOWIN!
posse~sio? or ~ - ~ood _ fortunel'p-="C~~~~lC:f:I=&lt;=~~!C.~.~.~?'c::!OC-OC\?CIOC-oe;c,?, 9C~.,Ci'li.~,:;r=:~::rc=&gt;Q4=&lt;=~0~1 .,~,-~.,u~''"~.,ijl,iji,1;C,:It;~~
must !Je m want of a wr e." ·

1

I''· ''

and

, .1ily.

• • •

Whippany

Twill Flair

•

Accutron•
by Bulova
The ~utron .,.te~ hoi no balonce whoel, no malnsprln&amp;, no
lurlrsprin1. lnitud It ~as a tiny electronl~lly·driven tu~lna
folk. The tunlnc fort&lt; splits a second Into 360 precise little
pelts. Tho on ordinary wotch ~n do is divide a second
Into 5 or 10 perts.

AUL DAVIES JEWELER

VELVET
SOLIDS

)

McGregor knlll Arnet®

~!\ · Ot~

·j\

••o

McGregor full fashions this
ribbed knit of Arne!® triacc·
tate and nylon and styles It

with deep four buuon placket.
Mu chlne washable and dryable.

;m.

uiacetate with ribs to spare in
this handsome turtleneck pullover. Full fashioned . Machine
wuhable and dryable. $17.

VELVETEEN ·

~ $100

}Q% ~

SOLIDS

Per
Yd.
40" Lots of Colors

36" Many Colors

POLVESTER CREPE

Reg. $2.95

45" KLOPMAN'S

priced model at $ll0 or a 14K solid
gold date and day model at $700. the

MRS. MARK ELLIOTT NEAL

HOLIDAY BROCADES

spl it second timins is the same.

Guara nteed accurate to within a

:Hutchins-Neal
Exchange
.
Vows
..

" PATRIOT - The Trinity
Wesleyan Church, 529 North
Elm St., Oak Hill, was the
~lting for the marriage of
Miss Adrah Louise Hutchins,
·youngest daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Hutchins of
Patriot, Ohio and Mark Elliott
Neal, eldest son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey E. Neal of Oak
Hill, Ohio on Nov. 4.
The impressive open church
ceremony was solemnized by
The Rev. Froman Gollihue, at
' :30 o'clock.
• The church was decorated
\vith yellow roses, white mums,
't!;lndelabras and greenery.
The bride was given in
marriage by her brother ,
Forrest R. Hutchins. She was
rlillllnft lh'li"whit{ peau sole
satin fioor length gown with an
empire waistline, scoop
eekfiiie .and ·long bishop
leeves tied at the wrist. Her
•headpiece of net and lace was
~aisl
length. She carried a
....
~ascade bcuquel of yellow
lf.osebuds with touches of lace
~4nd ivy.
; ,. The bridal attendants were:
:~!lss Penny McNeal, Oak Hill,
•cousin of the bride as maid of
'::~onor; Miss Leah Neal, Oak
tHi!l, sister of the groom as
':Jimior bridesmaid. Miss Mc'tNeal's gown wa-s of moss
.l8reen, dotted swiss, high neck
t'"tline, the sleeves were short
With long matching gloves,
'4111pire waistline with a band of
ID1lti-colored flowers em.
oldery patterns. Her
\'-'Piece was of net and lace
~ matching color.
·• IIIss Neal wore a light yellow
anpe prlncess style gown with
bishop sleeves wilh white
rl buttons of heart .shape.
headpiece was a wide
~yellow velvet band.
• The maid of honor and junior
;bridesmaid each carried one
h se wllh·ribbon and greenery
!of color matching their gowns.
. Mr. Timothy· A. Neal,
tprolher of lhe groom, per~ormed the duties of best man.
~atirig the guests were JerTy
p. Myers, cousin of the groom,
p nd Bob Miller. Registering

ae

Lovely Setection.ot Metallics

minute a month."

F

PERMANENT

Accutron price range. So give him
the watch he wants ... Accutron

by

!he g ~ests was Mrs. Jerry D.
Myers.
The program of organ music
was presented by Mrs. Harry
Collis using selections: ''We've
Only Just Begun," "The Impossibl e Dream," " Speak
Softl y Love, " and th e
traditional Wedding March.
Solos by Mrs. Curtis Nunnery,
"0 Prorpise Met "Beca use, "
and "Melody of Love."
For the occasion, the bride's
mother wore a green knit dress
wi th black accessories. The
groom's mother wore a light
blue knit dress with black
aocessori es.
Following the wedd ing, a
reception was held in the social
room of the church.
The bride ' graduated from
Southwestern High School in
1971 and Nationwide Beauty
Academy. She is employed by
Eva 's Bea uty Salon in
Gallipolis.
The groom graduated from
Oak Hill High School in 1971
and is employed by the Charles
E. Simpson Sheet Meta l
Company, Jackson.
The couple is residing on
RL 1, Oak Hill.

PRESS
PRINTS

Bulova.

Open Monday
and Fridar
.TUPM

.I

SCARF AND
TIE
ANIMAL
CUTOUTS

:·:\lflitZ$~&gt;;:~

ounty

Co-Ordinator,
lllftOUII(.'ell the Bend Area
CGmmunlty Adlon Group will
· ~ve their orJI!Iiza\ional
J!lleui.g Wednadly at 7;30

p,m.

25

·15%

QUILTED
&amp; PLAIN
CO-ORDINATES

SWEATER
KNITS

F
F

OUTING
FlANNEL
PRINTS

25~ea .

BONDED

25%

F

NYLON
NET 5 yds.

o

FELT
10~
SQUARES · ea..

1h ~
JERSEY
100110 P.RINTS 10% ~
.

F

o

PLAID &amp; SOLID

OFF

0

F
F

$1

A. Sl•i nlm t leel. Blue dill and str111. $1111.

B. Stai nless stee l. GrMll grey dial. $1:fll.
C. TWO·tone case and band . Bura:undy dial. $115.
0. 14K solid go ld case an d alt&amp;ched band . $700.

Singer Gift
eenter

e USE OUR LAY-AWAY

Clark's Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
~ we

Gallipolis. Ohio

will adjust lo this tolerance, If necessery. Guarantee Is for one year.

'

ABEAUTIFUL CABINET WITH
THE EXCLUSIVE TOUCH &amp; SEW
SEWING MACHINE FOR HER!
SEE IT TODAY!

FREEl

SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICES THIS WEEKI

"Escapade" by

SINGER HAS A MACHINE FOR
EVERY BUDGET AND WOMAN

· afRWB~BBee

PRICES START AT

•5800

CHECK THIS LIST
• FREE DELIVERY . • FREE LESSONS
•SERVICE GUARANTEED 90 DAYS.TO PAY

LAY·A·WAY TODAY Ill
ASK FOR A DEMONSTRATIONI

SCISSOR SPECIAL
ORITZ TWO:SPEEO

$800

ELECTRIC SCISSORS
Reg . $12.00 Guaranteed
BE LDING-CORT IC ELL I

... .

•

· ~

New soft-sided zippered luggage. lfs bold 'n sassy.

GREAT FOR KNITS

'

'

The daringly different non-conformist luggage that makes
you itch to wander.

W~kender

4i2-414 Second Ave.

$599

I I I
I

I

I

.

·-

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE
OPEN 'fll 8 P.M. MON. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS

Men's 27" Wardrobe .134.80

•

•

FOR A WIDE VARIETY OF
FABRICS IN A MULTITUDE
OF DESIGNS SEE US!

OPEN EVERY NITE 'TIL 8:00 P.M.

.27" Wardrobe. ••••••'34.80
Menr.s Companion s19.80

'19.80

FOR THE AREA'S BEST
AND BIGGEST SELECTION
IrS FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE

'

Blue - Green - Burnt Orange for ' her and
Brown for him.
\..•'

Cosmetic Case .••.• n 8.80

SEWING SCISSORS

TRIMS • TRIMS • TRIMS

Reg . 58.00

EXTRA SHARP

21"
Mrs. Pauline L. Marshall,

0! o
·. 10 ~

MANY MORE GREAT SAVINGS ON YOUR
FAVORITE FABRICS!

.

·::

OFF

SLEEPwEAR '
FABRICS

45" Reg. to $2.98 ycl.
Many _.Unique Patterns

a

t'

15%

We have a great selection in every

•

· GALLIPOUS - A surprise
birthday party \Vas held
Saturday, Nov. 25, for Carol
Bosworth.
Many games were played
ith prizes going to Becky
CeMaster and Teresa Sheline.
Refreshments of cake, punch,
arrd pizza were served.
• Atlendmg were her parents,
Mr . and Mrs. James R.
Bosworth, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas While, S&amp;Jldy Bradbury, Aldeth White, Waneta
Clark, Teresa Sheline, TerTy
Eihenalir, Becky LeMaster,
Barbara Gay; Scarlet Crablfee, and Debbie Fraley.

10.
,,.~

LARGE SELECTION 60"

..

•

QIV8

Ted Flood, Watchman .on Premisles

MONDAY, DEC. 4 THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 9

POLYESTER
KNIT

Birthday honored

For
Christmas,
•

I

JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAYS ,

Accutron®
byBulova

t'

- ~.,

SALE OF'FABRIC AND SI-NGERS

prec ise. So whether you buy the loy.·.

,,

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL"

WITH A GIGANTIC

makes every Accutron watch · so

a man should
Ukeaman.

Ar:cuttoli tlmo It 10 neorty perfect that we auarantee monthly
KCUf8CY to within 60 seconcli. • We also guaranttt a fine Mlectlon If you do your keutron shopplna noW. From $110:

'

For Christmas ~
give him the precision
he wants ...

GALLIPOLIS RETAIL MERCHANTS

ALE.

·FRENCH,CITl
FABRIC
SHOPPE
.
CELEBRATES ITS THIRD YEAR

, Despite material .progress. Ma ry Matt hews, Martha RC&gt;se,
human lrfe has never had a Luri lle Lemon , Marcella
great.e r sense of rnsec urjly H· .. ·
L' ll' S· d
than it is eXperiencing toda Y. . di J.rson, l . !an aun ~ r ~,
- Kurt " 'al.dh ·,n S . t : Maxr nc Ca llr coal, Herman
"
. et . ec? e a&gt;y P· .. II
d J 'ta G
Gene rat of tire Unit ed Na- "' ce an . uanr
eorge.
tiO?!.'l, calling fo r U.N . ac- · Mrs. Hawkms was presented
tion to cope w itlr a world - a gift and best wishes for a long
wide " crime crisis."
and enjoya ble retirement.

WIN. .A
TUR.KEY!

We know the
1,

ANNIVERSARY

BmokinS, Marianna Jdfer:s,

COORDINATE YOUR MANS CHRISTMAS

•

l.ew•a -Whitt. Elsie Ours, Jane
An n .I.liyne, Violet Jeffe rs,
GraL'C Myers, Lucille Rees,
[)(,,.., Waddell, Mary' Lon~.
was honored with a din ner by a Helen Walters, Vivia n Tope,
group of her co· wor·ke rs Grace II.Lkii1 8UII , ~ y r lle Queen,
n•&lt;:f' n tl~·.
Vera Miles, Elizebelh .Daniels,
Present were the following: Mabel Henry, Inis Corbin,
Eu nil"l•
Sh;:wc.. Ma ud e

rl.!-.11'1!1------------_,

'

Let

GA LLIPO!.IS - Mrs. Marie
Hrtwkins , who is retir·ing afte r
,I \\ enty"'mt!-)icat"S-ef. serv ice at
!he Gallipolis Slate Institute,

narrati ve fo rm. We usually see
10 TO BE GIVEN
screaming headlines on our
many problems, instead-of the
AWAY DEC. 18th
bigger, brighter .side of our
country as shown iri this book.
ALL YOU HAVE TO DO
Three new members were
introduced. They are Mrs.
IS COME IN AND REGISTER;
Herman Koby, Mrs. John
No 'Purchase Necessary-Need Not Be Present
Ca r ty and Mrs. Neal J .
Prendergast.
At the . conclusion of the
program, the hostess served a
lovely dessert 'course. Mrs.
Corner of Second &amp; Olive
Gallipolis; o.
James
.•
table. Orr presided at the lea .._,ll!llt'l!\l!rtM
,.
· · · · ·

nation's first truly co-educational school.
In 1929, the For·d Motor Co .
raised daily wages from $6 to
$7 despite the collapse of the
slock market.
In 1948, the nation learned
'j'
!hat microfilm of secret Ameri- I- ~

f

rd:

The tun tns fork movement is what

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs. Hollis P. Johnson, Crown
City, are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Wanda Kay, to Barry Roberts,
son of Mr. and Mfs. Densil Roberts, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. The
wedding will be an event of Dee. 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Providence Baptist Church. The gracious custom of open
church Will be observed. Miss Johnson is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and is employed at Robbins and
Myers, Inc. Mr. Roberts is a graduate of Gallia Academy
High Sehpo! and is employed as a carpenter .

custom of open church will be
observed. A reception will
follow in the church parlor.
Miss Halley, a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and the Huntington School of
Beauty Culture, is employed at
Lanna's Salon o( Beauty in
Gallipolis.
Mr. Lintala is also a
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and attended
Miami University, Oxford,
Ohio. He is presently employed
by the Wellston City High
School System .

~.

.•

..

'

Georgia Cook, Bonnie Gooldin,
Janel Wealherhol_d, Francis
Sa unders, Wanda Johnson,
.Shirley Cummons, Judy · McCul ly , Ju ne Kemper , Joe
Phillips, Lois Young, Lynn
Tawney ; Pauline White, Kate
Dobbins, Ruth Hood, Anita
·Blanton, Naomi Wirlh, Ruth
Fiske and Salley Rayburn.

'Mrs. Cornett hosts
Thursday ·Club

DIANA 'KAY HALLEY

4

.

.Mrs. Ramey hon~red with baby shower

Wanda Kay johnson

.

bmmn
I

Gallipolis,

.o.

'

'·

sa

'

,

-

Court Sf.

1'

2 toMPLETE FLOORS OF FABRICS&amp; ~OTJONS
SIMPLICITY; McCits, buHerlck, vogue pattersn
WE DO CUSTOM DRESS MAKING
.. SINGER SALEU. SERVICE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
I

.

'

444-9255

�..

·'

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'

..

7-The Sunday Times- Seatinl!l, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

'

:·.·.·.··

....

·. ·.··.· ...·• .

Coming
I vents-

Kathryn J Henderson

.

'

\

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

· GALl:! POLIS
'f'ne many questions by · club""
Edu-cation Committee · Hosted members. · ·
' the November meeting qf the Thtee guests ior the evening
Gallipolis Junior Women's were introduced. They were
Club Mnnday night. Mrs . Mrs. Barbara , Vallee, Miss
Annabelle Bal) was the Beverly Rusk, and Mrs.
speaker.. She explained Gallia Celeste Ropp.
County's Guiding Hand School
Members were reminded the
program and told how the next meeting will be Jan. 29, at
program has expanded over Patti Evans' home. The annua:I
the years. It was first started sewing conteSt style show _will MiSl! Ada Rowe. They Were
lot school age · children and· · be held at. that meeting. !l'he dinner guests Thanbgivlng of
later expanded to include pre, contest is open lo club' mem- Mr. and Mrs. Steve &lt;leland
.school and young adults. After bers and high school girls. · and family at Racine.
her talk Mrs .. Rell WR S asked
Mrs. Hazel Lawson imd
daughter, W'tlda, Mrs. Dorothy
Parsons, Mrs. Marltme LaWIOn
and Mary Huffman were
shopping 1n Parteuburg
WoH Pen. Mr. and Mrs. Steve recently.
By Mrs. flerberl Roush
'
Pvt. E2 Ronald Russell of Ft. Hagey of Akron were also
Mr. and Mrs. Albert BlackM¢ade, Md. spent Thanks- guests of the Robert Russells well, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
giving weekend with ,his wife, over the weekend.
Laudennilt and children were
Mr. I;Uid Mrs. Vernon Rowe Thanksgiving Day ll1*t8 ~~
Mrs. Russell and daughter,
Amanda, and his parents, Mr. of New Brighton, Pa. spent Mrs.
Donohue and David
and Mrs. Robert Russell at Thanksgiving weekend with and Mrs.
BacbUI.

o~L

Fairvi~w

GALUPOIJS - Mr.andMrs. H. Leroy Adkins, 538Hilda
PEMBROKE Club will meet
Dr., Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of their
GALIJPOLlS-Mr, and Mrs. Ray Henderson', Mountain
with Mrs, Frank Wetherholt at
daughter, Sue, to Gary Allen Jones, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
Home, Arkansas, are announc~ the engagement and ap8 p.m.
Paul V. Jones, Ill Garfield Ave., Gallipolis.
proaching marriage of their daughter, !(athryn Janette, to ·
The bride-elect is a senior at Gallia Academy High
THURMAN Senior Citizens
Gregory Guy Pauley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Loy P~ul~y, 130
School and a part-time employee at Holzer Medical Center.
will meet at the Methodist
Jl;lstiimi Dr., Gallipolis. The brldHiect is a Language A.rts
Miss Adkins plans to epter the Holzer School of Nursing next
teac))er at the Community lW Junior Hlgb School, Ladonia, · ' Church al noon. Mrs. Biddle of
fall.
Her fiance is a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy and is
Jackson will be the speaker.
Missouri. Mr. Pauley is a Senior Busi~esr major at Harding
presently employed by the Evans Packing Company.
All senior citizens and retired
College, Searcy, Arkansas. The wedding will be an event of
people are welcome.
A June wedding is being planned. '
Dec. 30, at the College and North Church of Christ. In
THURSDAY
...... ....,_
Motintaln Home, Arkansas.
VALLEY Belle Garden Club ·
Christmas Dinner will be held
at the Holiday Inn, 6:30 p.m.
The regular meeting will be
, held at the home of Mrs. ,
Wymond Bradbury. Roll call is ,
"New Christmas idea for
decoration", Program will be
usan ta
is
coming".
Arrangement
,suitable
for the
PT. ~LEI\SANT - The St. neth Roush gave a reading
PetE:r Lutheran Chur~h Women "Llght·The Way" and meeting home.
mel Tuesday evening at the closed wllh the LCW THE
ANNUAL
family
church for the annual benediction.
Christmas party for the GSl
"Thankoffering" tO be given to
A social hour was held in the Volunteers, will be held at
the Western Pennsylvania, fellowship hall with refresh- Cottage 7 at 7:30 p.m. There
West Virjlinia Synodical men Is served by Mrs. Scholz to will be a doll~r gift exchange.
Treasury. The church altar Mrs. Emil Romans.. Mrs.
was used for special reading, in Kenneth Roush and ·Mrs. Dale FR{DAY
unison, for the meeting.
Roush. Also, Mrs. William EPISCOPAL Church ChristMrs .
Frank
Scholz, Knight, Mrs. Lynn Freeman, mas Bazaar and Parish Pantry
president, opened the meeting Mrs. Walden F. Roush, Mrs. lo be held at the church, 541
with devotional. Officers' Marie Knoll, Mrs. Charles Second Ave., from 6 to 10 p.iii.
reports were received and Oliver and Mrs. Paul Somplans were made for the merville, Jr. will assist with
· COij\i~§ 1 ~isiiJ&gt;as season with other Chris~s activities of
,&lt;.,
a ''llann~r Wilikahop" meeting
announced later'
Membership cards were
7:3/J 1!·1/1 Dec 12, It lhfi
meeting will be to help
relloWslilp Hall ;of lbe clinrch. decOrate the church Christmas given for' 1971·74 by 'Mrs.
All ladies and members of the tree with the special gifts for Scholz, with the inscription,
church are asked to attend and children, prepared in mid- "LUTHERAN
CHURCH
WOMEN
...
Seeks
to be an
help with the project, Other December. The regular
Christmas plans were made, meeting of the Lutheran instrument of . Christian
pending church council aJl- Church Women will be beld ln mission in helping the church
. proval, and with the LCW January, 1973, Details will be to declare the Gospel of Jesus
Christ through LEARNING of
members to assist. Mrs. KenChrist and' the mission of His
Church, WITNESSING in our
daily lives lo our Christian
faith, SERVING the needs of
others in the congregatioll'and
PAULA OOVERT, A BAIJET DANCER, will be among
the commonly, SUPPORTING
the entertainers performing In the Gillian Moore Christmas
the total work of the church
Variety Show, Dec. 9, at 7 p.m. in the Washington School
through prayers and ofAuditorium.
ferings ."
Also, 1973 Thankofleringboxes were issued to members.

Kiddie Shoppe ·
Ingels Furniture
Citizens National Bank

Jimmie 's Pastry Shop

• Thomas L Goett DBA
Joe's Car'ry-Out
O'Dell Enterprises

·1

(Speed Queen)

Saker Furniture

'

Rawlings-Coats
Roya' Crown Bottling Co.

·~'

'"-.
'

••

--: Friday, ri.;c~ 22.' 1

The Quality Print Shop
Deb's Barber Shop
Blue Tartan

• 7 P.M.

Cross Hardware
The Daily Sentinel
Western Auto Associate Store

l

..

:.JJ

-

-CLIP AND DEPOSIT
WITH MIDDLEPORT STORES

For
Christmas ...
Quick-set
date-and-day
automatics
by·Bulova
· From $65

PIUIOIII'"A"

$tllllhl still. Blllt dllland alllp. fll.

Nhllbft "D"
Ooly and lilt INI'ktrs. Sllv1r dial. SJI.

Variety show planned

GALLIPOUS - The Gillian
Moore Christmas Variety Show
, ...: will be held Dec. 9, at 7 p.m. in
the
Washington
School
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duck- Auditorium. Bud McGee will
worth of Rittman were be Master of Ceremonies and
weekend guests of hls mother, all proceeds will be used for
Mrs. Daisy Roush, Mr. and free TVs in the pediatrics ward
Mrs. George Schneider. They at the Holzer Medical Center.
were
home by
The show will include a wife
-Poi1F&amp;,-R&lt;&gt;II5il-fo~IR--elll~ffidt!d-..v.alriely of entertainment invisit.
eluding professional enMr, and Mrs. Marty lertainers. The Gillian Moore
Morarlty of ColumbUs visited Dancers will perform classical
J!is mother, Mrs . Pauline -· and modern ballet, jazz dan- .
Morarity.
cing and mother-daughter
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Teaford light-hearted musical comedy.
have returned home from a few Other entertainers include the
days 'vacation in Florida. They Ann Reiser Baton students who
enjoyed the Eastern coastal will do numerous routines, Rio
route home.
Grande College's "The Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Choral
Chorus,
Gallia
McKinney of Columbus were Academy High School choir
holiday guests of their and solo singers, directed by
daughter ll!ld son-in·law, Mr. Anne Fischer,_and solo singers
and Mrs. Glenn Cundiff.
directed by Merlyn Ross.

Syracuse

Tickels are · available at
Corbin and Snyder Furniture
Store, Carl's Shoe Store. and
O'Dell Lumber Co. They will
also be sold al the door for $1
for adults and fifty cents for
students.

King Builders Supply Co.

Take your choice. And a fine
choice it Ia. For whichever watch
you ae~et. you've got a great
performer. 23 jeweto. Alj!OmaHc.
Dato ..nd-day. Qulck...,t. Water
and llhock realotlht. .-.andeome
and rugged, a watch dulgned
for the man of tOday.
For an even wider choice, come
on In, We'll ohow you more of
these good-looking Preeldent
and Senator watches by B~lova.

I

Clark's Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'
...... I-- ... ...,. ...... - ...
II

1

'

'

..

7

p.m., In

front of

Gas Co., Middleport. •• ~~·' -·• ' •·
to win.· No , .
purchase necessary to
Form . Look
for Entry Forms in Middleport ~rchlnh .
n ws · ~~~r;.:•;::di,s·---------•. .

Burkett's Barber Shop

RAINDROPS

Warmer-Top
30" electric
range, ..
.t1 I
Self-Cleaning
'
'
oven

/

f~P.!u.ref .Yo~, fc_~e,:rn,gvhJQ...spi[Lt . thi§J winter in ~

\4 ,

rhts sof t'ahfor_nta Cobblers feminine Sugar Kid
' · shoe with its gently rounded toe ahd I ittle heel
_tha't 's stacked for walking. $14,95,
•

were at a li ¥e perfo rman ce.
FAA -AM -

Stereo FM radio. Stereo
Precision
re cord
chan ger with Micro·

Touchl rl 2G tone arm .
Cue con trol.
headphone

.,.,. 1t1t fllnltr

OPEN MONDAY AND
FRIDAY 11L 8 PM

11-.

. :.::.SAVE ,
$70
ERK3067

'299

'

',..,.

95

LDG /LDE2090A
LWA2090A

ASHOP-A:
RAMA

ReGULAR
VAWE

SlORE

•299

95

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

OPEN EVERY NITE

$100~;e
pair

Ste r eo
iack .

Golltpolls, 0.

JlllociM An.

SAVE

Grained Walnut color.

•hotl• to....,_

1

Put beau ty and fun in your
cooking center with:
• Automatic surface unit and
oven • roast meter ;, clock &amp;
timer • porcelain litl·up top • 4
oven signal ligh ts • lig ht ed
work suriace • Char-Call speed
broiler &amp; pan • warmer shelf
swi tch • full -width storage
drawer . ..Now only

The METROPOLITAN
CS90W
Hear sound all around
you ... as tho ugh you

1

'

CHRISTmAS
·SALE PRICE
-·

IL 8

•249

GIFTS SHE UKES BEST

•.• COME FROM THE

95

World's most fully-automatic
20 lb. washer and dryer ...
Wash 2 lbs. .up to 20 lbs. in a single load - With just a push
_
of a bulton you get super·clean wash, automatic adva nce
from soak to wash. automatic detergen t, bleach and rinse 2 4 9 9 5
softener dispensing at proper times plus automatic lint
filtering at every water-saver level. SAVE $50 WASHER
ONLY ... now only $249.95 ·
Match-mate 20 lb. dryer features Stop'N Dry, special
\'Hinkle control , 3 cycles, pushbutton fabric selector,
u~load signaL SAVE $40 DRYER ONLY ... now
electric

5

179

95

1

·

SAVE
$60

captures the grace
elegance of Old Cathay in
a shimmering giOJY of multicolored embroidery on lustrous gold
braid. All in the soft swish of Nylon
Tricot for comfort caressed hours.
Choose your fabulous sleep and
lounge companions in Amethyst,
Well Red or Persian Blue.
Lotr~aine

•

SAVE

sao

World's
most modern
dishwashers

F•74 - Fl~~e Record ColltdOf
AlbUms wllh 50 Hlectionl fll•
turing top vocel tnd IM1rumen-

NIH - Stereo Headphonn Itt
vou enjoy ~ur fnorite mutlt

Get dis hes [Sally clean in
su per-quiet unde rcounter or
portable dishwashers with
atalnless atHI llnera. Enjoy
front loading , 2-level washing,
self·clean·ing ~ra in. fan circulated drying , 8 cycle lighJ$.
Portable model with cultihg
board top .. . onllf,Slt71UI5
Undercounj_er model for built. in installalion 5229.115

$46995
Never-Frost 22
refrigerator-freezers

E'njoy over 13 c u. fl. re lrigerator storage and 286 lb. lrozen food capacity Jn
these decorator S1de·by·Sides. Step up Ia fingertip convenience of fully
adjustable shelves. twin da~ry bars , rneat keeper, egg bucket, two crispers,
Juice can dispenser. automat ic door closers, mag netic doors and Roll-Away
wheels. Now only 541511.95 with provision to add lceMaker anytime. Save
$80, too , on Model RSF2298B with FACTORY INSTALLED ICE MAKER ...
now only S5t9.95
DWFt880A

privately.

~

by FEDDERS

and Save!

~

xI t 1

WIIOOP INIUI MIAft MIMI•

' . 1*¥' II

Drawing witt be Dec.

Store

step up to

. u •• .....,)

I

Boo~

Zerkles Trucking Company

First time ever ...
Norge offers you top-of-the-line
appliances on Sale! And colors
at no extra cost.

...
t:

Middleport

'
EVERY DAY•• NOW TO DEC.16, 1972

''

1...___ r THI r r xr xI

O~iry

Motor Parts Company
Rail 's Ben Franklin Store

AT INGELS
IN MIDDLEPORT

None over $10(1.

t LAY If AWAY

Middleport Department Store
Os sie's Recreation Room
Waller Crook s, Broughton 's

Jwt In time for

tlartlata.

llllTN 111"
- - · diOI, T""od ..... I&gt;Ond•.$110.

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
The Sewing Center
Young 's Mark et

. ~io Valley Bakery
Mills Ashland Service Station
Dr. Clyde J. Ingels
Shoe Box, Inc. ·

Bahr Clothiers
General Tire Sales
Kelly Manufacturing Co.,
Va lley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
Vill age Pharmacy
Gruesers Waffle ShoP
Dutton Drug Company
Wa llace Jewelry
Fr.iendly Tavern
M&amp;R Bargaintand
M&amp;R Foodliner
Fairmont Food s

~:I!1IS 3~1 ;1 t~ i.j~r~~

LONG LOUNGE ROBE
. · S-M·L ......... ... p4.00
TUNIC PAJAMAS
" 32-38 ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' $12.00
t;ONG GOWN
· S-M·L , .. , . , ... . . $ 9.00
LOUNGE SCUFFS
S-M-L·XL ... $ 4.00

•:...:o:=.-

TINEW

Dudley's Florist'
Po inT Vi ew Cable TV Service
J . J . Davis, M . 0 .
Radio Mid-Pom . Inc.
Heritage House
K~ith Goble Ford, l11c.

Heiner 's Bak ery

SENATH: 11A11

Stllnllll llHI. Royal biUI dill. 170.

entry forms from merchantS ads.

FREE PARKING IN MIDDLEPORT DEC. 11·23, COURTESY ~IDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

''Thankoffering'' ·
observed by LCW ·

~~~

No purchase necesSary·to receive

MIDDLEPORT RETAIL MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION PARTiCIPATING MEMBERS:

Werner's Radio

•

· • Need npf be present to win.

WIN AFORD PIN.TO

Headquarters · Restaurant

News Notes

Miss Sue Adkins

DAY
ONANZA

'·

Annabelk Ball

YOUTH revival begins at
· Bulaville Cpristian Church, 7
p.m, Rev. Beegle will give
message Mon., Tues., and
Wed. and Rev. Don Price on
. Thurs. and Fri. Everyone
welcome.
TUESDAY
THE; 'l'B and Heallh
Aasociatlon Executive Board
will meet at 7:30 p:m, at ihe
Health Department in ' the
Courihouse.

MIDDLEPORT STORES

• • • In Friendly

Jr. Women's Club
hears -Mrs. Ball
'

SUNDAY
THE ENGUSH Club will meet
at the Buckeye Rural Bulldipg
at Zp.m. for a Christmas party,
GRACE Guild Christmas
Oinner- guest night. Program;.
Rev: Paul Hawks at Methodist
Church at 5 p.m.
MONDAY . ·
.
.GALLIA Council No. 114 .
Daughters of America regular
· meeting. ElecUon of officers,
7:30p.m.
···

'

This Special Value

~

'•

~

. c.rtr'IJ
-~~-.~­
fl lt1AJ lap ¥liNI
end lnlln

GWIJ. UP

I

LUl .,...

,

On~

At

INGELS FURNlTU E
N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
BANK RATE FINANCING

�..

·'

''

'

..

7-The Sunday Times- Seatinl!l, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

'

:·.·.·.··

....

·. ·.··.· ...·• .

Coming
I vents-

Kathryn J Henderson

.

'

\

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

· GALl:! POLIS
'f'ne many questions by · club""
Edu-cation Committee · Hosted members. · ·
' the November meeting qf the Thtee guests ior the evening
Gallipolis Junior Women's were introduced. They were
Club Mnnday night. Mrs . Mrs. Barbara , Vallee, Miss
Annabelle Bal) was the Beverly Rusk, and Mrs.
speaker.. She explained Gallia Celeste Ropp.
County's Guiding Hand School
Members were reminded the
program and told how the next meeting will be Jan. 29, at
program has expanded over Patti Evans' home. The annua:I
the years. It was first started sewing conteSt style show _will MiSl! Ada Rowe. They Were
lot school age · children and· · be held at. that meeting. !l'he dinner guests Thanbgivlng of
later expanded to include pre, contest is open lo club' mem- Mr. and Mrs. Steve &lt;leland
.school and young adults. After bers and high school girls. · and family at Racine.
her talk Mrs .. Rell WR S asked
Mrs. Hazel Lawson imd
daughter, W'tlda, Mrs. Dorothy
Parsons, Mrs. Marltme LaWIOn
and Mary Huffman were
shopping 1n Parteuburg
WoH Pen. Mr. and Mrs. Steve recently.
By Mrs. flerberl Roush
'
Pvt. E2 Ronald Russell of Ft. Hagey of Akron were also
Mr. and Mrs. Albert BlackM¢ade, Md. spent Thanks- guests of the Robert Russells well, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
giving weekend with ,his wife, over the weekend.
Laudennilt and children were
Mr. I;Uid Mrs. Vernon Rowe Thanksgiving Day ll1*t8 ~~
Mrs. Russell and daughter,
Amanda, and his parents, Mr. of New Brighton, Pa. spent Mrs.
Donohue and David
and Mrs. Robert Russell at Thanksgiving weekend with and Mrs.
BacbUI.

o~L

Fairvi~w

GALUPOIJS - Mr.andMrs. H. Leroy Adkins, 538Hilda
PEMBROKE Club will meet
Dr., Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement of their
GALIJPOLlS-Mr, and Mrs. Ray Henderson', Mountain
with Mrs, Frank Wetherholt at
daughter, Sue, to Gary Allen Jones, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
Home, Arkansas, are announc~ the engagement and ap8 p.m.
Paul V. Jones, Ill Garfield Ave., Gallipolis.
proaching marriage of their daughter, !(athryn Janette, to ·
The bride-elect is a senior at Gallia Academy High
THURMAN Senior Citizens
Gregory Guy Pauley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Loy P~ul~y, 130
School and a part-time employee at Holzer Medical Center.
will meet at the Methodist
Jl;lstiimi Dr., Gallipolis. The brldHiect is a Language A.rts
Miss Adkins plans to epter the Holzer School of Nursing next
teac))er at the Community lW Junior Hlgb School, Ladonia, · ' Church al noon. Mrs. Biddle of
fall.
Her fiance is a 1972 graduate of Gallia Academy and is
Jackson will be the speaker.
Missouri. Mr. Pauley is a Senior Busi~esr major at Harding
presently employed by the Evans Packing Company.
All senior citizens and retired
College, Searcy, Arkansas. The wedding will be an event of
people are welcome.
A June wedding is being planned. '
Dec. 30, at the College and North Church of Christ. In
THURSDAY
...... ....,_
Motintaln Home, Arkansas.
VALLEY Belle Garden Club ·
Christmas Dinner will be held
at the Holiday Inn, 6:30 p.m.
The regular meeting will be
, held at the home of Mrs. ,
Wymond Bradbury. Roll call is ,
"New Christmas idea for
decoration", Program will be
usan ta
is
coming".
Arrangement
,suitable
for the
PT. ~LEI\SANT - The St. neth Roush gave a reading
PetE:r Lutheran Chur~h Women "Llght·The Way" and meeting home.
mel Tuesday evening at the closed wllh the LCW THE
ANNUAL
family
church for the annual benediction.
Christmas party for the GSl
"Thankoffering" tO be given to
A social hour was held in the Volunteers, will be held at
the Western Pennsylvania, fellowship hall with refresh- Cottage 7 at 7:30 p.m. There
West Virjlinia Synodical men Is served by Mrs. Scholz to will be a doll~r gift exchange.
Treasury. The church altar Mrs. Emil Romans.. Mrs.
was used for special reading, in Kenneth Roush and ·Mrs. Dale FR{DAY
unison, for the meeting.
Roush. Also, Mrs. William EPISCOPAL Church ChristMrs .
Frank
Scholz, Knight, Mrs. Lynn Freeman, mas Bazaar and Parish Pantry
president, opened the meeting Mrs. Walden F. Roush, Mrs. lo be held at the church, 541
with devotional. Officers' Marie Knoll, Mrs. Charles Second Ave., from 6 to 10 p.iii.
reports were received and Oliver and Mrs. Paul Somplans were made for the merville, Jr. will assist with
· COij\i~§ 1 ~isiiJ&gt;as season with other Chris~s activities of
,&lt;.,
a ''llann~r Wilikahop" meeting
announced later'
Membership cards were
7:3/J 1!·1/1 Dec 12, It lhfi
meeting will be to help
relloWslilp Hall ;of lbe clinrch. decOrate the church Christmas given for' 1971·74 by 'Mrs.
All ladies and members of the tree with the special gifts for Scholz, with the inscription,
church are asked to attend and children, prepared in mid- "LUTHERAN
CHURCH
WOMEN
...
Seeks
to be an
help with the project, Other December. The regular
Christmas plans were made, meeting of the Lutheran instrument of . Christian
pending church council aJl- Church Women will be beld ln mission in helping the church
. proval, and with the LCW January, 1973, Details will be to declare the Gospel of Jesus
Christ through LEARNING of
members to assist. Mrs. KenChrist and' the mission of His
Church, WITNESSING in our
daily lives lo our Christian
faith, SERVING the needs of
others in the congregatioll'and
PAULA OOVERT, A BAIJET DANCER, will be among
the commonly, SUPPORTING
the entertainers performing In the Gillian Moore Christmas
the total work of the church
Variety Show, Dec. 9, at 7 p.m. in the Washington School
through prayers and ofAuditorium.
ferings ."
Also, 1973 Thankofleringboxes were issued to members.

Kiddie Shoppe ·
Ingels Furniture
Citizens National Bank

Jimmie 's Pastry Shop

• Thomas L Goett DBA
Joe's Car'ry-Out
O'Dell Enterprises

·1

(Speed Queen)

Saker Furniture

'

Rawlings-Coats
Roya' Crown Bottling Co.

·~'

'"-.
'

••

--: Friday, ri.;c~ 22.' 1

The Quality Print Shop
Deb's Barber Shop
Blue Tartan

• 7 P.M.

Cross Hardware
The Daily Sentinel
Western Auto Associate Store

l

..

:.JJ

-

-CLIP AND DEPOSIT
WITH MIDDLEPORT STORES

For
Christmas ...
Quick-set
date-and-day
automatics
by·Bulova
· From $65

PIUIOIII'"A"

$tllllhl still. Blllt dllland alllp. fll.

Nhllbft "D"
Ooly and lilt INI'ktrs. Sllv1r dial. SJI.

Variety show planned

GALLIPOUS - The Gillian
Moore Christmas Variety Show
, ...: will be held Dec. 9, at 7 p.m. in
the
Washington
School
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duck- Auditorium. Bud McGee will
worth of Rittman were be Master of Ceremonies and
weekend guests of hls mother, all proceeds will be used for
Mrs. Daisy Roush, Mr. and free TVs in the pediatrics ward
Mrs. George Schneider. They at the Holzer Medical Center.
were
home by
The show will include a wife
-Poi1F&amp;,-R&lt;&gt;II5il-fo~IR--elll~ffidt!d-..v.alriely of entertainment invisit.
eluding professional enMr, and Mrs. Marty lertainers. The Gillian Moore
Morarlty of ColumbUs visited Dancers will perform classical
J!is mother, Mrs . Pauline -· and modern ballet, jazz dan- .
Morarity.
cing and mother-daughter
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Teaford light-hearted musical comedy.
have returned home from a few Other entertainers include the
days 'vacation in Florida. They Ann Reiser Baton students who
enjoyed the Eastern coastal will do numerous routines, Rio
route home.
Grande College's "The Grand
Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Choral
Chorus,
Gallia
McKinney of Columbus were Academy High School choir
holiday guests of their and solo singers, directed by
daughter ll!ld son-in·law, Mr. Anne Fischer,_and solo singers
and Mrs. Glenn Cundiff.
directed by Merlyn Ross.

Syracuse

Tickels are · available at
Corbin and Snyder Furniture
Store, Carl's Shoe Store. and
O'Dell Lumber Co. They will
also be sold al the door for $1
for adults and fifty cents for
students.

King Builders Supply Co.

Take your choice. And a fine
choice it Ia. For whichever watch
you ae~et. you've got a great
performer. 23 jeweto. Alj!OmaHc.
Dato ..nd-day. Qulck...,t. Water
and llhock realotlht. .-.andeome
and rugged, a watch dulgned
for the man of tOday.
For an even wider choice, come
on In, We'll ohow you more of
these good-looking Preeldent
and Senator watches by B~lova.

I

Clark's Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

'
...... I-- ... ...,. ...... - ...
II

1

'

'

..

7

p.m., In

front of

Gas Co., Middleport. •• ~~·' -·• ' •·
to win.· No , .
purchase necessary to
Form . Look
for Entry Forms in Middleport ~rchlnh .
n ws · ~~~r;.:•;::di,s·---------•. .

Burkett's Barber Shop

RAINDROPS

Warmer-Top
30" electric
range, ..
.t1 I
Self-Cleaning
'
'
oven

/

f~P.!u.ref .Yo~, fc_~e,:rn,gvhJQ...spi[Lt . thi§J winter in ~

\4 ,

rhts sof t'ahfor_nta Cobblers feminine Sugar Kid
' · shoe with its gently rounded toe ahd I ittle heel
_tha't 's stacked for walking. $14,95,
•

were at a li ¥e perfo rman ce.
FAA -AM -

Stereo FM radio. Stereo
Precision
re cord
chan ger with Micro·

Touchl rl 2G tone arm .
Cue con trol.
headphone

.,.,. 1t1t fllnltr

OPEN MONDAY AND
FRIDAY 11L 8 PM

11-.

. :.::.SAVE ,
$70
ERK3067

'299

'

',..,.

95

LDG /LDE2090A
LWA2090A

ASHOP-A:
RAMA

ReGULAR
VAWE

SlORE

•299

95

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

OPEN EVERY NITE

$100~;e
pair

Ste r eo
iack .

Golltpolls, 0.

JlllociM An.

SAVE

Grained Walnut color.

•hotl• to....,_

1

Put beau ty and fun in your
cooking center with:
• Automatic surface unit and
oven • roast meter ;, clock &amp;
timer • porcelain litl·up top • 4
oven signal ligh ts • lig ht ed
work suriace • Char-Call speed
broiler &amp; pan • warmer shelf
swi tch • full -width storage
drawer . ..Now only

The METROPOLITAN
CS90W
Hear sound all around
you ... as tho ugh you

1

'

CHRISTmAS
·SALE PRICE
-·

IL 8

•249

GIFTS SHE UKES BEST

•.• COME FROM THE

95

World's most fully-automatic
20 lb. washer and dryer ...
Wash 2 lbs. .up to 20 lbs. in a single load - With just a push
_
of a bulton you get super·clean wash, automatic adva nce
from soak to wash. automatic detergen t, bleach and rinse 2 4 9 9 5
softener dispensing at proper times plus automatic lint
filtering at every water-saver level. SAVE $50 WASHER
ONLY ... now only $249.95 ·
Match-mate 20 lb. dryer features Stop'N Dry, special
\'Hinkle control , 3 cycles, pushbutton fabric selector,
u~load signaL SAVE $40 DRYER ONLY ... now
electric

5

179

95

1

·

SAVE
$60

captures the grace
elegance of Old Cathay in
a shimmering giOJY of multicolored embroidery on lustrous gold
braid. All in the soft swish of Nylon
Tricot for comfort caressed hours.
Choose your fabulous sleep and
lounge companions in Amethyst,
Well Red or Persian Blue.
Lotr~aine

•

SAVE

sao

World's
most modern
dishwashers

F•74 - Fl~~e Record ColltdOf
AlbUms wllh 50 Hlectionl fll•
turing top vocel tnd IM1rumen-

NIH - Stereo Headphonn Itt
vou enjoy ~ur fnorite mutlt

Get dis hes [Sally clean in
su per-quiet unde rcounter or
portable dishwashers with
atalnless atHI llnera. Enjoy
front loading , 2-level washing,
self·clean·ing ~ra in. fan circulated drying , 8 cycle lighJ$.
Portable model with cultihg
board top .. . onllf,Slt71UI5
Undercounj_er model for built. in installalion 5229.115

$46995
Never-Frost 22
refrigerator-freezers

E'njoy over 13 c u. fl. re lrigerator storage and 286 lb. lrozen food capacity Jn
these decorator S1de·by·Sides. Step up Ia fingertip convenience of fully
adjustable shelves. twin da~ry bars , rneat keeper, egg bucket, two crispers,
Juice can dispenser. automat ic door closers, mag netic doors and Roll-Away
wheels. Now only 541511.95 with provision to add lceMaker anytime. Save
$80, too , on Model RSF2298B with FACTORY INSTALLED ICE MAKER ...
now only S5t9.95
DWFt880A

privately.

~

by FEDDERS

and Save!

~

xI t 1

WIIOOP INIUI MIAft MIMI•

' . 1*¥' II

Drawing witt be Dec.

Store

step up to

. u •• .....,)

I

Boo~

Zerkles Trucking Company

First time ever ...
Norge offers you top-of-the-line
appliances on Sale! And colors
at no extra cost.

...
t:

Middleport

'
EVERY DAY•• NOW TO DEC.16, 1972

''

1...___ r THI r r xr xI

O~iry

Motor Parts Company
Rail 's Ben Franklin Store

AT INGELS
IN MIDDLEPORT

None over $10(1.

t LAY If AWAY

Middleport Department Store
Os sie's Recreation Room
Waller Crook s, Broughton 's

Jwt In time for

tlartlata.

llllTN 111"
- - · diOI, T""od ..... I&gt;Ond•.$110.

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
The Sewing Center
Young 's Mark et

. ~io Valley Bakery
Mills Ashland Service Station
Dr. Clyde J. Ingels
Shoe Box, Inc. ·

Bahr Clothiers
General Tire Sales
Kelly Manufacturing Co.,
Va lley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
Vill age Pharmacy
Gruesers Waffle ShoP
Dutton Drug Company
Wa llace Jewelry
Fr.iendly Tavern
M&amp;R Bargaintand
M&amp;R Foodliner
Fairmont Food s

~:I!1IS 3~1 ;1 t~ i.j~r~~

LONG LOUNGE ROBE
. · S-M·L ......... ... p4.00
TUNIC PAJAMAS
" 32-38 ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' $12.00
t;ONG GOWN
· S-M·L , .. , . , ... . . $ 9.00
LOUNGE SCUFFS
S-M-L·XL ... $ 4.00

•:...:o:=.-

TINEW

Dudley's Florist'
Po inT Vi ew Cable TV Service
J . J . Davis, M . 0 .
Radio Mid-Pom . Inc.
Heritage House
K~ith Goble Ford, l11c.

Heiner 's Bak ery

SENATH: 11A11

Stllnllll llHI. Royal biUI dill. 170.

entry forms from merchantS ads.

FREE PARKING IN MIDDLEPORT DEC. 11·23, COURTESY ~IDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

''Thankoffering'' ·
observed by LCW ·

~~~

No purchase necesSary·to receive

MIDDLEPORT RETAIL MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION PARTiCIPATING MEMBERS:

Werner's Radio

•

· • Need npf be present to win.

WIN AFORD PIN.TO

Headquarters · Restaurant

News Notes

Miss Sue Adkins

DAY
ONANZA

'·

Annabelk Ball

YOUTH revival begins at
· Bulaville Cpristian Church, 7
p.m, Rev. Beegle will give
message Mon., Tues., and
Wed. and Rev. Don Price on
. Thurs. and Fri. Everyone
welcome.
TUESDAY
THE; 'l'B and Heallh
Aasociatlon Executive Board
will meet at 7:30 p:m, at ihe
Health Department in ' the
Courihouse.

MIDDLEPORT STORES

• • • In Friendly

Jr. Women's Club
hears -Mrs. Ball
'

SUNDAY
THE ENGUSH Club will meet
at the Buckeye Rural Bulldipg
at Zp.m. for a Christmas party,
GRACE Guild Christmas
Oinner- guest night. Program;.
Rev: Paul Hawks at Methodist
Church at 5 p.m.
MONDAY . ·
.
.GALLIA Council No. 114 .
Daughters of America regular
· meeting. ElecUon of officers,
7:30p.m.
···

'

This Special Value

~

'•

~

. c.rtr'IJ
-~~-.~­
fl lt1AJ lap ¥liNI
end lnlln

GWIJ. UP

I

LUl .,...

,

On~

At

INGELS FURNlTU E
N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
BANK RATE FINANCING

�' '

,.

'

'

.

'

i

,-.

.'

~- -

,

~

,

. • • •.
.
.
-I
•~ The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Swulay, Dec. 3, 1972 ·

•

.

.

'

_,.

.

.

...

...

'

'

I

•II

1,

•'

"
I

f

&gt;•

.

'

.

',

•

'

··, · · lfp aTreeAbou ··.···
···· What to .6ive? ·

M&amp;R

·... SHOPPING
CENTER . MIDDLEPQRT, OHIO.

.

1 .
,'·

.

••

,

'

'

CHRISTMAS~

il

STAINLESS STEEL·.

fi

~ll

CARDS

GARLAND
·

·VALUES · BOX ·

-BIG SHOT
POLAROID
·. CAMERA.

DEEP FRYER.&amp; COOKER

18 FT. X·3 INCHES

.

$,

.,.........

·7

VALUE

CRAD'-E

JEWELRY
CHEST
.
:i- ::: ·;. :. \!: :

j ~;: :: ~-:;

:::! ·;~

NEW COLORS
:~. ::.

::: ;: .. '

. ELEORIC

POLAROID TYPE 1.07

.,

POLAROID FILM
TYPE 107

SAYELLE

R~G.$

DOLL
&amp;

RONSON'S
BLACK AND WHITE FILM

7 PC. WITH MOUNT

HE YAWNS

'1.89

NEW SHIPMENT

. SET

HE WALKS

BLACK .&amp; DECKER
1/. '' CIRCULAR SAW KIT
14 WITH METAL CHEST ·

~

·KITCHEN _TOOL

1·

PUU TH.E LEASH .

JUDY DOLL~~

•

I

PANKA
PANDA

.,

.

s
HANDCRAfTED.

'

EKCO
.. FLINT _CLASSIC

.,.

50 PC. SERVICE FOR 8 . · .

. HO~HOI

HY-FRY
AUTOMATIC

HO·HO·HOI

-~-

%:1

'

'

.

•.f -'

·t .TABLEWARE .
..

.

66

13"

HAIR
BRUSH -

·'

AMERICAN PROPANE .

.

· .SUPER HOT TOR·CH
RENWAL

. VISIBLE

GIFT SET

GLASSES
::. ; .":i( :::.::· .· ::~ !:::.::- :i·!:: ::;····..· ::;: !;!=![:· !.·: ~:

ERAL

,

SKEIN

PRESSURE COOKER
HO·HO·HOI
SOUNDESIGN

· 4 QT.

RADIO

ONLY

AM.fM

~oz

WOODTONE ELECTRIC
.PENDULUM CHIME CLOCK
...

$

-~

.

SALTON HOT RAY
ELECTRIC

Bun Warmer

. FINE
SEl£CTION
'OF TIMEX

MARX

..

SUPER WHEEL.
$

9 VOLT BATTERY .
PKG. OF 2

·CHRISTMAS
CANDY
5 LB.
BOX

·. 'WATCHES
. 695TO

$377

MIRRO-SCENE

RENWAL
HUMAN
GLOWS I~ l]E DARK
· ONLY

EVEREADY

D·BATTERIES

PICTURES·$
BIG 36"x24"
PICTURE ON MIRRORS
OOMPLETE KIT INCLUDES
MOUNTINGS .

GUN ·RACK - .

PKG. OF 2

HOLDS 4 GUNS
WITH ,
LOCKING DEVICE &amp; DRAWER

'

CHOCOLATE ·

DROPS
'

2 LB. PKG.

'·

REG. s1595
. BOYS
.SPORTSMEN

TARGET SET

sooo

BOX

PERFECT GIFT

SKELETON
KIT

49e.
"

SPARTUS

.TRASH
BAGS
10 BAGS

CHRISTMAS SNOW

ONLY

TOTEM

ICE
CRUSHER
·ONLY

59~
4 QT.

DELUXE AUTOMATIC

WITH

CHRISTMAS
TREE.STAND

10
oz.
' .
BOX ..

.

CAN OPENER

LADIES
OR
MEN'S·
GLOVES
$159PR.

$

•344

ONLY

•

7 PC. GOLF SET

DOG KIT

&amp;,.,~

MATIC . ·•

SPALDING

.

MATTEI.

FARBS

· HEAD OVER HEELS
. SET

$
\

fll, 110. -

- - --·. .

. .. -

Friday, Dec. 2l.

'

·~

•r

.
I

.

'.

''

.__....,1

'

'

�•.

..

~T

:

· 10-1beSundayTimes-8entinei,Sunday,Dec.3. 1972

• I

POM~ROY

AND MIDDLEPORT

L

ELEGANT
'

,DRESS .

OPEN
9 TO 9

ELEC. SCISSORS
SERRA SHARP
SCISSORS

girl
loye.
The will
Talkmg
Ooll

dreued ,

'"5 ''

reii.dy for bed .
Get
y~ur

10. hfest riding toy .

childr~n

$

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

~
___../ ·~
, ~
~
~1 . . . . .....
'"""
'""
~· ~ ...... -.._._ .... ~::·:-~~~ ...,.

• ._

....

one

L
LONG SLEEVE

SK INFIT
L INING

ZIG ZAG
AtTACHMENTS

SPECIAL
SALE ON
FABRICS

SEWING CHESTS

v:~uESaa~

e

EACH

EASTERN

VALUES

s1i~

Reg . $4.99 Value

EA.

J1.59

99· .

Save Big Now, Shop Sttffler s.

SOUTHERN

-Haoov Ctuistmas Dreaming:- .
PIITQ OR PALOIIIO MOUlTED

Big 10 Inch

PISTOL SETS

PLAY BALLS

are mounted on a
strong, sturdy chromated
'!Ubular steel spider frame.

EA.

Western Ranger

VINYL

S~!t~'~9~p~~!.
·
~ses

~

. .
1913 PINTO
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDDLEPORT To Be Given

$5.95 {

GifT BONANZA
STORE

Includ ed In set , two
Marbelized

di e

vinyl

play balls. Big 10"

fancv

site in assorted
colors . Lots of
fun .

ASST.
COLORS

cast

metal ·

western style p isto ls,
holster and

belt .

7

SAVEBIGAT
STIFFLER'S!

rea list ic

GI-

"Color Master'; one-touch control- activa1es AFC, Color and Tint

GIFT BONANZA
, .

l

contro ls for sharp, pleasing eolor pictures ... automatically .

SlORE

. . "]

''Super Scope" VHF and Varaetor UHF luning system-all-new
electronic UHF luning with RF amplifier stag&amp; for bolter fringe
performance. Pre-set electronic UHF tuning.

.THE SHOE BOX

OPEN MONDAY · F~IDAY •
and SATURDAY TIL9 P.M.

SS8l0 chassis is 8S percent solid state for long life and depondable
performance.
S-year picture tube adjustment warranty. For the first two years,
you get a rebuilt tube at no charge for the lube itself. For the flrsl90
days, there Is no charge for labor. For the remainder of the 5-yeor
period, you ~eta rebuilt lube ala pro-rated price plus a small eosl
fo r installation .

w,..•

Are Y." ""- ~ fl...
wh. tt.ift~ fN.t •n RNA
II ovt ef yN ptic:t r1119t? Wt'vt tot l'tiWI for youl
JT ISN'T , , , JUST COMPARE FEATURES, COMo
PAR£ PERFORMANCE , •• tt!~t~ CCMPAIU ~IC~
'

Wlitrt Sllots -

SenSibly

Priced

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

.,.

•

.-

BAK

Elrty Amorlc1n
Tho Allonta/Model 5L5435

-=.b

FURNITURE
f:R· MIDDLEPORT

LOOK HERE!

A New Adventure
In Christmas Shopping

Check Your List!

OUR NEW
GIFT SECTION
CHECKBOOK CLUTCH

racer with 5

motor,

Admiral Solarcolor picture lube with Black Motrlx;,.lar brighter
than previous Admiral pictures, before Solarcolor.

lt71 PINTD

Bahr Clothiers

INDY RACER

chrome

Check these Deluxe
SOLARCOLOR Features:
DEPOSIT AT ANY MIDD!.~POitT To

~\\)\'"'""

10 imported fragrances in
gift box.
Tremendous value I

18"

Promo11on

.Awoy

Doc. 22, 1m - 1 P.M.

'Your Shopping HeadqUJJrlers

decals,

ORDER

American.

-~~~\\"''

•

Member
Middleport
Merchants
Holiday
Bonanza

Magnificent a II-wood cabinetry in your choice -of three 0 Wrap
around" styles-Mediterranean, Contemporary or Early

. tt~\t\

BUY
HER
A
CABINET
FOR HER
PORTABLE

Medltmanoan
Tho Gaucho/Model 5Ui438

'"t
cr,e'fi\\\' .

Another great stocking stuf~ er
from Stiffler 's. W i de selectton 1
ol toy s with values t~ S1 .~9.

$399

$69995

BOOKS OF RELIGIOUS INTEREST
INSPIRATIONAL CONTENT
(A Holiday Bonanza Merchant)

•

WAHAMA

CHOICE OF
3 STYLES

·BOOKS

. SWEAT SHIRTS
MEIGS

PLATES
CUPS
TABLE COVERS

NAVY

~

M~rcha nl

BEAUTIFUL LERNER

Take your choice of a big
selection of toys thi11 make
great sto~king stuffe~s.

ove ...

NAPKINS

CRUSHED
LEATHER

E

-SHOP AT SJIFFLER'S-

·&gt;.

BROWN

I

A Holiday Bonanza

EACH

TOYS,. TOYS

By Gibson

'

~Ad,.lral® .
SOLARCOLOR

"'

DROWSY DOLLS

provides plenty of tun
tlnd
exercise
for
child ren. from age5 3 to

WHITE

(For cutting knits)

MATTEL'S TALKING

A th'ree wheel cycle that •

CARDS

.

AND CANDLE
PARTY TABLE DECORATIONS

WHITE

BUY NOW ON .LAY-AWA
REG. $7.99 VALUE

A doll any little

CHRISTMAS

. FRONT LACE
and
SIDE ZIPPER

SUNDAYS

~IG'·WHEEL

.. ()N THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

.lluHh .
1\1})1~!~~

1 TO 6

.MARX ·

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE,

BY

DAILY

FIRST THREE WHEELED SPEED CYCLE

smart santa

BOOTS

SURPRISE HER WITH A
WHITE

,

-STIFFLERi THE CHRISTMAS STORE WITH MORE.:.

Give
the grrt
thewhoe ,

. be a

SEWING SHOP

Al STIFFLER'S IS

.

'

HO

EARLY

YOUR CHOICE

.

11-'lbe Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1912

•

•

clutch purse holds
and even

pla1ed wheel s and

dr iver . Durab le.
color fu l Gav ·POiy
In f inishes . Sl .98

~-.....-·1.501Indoor-Outdoor
FONDUE .!_E_T
"Sa fety ·Swi nQ" ·
Sterno hOlder and
open hearth stand

....... Conlrol

allows Sterno l o
be swung out from
u nd er
pot .
Avacado, Flame
or Gol d with
black .

FOR HERI
MIST-AIR HOT COMBTM

$

FOR MIMI

Remington's new.Styler/Dryer
for men. Power handle with .
brush, 2 combs, mist head.

•14.95

'21.88 VAlUE . ,.

3e77

Gifts For The Most
Discriminating- Gifts For

After Dec. 11 • Until 9 p.m.

"MOD"

SAVE

8 TRACK

20.07

1

VALUE
Dec. 1 1hru Dec. 10,
9:15 til 5, Mon . thru
friday, 9:15 til 9
Saturday.

434
. ~""~,...1 1.75

oz.

SCREWDRIVER SET

Reg. $59.95
Kit incllldtl quality .
IJIMI!era and demo tape!

Pocket-size set of asst'd
sizes, with interchangeable hancfle
and ca·rrying case.
79¢ value
49~

IM1111le Fllllah Hardwood
Musical Colonial

VALUE

Lay·Away

9f

Plan!

~---

--·Friday,

·Our Gift to You

JR.
SPRAY LOTION

800 Inches of transparent tape to make your

.
FREE WITH COUPON
.

.

Bring lh this coupon-receive Rocket Tape free!

OOTHIIRS
... ARE ALWAYS WELCOME, SANTA!·
'

I

~

"Tilt Crutvr of Rta1011able .,.._ 'Prlcet"
North S.CCIIICI Avenue
Mictflltport' Ohio

MIDDLEPORT

-

.

s3gsa

.MEDITERRANEAN
COFFEE TABLE

STEREO

$19g&amp;B

Rich · pecan f inish. im·
ported marble top. Slide·
out drawer holds FM-AMF M slereo radio-phonol

1971 . 1 P.M.

WestemAuto

BAHR

gift wrapping easier.

27¢ value! ·

Dtc. 22,
'

•• .FROM

ROCKET TAPE

1~ oz. of Faberse
for men.

ROCKER

·- -----·.

: Frid1y, O.e. 22 ; 1972 • 1. P.M.

Or

THE·SLEEP SENTRY

TAPE
DECK

12.95

OLD

remo1e control

tiinlng
• PriYIIe ~-~~~~

• IMtant picture

1

SHAVE

-·-- . ,._
=

DOUBLE
CUT-AWAY

Everyone On Your List! !

AFTER

95
-

!n'1:
:',;'
chlnnell will!

D()N Ia EDNA WILSON

o. . '

IIICIIOUIICI

11 you lalllllttp while walc~lng lV, tho atatlon o- off tho tlr (lnd providing
· lhtrt'a nq J•if«&lt;nv algnal·on .l ht ata!JOIII
lht Sloop 8tMI)' g-lnto actiOn lnd
· autom~celly turna off lht 1V lot you. .

MOTOROLA

_

12"
. ..

---

Portable
TV
'
.

Thlt Bfa~k-lnd­
Whltt Port1bl1 1V
pocko pltnty of
perfo!llllnct for
. crlap, blight

$

plctureo.
Polyalycablnet In Wolnut
. gltln ftnlah ,

MOTOIIO&amp;.A ... maker~ Ot Ql•li••a: oolot TV

WERNER RADIO &amp; TV
MIDDLE PORT, 0.

A Holiday· Bonanza Mlrc~ant

' .

·I

J •

n

�,.

..

.. .

1972 .

•

..

• ..

,'
..•. 1.

,..

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'I ~ .

:.

•

''J.

j

....

.

_,

'

•
·.

'

~

Hollon-Hammvows taken0ctober15

unity
"'""'"" rner By Charlene Hoeflich .
•

POMF:ROY - Altar vases of foshioned similar tQ the one
gladioli, orange mums, baby's worn by Miss Ifile. She carried
br·calh .and greenery llanked · an !.range and yellow basket
by seven branch candelabra fill&lt;lQ with mums. Miss Debbie
er1rwincd · with ivy decorated Cruss of Racine registered the
IIi~ Fur·est Run United guests and she 'wore a yellOw
Methodist
· Church for the long gown with a green corPOMEROY -Geraldine Kessinger, District 8 president for
wedding of Miss Linda Hollon sage.
.
.the American Legion Auxiliary, wants the birthday party at the
Mr
.
·
Charles
Thomas
Serving
as
best
man for his
and
OIUUco\he Veterans Hospital on Dec. 14 to be really, really trig
·
Hamm
.
brother
was
Mr
. Robert
this year .
'
The bride is the daughter cf Hamm . The ushers were Mr..
And she needs your help!
Mr . and Mrs. Edison Hollon· of Larry H,ollon, Minersville,
About ~20 potato chips cans will be decorated by the juniors
Route I, Minersville, and lhe Route I, and Mr . Gary
of the Middlepor\ ·Auxiliary unit for cookies and candy for the
bridegroom is lhe son of Mr. Michael, Minersville.
veterans.
· •
and Mrs. Virgil Hamm, also of
For her daughter's wedding,
But, filling the cans takes about 3i:Jo pounds of candy and
Minersville, Route 1.
Mrs. Hollon wore a pink
about 100 dozen :cookies!
'
The wedding was an event of polyester knit with long lace
· .Geraldine is asking not only that the Auxiliary units of the
Oct. 15 at 2:30 p.m. with the sleeves and brown accessories.
county get behind this project to make life a liitle brighter for
Rev, Merrill Floyd performing She wore a corsage .of green
lx&gt;spitalized veterans but the entire community.
lhe double ring ceremony. Mrs. tinted carnations. Mrs. Hamm
The cans will be filled on Dec. 13 from 5 to 7 p.m. and conDavid Nease, organist, was 'in a two piece polyester
tributions ~an be brought to the Middleport Legion hall at that ,
presented selections including knit dress of 'royal blue with
time. Mrs. Kessinger does ask that the cookies be small enough
"Wedding Day," themes .from white 'accent trim and had an
to go· Inside the potato chip cans.
"Love Slory" and "Romeo and ora,nge tinted carnation corIn addition to the candy and cookies, bags of fruit will be
Julie1.111 "1 Love Thee," "0, sage.
prepared for each of the veterans and each one will get a $1
Perfect
Love,"
and
A reception honoring the
"Because," and Mrs. Robert couple was held in the church
canteen book from district fu nds.
Hamm, soloist, sang "Enlreat fellowship hall following the
HOW' VERY NICE of Jeali Moore and Alice Mills tQ provide
Me No t to Leave Thee," ceremony. The bride's table
''Wedding Blessing," "Wed- featured the three tiered cake
that lovely ceramic Christmas tree for the folks ai the Meigs
ding Prayer" and "The Lord's decorated in orange and green
County Infirmary·. It's just beautiful and being enjoyed so much ·
Prayer."
and lopped with the l,raditional
by the resi~ents there.
Given in marriage by her miniature bride and groom
fa ther, lhe bride was attired in replica. Swan columns
ABOUT 10,1)(1() BOOKS from the Meigs bookmobile are
a
gown of white satin, A-line separated. the tiers of the cake
overdue and Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja is making an appeal f:.r their
styling, with the bodice- which was flanked by white
return.
featuring a lace overlay and tapers in silver holders. Miss
She emphasizes that !here will be no charge on overdue
full chiffon sleeves. Small Roma Nease presided at the
books and suggests that schooLchildren take their books to school
pearls and a Dior bow at the punch bowl, and Miss Connie
and t,hat adults either return them tQ the bookmobile on the next
back were used on the bodice. Warner served the coffee.
visit or drop them in ihe book slot just outside the door at the Nye
The lace trimmed finger-tip Others assisting were Mrs.
Ave. headquarters.
veil was fastened to a band of Mary Nease, Mrs . Rose
New book purchases are almost out of the question now with
satin with lace accent. The Genheimer, Mrs. Ann Watson,
the new austerity program, and Mrs. Pikkoja is quite concerned
bride carried a lace covered Mrs. Marybell Warner, and
about the empty shelves.
white Bible topped with a white Mrs. Virginia Davis.
So be a good citizen - if you have a book out that's now
orchid from which fell satin
For a wedding trip l&lt;l Noroverdue, return it. There'll be no charge and no embarrassment.
streamers tied in lovers knots. thern Ohio, the bride changed
Her only jewelry .was her into a purple polyester knit
FREE DONUTS AND coffee, anyone?
mother's pearl earrings. She pant suit. The couple now
Yep, that's what you'Dbe served when you visit the Christcarried a family bandkerchief resides on the !famm farm at
mas bazaar of the Enterprise United Methodist Church women.
in her Bible and wore a blue Route I, Minersville.
The bride is a graduate of
garter made by Mrs. Vernon
The bazaar will be held Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday
Nease who also fashioned the Southern High School, class of
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and the refreshments will be served all
gown .
1971, and the Marietta Beauty
three days.
Miss
Patty
Jhle
of
Route
1,
School.
She is employed at
There's lots for sale - unusual handmade novelty items,
Racine, was the maid of honor. lola 's Beauty Salon In
craft objects, doilies, potholders, ·plain and fancy ·aprons, wall
She
was in a bright orange Pomeroy. Mr. Hamm Is a
wipes of netting, ~nltted and crocheted houseslippers, and a
princess style gown of graduate of Southern High
variety of other things. In addition tQ those things, a holiday bake
polyester crepe with Dior bow School, and is associated in
sale will be held and dozens and dozens of Christmas cookies and
accent
and puffed sleeves She dairy farming with his father.
pounds and pounds of homemade candy are being made.
Oul-of-lown guests were Mr.
carried a nosegay bouquet of
orange and yellow with white and Mrs. Kenneth A. Herber,
mums and her headpiece was Antwerp, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
TOYS WANTED
BAZAAR ffi TUESDAY
an
orange band with matching Robert Parker, Marietta; Mr.
POMEROY - The Salvation
.Mil)DLEPORT - The annual
veiL
and Mrs. Paul Hamm, !..anArmy
at
Pomeroy
needs
good
bazaar of .the Heath United
Miss Cindy Hamm, niece of caster; Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Methodist Church in Mid· used toys for needy children at
the bridegroom , was the flower· Hamm, South Webster; Mrs.
dleport will be held Tuesqay at Christn1as. Toys can be left at
girl
and her gown was in green
Airman Stewart takes Korean bride
the church beginning at 9 a.m. the Army he~dquarters , Ii5
Mrs. J . W. Morris and Miss
A lunc~on will be served from Butternut Ave .
.
MIDDLEPORT - Miss Kim Chong Cha, daughter of ·~;188ii!il j 888131:1-·lil-til..lil. ·;;';lrJiil'''&gt;11·~~·:~$~W' Nellie ;lerkle.
~·
·
,ij~MEMBER
ll .a.m . l~ 2 p.m. wlth1 soup,
- MEIGS COUNTY Salori,
Pyon Yun Ndntol&amp;!i&amp;,.Kor~, .and·Airman Cli&gt;rlrll Richard,li t~
chlli, salalls, pie and cp~Q to be PtlMillll,Q.Y'\ - Gregory
Eight and Forty, djnner ,at ,\he
Stewart, son Df Mr. and_Mrs. Clu-1 Stewart, Route 1, Mid" . , ;~
a'Milable ~ The bazaar will Wille , Pomet'oy . has been
Evelyn Cleland home in Racine
dleport, were united in marriage on June 7 at 3 p.m. in the ~:
feature numerous handmade granted a junior membership
al 6:30 p. m. Monday . MemEmbassy at SeouL
:~
articles including toys, aprons in the American Angus
"
bers are to take food for a
Airman Stewart is a 1970 graduate of Meigs High School ~;~
Association at St. Joseph, Mo.
and others.
basket. Secret pals will be
and is now serving l.n the U. S. Air Force. He is the grandson
revealed with a gift exchange.
of Mrs. Mer! Ratliff of Cheshtre. The couple resides at ~·
Kunsan, Korea.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
SUNDAY
"YOUTH OF Today" singers OES, annual installation , 8
from Rome and Proctorville p.m., Monday, at Masonic
will be at the Pomeroy Church Temple .
I
TUESDAY
··-.. ....
.
SYRACUSE - Plans for was awarded to Charles of the Nazarene at 7:30 p.m.
ANNUAL
BAZAAR MidSunday. Everyone welcome.
r·e membering shut-ins with Hoback.
SPECIAL WEEKEND d:eport's Heath United
Mrs. Lisle served refreshlrays during the holiday season
Methodist Church beginning 9
were made Thursday night ments tQ Mr. and Mrs. Carroll revival , 7:30 p.m. Friday a.m . Tuesday ; luncheon from
when the Eagles Class of the Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Karl through Sunday with the Rev. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. ; various
Says:
Syracuse Asbury United Klues, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bobby Porter as evangelist. handmade articles available. ·
Methodist Church met at the Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs. Special singing. each evening;
INSTALLATION of officers
Charles Hoback, Mr. and Mrs. public welcome.
home of Mrs. Mary Lisle.
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
of
MONDAY
Bill Winebrenner conducted Melvin Van Meter, Mrs. Ann
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Tuesday, 7:45p.m. at temple.
a devotional period concluding Sauvage, Mrs. Helen Teaford,
GOLDEN RULE Class,
with prayer . The group Robert Flanagan , Mrs. Jean p.m. Monday at the school with Pomeroy Church of Christ,
discussed new pews for the . Kl&lt;&gt;es, Miss Eleanor Robson Christmas p•ogram to be meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
church which are scheduled tQ and Miss Marcia Karr, class · presented.
SEVEN NIGHT revival at home or Mrs. Evelyn Smith for
arrive this month. Adoor prize teacher.
Long Bottom United Methodist a Christn1as party. There will
be a grab bag gift exchange.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Church beginning Sunday with
the
Flowers
Brothers,
WEDNESDAY
Marietta, singing; the, Rev.
POMEROY
WCTU Christ.
.Bud Hatfield, Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va .. speaking 7:30 nightly, mas meeting at the home of
Monday , through Dec . 10. Mrs. Robert Warner, Wednesday. Covered dish dinner at
LOCUST &amp; BEECH
MIDDLEPORT
Public invited.
'
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN noon .
MIDDLEPORT FIREClub, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
home of Mrs. M. J. Fry , MEN'S Auxiliary, WedYear-End Clearance
Cheshire. Members to lake nesday night at 6:30 p.m.
unwrapped gifts for the holiday potluck ilt the
Southeastern Ohio Mental · firemen's hall with a $2 gift
Health Center. 'Co-hostesses, exchange.

Social .
i, Calendari

Shut-ins will be remembered

KEITH GOBLE

"You Can Have The
Savings Now!"

.

CAPES

Gasoline Purchase

CARS

SIZE 2-12
$lft50
Solids &amp; prints. . V
Red. gold, whit e.
navy.

'73 FORDS

ALL DAY MONDAY
DECEMBER 4th

STOP· IN WHEN
SHOPPING
IN MIDDLEPORT

'Mrs. Gerald Hayman, East
Letart, observed their 40lh
an niversary at their home Nov,
5, with open house, hosted by
their chil~ren, Mrs. Lillie Hart,
' Racine; Mrs. Phyllis Young,
Mason , W. Va.: Mrs. Lida
Jewell, Letart, W. Va.; Ed·
ward of Westerville, and Keith,
at home.
They also have a son,Donald
and his family of Laurel, Md.,
unable to attend, but phoning
during the day.
The couple was married Nov.
2, 1932 at Ripley, W.Va. They
are lhe parents of six children
and have 16 grandchildren and
lwo great-grandchildren.
The couple .received a corsage and boutonniere or mums
tipped in red from their
children for the occasion.
Their table was covered with
a champagne colored lace
tabl~cloth, centered with
arrangements ~f . baby mums
tipped in red, and double
crystal candelabra with white
rapers on each side. The table
also featured a three tiered
wed4ing cake decorated with
red roses and topped with a
while . satin wedding bell
backed with nylon net and
baby's breath.
Mrs. Phyllis Young presided
al the table with Mrs. Gloria
Whitlach servi~g the punch
f'd Mrs. Manlyn Hayman

GIRLS(

·BLOUSE$.
SIZE
4 Thru 14 20%
BOYS .AND GIRLS

COATS·
SNOWSUITS

lf4

OFF .

JACKETS

tioo•e"---------. • Lo MO. ~-=~--::--::--:-::;:--;-;;-;;-­

Drawing : Friday, De&lt;. 22, 1972 - 7 P.M.
II

I ·.H I

f~islering t~4

\ ·THE')KIDDIE .,SHO'P'~E·
On The T lr. Middleport

ngo
Man.
He really lives
•
r

1n

MAY WE SUGGEST

VALUE
STAMPS

......

'

·AND All THE
TRIMMINGS
;

He knows wh4t it's ~11 ~bout.
. ~St's why you'll find him we~ring Ding~ bo
Th~t's why you should be we~ring them, too.

Goble Ford
992·2196

&gt;t Ill\ The World '•
from Acme Y:Y Lorgetl Boolmaker
·

Middleport

Memller Mlddllriort MercMnll Holldly llc!nanra

OK. 22, Jfn · 7 P.M.

Free Lube Job
With purdlase of oil
chanp •d filter.

.

o.c. 22, 1t72 •

Smeltzer

Come irt and·see our splection of Dingo BOots.

Open 9 to 9 W11Wrp

heritage house

CROSS MIDDLEPOIT,
HARDWARE
0.

A

~ -- .

Sund1Jllll6

Bon1n11 Mirchant
f

.
'

Choose from beautiful cut trees, baU.ed
and liurlapped trees, a~ first quahty
a rtificia I trees.

411111111111

ONE OF MEIGS County's five generation families has as
its youngest member Lisa Tillman, held above by her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Henry Spencer, Long Bottom. Seated at
the left is Mrs. Martha McElroy, MlnersviUe, Lisa's greatgreat-grandmother. Standing from the left are Mrs.
Lawrence DeGroat, Fountaiti, Colo., grandmother of Lisa,
and Mrs, Russell Tillman, Fountain, Colo., Lisa's mother.

~

I

Harley Powell, Mrs. Cinda
Harris, Mrs . Pearl Van .
Cuuuey, Miss Hazel .Van
Cooney, Mrs. Marie Pickens,
Mrs. Karen ·Redmond;· Mrs.
· Sherry iluskir)&lt;, Mrs. Janet
HarUey, Mrs. Jennifer ·Harris,
Lisa and Terti Harris, Teresa
Thomas, Mrs. Mary Bailey,
.Miss · Barbara Slnith, Mrs.
Nancy Vll{l Meter, Mrs. Judy
Custer, Miss'Jerry Pullin, Mrs.
Clarabelle Riley, Mrs. Dana
Kes~inger, Miss
Frances
Roush, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mrs, Nina Bland, Mrs. Mona
.Lee Neal, and Mrs. Reginll
Swift.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr., Miss Betty
Lou Gilmore, Mrs . Joyce
Douglas, Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
Mrs . Grace Pratt, Miss
Mildred Hawley, Mrs. Kathy
Hood, Mrs. Chris Garst, Mrs.
Robert Caruthers, Sr., Mrs.
Linda Laudermilt, Mrs. Kay
La udermilt, Mrs. Alice RQb·
son, Mrs. Emma Won has, Mrs.
Mae Ashley and the Loyal Pals
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ.

Wekme ...

1 to 5

·All Are Invited!

POMEROY
FLOWER
~:~
SHOP
Stort
Frtt TltktU For

Pomerov

Merchants

• n

•, ·

Prlifl Htrtl

· ·- ~

.

lola's Dress Shop

..

Mrs. Millard Van Meter

106 BUTTERNUT
Phone 992-2039

POMEROY

Save ChmtnuJs Dollars When
You
ARE IN STORE

Shop

FOR SMART SANTAS

Mason Furniture

Comforlabl 9 sitting, rocking , TV-vieWing or full
reclining in this modern Rock-A ·Lounger. Se·
lect vinyl or vinyl-fabric com binati on.

MR. AND MRS. OWENS

1

· ",~' '~

:.

J ,'' '.

1

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~

~'" "HI.

··

MIDDLEPORT
A
rece~Uon honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Owens on their
golden wedding anniversary
will be held Sunday, Dec. 10, at
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
The affair is being hosted by
their . daughters and sons-inlaws, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
(Anna Margaret) Price; Mr.
and Mrs . John (Jane)
Bowman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul (Carla) Wmeb~enner, all
of Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. Owens were
married on Dec. 23, 1922 at

l

•

·r

~

':

Gallipolis by the Rev. Clarence
K~mper. Mr. Owens was '
employed for 44 years with the
C. and o. Railroad before his
retirement in 1961. Both Mr.
and Mrs. Owens are active In
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church, he
having served as a deacon and
elder, and she as a deaconess
and trustee.
Besides
their
three
daughters, the honored couple
have five grandchildren and
six great-grandchildren.
Friends and relatives are invited tQ attend the reception
which will be held from 2 tQ 4
p.m.

B'..:.1-j h

riua

~

¥nce•.htz'on
'1':
, z's set

D·~cemher
, ~
~
, f

S OUJer

Family dinner
given recently .
· also surprise
CHESTER - A bridal
shower was given Saturday,
Nov. 18, hoooring Miss Kim
Flck, bride-elect of Howard
Bahr, at the home bere of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar Baum, with
Miss Nancy Baum as hostess.
A lavender and yellow color
scheme was carried out in the
'
decorations.
The gift table' was
centered with a large wedding
bell flanked by lav~nder "candles, above which were
suspended smaller 'bells.
Streamers e:ttended fnl!n the
~::~u :to the table. The
·1
on the refreshment
table featured a love moUf.
Games were played and
prizes won by Mrs. Mary Baht,
Mrs. Wiln\a Parker, and Miss
Debbie Wood. Mrs. Slna Bailey
won the door prize.
Attending were Mrs. Ann
Bailey, Mrs. Jane F!ck, Mrs.
Jean Kelly, Mrs. Kathryn
Baum, Mrs. !ana Bailey, Mlas
Joy Kautz, Mrs. Mary Kautz,
Miss JuUa Holter, Mrs. Wilma
Parker, Mrs. Kathryn Wells,
Miss Debbie Wood, Mrs. Kaye
Flck, MIN Kathy Smith, Mrs.
Linda Well, Mrs. Evelyn Well,
Miss Barbara Well, Miss Vlcld
Colt~ Mrs. Mary Baltr, and
Mn. Henry Babr.
'
Sending glfti were Ml11
Carolyn Grlllln, Mn. Sbaron
~ariz, Mn. Slna M..-phy'
lin. Ann am we flekl, Mn.
..... Mara, Mill libel lion,
Mn. Satll Ba1Je1, lin. Kay
BliiiJ' Mn. Adl Morrta. ...
Bnada lloriJC, Mn. BeUy
Nenll, 1111'1. Edra Wood, Mn·
1111'014 Wbdera, Mn. BeUy
Picett 1111 Jrla, Mn. Kin
lflrtq, Miss Deb Hlrlncbt,
IIIII I - Wblteli II~ llld llirl

f.t.''
~

Modern Recliner goes

easily inlo 3 comforlable

positions. Select vinyl or
vlnyl·fabric combination.

~

~ ·

~ BERKLINE®

i Comfort Action
I Chairs
I
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MIDDLEPORT - A family
dinner last Sunday evening at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Hysell was In observModern Aock-A-Lounger , 'in vinyl
comblnc~Uon. So comfortable lor
ance of the Thanksgiving
TV-¥iewing ·or full reclini ng.
· holiday· and also as a surprise
party for Mr. Hysell who. is
retiring from his job as a
school bus driver.
Presented tQ him was a
decor a ted cake l&lt;lpped with a
large yellow school bus replica
inscribed appropriately. Gifts
were ,presented to hlm by the
Sit, rock, watch TV or
recline in this elegant
family of 30 attending.
transit i onal Rock - A ~
. Present were the hosls and
· Lounger, beautifully de·
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell, U
tailed in decorator fabric .
Linda, Donalc!.and .Donna, Mr . ~ ~ v··~--~· ····•• --·-·- •--· -·-·
and Mrs. Ralph Painter,
Diana, Becky and Victor, Mr .
and Mrs. ·Ivan Wood, Keith,
Bonnie, Rodney, and Lora, Mr.
ahd Mrs. Earl Mossman,
Tammy, Vincent and Connie,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger HyseU,
Dennis and Janelle, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Hysell and Gary, Jr. ·

or vlnyl-fabrlr:
si lling, rocking ,

RECLINER AND
ROCK·A·LOUNGER
FEATURES

~

1

....,.. Three col"fortable poalllons
- . Quaiily B'erkllne Conotroclion
.....,..Complele aelecliop
.... - ..
of styles ana ofijro
.....,.. Uphol81ored In the
fineS! vinyls and fabrics .

I
i

Ener~ released by just
one pound of the sun would
keep a kitchen stove going
with all burners on for .several hundred years.

eoldly slyied modern Recliner,
delalled In rich vinyl. :Three
unbelievably c omfortable posi·
lions.

.Now! .LIJ It Away

SINGER

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Machine~
Far antm• 72

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Three-position Hi-Leg Re·
cllner Is a contemporary

beaulr,, wllh smart fabric

co¥er ng and wood ac-

WE'll DELIVER t...

cents.

You Can Do Better At

·+. . IN TIME FOR if;+.''

• CHRISTMAS .. ·.

Small deJIOIII wilt hoid.

The Fibric Shelp

Pill*.

...

'

THEY'LL MAKE TOYS
REEDSVILLE - Plans for
making toys for Veterans
Memorial Hospital and having
a Chrisll))as party for the
Meigs County Children's Home
have been made by the Eastern
High
School
Future
Homemakers of America.
Sandy Woods presided when
plans also were made for a
chapter party and Cathy
Pickens was selected as girl of
the month. A bake sale was
planned Dec. 9. Sally Blackie,
home economist or the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecrric Co., displayed and
explained the making of seven
Christmas arrangements, and
refreshments were served.

Five Generation family together

key ~
h.
d
tS . onore

'll«l1 'lC'U ~'T

CHRISTMAS
.TREES

TOP

r '

s. Third Ale.

!,.?

Alan Cunningham, Campbellsville, Ky.;
Bruce Hart, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Hayman,
Kimi, Terri, and Edward II,
Westerville; Mrs. Gloria
Whil)ach and Derreck, Mrs.
Phyllis Young, Kenneth and
Steve, Mason ; Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell , Barbie and
Bobbie, Letart, and Ann
' Ra'dford, Pomeroy.
Those attending local were,
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Molly,
Amy and Larry, Bertha
Robinson, Mable Shields, Dolly
Wolfe, Eula Wolfe, Doris
Adams, Freda Eyans, Mr. and
Mrs. Dannie 'Manuel, Troy and
Denise, Mr. and Mrs. Rodrick
Grqnm, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
Roush and Tammy,' Lorna
Bell, Eileen Buck, Early
Roush, Julia Norris, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis and arenda,
Clara Mae Sargent, Mr: and
Mrs. William Stover, Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Stover, Melissa
and Eric, Mrs. Drew Fisher,
Bucky and Carol, Keith
Hayman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart, Beverly, Brice
and Beth.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohue, M;. and
Mrs. Waid Hayman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace.
'

,, Mr. and Mrs . Hayman "i.YlTS. 'OrJ0'(;
greeted many. relatives,
friends
and
neighbors
•
throughout the afternoon and
many lovely gifts were.
received.
. RACINE . .,.. The annual
Guests from out of l&lt;lwn were· family reunion in honor of Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Coe, Fred J. B. (Roxie cJ. Battin)
Smith, Carbon Hill; Mr. and Sllockey's birthday was held
Mrs. Sid Hayman, Rita, Trina, Nov'. 23 at ·the borne of her
and Ryan, Rutland; Mr. and daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
Mrs. Joe Bissell and Kenneth, and Mrs. Harold (Rebecca)
Circle, Rt. I, Racine.
Mrs: Soockey, who was 76PARTY PLANNED
years old Nov. 28, was
BURLINGHAM The "corOJl!lted" with a gold crown
Modern
Woodmen
of inscribed In silver letters,
Burlingham Camp 7230 has "Spirit of 76" by her grandplanned a Christn1as party .. sons, Keith, Chris and Steve
Saturday, Dec. 9 at ,6:30 p.m. · Circle, A beautifully decora.ted
The dinner will be potluck, with cake was presented by her ftrst
meat &amp; coffee to be furnished. daughter, Mrs. Guy (Lucille)
Guests are to provide their own Laughlin, Vienna, W. Va.
silverware. A program .will be
Other family members
presented by the children and , !ft~nt ':"ere Guy Laughlin,
Santa will provide ireals for also of V1enna; Mr. and Mrs.
youngsters whowillalsohavea ·Freeman (Lee) Enoch of
gift exchange. All members Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs.
and their families are invited. Don (Joan) Wright with
Ethel Hart is the direcl&lt;lr.
Donna , John and RoJie of
'
Alum Creek, W. Va. ; grandchildren
and
·greatgrandchildren, Mr. and Mrs.
EASTMANS VISITED
Don Hill with !JoMy and Mike
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. of Washington, D. C.; Mr. and
Leland Saxton, Pomeroy, spent Mrs. Roger llllll8l! with Marti,
the Thanksgiving weekend Scott, and .LIInce of near
with Mr. and Mrs. Don East- Parkersburg; Douglas Enoch
man 11nd ..daughter, Jean, of sYracuse, and Jeff Circle,
Racine.
Crawford Drive, Colwnbu.s.

VALUE
STi\MP5

.

461

'
'

E~T LETART - Mr. and llong Bottom;

TOP

Double TV Starn ps ,.,

'.

MIDDLEPORT - A yellow
wnd green color scheme was
earried out for a layette shower
li&lt;muring Mrs. Randy ( Narsa)
VanMerei Thursday' evening al
lhe home of Mrs. ·charlene
Thomas in Middleport.
Gifts ~were placed in a
dl'Coraled bassinet and favOfs
of angel napkin holders, made
by M~s . Thomas, · were.
presented guests . Other
hos tesses for . the affair were
Mrs. Janet Hinkle, Mrs. Mabel
Walburn and Mrs . Diane
Caruthers. Games were played
with ptizes awarded to Mrs.
· Judy Custer, Mrs. Jennifer
· Harris and Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds .
Refreshments of cake ,
punch, mints and nuts were
served. Present were Mrs.

Celebration held

TO

MILLS ASHLAND

USED

'

MR. AND MRS. IHAYMAN

CHRISTMAS

With '3.00 or More

t.

'·

Layette shower given

Hubert Davis, Athens; Mr. and Gilbert, Zanesville. Others
Mrs. Joe Febinger, Salem; attending were from MidMary Jo Davis, and Barbara dleporl, Po!"eroy, Racine, and
Davis, Toledo; Mrs. Ve•a Minersville:

Mr. and Mrs. Charles T Hamm

MR. FORD COUNTRY

•.

...

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'·

MASON FURNITURE
..

773-5592.
'IH:.'IB.'IH:.

HERMAN GRATE

MASON, W. VA.

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1972 .

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Hollon-Hammvows taken0ctober15

unity
"'""'"" rner By Charlene Hoeflich .
•

POMF:ROY - Altar vases of foshioned similar tQ the one
gladioli, orange mums, baby's worn by Miss Ifile. She carried
br·calh .and greenery llanked · an !.range and yellow basket
by seven branch candelabra fill&lt;lQ with mums. Miss Debbie
er1rwincd · with ivy decorated Cruss of Racine registered the
IIi~ Fur·est Run United guests and she 'wore a yellOw
Methodist
· Church for the long gown with a green corPOMEROY -Geraldine Kessinger, District 8 president for
wedding of Miss Linda Hollon sage.
.
.the American Legion Auxiliary, wants the birthday party at the
Mr
.
·
Charles
Thomas
Serving
as
best
man for his
and
OIUUco\he Veterans Hospital on Dec. 14 to be really, really trig
·
Hamm
.
brother
was
Mr
. Robert
this year .
'
The bride is the daughter cf Hamm . The ushers were Mr..
And she needs your help!
Mr . and Mrs. Edison Hollon· of Larry H,ollon, Minersville,
About ~20 potato chips cans will be decorated by the juniors
Route I, Minersville, and lhe Route I, and Mr . Gary
of the Middlepor\ ·Auxiliary unit for cookies and candy for the
bridegroom is lhe son of Mr. Michael, Minersville.
veterans.
· •
and Mrs. Virgil Hamm, also of
For her daughter's wedding,
But, filling the cans takes about 3i:Jo pounds of candy and
Minersville, Route 1.
Mrs. Hollon wore a pink
about 100 dozen :cookies!
'
The wedding was an event of polyester knit with long lace
· .Geraldine is asking not only that the Auxiliary units of the
Oct. 15 at 2:30 p.m. with the sleeves and brown accessories.
county get behind this project to make life a liitle brighter for
Rev, Merrill Floyd performing She wore a corsage .of green
lx&gt;spitalized veterans but the entire community.
lhe double ring ceremony. Mrs. tinted carnations. Mrs. Hamm
The cans will be filled on Dec. 13 from 5 to 7 p.m. and conDavid Nease, organist, was 'in a two piece polyester
tributions ~an be brought to the Middleport Legion hall at that ,
presented selections including knit dress of 'royal blue with
time. Mrs. Kessinger does ask that the cookies be small enough
"Wedding Day," themes .from white 'accent trim and had an
to go· Inside the potato chip cans.
"Love Slory" and "Romeo and ora,nge tinted carnation corIn addition to the candy and cookies, bags of fruit will be
Julie1.111 "1 Love Thee," "0, sage.
prepared for each of the veterans and each one will get a $1
Perfect
Love,"
and
A reception honoring the
"Because," and Mrs. Robert couple was held in the church
canteen book from district fu nds.
Hamm, soloist, sang "Enlreat fellowship hall following the
HOW' VERY NICE of Jeali Moore and Alice Mills tQ provide
Me No t to Leave Thee," ceremony. The bride's table
''Wedding Blessing," "Wed- featured the three tiered cake
that lovely ceramic Christmas tree for the folks ai the Meigs
ding Prayer" and "The Lord's decorated in orange and green
County Infirmary·. It's just beautiful and being enjoyed so much ·
Prayer."
and lopped with the l,raditional
by the resi~ents there.
Given in marriage by her miniature bride and groom
fa ther, lhe bride was attired in replica. Swan columns
ABOUT 10,1)(1() BOOKS from the Meigs bookmobile are
a
gown of white satin, A-line separated. the tiers of the cake
overdue and Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja is making an appeal f:.r their
styling, with the bodice- which was flanked by white
return.
featuring a lace overlay and tapers in silver holders. Miss
She emphasizes that !here will be no charge on overdue
full chiffon sleeves. Small Roma Nease presided at the
books and suggests that schooLchildren take their books to school
pearls and a Dior bow at the punch bowl, and Miss Connie
and t,hat adults either return them tQ the bookmobile on the next
back were used on the bodice. Warner served the coffee.
visit or drop them in ihe book slot just outside the door at the Nye
The lace trimmed finger-tip Others assisting were Mrs.
Ave. headquarters.
veil was fastened to a band of Mary Nease, Mrs . Rose
New book purchases are almost out of the question now with
satin with lace accent. The Genheimer, Mrs. Ann Watson,
the new austerity program, and Mrs. Pikkoja is quite concerned
bride carried a lace covered Mrs. Marybell Warner, and
about the empty shelves.
white Bible topped with a white Mrs. Virginia Davis.
So be a good citizen - if you have a book out that's now
orchid from which fell satin
For a wedding trip l&lt;l Noroverdue, return it. There'll be no charge and no embarrassment.
streamers tied in lovers knots. thern Ohio, the bride changed
Her only jewelry .was her into a purple polyester knit
FREE DONUTS AND coffee, anyone?
mother's pearl earrings. She pant suit. The couple now
Yep, that's what you'Dbe served when you visit the Christcarried a family bandkerchief resides on the !famm farm at
mas bazaar of the Enterprise United Methodist Church women.
in her Bible and wore a blue Route I, Minersville.
The bride is a graduate of
garter made by Mrs. Vernon
The bazaar will be held Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday
Nease who also fashioned the Southern High School, class of
from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and the refreshments will be served all
gown .
1971, and the Marietta Beauty
three days.
Miss
Patty
Jhle
of
Route
1,
School.
She is employed at
There's lots for sale - unusual handmade novelty items,
Racine, was the maid of honor. lola 's Beauty Salon In
craft objects, doilies, potholders, ·plain and fancy ·aprons, wall
She
was in a bright orange Pomeroy. Mr. Hamm Is a
wipes of netting, ~nltted and crocheted houseslippers, and a
princess style gown of graduate of Southern High
variety of other things. In addition tQ those things, a holiday bake
polyester crepe with Dior bow School, and is associated in
sale will be held and dozens and dozens of Christmas cookies and
accent
and puffed sleeves She dairy farming with his father.
pounds and pounds of homemade candy are being made.
Oul-of-lown guests were Mr.
carried a nosegay bouquet of
orange and yellow with white and Mrs. Kenneth A. Herber,
mums and her headpiece was Antwerp, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
TOYS WANTED
BAZAAR ffi TUESDAY
an
orange band with matching Robert Parker, Marietta; Mr.
POMEROY - The Salvation
.Mil)DLEPORT - The annual
veiL
and Mrs. Paul Hamm, !..anArmy
at
Pomeroy
needs
good
bazaar of .the Heath United
Miss Cindy Hamm, niece of caster; Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Methodist Church in Mid· used toys for needy children at
the bridegroom , was the flower· Hamm, South Webster; Mrs.
dleport will be held Tuesqay at Christn1as. Toys can be left at
girl
and her gown was in green
Airman Stewart takes Korean bride
the church beginning at 9 a.m. the Army he~dquarters , Ii5
Mrs. J . W. Morris and Miss
A lunc~on will be served from Butternut Ave .
.
MIDDLEPORT - Miss Kim Chong Cha, daughter of ·~;188ii!il j 888131:1-·lil-til..lil. ·;;';lrJiil'''&gt;11·~~·:~$~W' Nellie ;lerkle.
~·
·
,ij~MEMBER
ll .a.m . l~ 2 p.m. wlth1 soup,
- MEIGS COUNTY Salori,
Pyon Yun Ndntol&amp;!i&amp;,.Kor~, .and·Airman Cli&gt;rlrll Richard,li t~
chlli, salalls, pie and cp~Q to be PtlMillll,Q.Y'\ - Gregory
Eight and Forty, djnner ,at ,\he
Stewart, son Df Mr. and_Mrs. Clu-1 Stewart, Route 1, Mid" . , ;~
a'Milable ~ The bazaar will Wille , Pomet'oy . has been
Evelyn Cleland home in Racine
dleport, were united in marriage on June 7 at 3 p.m. in the ~:
feature numerous handmade granted a junior membership
al 6:30 p. m. Monday . MemEmbassy at SeouL
:~
articles including toys, aprons in the American Angus
"
bers are to take food for a
Airman Stewart is a 1970 graduate of Meigs High School ~;~
Association at St. Joseph, Mo.
and others.
basket. Secret pals will be
and is now serving l.n the U. S. Air Force. He is the grandson
revealed with a gift exchange.
of Mrs. Mer! Ratliff of Cheshtre. The couple resides at ~·
Kunsan, Korea.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
SUNDAY
"YOUTH OF Today" singers OES, annual installation , 8
from Rome and Proctorville p.m., Monday, at Masonic
will be at the Pomeroy Church Temple .
I
TUESDAY
··-.. ....
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SYRACUSE - Plans for was awarded to Charles of the Nazarene at 7:30 p.m.
ANNUAL
BAZAAR MidSunday. Everyone welcome.
r·e membering shut-ins with Hoback.
SPECIAL WEEKEND d:eport's Heath United
Mrs. Lisle served refreshlrays during the holiday season
Methodist Church beginning 9
were made Thursday night ments tQ Mr. and Mrs. Carroll revival , 7:30 p.m. Friday a.m . Tuesday ; luncheon from
when the Eagles Class of the Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Karl through Sunday with the Rev. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. ; various
Says:
Syracuse Asbury United Klues, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bobby Porter as evangelist. handmade articles available. ·
Methodist Church met at the Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs. Special singing. each evening;
INSTALLATION of officers
Charles Hoback, Mr. and Mrs. public welcome.
home of Mrs. Mary Lisle.
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
of
MONDAY
Bill Winebrenner conducted Melvin Van Meter, Mrs. Ann
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Tuesday, 7:45p.m. at temple.
a devotional period concluding Sauvage, Mrs. Helen Teaford,
GOLDEN RULE Class,
with prayer . The group Robert Flanagan , Mrs. Jean p.m. Monday at the school with Pomeroy Church of Christ,
discussed new pews for the . Kl&lt;&gt;es, Miss Eleanor Robson Christmas p•ogram to be meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
church which are scheduled tQ and Miss Marcia Karr, class · presented.
SEVEN NIGHT revival at home or Mrs. Evelyn Smith for
arrive this month. Adoor prize teacher.
Long Bottom United Methodist a Christn1as party. There will
be a grab bag gift exchange.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Church beginning Sunday with
the
Flowers
Brothers,
WEDNESDAY
Marietta, singing; the, Rev.
POMEROY
WCTU Christ.
.Bud Hatfield, Gallipolis Ferry,
W. Va .. speaking 7:30 nightly, mas meeting at the home of
Monday , through Dec . 10. Mrs. Robert Warner, Wednesday. Covered dish dinner at
LOCUST &amp; BEECH
MIDDLEPORT
Public invited.
'
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN noon .
MIDDLEPORT FIREClub, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
home of Mrs. M. J. Fry , MEN'S Auxiliary, WedYear-End Clearance
Cheshire. Members to lake nesday night at 6:30 p.m.
unwrapped gifts for the holiday potluck ilt the
Southeastern Ohio Mental · firemen's hall with a $2 gift
Health Center. 'Co-hostesses, exchange.

Social .
i, Calendari

Shut-ins will be remembered

KEITH GOBLE

"You Can Have The
Savings Now!"

.

CAPES

Gasoline Purchase

CARS

SIZE 2-12
$lft50
Solids &amp; prints. . V
Red. gold, whit e.
navy.

'73 FORDS

ALL DAY MONDAY
DECEMBER 4th

STOP· IN WHEN
SHOPPING
IN MIDDLEPORT

'Mrs. Gerald Hayman, East
Letart, observed their 40lh
an niversary at their home Nov,
5, with open house, hosted by
their chil~ren, Mrs. Lillie Hart,
' Racine; Mrs. Phyllis Young,
Mason , W. Va.: Mrs. Lida
Jewell, Letart, W. Va.; Ed·
ward of Westerville, and Keith,
at home.
They also have a son,Donald
and his family of Laurel, Md.,
unable to attend, but phoning
during the day.
The couple was married Nov.
2, 1932 at Ripley, W.Va. They
are lhe parents of six children
and have 16 grandchildren and
lwo great-grandchildren.
The couple .received a corsage and boutonniere or mums
tipped in red from their
children for the occasion.
Their table was covered with
a champagne colored lace
tabl~cloth, centered with
arrangements ~f . baby mums
tipped in red, and double
crystal candelabra with white
rapers on each side. The table
also featured a three tiered
wed4ing cake decorated with
red roses and topped with a
while . satin wedding bell
backed with nylon net and
baby's breath.
Mrs. Phyllis Young presided
al the table with Mrs. Gloria
Whitlach servi~g the punch
f'd Mrs. Manlyn Hayman

GIRLS(

·BLOUSE$.
SIZE
4 Thru 14 20%
BOYS .AND GIRLS

COATS·
SNOWSUITS

lf4

OFF .

JACKETS

tioo•e"---------. • Lo MO. ~-=~--::--::--:-::;:--;-;;-;;-­

Drawing : Friday, De&lt;. 22, 1972 - 7 P.M.
II

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f~islering t~4

\ ·THE')KIDDIE .,SHO'P'~E·
On The T lr. Middleport

ngo
Man.
He really lives
•
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1n

MAY WE SUGGEST

VALUE
STAMPS

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·AND All THE
TRIMMINGS
;

He knows wh4t it's ~11 ~bout.
. ~St's why you'll find him we~ring Ding~ bo
Th~t's why you should be we~ring them, too.

Goble Ford
992·2196

&gt;t Ill\ The World '•
from Acme Y:Y Lorgetl Boolmaker
·

Middleport

Memller Mlddllriort MercMnll Holldly llc!nanra

OK. 22, Jfn · 7 P.M.

Free Lube Job
With purdlase of oil
chanp •d filter.

.

o.c. 22, 1t72 •

Smeltzer

Come irt and·see our splection of Dingo BOots.

Open 9 to 9 W11Wrp

heritage house

CROSS MIDDLEPOIT,
HARDWARE
0.

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Sund1Jllll6

Bon1n11 Mirchant
f

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Choose from beautiful cut trees, baU.ed
and liurlapped trees, a~ first quahty
a rtificia I trees.

411111111111

ONE OF MEIGS County's five generation families has as
its youngest member Lisa Tillman, held above by her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Henry Spencer, Long Bottom. Seated at
the left is Mrs. Martha McElroy, MlnersviUe, Lisa's greatgreat-grandmother. Standing from the left are Mrs.
Lawrence DeGroat, Fountaiti, Colo., grandmother of Lisa,
and Mrs, Russell Tillman, Fountain, Colo., Lisa's mother.

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Harley Powell, Mrs. Cinda
Harris, Mrs . Pearl Van .
Cuuuey, Miss Hazel .Van
Cooney, Mrs. Marie Pickens,
Mrs. Karen ·Redmond;· Mrs.
· Sherry iluskir)&lt;, Mrs. Janet
HarUey, Mrs. Jennifer ·Harris,
Lisa and Terti Harris, Teresa
Thomas, Mrs. Mary Bailey,
.Miss · Barbara Slnith, Mrs.
Nancy Vll{l Meter, Mrs. Judy
Custer, Miss'Jerry Pullin, Mrs.
Clarabelle Riley, Mrs. Dana
Kes~inger, Miss
Frances
Roush, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mrs, Nina Bland, Mrs. Mona
.Lee Neal, and Mrs. Reginll
Swift.
Others presenting gifts were
Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr., Miss Betty
Lou Gilmore, Mrs . Joyce
Douglas, Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
Mrs . Grace Pratt, Miss
Mildred Hawley, Mrs. Kathy
Hood, Mrs. Chris Garst, Mrs.
Robert Caruthers, Sr., Mrs.
Linda Laudermilt, Mrs. Kay
La udermilt, Mrs. Alice RQb·
son, Mrs. Emma Won has, Mrs.
Mae Ashley and the Loyal Pals
Class of the Middleport Church
of Christ.

Wekme ...

1 to 5

·All Are Invited!

POMEROY
FLOWER
~:~
SHOP
Stort
Frtt TltktU For

Pomerov

Merchants

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Prlifl Htrtl

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.

lola's Dress Shop

..

Mrs. Millard Van Meter

106 BUTTERNUT
Phone 992-2039

POMEROY

Save ChmtnuJs Dollars When
You
ARE IN STORE

Shop

FOR SMART SANTAS

Mason Furniture

Comforlabl 9 sitting, rocking , TV-vieWing or full
reclining in this modern Rock-A ·Lounger. Se·
lect vinyl or vinyl-fabric com binati on.

MR. AND MRS. OWENS

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MIDDLEPORT
A
rece~Uon honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Owens on their
golden wedding anniversary
will be held Sunday, Dec. 10, at
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
The affair is being hosted by
their . daughters and sons-inlaws, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
(Anna Margaret) Price; Mr.
and Mrs . John (Jane)
Bowman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul (Carla) Wmeb~enner, all
of Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. Owens were
married on Dec. 23, 1922 at

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Gallipolis by the Rev. Clarence
K~mper. Mr. Owens was '
employed for 44 years with the
C. and o. Railroad before his
retirement in 1961. Both Mr.
and Mrs. Owens are active In
the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church, he
having served as a deacon and
elder, and she as a deaconess
and trustee.
Besides
their
three
daughters, the honored couple
have five grandchildren and
six great-grandchildren.
Friends and relatives are invited tQ attend the reception
which will be held from 2 tQ 4
p.m.

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, z's set

D·~cemher
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S OUJer

Family dinner
given recently .
· also surprise
CHESTER - A bridal
shower was given Saturday,
Nov. 18, hoooring Miss Kim
Flck, bride-elect of Howard
Bahr, at the home bere of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar Baum, with
Miss Nancy Baum as hostess.
A lavender and yellow color
scheme was carried out in the
'
decorations.
The gift table' was
centered with a large wedding
bell flanked by lav~nder "candles, above which were
suspended smaller 'bells.
Streamers e:ttended fnl!n the
~::~u :to the table. The
·1
on the refreshment
table featured a love moUf.
Games were played and
prizes won by Mrs. Mary Baht,
Mrs. Wiln\a Parker, and Miss
Debbie Wood. Mrs. Slna Bailey
won the door prize.
Attending were Mrs. Ann
Bailey, Mrs. Jane F!ck, Mrs.
Jean Kelly, Mrs. Kathryn
Baum, Mrs. !ana Bailey, Mlas
Joy Kautz, Mrs. Mary Kautz,
Miss JuUa Holter, Mrs. Wilma
Parker, Mrs. Kathryn Wells,
Miss Debbie Wood, Mrs. Kaye
Flck, MIN Kathy Smith, Mrs.
Linda Well, Mrs. Evelyn Well,
Miss Barbara Well, Miss Vlcld
Colt~ Mrs. Mary Baltr, and
Mn. Henry Babr.
'
Sending glfti were Ml11
Carolyn Grlllln, Mn. Sbaron
~ariz, Mn. Slna M..-phy'
lin. Ann am we flekl, Mn.
..... Mara, Mill libel lion,
Mn. Satll Ba1Je1, lin. Kay
BliiiJ' Mn. Adl Morrta. ...
Bnada lloriJC, Mn. BeUy
Nenll, 1111'1. Edra Wood, Mn·
1111'014 Wbdera, Mn. BeUy
Picett 1111 Jrla, Mn. Kin
lflrtq, Miss Deb Hlrlncbt,
IIIII I - Wblteli II~ llld llirl

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easily inlo 3 comforlable

positions. Select vinyl or
vlnyl·fabric combination.

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MIDDLEPORT - A family
dinner last Sunday evening at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Hysell was In observModern Aock-A-Lounger , 'in vinyl
comblnc~Uon. So comfortable lor
ance of the Thanksgiving
TV-¥iewing ·or full reclini ng.
· holiday· and also as a surprise
party for Mr. Hysell who. is
retiring from his job as a
school bus driver.
Presented tQ him was a
decor a ted cake l&lt;lpped with a
large yellow school bus replica
inscribed appropriately. Gifts
were ,presented to hlm by the
Sit, rock, watch TV or
recline in this elegant
family of 30 attending.
transit i onal Rock - A ~
. Present were the hosls and
· Lounger, beautifully de·
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell, U
tailed in decorator fabric .
Linda, Donalc!.and .Donna, Mr . ~ ~ v··~--~· ····•• --·-·- •--· -·-·
and Mrs. Ralph Painter,
Diana, Becky and Victor, Mr .
and Mrs. ·Ivan Wood, Keith,
Bonnie, Rodney, and Lora, Mr.
ahd Mrs. Earl Mossman,
Tammy, Vincent and Connie,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger HyseU,
Dennis and Janelle, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Hysell and Gary, Jr. ·

or vlnyl-fabrlr:
si lling, rocking ,

RECLINER AND
ROCK·A·LOUNGER
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- . Quaiily B'erkllne Conotroclion
.....,..Complele aelecliop
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.....,.. Uphol81ored In the
fineS! vinyls and fabrics .

I
i

Ener~ released by just
one pound of the sun would
keep a kitchen stove going
with all burners on for .several hundred years.

eoldly slyied modern Recliner,
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Three-position Hi-Leg Re·
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WE'll DELIVER t...

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You Can Do Better At

·+. . IN TIME FOR if;+.''

• CHRISTMAS .. ·.

Small deJIOIII wilt hoid.

The Fibric Shelp

Pill*.

...

'

THEY'LL MAKE TOYS
REEDSVILLE - Plans for
making toys for Veterans
Memorial Hospital and having
a Chrisll))as party for the
Meigs County Children's Home
have been made by the Eastern
High
School
Future
Homemakers of America.
Sandy Woods presided when
plans also were made for a
chapter party and Cathy
Pickens was selected as girl of
the month. A bake sale was
planned Dec. 9. Sally Blackie,
home economist or the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elecrric Co., displayed and
explained the making of seven
Christmas arrangements, and
refreshments were served.

Five Generation family together

key ~
h.
d
tS . onore

'll«l1 'lC'U ~'T

CHRISTMAS
.TREES

TOP

r '

s. Third Ale.

!,.?

Alan Cunningham, Campbellsville, Ky.;
Bruce Hart, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Hayman,
Kimi, Terri, and Edward II,
Westerville; Mrs. Gloria
Whil)ach and Derreck, Mrs.
Phyllis Young, Kenneth and
Steve, Mason ; Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell , Barbie and
Bobbie, Letart, and Ann
' Ra'dford, Pomeroy.
Those attending local were,
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Molly,
Amy and Larry, Bertha
Robinson, Mable Shields, Dolly
Wolfe, Eula Wolfe, Doris
Adams, Freda Eyans, Mr. and
Mrs. Dannie 'Manuel, Troy and
Denise, Mr. and Mrs. Rodrick
Grqnm, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
Roush and Tammy,' Lorna
Bell, Eileen Buck, Early
Roush, Julia Norris, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis and arenda,
Clara Mae Sargent, Mr: and
Mrs. William Stover, Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Stover, Melissa
and Eric, Mrs. Drew Fisher,
Bucky and Carol, Keith
Hayman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart, Beverly, Brice
and Beth.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Donohue, M;. and
Mrs. Waid Hayman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace.
'

,, Mr. and Mrs . Hayman "i.YlTS. 'OrJ0'(;
greeted many. relatives,
friends
and
neighbors
•
throughout the afternoon and
many lovely gifts were.
received.
. RACINE . .,.. The annual
Guests from out of l&lt;lwn were· family reunion in honor of Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Coe, Fred J. B. (Roxie cJ. Battin)
Smith, Carbon Hill; Mr. and Sllockey's birthday was held
Mrs. Sid Hayman, Rita, Trina, Nov'. 23 at ·the borne of her
and Ryan, Rutland; Mr. and daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
Mrs. Joe Bissell and Kenneth, and Mrs. Harold (Rebecca)
Circle, Rt. I, Racine.
Mrs: Soockey, who was 76PARTY PLANNED
years old Nov. 28, was
BURLINGHAM The "corOJl!lted" with a gold crown
Modern
Woodmen
of inscribed In silver letters,
Burlingham Camp 7230 has "Spirit of 76" by her grandplanned a Christn1as party .. sons, Keith, Chris and Steve
Saturday, Dec. 9 at ,6:30 p.m. · Circle, A beautifully decora.ted
The dinner will be potluck, with cake was presented by her ftrst
meat &amp; coffee to be furnished. daughter, Mrs. Guy (Lucille)
Guests are to provide their own Laughlin, Vienna, W. Va.
silverware. A program .will be
Other family members
presented by the children and , !ft~nt ':"ere Guy Laughlin,
Santa will provide ireals for also of V1enna; Mr. and Mrs.
youngsters whowillalsohavea ·Freeman (Lee) Enoch of
gift exchange. All members Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs.
and their families are invited. Don (Joan) Wright with
Ethel Hart is the direcl&lt;lr.
Donna , John and RoJie of
'
Alum Creek, W. Va. ; grandchildren
and
·greatgrandchildren, Mr. and Mrs.
EASTMANS VISITED
Don Hill with !JoMy and Mike
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. of Washington, D. C.; Mr. and
Leland Saxton, Pomeroy, spent Mrs. Roger llllll8l! with Marti,
the Thanksgiving weekend Scott, and .LIInce of near
with Mr. and Mrs. Don East- Parkersburg; Douglas Enoch
man 11nd ..daughter, Jean, of sYracuse, and Jeff Circle,
Racine.
Crawford Drive, Colwnbu.s.

VALUE
STi\MP5

.

461

'
'

E~T LETART - Mr. and llong Bottom;

TOP

Double TV Starn ps ,.,

'.

MIDDLEPORT - A yellow
wnd green color scheme was
earried out for a layette shower
li&lt;muring Mrs. Randy ( Narsa)
VanMerei Thursday' evening al
lhe home of Mrs. ·charlene
Thomas in Middleport.
Gifts ~were placed in a
dl'Coraled bassinet and favOfs
of angel napkin holders, made
by M~s . Thomas, · were.
presented guests . Other
hos tesses for . the affair were
Mrs. Janet Hinkle, Mrs. Mabel
Walburn and Mrs . Diane
Caruthers. Games were played
with ptizes awarded to Mrs.
· Judy Custer, Mrs. Jennifer
· Harris and Mrs . Pearl
Reynolds .
Refreshments of cake ,
punch, mints and nuts were
served. Present were Mrs.

Celebration held

TO

MILLS ASHLAND

USED

'

MR. AND MRS. IHAYMAN

CHRISTMAS

With '3.00 or More

t.

'·

Layette shower given

Hubert Davis, Athens; Mr. and Gilbert, Zanesville. Others
Mrs. Joe Febinger, Salem; attending were from MidMary Jo Davis, and Barbara dleporl, Po!"eroy, Racine, and
Davis, Toledo; Mrs. Ve•a Minersville:

Mr. and Mrs. Charles T Hamm

MR. FORD COUNTRY

•.

...

'

'·

MASON FURNITURE
..

773-5592.
'IH:.'IB.'IH:.

HERMAN GRATE

MASON, W. VA.

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j,

'

�.
.

If- TheSundayTlmes -Sentinei,SUnday, Dec. 3, 1972

'

•

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Wedding pkln ·is completd

Ladies·will make 18:Chn$tfr#as
table
arrangements
..
'

•.•

..

~

RIJTLAND - Eighteen . recent £lower show.
Christmas table arrangements . Mrl!. Jack Robson, president,
will b~ made .by members of thanked all wlw participated in
the R~tland ·Garden Club for . I he therapy p1·ograrn on Nov,
the Attiens .Mental Health H at the Athens Mental Health
Center.
Center.
·Read at a recent meeting of
The certifica te ' of apthe club at the Jlnme of Mrs. preciation which the club has
Paul Winn, Bradbury, was a rece ived fr om the Gallipolis
letter from Mrs. Charlotte Cox Stale Institute for the therapy
of the Health Center requesting with the Nature Garden Club
the arrangements. The club was displayed by Mrs. ·Pearl
voted to pay·for lan~sca ping at Canaday. Also displayed was
the RuOand Methodist Church the 1971 publicity book which
Snd also lfJ send an · ap· was rated second in Region 11.
preciation·gift lfJ the church for · Plans for the club's Chris~
the use of its basement for the mas dinner and party were

JUST RECEIVED
NEW SHIPMENT

'PIANOS ·
And

CHRISTMAS
MUSIC

&lt;'omplcted . The party and gift
cxchartge will be. held al ~e
home o1 Mrs. Jla•·vey Erlewine
fullowing dinner at Grow's
Steak House.
Mrs . Winn
presented
devotions featuring the
Mayflo10er Compact which
begins, " In the name of God"
~n d is the foundation :~'of
T~anksg lvin g celebrations.
Members ·respondtd to roll tall
by naming their greatest
blessing. Mrs. Ann Webster
ga ve the secretary's report aild
Mrs. W. P. Jarrell the
ll·easurer's .
The "arrangement of the
month" featuring chrysanthemums was exhibited by
Mrs. Winn. An arrangenieni
con tain ing fl oating candles
. was used on lh&lt;l dining ~
table. ~
•
Mrs. Vjrgil Atkins presented
a progtim on the topic "GrOw
Florisl'll'' Mums," suggesting
that for a really exotic touch in
the ,home ga rden, a few of the
~plder lype milms with their
distinctive long and narrow·
petals be added. She said the
best place to plant these is ln.an
~pe_n area away from trots,
shrubs and buildings.
:t.
Soil shQ!ild be rich in org~~lc
matter·with bo.th peatmoss li!lld
compoilt being excellent i(Q.
ailives, Mrs. Adkins said. She
noted that most of today's new

0

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.

.

•

'

var~tie~ will survive the spring the covering .is to be
;•vel'ige winter if they arc· in rCuwvl'd ~s soon as signs. of
well-drained suit and are g1'owl h appear, she said .
eciverect uver after the soil has
The tJ·aveling prize was
frozen to· .a depth of .Several ctf!naled by Mrs . Maurice
inches. Before covering with Thomson, co-hostess fm· the
straw, hay or plastic, she meeting, and won by Mrs. Gush
sug~ested that the plants be cut Johnston. Mrs. James Titus is ·
lo about two inches. In the lo provide the one for the next
•

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•

I

.

meeting. Tips on December
ga rdening were given by Mrs.
J&lt;ma h .Cqtterill. · '
·. .
During the social hour;
refreshmen ts and favors in
kee ping with Thanksgiving
were served to tt.e 17 melnbers
tind one guest, · Mrs. Max

Davis.

.

Shrinettes_elect new officers
.

.

.
MIDDLEPORT - 11\rs. Cora
Beegle was elected president of
the iwin.Cily Shrinettes at a
mee ting held Thursday night at
the Columbus and Southerh
Ohiq. Electric Co.
Ot'*r officers named were
Mrs.:.· .Violet Miller, ,· vice
presj,nt; Mrs. Gertrude
Mitcii'U, secretary; and ' Mrs.
Beul~ Ewing, treasurer,
The annual Chrislmas 'party
was set for Dec. 21at the home
of Mrs. Je ~n Moore, 7:30p.m.
with each member to take a $2
gift. for an exchange.
Mrs. Moore reported that
bottle caps had been redeemed
by Royal ,Crown for $28, 1~. A
report was given on the
ceremonial held recently in
Colut1Jbus and attended by
Mrs. Shirley Spires, Mrs. Ruth
Swisher, Mrs. Bernice Workman, Mrs. Ewing, Mrs. Mit-

:i ·

cbell, and Mrs. Moore. All
· pijrticipated in the pageantry
iiM attended the banquet. The
Shrinettes donated $100 in cash
and $175 in miscellaneous
items for the Crippled

ER unit called
out four times

MRS. RICE HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Lorena Rice has returned
home after spending the
Thanksgiving holiday period
With her nephew, Mr. and Mrs.
Ri!yce Lee, in Jamestown,
Ohio. Mrs . Rice was accompanied by her sister, Mrs.
Bernice Pauley of Gallipolis;
her niece, Miss Ruth Pauley,
Charleston; Ward L. Pauley of
Lancaster, and another of Mrs.
P~uley 's sons, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Pll'uley and family of
Columbus. Royce Lee Pauley
is also Mrs. Pauley's son.

SON BORN OCT. 31
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
James B. Pettit, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of an
eight pound, three ounce son,
James Albert, Oct. 31, at the
Holzer Medical Center .
Grandparents are Mrs. Juanita
. Justis, Pomeroy; Paul Justis,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Pettit, Pomeroy. Greatgran dparents are Mrs. Mabel
Pettit, Pomeroy; Mrs. Sylvia
Wolfe, Racine ; and Preston
Parsons, Racine. Mrs. Ethel
Sarson, Racine'and Mrs. Ruth
Parsons, Racine, are great·
grea !·grandmothers.

ive Her Diamonds

Caravelle®by Bulova.

If diamonds are a girl's best friend, hefrlend her. And keep
her timely, too, For a mere $24.95. Give her a prettily sculp·
lured , precision-made, 17 iewel ' watch, highlighted with
twin diamonds. The Sweet Brier "G". t:arevetle by Bulova.
An expensive watch at on lnexpenotve prl.,..

SliCED WHOlE

SMOKED
PICNICS
lb. 49¢

, ..

.

BRUNICARDI
. HOUSE OF MUSIC

54 State St.,_Gallipolis

446-0687

On again .
off agai'n

lli01 ur

The Town·of Mason Wednesday had

two poti~emen, 1~hursday oniy one,

Fridcty nmrl' and Saturday two 'a gain.

New officers, who will be assuming
duty on a ·shift basis, are James
Ashwor th of Point Pleasant and Kenneth
Siders of Mason. l oqnerly of Marietta,
0.
.
.Ashworth is a former Point Pleasant
city patrolman and said hiS empioymenl
is on a temporary basis, Siders,
according to Mayor Roy Harless, has
had association with police work.
Previously, Mayor Harless stated that
U1e salary for James Gaskins, who was
employed Wednesday and !hen declined
the appointment Friday, would be set
by council in a regular meeting Monday
evening.
But Saturday , when questioned alwut

tssu cd

1.043 t1tH."s. 111r1dC' 268 notat inn
of liens, z;n cnncellHtion of
!tens. 20 dupli cate titles O:J nd
!hrTf' rrp l;tCf&gt;lllCnt titles .

WORK
WEAR

BROWN DUCK

lniured in Fall
The condition of Ken Williams, 38,
Huntington , repo rtedl y remains
''un changed" in St. Mary's Hospital in
Hunti ngton where he was admitted
Thursday following a fall from the roof
of a house under construction near
Letart.
Transported to the hospital in the New
Have n Emergency Ambulance,
Williams sustained a fractured disc in
the back and· rib frac tures in the fall.
The accident occurred at Broad Run , Rt.
1, Letart, while Williams was said to
have been as isting in the construction of
a new home for Robert Hendricks.

OPEN . SUND~Y

. ALL 3 STORES

SUNDAY ONLYI

SUNDAY ONLY I

'-"-'

GIRLS

MUG
T
EE
.
SETS
. DECORATED CERAMIC

PANTS
ENTIRE
STOCK
.
-· GOES!

s Hour Sunday Sale. Sizes 3
to 14 in orion acrylics.
denims. cotton etc . All
sales final.

NO
RETURNS

2

.

OFF
PRICE
MARKED

MUGS I
4 and 5 MUG SETS
COMPLETE WITH
STAND
REG.

REGUlAR '1.00

DtRISTMAS

SALT &amp;
PEPPER
SETS

Table
Arrangement

Sunday Only. Your
choice of any of the
many novelty 51111 and
Pepper Sets in our store.

M ercyhrs1 Zl Lckha vn 64

Lynchbg 85 SUNY·Gen 16
Ut ica 10 Palersn Sl. 73
U. Penn. 94 Ki ngs Col t. 54 ·
W!lli.;.m s 91 Bowdoin 68
St. Fr an . 64 Brr ngl n 62

Sl· Mich . 75 Scrd Hearl 61

eJACKETS eCOATS •INSULATED
JACKETS • OVERAllS • COVERALlS
AND MANY MORE

'

as

2.44

rug~ e d

a s the men
who we ar them

1

and
2.94

Knights Dept. Store

:' SET

1

.

RlGULAR 94'

1 TO 6

East
SU NY Mar . 81 W.Cann. 74
Leh man •19 Brk lyn Poly 32
Bucknel l 86 Chile Nat I 54
N.Y. Tech 87 Jno Jay 67

.

0.

. I SUNDAY ONLYt. I
CHIP 'N DIP GIFT SET.
.

'

Pl ymouth SL 71 Cslt eln 68 ·
LnSal lc 73 Army 63

South

Fl a Sl . 109 Ga . Soulhrn 97

Cn Ire 77 Tmp te,

Tenn 69
Deni!.on 95 Betha n y 71
Hir am 74 Wooster 66
Mi ss. Coli. 106 .51. .Brnr d 82

South Ala . 68 Auburn 64
N.C. AT 101 Eliz . Cl y 84
Kan. Sl . 81 E. Kentucky 59
Furmun 91 Woff ord 54

Midwest

Xavier 0 .91 Wheelng 56
Wabash 83 Maria n 78

Loyola Ch i 86 Sl. Jno-Minn 51
low&gt; 101 Chicago St. 44
Dubuque 69 Pla llevl 58
Deliance 82 Narlhwd 78
MO. 77 Cai ·Davis 70

..

/

SALE ENDS SATURDAY DEC. ·16th,·

Honey Gold or Av~cado. a
inch bowl, 4 inch dip bowl, ,
brass holder. Whjle
last.
·
'

Sur•dar ·Monday· Tuesfl:ay · Wednesday

DRESS .SHOES
*LIFE STRIDE
*MISS AMERICA
*AUDITIONS

Most all are solid colors.
. Siae 22x44. ".Cannon" or
"Cones" brands. Sllllllay
Ollly 5 hour special priee.

BUY ONE PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE
AND GET ANOTHER, AT

EXAMPlE: BUY J'Ml PAIR IJ D£Jt'S GET THE I.IMER PAIR AT lb PICE

AND/OR DRESS

POINT PLIAIANT·

I
HASH GLASSWARE
Tumblers. fuict glum. dnstrt
dishes, glnsea, In 1 vorlety of
blue, told, olive or titer 11111 .
All Amtricon m1do. Don't !Ria
this, Irs 1 'rHI NYingJ riel.
E._,rydoy 12c.
I

.A
oa&amp;C UNT
'OO.AATMf.NT STORE

'

510 MAIN

• Siller 8rldae Plaza
OPEN
!:VERY SUNDAY
1PMT06PM ·

towaWsl yn 101 Greenv l 72
Parsons 107 G . Wm s 78
St. Xv i er 92 Bndcfn e 80
Belo i l 76 Roc kford 63

Aug slna 81 Mnmouth 47
Quin cy 65 N E Mo. 6.4

UW.Sivn 's PI 71 SI .Mry's 52
Southwest
Tex Tech 11 W. Kentcky 66
FIHays 51 . 98 Krney Sl. 91
W.Tex.SI. 77 Crps Chrsli 71
Lama r 91 E.Tex. Sap. 60
Tex A&amp;M 88 Te&lt;X·Arl 84
West

Utah SJ. 88 Stout Sl. 10
BYU 84 San ta Clara 73
San Fran 83 Stanford 68
UCRv rsd e 64 Whtler 59
Hawaii 99 UC· Ir v 75

lda. St . 95 Cai Poly·SLO 70
Mont . Sl. 80 W. Wash SS
San Diego 84 S. Ulah 80
Gonzaga 68 E. Wash. 63
Ceni.Wa sh. 78 Pac Llhrn 63
UC·S. B. 83 Idah o sa
Nr lhrdge 91 Occdntl 59
San Diego 84 S. Utah 80
lnternatl 63 Pmna Plzr .4 1

Laverne 75 UC·S.D. 60
Awsa.Pac 70 Chapman 6.4

Cl remn1 83 Cal Baptist 82
S. Cal. Call 74 L.A. Bap 57
Colo. St. 79 Fullrtn 62
Utah 75 Loyola · L.A. 70
Mo. n Cat Aggies 10

OPENING ·MATCH
NEW'YORK (UPI)- Austra.
!ian Roy Emerson the tour·
,
'
.
nament s top seed, wtll face
Steve Turner in the opening
match Monday of the $7~ ()()()
Clean Air Tennis Classic at 'the
Seventh Regiment Armory.

'

2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

PH. 446-2682

GALUPOUS, OHIO

.
•

)(

'17.50

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL

lAY-AWAY
OR PAY
NEXT YEAR
ON
BAHKAMERICARD
•

Guy Bing, 56, Middleport, was rushed
lfJ Helzer Medical Center at midmorning by the New Haven Emergency
Squad for treatment of a "severely
lacerated" finger. Bing injured his hand
while at his employment at the Foote
Mineral Plant.

RUCKER SENTENCED
. , "I'OM~R0¥1"'"
.. ,
BAlKE
11An
KESUlTSI
'II
I
d
•
tth
· au
· to
United Pi-'ess International
Goo VI e, C tal'ge w
Wa lnu1 Ridge 71 Whetstone 50 la•·ceny, entered a plea of
Zanesvi ll e 65 Cambridge 57
gu ilty in the court of Common
Ashland
I
Ky
.)
58
Portsmouth
Pieas
. . J udg•e John c. Bacon
Hig h s•
Portsmouth Notre Dame 64
Sa turday and was sentenced
Wheele rsburg 62 immediately to a term of 1 to 20
Portsmouth Wesl 106 Norlh years in the state penitentiary.
O,HIOftttG~ , ~~_PIOQ~.

wes l 59

New Boston
90 67
Gr Clay
een 65
South
Webster
66
Waverly 77 Wellston 45
Middletown 111 Lima Senior 72
Shawnee 51 Wapakoneta 41
Lima Cen t ra l Catholic 71 Piqua

ss

Greenfield Narfh 63 Greenfield
Catholic Central 58
Mansf ield Sen ior 53 Fremont

Ross 38
Mansfield Sl . Peters 77 Dan·
vi lle 38
Sheridan 61 West Musklngum
59
Joh n Glenn 54 Maysville 52

422 Second Ave.

Al exander 71 Mill er 41

•Warren

Hardlng 57

Newton

Falls 50
Lorain Senior 69 Find lay 60
Cleve. Eas t Tech '83 Cleve .
Glenville 66
Mentor 66 Maylleld SS
Geneva 59 Madison 35
Columbia 64 Buckeye 42
Lorain Catholic 74 Amherst 48
Barberton 79 Norton 32
Manches ter 92 Lake 36
Can . McKinley 59 All iance 44
Canlon McKinley 59 Alliance'44
Crestwood 56 Field S?
Waverly 77 Wellston 45
Pickerington 60 Millersport 54
Springfield Shawnee 63 Clark

THE

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

SIGN
. OF

LOAN

AND

SAFE
SAVINGS

co.

GuARAITEED :SAVII

••

''
•
•'
'

·.i

'
'
"
.•.~

.•."'
•'

~.
~

•••

•&gt;
•

•'

• •

I

I

.

••

•

2 Year, Savings
Certificates
5
5000
. '

Sou theastern 49

Day. Slivers 69 Oakwood 60
Beavercreek 71 Wilbur Wright
55

Day . Aller 64 Fairmont East 50
Day . Stebbins 47 Carroll 45 (of)
D~esTh4~mlnade Sf Fairmont
Miamisburg 48 Centerville 45
Xenia Woodrow Wilson 83
Lancaster SO
Troy 93 Miami East 67
Springboro 70 Waynesville 64
Lorai n Senior 69 Findlay 60
Ri:t"'dale 43 Marion Catholic
Cin. LaSalle tOS Cln. Me·
Nicholas 58

Tile Store wllll MllttJ
GALLIPOLIS

·------·--====================il

Philo 73 New Lexington 11

Margan 98 Crooksvi lle 78

minimum

.,"
~

&gt;4,•

-:
l

•~

•l:
•

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

5%%

••

I,
•

: i

.
I

NO
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

"THAT OLD FASii.IQNEO GOODNESS"

'

GIFT
WRAPPING
IS
FREE

Save Any Amount Any Time

jqakt. ~4nppr

I

FOR
YOUR SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE
WE ARE OPEN
EVERY DAY
'
'Til
8 PM
AND OF COURSE

USE OUR
NO COST

I

Irlterest paid quarterly on all certificates
Deposit by the lOth of the month and eam from the first.
Interest available monthly on accOimts. of 81,000 or more

'THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

WHY COOK? PICK UP A SNACK BOX
. '
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

eMms, w. v~.

acms AND

*·

2 PIECES CHICKEN

INCOMPARABLE"

I

THE lARGEST
PRmiEST
QiRISTMAS
SElfCTION
EVER!

Passbook Savings Accounts

"IT'S

• Point PleaSant

AWAITING YOU

performance down Fifth to city hall and
back up Foarth Sreet to the New Haven
Grade SchooL
Here the youngsters were greeted by
Santa Claus, who distributed treats to
these little ones.
William. DeMoss was parade
chairman for the project sponsored by
the New Haven PTA. Treats were
presented through a project sponsored
by town officials.
This evening the twfKiay Winter
Festival will come to a close at 8:30
p.m ., with a Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus
contest. Festivities get under way this
afternoon at 4 p.m. at the Grade School.

ROLL &amp; POTATOES

VALUES TO 25' .

l

IS .

SNACK BOX·

BOX

Rardin's Shoe Canter
, J10 MAIN

SUNI!AY ONLYI ·
EVERYDAY 94' STOCK

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

%PRICE • • • •
SHIIS

I

tERRY BATH TOWELS

DRESS BOOTS

NB IV HAVEN - One o[ the most
colorful events in m~n y a day in Mason
County was launched in the form of a
Chrisl noas parade in New Haven Friday
nighl in conjunction with a two-day
Winter Festival.
There were floats, eight in all,
depicting aU sorts of characters and the
competition was stiff1 when judges
finally reached their decision and
awarded the first place prize to the
Broad Run Kingergarten. Their entry
was in the form of three floats
characterizing the Old Woman In the
Shoe, and Nursery Rhythms.
The Luther League of St. Paul
Lutheran Church in New Haven came in
for second place in the float catagory
with a presentation of an appropriate
·' Nativity Scene.
·Ascene of "Winter in West Virginia"
won the New Haven Woman's Club third
place in the float contest.
Wahama's popular White Falcon
Band led off the parade, escorted by the
NewHaven police cruiser, which started
at the Community Building.
Hundreds of townspeople lined the
streets to watch the long line

AI Towson, Md.
Jhns Hfkns 98 Copn St n
Twsn S 12 Baltimore 6t
Mrgn St 70 Lyla-Bal 68 ot
Slsbry Sl 96 W. Md. 86
Baker lnvitaliona I
AI McKenzie, Tenn.
Cent. Sl . 87 Wlbrfrce 68

eGIFT BOXED .

STYLE CENTER .

colorful spectacle ·

Schaefer Classic

ANaiOR IIJCKING QUALITY

THE

and no damage to his car .

Colonial Classic

and Thursday Only!

Women's Dress Shoes &amp; Dress Boots

New Haven parade is

AI South Hampton, N.Y.
Ononta St . 69 Ad lphi 63

I

WENT OFF ROAD
DEXTER - The sheriff's
department Saturday investigHtcd at 1:45 p.m. a minor
accident in Salem Twp. on
county road 4, one mile west of
here in which Vernon Curnette,
Grove City, Ohio lost control of
l1is auto, drove off the right of
the road and Into an em·
bankment. He was not injured.
There was no cili!Uon issued

BIG ATI'RACTION- Next to Santa, two costumed women dressed up in holiday
season garb were the big attractions of the New Haven Christmas Parade Friday
evening. They are sisters, !Mrs. Thomas (Wink) Grinstead, left, and Mrs. Cliff
I (Buster ) Roush.

1 ~·
By Un ited Press In ternationa l

Cin . Elder 82 Newport ( Ky .l
Catholic 65
St. Bernard 41 Reading 39

WITH

molorc n:les , l\\'O

hun H:' . Cl erks

'

&lt;iAJ.I.IPOI.IS - Three
c•ndidates in last month's
· gcncr'&gt;ll electiun have filed
expense statements .with . the
Ga l.lia County Board of
Elec tions. ~II candidates mitsl
file expense sta Iements or a
statement listing no expenses.
A board spokes111an said ali'
candidates should file as
'quickly as possible. Filing·
were D•·. Donald R. Warehime,
Galli a County Co roner , no
expenses; R. William Jenkins,
DemocrHt Juvenile and
P,robate Judge, $400.08 and
Miss Marjorie Rinehart, Gallia
County Clerk or Courts, $556.47.

used mo!qrqcles, aml on t nr\\

"

Styro loam ~oil covert&lt;!
base, Christmas Candle,
pine cone and poin&gt;ettta
arrontoment., Save 2Bc
. on tach one.

'

Sf'i'Pn new

FOR

•

FAMOUS BRAND NAMES
• LOWREY • STORY &amp; ClARK
and OTHERS .

Expenses filed

lrensfeiTPd to the Hoizrr
l\'ll'dirHl Cl·nt r r foll owi ng an the two tnen's se~laries. he said, " I'm not
di ~ dosm g llmt for publication. "
fipp;went ht'.arl attaek.
Remi nded that this is a 1 matter of
F:dna Woodruff. 62, Ht. l.
Vintml, \\ ~1 s t:Jk ('ll to th P public record and that it may be
ht,:-;pi1.tllut 7: lfi p.1n. Friri; ty 1'(1r checked , the town official agreed saying
l!t•atnwnt u! :&gt;PH'rt' {' IJ cs t "You'll just have to come up and look at
it".
p;tin-l&lt;.;,
.The on again, off again police situation
AI 7:40 tUII . .ScliUrd;ly.
C:trl'ic Lemaster , 76. 1733 started Wednesday afternoon when
Chal h\-1111 Ave .. was tak cu lu Mayor Harless summoned Police Chief
the Holier :\krl iral CPn ter ns ll .John Harrah to his office, and informed
him of his own resignation, although
llledicul patJe nt.
Harra h said he was unaware of it and
had not submitted or signed such an
105 c;u:s bough t
agree
ment.
GA LLIPOLIS ·- Areoo·di ng
So today resident.s of Mason are
tu !lie Title Division of the
contributing
toward the salari es or two
G&lt;J IIi;t C'uun1y Ch•rk of Co u r t~
policemen and even though they're
Offi ('l'. 103 nPw r·;1rs were
being assessed they don 't know what
purrha.'ied in (;allt:J CounJ y
th is salary arpounts to. The assessment
d u r in~ tile mun th of ~ove rn b r r.
of 75 cents is levied monthly and is
De;tle r.o;,; sold .11 npw lnwks ,
shown on the town wa ter bills, which
I:H usl'd cms,.21uscrl trucks. 18
also includes water bills, sewer rental ,
new tr;tilcn,.;, funr used trmlcr s.
and 25 cents for fire protection.

HEADQUARTERS

HOWARD DA!LEY, MIODLEPOR'J:, and his famlly, have
had tbeli' ~are M Illness stlfe Septerijfler ,

,

\\'here 17·yfR!I'
old W&lt;mda .Tuhn:-.i loo. ~i.l S icrll'
.\\•e., '"'"taken to lhr· Holoer
M ~ ·di ral Crn ter as n medical
patit•nt. T!le setond cmne at
5:,!J p.m. Friday. Charl es K.

caPilaPtt
SINGE 1669 ·

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Hohrd entl!l'e!l the holipjtalln 8e1Umber, then his mother
and fatller, Mr. and Mrs. Everett oatie;, Pomeroy, were both
confined in a hospital at the SllllM! time; a cousin who came lfJ
visit Mr. and Mrs. Dailey became Ill and was admitted to the
hospital, and his sister, Loullle of Colwnoos, accidentally spilled
a hot substance causing her to receive third degree burns, and
Thursday his wife, Roberta, underwent major surgery.
We certainly b,ope thinp begin to brighten up for the Dailey
family ,
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COI'miATUl.ATIONS 't6 Karen J2:t 'rice, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Wendell Price, Mklilleport, libo was named to the
Dean's list at Medtrldata Institute, LowvU!e, Ky., with a 3.73
grade. Karen, a freshman, is a medical asslsfal'ltmajor. She is
also class historian .
A graduate of Meigs lfigh School, she wai·a member of the
Meigs Band four years aoo a majorette three years. Keep up the
good work I, Karen.

20.

For$24.95

A HIGH-POW!:RED BB 'gwl is beltlt blamed for damage at
Southern Junior High SchoollJl Raclne.where 19 holes were shot
In windows and Wagner Hardware where 12 windows were
damaged.

•

MichHel,:

~!11.SC'('i!11d 1hc; ..

.Jones. fN, Rin Grande , wa s

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. MRs. UU.IAN GRESS, Pomeroy, has the Christmas spirit.
Already she has begWJ baking ber Christmas cookies which run
into the dozens upon dozens.
She Is:a remarkable person.

A.

Since 1859

··t

fts.

A second misha p oecmTcd

runs F r·iday and Snturday
mumi ug.
',
Tli,. firs t ''"II c~ mc nl 2: ~0
p.111. Frid&lt;t\' ((l Muor•p's Store

J ose pi\

.1~

DmECTORS AND EMPLOYES of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co. held ita liMual Chrislmas dinner Thursday
night at the Metas Inn hoaled b)&gt; ·the Pomeroy Brancli.'May
Harron iPd Marilyn Porlet:' of Athelll were'honore~ on their'
, retirement and nij:!!lved appropriate
Eail tngeili, IIJinager of the Po. . Branch, on behalf of
the Athei\1 Co\ln(y Savings·&amp;nd Loan;\ltesented Dale Schultz
with a.;laque In bonor of SC~Iz's llllk',.,r with the company.
Favora~.nd gifts were pruehted to tl!ei'Jadles and music was
provided by Armand at the organ.

'.s
vol u nt eer
emct ge ncy .'!Quthl m;t de four

II

r tlecked, and nn l;·~Jublf:o · \\'\lS
f11Und.

TAWNEY JlWELERS

PdMEROY- Quite an addition to. the village of Pomeroy
are the lll!w mercury vapor lights on bOth parking lots .
Speaking oflights, the Olr~tm~s lights In Pomeroy are quite
attractfv~. They were IW'Ded on Tlllrsday night at the ~fflcial
openiii(,Qf the Christmas apson.
·
Erecting the lights wat_not easy. Jim Mees, Earl Ingell~ ,
. Ronnie ~lters and employ.Qf the PolnTView Cable Co. are to
be commended for their w~ ln ·seelna that the lights were put
up andfOi: working each evei)l_ng until t~job was completed.
·

rount~

\'.as

·mechambmt failed.

Friday morning on SL'conrt
Av e .• in frt'mt of tht! Str!J·
Cen t.er where' a truck dt·hen~ !Jv

B~ Katie Crow :~·

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PIANO OR
ORG.A N

l;dk. T hl'I'.C' W&lt;J!\: mi11 ur
SH!nrdQ). nwrni11g follr.mmg a
.dam:1~ ( ~ ;\in cll:il it.n· w; t:o..
·traff ic: ::H,'dd m'll nn Vinton St JS~ni•d.
Ci.t} polit't' ufhc·l~t'~ !:ill id !&gt;l'e k
lc,sr c~mtrol o[hi:s enr '~ ltich n1n
of[ the rig ht side of lih' n.J.&lt;Jd
striki ng a guy w i r~cabll· hJ H
uiilily pole ilnd·a fcnt·f&gt;. Peck
G.\I.LII'OI.!S .!.. Gallia
told officers lht' t'Hr's sLPrrin~

Children's hospilals.
Mrs . Moore opene&lt;l the
.111eeting with a poem. The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Violet Miller Was won by
Mrs. Bonnie Miller,

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THIS YEAR GIVE A

.larun h·l'k
.l;wkson, !Jacked i nt~l a parkC'd
'!o. Rl. ~. Aidlll'll. '"'" ehar~ttl au111 o\HWd b ~· Gt&gt;orge J. KoWilll reckh~s~ op••rcttiou
GAL!.lPOI.IS

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i Katie's Korner
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NE;W: HAVEN - Plans have Ohlinger, Mi!s Darlene iUfne
been completed for the wed- of New Haven, and Mrs. Diane
ding of Miss. Joyce Graham oo JohJ!son of West Columbia,
Mr . . Ly!Jil ~ck In ' a can· • Gi'OO!llBmen . will be Mr.
dleli~ht ceremonr · Friday, Qanny Rairden, brother of the
· Dec. 15, at' 7 p.m. at the New bl:ide-elect,Robert Crouse, and
Haven Church of God.
Joe Czjaka\"SS!i of Hartford.
The custom of open church . Miss Usa Ferrell acxl Miss
will be observed.
Trtna Reeves wiD be the nower
Linda Ferren will be the girls and, ..Master Tony Oz.
matron of honor lor her sister, jakowski will serve as ring·
and· Mr. John Landaker will bearer. Music will be povided
serve as best man. Brides- by Mrs. Lee Jeffers at the
maids will be Miss. Becky organ.

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Driver charged after accident

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~;;:;::,:::i~&amp;::;:;;,;,;,,;:l:ii~:;:;:;:;:;~::::~::;&gt;,&gt;,:~;:;&gt;,:~~::::::g;

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15-Th&lt;&gt; Sunday Tlllles ·Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

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MITCttELL OF'FICI SUfllttLY 8c Gl" SHOP

';'ill{&lt;'

.

.

&amp;wing• Sine!' 1886"

.-JATION.IItY. MAL.Ioll-'11&amp; CA•DII AND 'AII"fY .U. .LIU

PNON•

•••tt•e

"-

GAw..Ou•. OHIO

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4M •ac:ot~~D AYP.U•

"Hat

GAUJPouS, 11110

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-3832

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If- TheSundayTlmes -Sentinei,SUnday, Dec. 3, 1972

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Wedding pkln ·is completd

Ladies·will make 18:Chn$tfr#as
table
arrangements
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RIJTLAND - Eighteen . recent £lower show.
Christmas table arrangements . Mrl!. Jack Robson, president,
will b~ made .by members of thanked all wlw participated in
the R~tland ·Garden Club for . I he therapy p1·ograrn on Nov,
the Attiens .Mental Health H at the Athens Mental Health
Center.
Center.
·Read at a recent meeting of
The certifica te ' of apthe club at the Jlnme of Mrs. preciation which the club has
Paul Winn, Bradbury, was a rece ived fr om the Gallipolis
letter from Mrs. Charlotte Cox Stale Institute for the therapy
of the Health Center requesting with the Nature Garden Club
the arrangements. The club was displayed by Mrs. ·Pearl
voted to pay·for lan~sca ping at Canaday. Also displayed was
the RuOand Methodist Church the 1971 publicity book which
Snd also lfJ send an · ap· was rated second in Region 11.
preciation·gift lfJ the church for · Plans for the club's Chris~
the use of its basement for the mas dinner and party were

JUST RECEIVED
NEW SHIPMENT

'PIANOS ·
And

CHRISTMAS
MUSIC

&lt;'omplcted . The party and gift
cxchartge will be. held al ~e
home o1 Mrs. Jla•·vey Erlewine
fullowing dinner at Grow's
Steak House.
Mrs . Winn
presented
devotions featuring the
Mayflo10er Compact which
begins, " In the name of God"
~n d is the foundation :~'of
T~anksg lvin g celebrations.
Members ·respondtd to roll tall
by naming their greatest
blessing. Mrs. Ann Webster
ga ve the secretary's report aild
Mrs. W. P. Jarrell the
ll·easurer's .
The "arrangement of the
month" featuring chrysanthemums was exhibited by
Mrs. Winn. An arrangenieni
con tain ing fl oating candles
. was used on lh&lt;l dining ~
table. ~
•
Mrs. Vjrgil Atkins presented
a progtim on the topic "GrOw
Florisl'll'' Mums," suggesting
that for a really exotic touch in
the ,home ga rden, a few of the
~plder lype milms with their
distinctive long and narrow·
petals be added. She said the
best place to plant these is ln.an
~pe_n area away from trots,
shrubs and buildings.
:t.
Soil shQ!ild be rich in org~~lc
matter·with bo.th peatmoss li!lld
compoilt being excellent i(Q.
ailives, Mrs. Adkins said. She
noted that most of today's new

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var~tie~ will survive the spring the covering .is to be
;•vel'ige winter if they arc· in rCuwvl'd ~s soon as signs. of
well-drained suit and are g1'owl h appear, she said .
eciverect uver after the soil has
The tJ·aveling prize was
frozen to· .a depth of .Several ctf!naled by Mrs . Maurice
inches. Before covering with Thomson, co-hostess fm· the
straw, hay or plastic, she meeting, and won by Mrs. Gush
sug~ested that the plants be cut Johnston. Mrs. James Titus is ·
lo about two inches. In the lo provide the one for the next
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meeting. Tips on December
ga rdening were given by Mrs.
J&lt;ma h .Cqtterill. · '
·. .
During the social hour;
refreshmen ts and favors in
kee ping with Thanksgiving
were served to tt.e 17 melnbers
tind one guest, · Mrs. Max

Davis.

.

Shrinettes_elect new officers
.

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MIDDLEPORT - 11\rs. Cora
Beegle was elected president of
the iwin.Cily Shrinettes at a
mee ting held Thursday night at
the Columbus and Southerh
Ohiq. Electric Co.
Ot'*r officers named were
Mrs.:.· .Violet Miller, ,· vice
presj,nt; Mrs. Gertrude
Mitcii'U, secretary; and ' Mrs.
Beul~ Ewing, treasurer,
The annual Chrislmas 'party
was set for Dec. 21at the home
of Mrs. Je ~n Moore, 7:30p.m.
with each member to take a $2
gift. for an exchange.
Mrs. Moore reported that
bottle caps had been redeemed
by Royal ,Crown for $28, 1~. A
report was given on the
ceremonial held recently in
Colut1Jbus and attended by
Mrs. Shirley Spires, Mrs. Ruth
Swisher, Mrs. Bernice Workman, Mrs. Ewing, Mrs. Mit-

:i ·

cbell, and Mrs. Moore. All
· pijrticipated in the pageantry
iiM attended the banquet. The
Shrinettes donated $100 in cash
and $175 in miscellaneous
items for the Crippled

ER unit called
out four times

MRS. RICE HOME
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Lorena Rice has returned
home after spending the
Thanksgiving holiday period
With her nephew, Mr. and Mrs.
Ri!yce Lee, in Jamestown,
Ohio. Mrs . Rice was accompanied by her sister, Mrs.
Bernice Pauley of Gallipolis;
her niece, Miss Ruth Pauley,
Charleston; Ward L. Pauley of
Lancaster, and another of Mrs.
P~uley 's sons, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Pll'uley and family of
Columbus. Royce Lee Pauley
is also Mrs. Pauley's son.

SON BORN OCT. 31
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
James B. Pettit, Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of an
eight pound, three ounce son,
James Albert, Oct. 31, at the
Holzer Medical Center .
Grandparents are Mrs. Juanita
. Justis, Pomeroy; Paul Justis,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Pettit, Pomeroy. Greatgran dparents are Mrs. Mabel
Pettit, Pomeroy; Mrs. Sylvia
Wolfe, Racine ; and Preston
Parsons, Racine. Mrs. Ethel
Sarson, Racine'and Mrs. Ruth
Parsons, Racine, are great·
grea !·grandmothers.

ive Her Diamonds

Caravelle®by Bulova.

If diamonds are a girl's best friend, hefrlend her. And keep
her timely, too, For a mere $24.95. Give her a prettily sculp·
lured , precision-made, 17 iewel ' watch, highlighted with
twin diamonds. The Sweet Brier "G". t:arevetle by Bulova.
An expensive watch at on lnexpenotve prl.,..

SliCED WHOlE

SMOKED
PICNICS
lb. 49¢

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BRUNICARDI
. HOUSE OF MUSIC

54 State St.,_Gallipolis

446-0687

On again .
off agai'n

lli01 ur

The Town·of Mason Wednesday had

two poti~emen, 1~hursday oniy one,

Fridcty nmrl' and Saturday two 'a gain.

New officers, who will be assuming
duty on a ·shift basis, are James
Ashwor th of Point Pleasant and Kenneth
Siders of Mason. l oqnerly of Marietta,
0.
.
.Ashworth is a former Point Pleasant
city patrolman and said hiS empioymenl
is on a temporary basis, Siders,
according to Mayor Roy Harless, has
had association with police work.
Previously, Mayor Harless stated that
U1e salary for James Gaskins, who was
employed Wednesday and !hen declined
the appointment Friday, would be set
by council in a regular meeting Monday
evening.
But Saturday , when questioned alwut

tssu cd

1.043 t1tH."s. 111r1dC' 268 notat inn
of liens, z;n cnncellHtion of
!tens. 20 dupli cate titles O:J nd
!hrTf' rrp l;tCf&gt;lllCnt titles .

WORK
WEAR

BROWN DUCK

lniured in Fall
The condition of Ken Williams, 38,
Huntington , repo rtedl y remains
''un changed" in St. Mary's Hospital in
Hunti ngton where he was admitted
Thursday following a fall from the roof
of a house under construction near
Letart.
Transported to the hospital in the New
Have n Emergency Ambulance,
Williams sustained a fractured disc in
the back and· rib frac tures in the fall.
The accident occurred at Broad Run , Rt.
1, Letart, while Williams was said to
have been as isting in the construction of
a new home for Robert Hendricks.

OPEN . SUND~Y

. ALL 3 STORES

SUNDAY ONLYI

SUNDAY ONLY I

'-"-'

GIRLS

MUG
T
EE
.
SETS
. DECORATED CERAMIC

PANTS
ENTIRE
STOCK
.
-· GOES!

s Hour Sunday Sale. Sizes 3
to 14 in orion acrylics.
denims. cotton etc . All
sales final.

NO
RETURNS

2

.

OFF
PRICE
MARKED

MUGS I
4 and 5 MUG SETS
COMPLETE WITH
STAND
REG.

REGUlAR '1.00

DtRISTMAS

SALT &amp;
PEPPER
SETS

Table
Arrangement

Sunday Only. Your
choice of any of the
many novelty 51111 and
Pepper Sets in our store.

M ercyhrs1 Zl Lckha vn 64

Lynchbg 85 SUNY·Gen 16
Ut ica 10 Palersn Sl. 73
U. Penn. 94 Ki ngs Col t. 54 ·
W!lli.;.m s 91 Bowdoin 68
St. Fr an . 64 Brr ngl n 62

Sl· Mich . 75 Scrd Hearl 61

eJACKETS eCOATS •INSULATED
JACKETS • OVERAllS • COVERALlS
AND MANY MORE

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as

2.44

rug~ e d

a s the men
who we ar them

1

and
2.94

Knights Dept. Store

:' SET

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RlGULAR 94'

1 TO 6

East
SU NY Mar . 81 W.Cann. 74
Leh man •19 Brk lyn Poly 32
Bucknel l 86 Chile Nat I 54
N.Y. Tech 87 Jno Jay 67

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. I SUNDAY ONLYt. I
CHIP 'N DIP GIFT SET.
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Pl ymouth SL 71 Cslt eln 68 ·
LnSal lc 73 Army 63

South

Fl a Sl . 109 Ga . Soulhrn 97

Cn Ire 77 Tmp te,

Tenn 69
Deni!.on 95 Betha n y 71
Hir am 74 Wooster 66
Mi ss. Coli. 106 .51. .Brnr d 82

South Ala . 68 Auburn 64
N.C. AT 101 Eliz . Cl y 84
Kan. Sl . 81 E. Kentucky 59
Furmun 91 Woff ord 54

Midwest

Xavier 0 .91 Wheelng 56
Wabash 83 Maria n 78

Loyola Ch i 86 Sl. Jno-Minn 51
low&gt; 101 Chicago St. 44
Dubuque 69 Pla llevl 58
Deliance 82 Narlhwd 78
MO. 77 Cai ·Davis 70

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SALE ENDS SATURDAY DEC. ·16th,·

Honey Gold or Av~cado. a
inch bowl, 4 inch dip bowl, ,
brass holder. Whjle
last.
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Sur•dar ·Monday· Tuesfl:ay · Wednesday

DRESS .SHOES
*LIFE STRIDE
*MISS AMERICA
*AUDITIONS

Most all are solid colors.
. Siae 22x44. ".Cannon" or
"Cones" brands. Sllllllay
Ollly 5 hour special priee.

BUY ONE PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE
AND GET ANOTHER, AT

EXAMPlE: BUY J'Ml PAIR IJ D£Jt'S GET THE I.IMER PAIR AT lb PICE

AND/OR DRESS

POINT PLIAIANT·

I
HASH GLASSWARE
Tumblers. fuict glum. dnstrt
dishes, glnsea, In 1 vorlety of
blue, told, olive or titer 11111 .
All Amtricon m1do. Don't !Ria
this, Irs 1 'rHI NYingJ riel.
E._,rydoy 12c.
I

.A
oa&amp;C UNT
'OO.AATMf.NT STORE

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510 MAIN

• Siller 8rldae Plaza
OPEN
!:VERY SUNDAY
1PMT06PM ·

towaWsl yn 101 Greenv l 72
Parsons 107 G . Wm s 78
St. Xv i er 92 Bndcfn e 80
Belo i l 76 Roc kford 63

Aug slna 81 Mnmouth 47
Quin cy 65 N E Mo. 6.4

UW.Sivn 's PI 71 SI .Mry's 52
Southwest
Tex Tech 11 W. Kentcky 66
FIHays 51 . 98 Krney Sl. 91
W.Tex.SI. 77 Crps Chrsli 71
Lama r 91 E.Tex. Sap. 60
Tex A&amp;M 88 Te&lt;X·Arl 84
West

Utah SJ. 88 Stout Sl. 10
BYU 84 San ta Clara 73
San Fran 83 Stanford 68
UCRv rsd e 64 Whtler 59
Hawaii 99 UC· Ir v 75

lda. St . 95 Cai Poly·SLO 70
Mont . Sl. 80 W. Wash SS
San Diego 84 S. Ulah 80
Gonzaga 68 E. Wash. 63
Ceni.Wa sh. 78 Pac Llhrn 63
UC·S. B. 83 Idah o sa
Nr lhrdge 91 Occdntl 59
San Diego 84 S. Utah 80
lnternatl 63 Pmna Plzr .4 1

Laverne 75 UC·S.D. 60
Awsa.Pac 70 Chapman 6.4

Cl remn1 83 Cal Baptist 82
S. Cal. Call 74 L.A. Bap 57
Colo. St. 79 Fullrtn 62
Utah 75 Loyola · L.A. 70
Mo. n Cat Aggies 10

OPENING ·MATCH
NEW'YORK (UPI)- Austra.
!ian Roy Emerson the tour·
,
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nament s top seed, wtll face
Steve Turner in the opening
match Monday of the $7~ ()()()
Clean Air Tennis Classic at 'the
Seventh Regiment Armory.

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2nd &amp;OLIVE ST.

PH. 446-2682

GALUPOUS, OHIO

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'17.50

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL

lAY-AWAY
OR PAY
NEXT YEAR
ON
BAHKAMERICARD
•

Guy Bing, 56, Middleport, was rushed
lfJ Helzer Medical Center at midmorning by the New Haven Emergency
Squad for treatment of a "severely
lacerated" finger. Bing injured his hand
while at his employment at the Foote
Mineral Plant.

RUCKER SENTENCED
. , "I'OM~R0¥1"'"
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BAlKE
11An
KESUlTSI
'II
I
d
•
tth
· au
· to
United Pi-'ess International
Goo VI e, C tal'ge w
Wa lnu1 Ridge 71 Whetstone 50 la•·ceny, entered a plea of
Zanesvi ll e 65 Cambridge 57
gu ilty in the court of Common
Ashland
I
Ky
.)
58
Portsmouth
Pieas
. . J udg•e John c. Bacon
Hig h s•
Portsmouth Notre Dame 64
Sa turday and was sentenced
Wheele rsburg 62 immediately to a term of 1 to 20
Portsmouth Wesl 106 Norlh years in the state penitentiary.
O,HIOftttG~ , ~~_PIOQ~.

wes l 59

New Boston
90 67
Gr Clay
een 65
South
Webster
66
Waverly 77 Wellston 45
Middletown 111 Lima Senior 72
Shawnee 51 Wapakoneta 41
Lima Cen t ra l Catholic 71 Piqua

ss

Greenfield Narfh 63 Greenfield
Catholic Central 58
Mansf ield Sen ior 53 Fremont

Ross 38
Mansfield Sl . Peters 77 Dan·
vi lle 38
Sheridan 61 West Musklngum
59
Joh n Glenn 54 Maysville 52

422 Second Ave.

Al exander 71 Mill er 41

•Warren

Hardlng 57

Newton

Falls 50
Lorain Senior 69 Find lay 60
Cleve. Eas t Tech '83 Cleve .
Glenville 66
Mentor 66 Maylleld SS
Geneva 59 Madison 35
Columbia 64 Buckeye 42
Lorain Catholic 74 Amherst 48
Barberton 79 Norton 32
Manches ter 92 Lake 36
Can . McKinley 59 All iance 44
Canlon McKinley 59 Alliance'44
Crestwood 56 Field S?
Waverly 77 Wellston 45
Pickerington 60 Millersport 54
Springfield Shawnee 63 Clark

THE

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS

SIGN
. OF

LOAN

AND

SAFE
SAVINGS

co.

GuARAITEED :SAVII

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2 Year, Savings
Certificates
5
5000
. '

Sou theastern 49

Day. Slivers 69 Oakwood 60
Beavercreek 71 Wilbur Wright
55

Day . Aller 64 Fairmont East 50
Day . Stebbins 47 Carroll 45 (of)
D~esTh4~mlnade Sf Fairmont
Miamisburg 48 Centerville 45
Xenia Woodrow Wilson 83
Lancaster SO
Troy 93 Miami East 67
Springboro 70 Waynesville 64
Lorai n Senior 69 Findlay 60
Ri:t"'dale 43 Marion Catholic
Cin. LaSalle tOS Cln. Me·
Nicholas 58

Tile Store wllll MllttJ
GALLIPOLIS

·------·--====================il

Philo 73 New Lexington 11

Margan 98 Crooksvi lle 78

minimum

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Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

5%%

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NO
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

"THAT OLD FASii.IQNEO GOODNESS"

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GIFT
WRAPPING
IS
FREE

Save Any Amount Any Time

jqakt. ~4nppr

I

FOR
YOUR SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE
WE ARE OPEN
EVERY DAY
'
'Til
8 PM
AND OF COURSE

USE OUR
NO COST

I

Irlterest paid quarterly on all certificates
Deposit by the lOth of the month and eam from the first.
Interest available monthly on accOimts. of 81,000 or more

'THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
and LOAN COMPANY

WHY COOK? PICK UP A SNACK BOX
. '
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

eMms, w. v~.

acms AND

*·

2 PIECES CHICKEN

INCOMPARABLE"

I

THE lARGEST
PRmiEST
QiRISTMAS
SElfCTION
EVER!

Passbook Savings Accounts

"IT'S

• Point PleaSant

AWAITING YOU

performance down Fifth to city hall and
back up Foarth Sreet to the New Haven
Grade SchooL
Here the youngsters were greeted by
Santa Claus, who distributed treats to
these little ones.
William. DeMoss was parade
chairman for the project sponsored by
the New Haven PTA. Treats were
presented through a project sponsored
by town officials.
This evening the twfKiay Winter
Festival will come to a close at 8:30
p.m ., with a Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus
contest. Festivities get under way this
afternoon at 4 p.m. at the Grade School.

ROLL &amp; POTATOES

VALUES TO 25' .

l

IS .

SNACK BOX·

BOX

Rardin's Shoe Canter
, J10 MAIN

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NB IV HAVEN - One o[ the most
colorful events in m~n y a day in Mason
County was launched in the form of a
Chrisl noas parade in New Haven Friday
nighl in conjunction with a two-day
Winter Festival.
There were floats, eight in all,
depicting aU sorts of characters and the
competition was stiff1 when judges
finally reached their decision and
awarded the first place prize to the
Broad Run Kingergarten. Their entry
was in the form of three floats
characterizing the Old Woman In the
Shoe, and Nursery Rhythms.
The Luther League of St. Paul
Lutheran Church in New Haven came in
for second place in the float catagory
with a presentation of an appropriate
·' Nativity Scene.
·Ascene of "Winter in West Virginia"
won the New Haven Woman's Club third
place in the float contest.
Wahama's popular White Falcon
Band led off the parade, escorted by the
NewHaven police cruiser, which started
at the Community Building.
Hundreds of townspeople lined the
streets to watch the long line

AI Towson, Md.
Jhns Hfkns 98 Copn St n
Twsn S 12 Baltimore 6t
Mrgn St 70 Lyla-Bal 68 ot
Slsbry Sl 96 W. Md. 86
Baker lnvitaliona I
AI McKenzie, Tenn.
Cent. Sl . 87 Wlbrfrce 68

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colorful spectacle ·

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and Thursday Only!

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New Haven parade is

AI South Hampton, N.Y.
Ononta St . 69 Ad lphi 63

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WENT OFF ROAD
DEXTER - The sheriff's
department Saturday investigHtcd at 1:45 p.m. a minor
accident in Salem Twp. on
county road 4, one mile west of
here in which Vernon Curnette,
Grove City, Ohio lost control of
l1is auto, drove off the right of
the road and Into an em·
bankment. He was not injured.
There was no cili!Uon issued

BIG ATI'RACTION- Next to Santa, two costumed women dressed up in holiday
season garb were the big attractions of the New Haven Christmas Parade Friday
evening. They are sisters, !Mrs. Thomas (Wink) Grinstead, left, and Mrs. Cliff
I (Buster ) Roush.

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By Un ited Press In ternationa l

Cin . Elder 82 Newport ( Ky .l
Catholic 65
St. Bernard 41 Reading 39

WITH

molorc n:les , l\\'O

hun H:' . Cl erks

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&lt;iAJ.I.IPOI.IS - Three
c•ndidates in last month's
· gcncr'&gt;ll electiun have filed
expense statements .with . the
Ga l.lia County Board of
Elec tions. ~II candidates mitsl
file expense sta Iements or a
statement listing no expenses.
A board spokes111an said ali'
candidates should file as
'quickly as possible. Filing·
were D•·. Donald R. Warehime,
Galli a County Co roner , no
expenses; R. William Jenkins,
DemocrHt Juvenile and
P,robate Judge, $400.08 and
Miss Marjorie Rinehart, Gallia
County Clerk or Courts, $556.47.

used mo!qrqcles, aml on t nr\\

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Styro loam ~oil covert&lt;!
base, Christmas Candle,
pine cone and poin&gt;ettta
arrontoment., Save 2Bc
. on tach one.

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Sf'i'Pn new

FOR

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FAMOUS BRAND NAMES
• LOWREY • STORY &amp; ClARK
and OTHERS .

Expenses filed

lrensfeiTPd to the Hoizrr
l\'ll'dirHl Cl·nt r r foll owi ng an the two tnen's se~laries. he said, " I'm not
di ~ dosm g llmt for publication. "
fipp;went ht'.arl attaek.
Remi nded that this is a 1 matter of
F:dna Woodruff. 62, Ht. l.
Vintml, \\ ~1 s t:Jk ('ll to th P public record and that it may be
ht,:-;pi1.tllut 7: lfi p.1n. Friri; ty 1'(1r checked , the town official agreed saying
l!t•atnwnt u! :&gt;PH'rt' {' IJ cs t "You'll just have to come up and look at
it".
p;tin-l&lt;.;,
.The on again, off again police situation
AI 7:40 tUII . .ScliUrd;ly.
C:trl'ic Lemaster , 76. 1733 started Wednesday afternoon when
Chal h\-1111 Ave .. was tak cu lu Mayor Harless summoned Police Chief
the Holier :\krl iral CPn ter ns ll .John Harrah to his office, and informed
him of his own resignation, although
llledicul patJe nt.
Harra h said he was unaware of it and
had not submitted or signed such an
105 c;u:s bough t
agree
ment.
GA LLIPOLIS ·- Areoo·di ng
So today resident.s of Mason are
tu !lie Title Division of the
contributing
toward the salari es or two
G&lt;J IIi;t C'uun1y Ch•rk of Co u r t~
policemen and even though they're
Offi ('l'. 103 nPw r·;1rs were
being assessed they don 't know what
purrha.'ied in (;allt:J CounJ y
th is salary arpounts to. The assessment
d u r in~ tile mun th of ~ove rn b r r.
of 75 cents is levied monthly and is
De;tle r.o;,; sold .11 npw lnwks ,
shown on the town wa ter bills, which
I:H usl'd cms,.21uscrl trucks. 18
also includes water bills, sewer rental ,
new tr;tilcn,.;, funr used trmlcr s.
and 25 cents for fire protection.

HEADQUARTERS

HOWARD DA!LEY, MIODLEPOR'J:, and his famlly, have
had tbeli' ~are M Illness stlfe Septerijfler ,

,

\\'here 17·yfR!I'
old W&lt;mda .Tuhn:-.i loo. ~i.l S icrll'
.\\•e., '"'"taken to lhr· Holoer
M ~ ·di ral Crn ter as n medical
patit•nt. T!le setond cmne at
5:,!J p.m. Friday. Charl es K.

caPilaPtt
SINGE 1669 ·

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Hohrd entl!l'e!l the holipjtalln 8e1Umber, then his mother
and fatller, Mr. and Mrs. Everett oatie;, Pomeroy, were both
confined in a hospital at the SllllM! time; a cousin who came lfJ
visit Mr. and Mrs. Dailey became Ill and was admitted to the
hospital, and his sister, Loullle of Colwnoos, accidentally spilled
a hot substance causing her to receive third degree burns, and
Thursday his wife, Roberta, underwent major surgery.
We certainly b,ope thinp begin to brighten up for the Dailey
family ,
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COI'miATUl.ATIONS 't6 Karen J2:t 'rice, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Wendell Price, Mklilleport, libo was named to the
Dean's list at Medtrldata Institute, LowvU!e, Ky., with a 3.73
grade. Karen, a freshman, is a medical asslsfal'ltmajor. She is
also class historian .
A graduate of Meigs lfigh School, she wai·a member of the
Meigs Band four years aoo a majorette three years. Keep up the
good work I, Karen.

20.

For$24.95

A HIGH-POW!:RED BB 'gwl is beltlt blamed for damage at
Southern Junior High SchoollJl Raclne.where 19 holes were shot
In windows and Wagner Hardware where 12 windows were
damaged.

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MichHel,:

~!11.SC'('i!11d 1hc; ..

.Jones. fN, Rin Grande , wa s

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. MRs. UU.IAN GRESS, Pomeroy, has the Christmas spirit.
Already she has begWJ baking ber Christmas cookies which run
into the dozens upon dozens.
She Is:a remarkable person.

A.

Since 1859

··t

fts.

A second misha p oecmTcd

runs F r·iday and Snturday
mumi ug.
',
Tli,. firs t ''"II c~ mc nl 2: ~0
p.111. Frid&lt;t\' ((l Muor•p's Store

J ose pi\

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DmECTORS AND EMPLOYES of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co. held ita liMual Chrislmas dinner Thursday
night at the Metas Inn hoaled b)&gt; ·the Pomeroy Brancli.'May
Harron iPd Marilyn Porlet:' of Athelll were'honore~ on their'
, retirement and nij:!!lved appropriate
Eail tngeili, IIJinager of the Po. . Branch, on behalf of
the Athei\1 Co\ln(y Savings·&amp;nd Loan;\ltesented Dale Schultz
with a.;laque In bonor of SC~Iz's llllk',.,r with the company.
Favora~.nd gifts were pruehted to tl!ei'Jadles and music was
provided by Armand at the organ.

'.s
vol u nt eer
emct ge ncy .'!Quthl m;t de four

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r tlecked, and nn l;·~Jublf:o · \\'\lS
f11Und.

TAWNEY JlWELERS

PdMEROY- Quite an addition to. the village of Pomeroy
are the lll!w mercury vapor lights on bOth parking lots .
Speaking oflights, the Olr~tm~s lights In Pomeroy are quite
attractfv~. They were IW'Ded on Tlllrsday night at the ~fflcial
openiii(,Qf the Christmas apson.
·
Erecting the lights wat_not easy. Jim Mees, Earl Ingell~ ,
. Ronnie ~lters and employ.Qf the PolnTView Cable Co. are to
be commended for their w~ ln ·seelna that the lights were put
up andfOi: working each evei)l_ng until t~job was completed.
·

rount~

\'.as

·mechambmt failed.

Friday morning on SL'conrt
Av e .• in frt'mt of tht! Str!J·
Cen t.er where' a truck dt·hen~ !Jv

B~ Katie Crow :~·

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PIANO OR
ORG.A N

l;dk. T hl'I'.C' W&lt;J!\: mi11 ur
SH!nrdQ). nwrni11g follr.mmg a
.dam:1~ ( ~ ;\in cll:il it.n· w; t:o..
·traff ic: ::H,'dd m'll nn Vinton St JS~ni•d.
Ci.t} polit't' ufhc·l~t'~ !:ill id !&gt;l'e k
lc,sr c~mtrol o[hi:s enr '~ ltich n1n
of[ the rig ht side of lih' n.J.&lt;Jd
striki ng a guy w i r~cabll· hJ H
uiilily pole ilnd·a fcnt·f&gt;. Peck
G.\I.LII'OI.!S .!.. Gallia
told officers lht' t'Hr's sLPrrin~

Children's hospilals.
Mrs . Moore opene&lt;l the
.111eeting with a poem. The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Violet Miller Was won by
Mrs. Bonnie Miller,

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THIS YEAR GIVE A

.larun h·l'k
.l;wkson, !Jacked i nt~l a parkC'd
'!o. Rl. ~. Aidlll'll. '"'" ehar~ttl au111 o\HWd b ~· Gt&gt;orge J. KoWilll reckh~s~ op••rcttiou
GAL!.lPOI.IS

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i Katie's Korner
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NE;W: HAVEN - Plans have Ohlinger, Mi!s Darlene iUfne
been completed for the wed- of New Haven, and Mrs. Diane
ding of Miss. Joyce Graham oo JohJ!son of West Columbia,
Mr . . Ly!Jil ~ck In ' a can· • Gi'OO!llBmen . will be Mr.
dleli~ht ceremonr · Friday, Qanny Rairden, brother of the
· Dec. 15, at' 7 p.m. at the New bl:ide-elect,Robert Crouse, and
Haven Church of God.
Joe Czjaka\"SS!i of Hartford.
The custom of open church . Miss Usa Ferrell acxl Miss
will be observed.
Trtna Reeves wiD be the nower
Linda Ferren will be the girls and, ..Master Tony Oz.
matron of honor lor her sister, jakowski will serve as ring·
and· Mr. John Landaker will bearer. Music will be povided
serve as best man. Brides- by Mrs. Lee Jeffers at the
maids will be Miss. Becky organ.

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Driver charged after accident

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~;;:;::,:::i~&amp;::;:;;,;,;,,;:l:ii~:;:;:;:;:;~::::~::;&gt;,&gt;,:~;:;&gt;,:~~::::::g;

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15-Th&lt;&gt; Sunday Tlllles ·Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

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MITCttELL OF'FICI SUfllttLY 8c Gl" SHOP

';'ill{&lt;'

.

.

&amp;wing• Sine!' 1886"

.-JATION.IItY. MAL.Ioll-'11&amp; CA•DII AND 'AII"fY .U. .LIU

PNON•

•••tt•e

"-

GAw..Ou•. OHIO

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4M •ac:ot~~D AYP.U•

"Hat

GAUJPouS, 11110

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
PHONE 446-3832

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lf-,;.llln'~Tlmlta-Sentinei,Swlday,Dec.3,1972

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eace. 0 es ra·lSe

Your .HeadcJuarters this .ChriStmas is the'
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*··

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and Russ
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Dollhie ·Knits For ·AJI The Men
In Your .Life!

A
. TOUCH
OF

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A. . 100 Pet. polyester
double knit sport coats
for the young man .
Fancy patterns. Only

16oo.1uoo
1400·1600
1400

$17.99,

VOL VII NO. 44

Drug culture·blamed 0 n

B.

Sizes 8 to 18

pillpopping Americans
~y

JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen.
Gaylord Nelson, D·Wis., said
Saturday Americans have so
fallen for the sales pitch 9f the
drug industry they have iurned
into "a nation of irrational pill. poppers" who use home remedies for every ache and pain.
The result, he said, has been
the growth of a drug cui lure
among the young.
Nelson said there is mounting
scientific evidence that produels sold over the counter for
colds, infections and even
obesity are. "riwsUy useless at
best, while many are harmful
and some are ·even dangerous."
And yet, he said, Americans
are spending $1 billion a year
on cold pills, cough syrups,
nose drops and similar produels.

B. Handsome 100
Pet. . polyester
double knit suits
in solid . and
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vest

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R~g~11,ars and lqn~s ..st~.r,t at,2~,i.f,~. " ,.

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80 Percent Acetate and 20 percent
nylon . Cut for comfort raglan shou lders
and long sleeves with a step in
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touch of elegan ce for you r holiday

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wardrobe. Colors: Plum. Paprika,

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don't have to be
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BOOTS

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Green, Brown or Navy . Sizes S-M-L.

Nelson 's remarks were prepared for the opening Tuesday
of hearings into over-thecounter drugs by a Senate
monopoly subcommittee he
chairs.
Among the popular products
he attacked were Contac,
Dristan, Allerest and Coricidin,
all sold for relief of cold
symptoms or nasal congestion.
Nelson said medical and
pharmaceutical experts have
found "no convincing evidence 11

Color: ·Black

·'

Otristmas. Morning
•• •
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. Skipper

·
!.,),J.-.....,o...,.,
cratlc governors, flexing their
newfound political muscle,.
want Jean Westwood out as the
party's national chairwoman,
but a UP! survey shows they
haven't agreed on who should
tal!e her place.
'
As mosl of the Democratic
governors] or governors-elect
from 33 states assembled here
for a special ,one day meeting
Sunday, tJje leading candidate
to succeed Mrs. Westwood was
former party treasurer Robert
Strauss of TeJtllS.
But sentiment also was
evident for , former party
chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien and for Maine national
committeeman George Mitchell.
The governors' meeting is a
prelude to the showdown over
control of the Democratic
party next weekend in
Washington, when the full 303member national committee
meets for the first time since
Sen. George S. McGovern's

to President
"'
n.
,
n
Takes Softer Stance
A move to oust Mrs. westwood if she does not resign is
expected at the .meeling. A
longtime party stalwart from
Utah and McGovern's personal
choice to head the natibnal
committee, Mrs . westwood
was the first target of
Democrats determined to
wrest party leadership from
the McGovernites .
At first, she defied the opposition, but when her support
softened
even
among
Democrats who backed McGovern, Mrs. Westwood took a
more conciliatory stance. As
the Dec. 9 national committee
session approached, it seemed
more likely than ever that she
would be out of a job when it's
all over.
The governors have only
· three of the 234 votes on the
national committee In the
name of their national
organization, but they claim
more influence within state

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Snowtracks etch plaid
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Interest. Sizes8to 18.
skirt, 16.00
Vestun ic, 28.00
Rib Tickler turtletop. 13.00
Snowtracks pants, 22.00
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the drugs work.
While drug !inns "deserve to
be exposed and censured and
the law needs to be tightened to
control their advertising," Nelson said, "the public itself must
share the blame for the fact
that we have become a nation
of irrational pill-poppers."
As a result, he said,
Americans now swallow a pill
for every ill - be it headache, a
sluffy nose, a twinge of pain or
even the ordinary stresses and
strains of daily life.
"In short," he said, "we have
be£ome massively addicted to
laking drugs whether we need
them or not. The result is that
we have created a drug culiure
and many of the youth of
American are simply doing
what they learned from their
parents."

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"Most of the drug companies'
promotion and advertising of
these products is simply a
generous mixture of false
claims and outright nonsense
'
... ," he sat'd . "The masswe
promotion of drugs for selfmedication is nothing short of
scarida1ous."

estwood d Oomed
, ... ' ,.J

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WORKERS OF THE GENERAL
Glass Co., Parkersburg, are conipleting the installation
of this gold aluminum siding at the Citizens National Bank in Middleport. The siding is used
above the first story permastone exterior Of the bank. Drive-in banking facilities are also being
installed at the Middleport bank.

P.;.tlfS

weave

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-------- ~unb~ ~hnts ~entintl
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Flare

Waffle

President Niilon gave final
instructions Saturday to Henry
A. Kissinger ·before the White
House special envoy flies to
Paris Sonday to resume the
secret talks to end the war in
Vietnam. White House officials
privately expressed optimism
that peace is near.
Wbile Niilon aild Kissinger
met at Key Biscayne, Fla.,
there were similar optimistic
reports from Saigon and Paris,
some· indicating a settlement
within two to three weeks.
Vietnamese government

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VELVET
FLEECE .

Print

cease-fire to take effect Dec. no convoy is on the road after
th~t dat~," said the Le Monde
has told an envoy of President 12.
Notificatill!i has· been given dispatch . The article said that
Nguyen Van ..Thieu that he
wants to sign a peace treaty by "to the anny and to . ll'e if Nixon signs the draft peace
government adminlstr~tion to agreement by Dec. 14, two~- 15. They said the N!lflh
Vietnamese negotiator, Le IA!c take all steps necessary in view thirds of U.S. prisoners of war
Tho, has suggested Dec. 19 for of a declaration of armistice could be repatriated by Christbeginning Dec. 12," said Le m~s.
sign in~.
Kissinger's latest secret
The later date Is the eve of Monde in a dispatch from
the 12th .amiversary of the Saigon. "Everything indicates talks with Tho in Paris,
establishment of tbe Viet Cong now that the American-Nqrth described at their outset as the
Vietnamese negotiations, "final round," were suspended
National ti~alion FTont.
which .reswne Dec. 4 in the for eight days until next
Delivery Deadline Set
In Paris, the daily Paris suburbs, will be the last. · Monday to provide an op"For example, the order has ,portunity for Nixon and his
newspaper Le Monde said
Saturday Thieu's government been given to deliver all war foreign affairs' adviser to
appeared to be preparing for a materiel before Dec. 12 so that confer during the past week

' By U!]iled Press lnternalioilal sources in Saigon said Nixon

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put-togethers
by Aileen

..Shirt

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COLDWATER, Ohio (UP!) The young mother of a newborn
one-pound, 91'.1 ounce baby girl
said from her hospital bed Saturday night she and her hus·
band are "hoping the baby can
hang on - that's all we can
do."
Mrs. Thomas Lefeld, 22, of
nearby Sl. Henry gave birth to
the tiny infant late Thursday
night. Her doctor says he was
"surprised" that the child which a nurse held in one hand
- was born alive. ·
The 12-inch long baby was
transferred Friday to a specia·lized children's hospital in Dayton and placed in an incubator.
Oxygen was piped in and intravenous feeding started.
The parents said their la~t
report from Dayton was tba t
the baby - named Usa Marie
- was conllnulng In "satisfactory" condition.
· Dr. Emillano Feliciano, who
, delivered the three months premature baby at this small northwestern Ohio commonlty's hospital, said he hadn't upected
the child to live,
"I was IIUI'[lliled It wu alive
andnow,mlraculously; the baby
has a VerY &amp;ood chance of liD'•
viving,'' the doctor aakl. "I had
told MrS. Lefeld thai lhe wu ,
ready to. atve birth and that
we would go ' ahea~ and hope
for the belt."

Mrs, Lefeld said she had fea~­
ed death for her first child.
"When the doctor told me it
was time, I was prepared for
the worst," said the young mother, who was awake during delivery. "I didn't think the baby
would live because it was so
soon."
·Mrs. Lefeld saw her daughter
only a short time before the
baby was transferred to Dayton and didn't get to hold her:
''I looked at her and she was
.so tiny," she said." Anurse held
·her in one hand. She looked
awfully red, but she moved
around and I was just so happy
she was alive."
Dr. Feliciano said It was tbe
smallest surviving baby he bad
ever delivered. The Guiness
Book of World Recor11s lists
the smallest surviving baby
at 10 ounces, born in England
in 1938. ·
·Mrs. Lefeld.- who expecis to
be released from the hospilal
Monday-wants to travel to
Dayton to see her child. The
doctor said he may order otherwise.
"I'm very anxious to see her
again," Mra. Lefeld 1181d. "I
want to go on Tuesday if I'm
able.
Dr. Feliciano said he woul~
give Mrs. Lefeld a checlcup Monday but recommend no traveling
for a week.
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delegatlons." They occupy a
majority of the statehollses 30 in 1971).72 and 31 in the next
two years -and are eager to
seize a greater share of
responsibi.lity for national
party policy.
The UP! pOll of the 30
Democrats now holding governorsbips or soon to take office,
completed Saturday, showed 20
either publicly favoring Mrs.
Westwood's departure or leaning toward it,
Strauss Backers Confident
Several· governors stopped
short of demanding that she be
fired, expressing the wish
instead that she voluntarily
give up the four-year term to
which she was elected last
July.
Only five expressed support
for her to continue as chairman, even temporarily.
Five governors -David Hall
of Oklahoma, John West of
South Carolina, Wendell Ford
of Kentucky, Jimmy Carter of
Georgia and Bruce King of
New Mexico -named Strauss
as their top choice. Bruce also
endorsed outgoing Gov.
Warren Hearnes of Missouri
and West said he also would
support fonner Gov. Robert
McNair of South Carolina.
Two others, Robert Docking
of Kansas and Hearnes; either
hinted their support for Strauss
or predicted he would be the
majority choice ·of the conterence.
Others Supported
O'Brien had the open support
of Gov.-elect Thomas P. Salmon of Vermont, Milton J. Shapp
of Pennsylvania, William· Guy
of North Dakota and Robert
Kneip of South Dakota, who
rriade clear he would rather not
see Mrs. Westwood go.
Kneip also mentioned Mitchell as a possible successor if
Mrs. Westwood resigns as did
Gov. Kenneth Curtis of Maine,
who was in the forefront of the
anti-Westwood governors.

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the
Silver
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Shopping
Plaza!
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Easy
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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, I 972

PAG.E

.f ; •.

with Tbieu's ·envoy,, Ng\lyen
Ptiu Due.
Ziegler Skirtll Issue
Due reportedly relayed
Thieu's demand that · Nortb
VIetnam withdraw all Its
forces from South VIetnam
before a cease.fire is ordered
and also raised some · oiMr
objections to the proposed
settlement. Tile optilllism
expressed by •Wlllte · Hause ·
officials indicated that .
Saigon's objections had l!een
overcome.
In Key Biscayne, Wlilte
House Prest Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler avoided any direct
characterization of the forthcoming round of talks.
"We expect the negotiallons
to last several days," he •lei,
"but I can't pr~ct the outcome or the length of the
negotiations. R's , the Preai-

17 ~g~;s :~ec~ve ~~~~:O~t-~

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Indian Bureau chief scalped
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Interior Secretary Rogers C.
B. Morton 'stripped Commissioner Louis R. Bruce of all
authority over the Bureau of Indian Affairs Saturday,
exactly a month after hundreds of militant Indians began
a week4o.ng takeover of the BIA's national headquarters
here.
In addition to the action against Bruce, an Indian who
had supported the protesters' grievances, Morton also
took Assistant Interior Secretary Harrison Loesch out of
e&lt;~ntrol of Indian affairs - a key demand of the demon·
strators - and sidelined Deputy (BIA) Commissioner
John Crow, widely crllized by organizers of the Indian
occupation.
At the same lime, In what were termed "secretarial
orders," Morton pot Richard S. Bodman, an assistant
interior secretary for management and budget, in lm·
mediate command of ludlail operations.

Aussie Labor
Party in power
CANBERRA (UPI) - The said the new government, will
Australian Labor Party (ALP), seek immediate diplomatic
after 23 y~ars in. opposition, relations ":ith China . Labor
was swept mto offtce Saturday sent a mtsston to Pekmg,
on a "it's time for a change" , headed by Whitlam, 18 months
platform, ousting the rulll\g ago. .
',
conservative coalition.
The prime minister-elect,
who
'
With 70 per cen t of the vote will hold the .foreign minish·y
counted at the national tally post, already said he feels there
room, the ALP, led by Edward is only one China and that
Gough Whitlam, was assured of Taiwan is ils province.
at least a majority of 10 seats
The Labor spokesman said
111 the 125-member House of the
new government will
Representatives.
continue to closely cooperate
The counting in the elections with the United Slates and New
will end late Saturday and Zealand in the Pacific and will
resume Sunday evening .
seek to make ANZUS "an
The defeat of the coalition insll'ument for justice and
government, led by the Liberal peace and political social and
party, follows the Nov. 25 economic advancement ."
landslide victory by the New
One of the first'llctions of the
Zealand Labor Party over lhe new government will be .to
National Party.
apply to the International Cow·t
Many of Australia's long-held of Jus tice for an injunction
foreign policies are du~ for restraining France from conmajor revision.
dueling further nuclear lesls.
Despite its name, the Liberal
The Labor Party is traditionparty followed a conservative ally isolationist in treaty
political line . Conservative gov- obligations with other countries.
ernments since 1949 have The party under Whitlam
followed a cautious line of opposed Australian involvement
general adherence to and in Vietnam and Whitlam has
dependence on more powerful promised an immediate end to
allies, first Brllain, and, in the draft.
more recent years, the United
Slates.
As a result, Anstralia became
involved in Malaysian affairs,
the Vietnam War, the purchase
REFORM LAGS
ofthe controversial Flll fighter
COLUMBUS (UP! )
-bomber, and in such treaties Harlem Congressman Charles
as the Southeast Asian Treaty Ran ge l, D-N.Y. , sa id here
Organization (SEATO), lhe Saturda y there has been
Australia-New Zealand-United "absolutely" no prison reform
States (ANZUS) Treaty and the . since the Attica riots because
five-power treaty with Britiain, . New York slate legislators
New Zealand, Malaysia and have refused to appropnate
Singapore.
necessary funds.
A Labor Party spokesman

k
•
Strl e maY
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sh
out
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~~:ms~~:n~~=~:
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In Saigon Saturday, . the
govenunent television station
said Foreign Miniater Tran
Va.n Lam had said SOUth
Vietnam will 'refuse to atp.any

forces. And In a aepllate
commentary, the station llllid
Hanoi must agree to the withCAPE KENNEDY (UPi) - Government labor specialists . drawal publicly and In lfl'lllng,
tried Saturday to head off a threatened strike that could delay
The North Vletnamue )iav~
Wednesday night's scheduled launch of Apollo 17's 13-&amp;y moon never admitted that any of
landing mission.
their troops are In lhe SOUth,
insisting
that the cOl1UJIIIIIlst
Federal mediator William Rose met separately with both sides
and a source close to the negotiations said there were Indications , forces there are solely Vietnamese "patriots" fighting
progress was being made toward averting a strike.
er of the Ylet
The wage dispute between the Boeing Co., a NASA contractor onder he
and 60 moonport technical writers and illustrators was the only Cong.
apparent obstacle to the 9:53p.m. EST start of moon mission. New Law Decreed
The commentary on , the •
Picket lines could turn away large numbers of ground support
govenunent-a&gt;ntrolled
stJtlon
workers.
Apollo 17 will end the historic 12-year-(lld Apollo lonar ex' rejected a commonly held
viewpoint that Saigon woWd
ploratlon project. Dr. James C. Fletcher, the NASA adminis- accept an unpubllcbl!d IIIII
trator, said Americans woulti not go back to the moon before the unwritten allfeement lor withmid-19BOs, at the earliest.
drawal of North Vletnadllle
Mission commander Eugene A. Cernan and geologist Harrison troops from the South, IIIII
H. "Jack" Schmitt are to land Dec. 11 in a northeastern lunar enabling IWioi to refrain
valley covered by what scientists believe is volcanic ash from the admitting what It prevloiuly
moon's las\ gasp of life. Ronald E. Evans will survey the moon · has denied. .
for six days from orbit.
"This Is really ai1Jy bec•t•
Cernan and Schmitt practiced driving a moon buggy Saturday then there would be no
morning and Evans got a geology briefing. Then all three guarantee," the station llld.
astronatus put aside their rigid training schedules for the "The North Vietnamese Cllmweekend. Sunday they plan to watch television football games. munists must 'withdraw· Ill,
The launch crew also will have Sunday off, with tbe countdown withdraw publicly, on. '111ll"
in a 30-llour "hold" perlod.'Launch Direct~ Walter J . Kapryan paper and dark ink."
said "ll wll be Ollf last chance to gl\le the crew .time to really • In another Saigon !lmiop·"
"'-~ :- ~ ""'
, •. ,
merit, !he semi-officii! VIetre tax.
.
A recora number is expected to' watch tbe shot-the first nam Preas 118id Tbleu bu
nighttime maMed launching here-and estimates of the crowd decreed a new law that will
expected in Brevard County around the moonport trange from a give him and his army Clllll·
plete control of the population
half million to fiv.e million.
and the economy In cw of an
Weather Forecut Good
In-place ceuellre.
Motels have been booked solid within 50 miles of the Cape and
The three·polnt dearee
tourists, industry representatives and newsmen started flowing signed a week aso ·glvs &amp;be
into the area Saturday,
president the right to Im;oee
The weather forecast for launch lime is good with partly martial law and order full
cloudy skies and moderate southwesterly winds expected.
military mobilization, ciQn
In addition to the federal mediator, space agency labor states of alert and emeraeacy,
specialistS and representatives of the National Labor Relations Impose curfews, ban all
Board ( NLRB) were attempting to head off a strike.
demonstrations and labor
The 60 workers were represented by the International Alliance strlku, fix prices and have the
of Theatrical and Stage Employes (IATSE) and they were army arrest pei'SOIII believed
seeking reinslatement of 30to50 per cent pay cuts they took wben to be dangerOUI to h1a IOVVDBoeing won the support contract in April, 1971.
ment. Troops would have, the
The onion and Boeing bave filed unfair labor practice charges right to shoot to kill "for telf
defense or pursuit."
against each other .
_
If Apollo 17 is not laonched by Dec. 7, the shot would be pOBtponed to Jan. 4 NASA 118ld such a delay would cost the Kennedy
Space Center alone $2.5million plus $8 million if the delay forced
a similar delay in the Skylab space station project set to begin
April 30.

rro.n

Air arm
attacks

Investigation may linger on
BATON ROUGE, La. (UP!)
- The slate commission inves tigating the death of two
&amp;outhern University students
during a clash with police has
indicated the investigation
might continue indefinitely and
testimony might be taken from
as many as 100 persons.
The Louisiana Board of
Education said Saturday it
would ask for the permanent
closing of Southern University

SAIGON (UP!) - U.S.
warplanes, flying near-record
strikes throughout Indoclllna,
began a second month of
concentrated strategic born·
bing Saturday In an effort to
hatter Communbtt troops and
slow their southbound supplies.
Monsoon downpours slowed
ground fighting In northern
~ang Trl Province.
The U.S. command said that
the past month of bombing was
conducted by nearly 3,000 ~
bombers and thotisaoda of
conventional jet fighter-bombers in Vietnam alone. Other
warplanes hit dally agalnBt the·
Ho Chi Minh supply trail In
man , to put out whatever fires Laos and Its extenSl'ona In
may develop."
Cambodia:
"My being a minority mayor Bogged down by five days of
cannot blink out the fact the continues monsoon ""
...,wnthat the high Incidence of crime pours, South and North.
in this community does involve Vietnamese troops facing -·h
blacks," Berry said. "But at Ute other In South Vietnam's
same time, 48 per cent of the northernmost' Quang Trl
unemployed in Cincinnati are Province eased their fi•""ft«
..,_
black. That is significant."
and •belling.
The new mayor said he will UP!
. correspond""t
~· Ke~•
,....,,
look to business and Industry F. Englade reporte"u ' .,.,.,...
"~'""-y
to help eliminate the root of the from the Quang Trl area that
crime problem. .
-~
floods caused by the ·••·vy
"It's not just the task of the monsoon rains slowed fa~*
poli~ force., " he said. "We all face battle acUvity. io much In
have to get togethe~ in solving the past 24 hours that jllllthis." ,
small aldmdsh was "'"'lid. :•.
Berry said Cincinnati is at a Gov--t
- ..tr•an• •• •,".
~ ·~-·
..-"sensitive" Stage.
CJaJmed to •-""''-' ..__
,,.,~ ...,_
_. &gt;,'•,
"It doesn't yet bave the prob- North '"·"'-•IOidla'lllt
, __.,.....
a
lem of a city the _size of ~Mil- ·COli Of two of their own Aid
mgton or St. LolliS, so tt s liD· and slJ: wounded, blllid.
porlant for us to define our · Communist artiii~J llld
pro~lems and discover our mortar barraaee, 1lllk!tl Jut
strengths and weaknesses now," m011th had ~ •
M,sai~, "before these problems 3,400 rounds per day llcl•&lt;lll
anse.
·
oil, Englade uid.
in New Orleans if students
there continued their monthlong boycot of classes.
The slate commission said
Friday it had already determined that Denver Smith and
Leonard Brown, both 20, were
killed by pellets fired from a
shotgun and that deputy
sheriffs and state police fired
!ear gas first In the Nov. 16
confrontation.

Ex-Newsboy Cincinnati's Mayor

· tY·
CINCINNATI (UPI )- SIX
SI'Ven-year old Thendore M.
Berry, who once hawked newspapers while listening to poI•·.
ticians exhort neighborhood ral.
has beeorne Cmcmna
· · t'1•s
Ites,
first black mayor.
An Intelligent and complex
man, Berry climbed from pov·
· to prospererty and desoIalton
· and fulf ilimen! t hrough a
tty
PROBE TO SATURN?
· and instinccombination of guts
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. live drive.
(UP!) - The Space Agency
At an early age, .Berry took
said . Saturday a spacecraf.t jobs washing windows, shining
scheduled for a mission beyond shoes,' delivering coal, waiting
Jupiter may instead be sen't on · lables and working in steel
a seven-year journey lor a look miiiS. Butwithitcamedegiees
at the ice-covered planet from Woodwird High SchooI,
Saturn and ill three dust rings. the University of Cincinnati and
the UC College of Law.
"When 1 was 1n ~igh IIChool,
TRESTLE FAIJ.S
my
elder sister and brothers
WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - A
111o0 trestle collapsed just were encouraging me to stUdy
IIOfth of here Saturd8y, burlifl8 medicine," •Berry Recalls.
14 C8l'l of a ukar freiaht train "When 1 go to college, !found 1
Into a gqlly. No injuries .were was more lntereated in the
science of people as they telate
r~ted.

to their comm un·tt y, So I ch ose Cotnmt'tlee ~•ndorsed slate and
'I begtn·
to go into law, and after \hat, was elected tr counc1,
into politics."
ni ng his polilict ~areer "more
Berry sat'd he ft'rst J'ot'ned the through gravltat.on than actt've
Republican patty "because I pursuit," he said.
was told that all young lawyers By 1965, 0=·rry had attracted
who wanted to get anywhere national attention and was apshould join." But he dropped out pointed by President Johnson to
Wlthl·n 10 years "because I took be assistant d'•ector
of the war
~
a J'ob wt' th ""'
••- Offt' ce of War on Poverty, ·,0 charge of the
Informatt'on In 1942 when commun'tty act'ton program .
0 ·rry;s wt'!e 'Johnnt'e .M
Rooseve It was Prest
ae,
· ' dent , and ""
that was regarded as political says she plans t~ enjoy her
heresy b.y the Republt'cans"
• he year·as Ct' nct'nnatt' 's First Lady
sajd.
'
"to the fullest" and use her job
Berry said he looked on it as as .librarian at the Cincinnati
patrtotic duty, and principles Technicallnstituteiis "therapy"
meanmoretohimthanpersonal to contend with her husband's
·he· cUe tile.
success.
•
I
ae'rry sat'd •he Wt'JJ ••espond tO
For example, in 1945 he was
a...
·"edtorun forct'ty counc t'l, but
.
w
' hatever ract'al pressures stem
declined because he was presi- from being Cincinnati's first
dent of the local NAACP. He black mayor.
',
said he "didn't want it to l"'!k
"I don'tforsee any trouble, but
like I was nsing the organization 1 hOpe 1 have the necessary
as a political ~pringboard."
· equipment to handle it if it arisFour years later, Berry ac- es," he said. "I'll just have to
ceplel' a b!!rth on the Cl)arter be ready; like any good fire-

I

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lf-,;.llln'~Tlmlta-Sentinei,Swlday,Dec.3,1972

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Drug culture·blamed 0 n

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JANE DENISON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sen.
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Saturday Americans have so
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drug industry they have iurned
into "a nation of irrational pill. poppers" who use home remedies for every ache and pain.
The result, he said, has been
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Nelson said there is mounting
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Nelson 's remarks were prepared for the opening Tuesday
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Among the popular products
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all sold for relief of cold
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Nelson said medical and
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Otristmas. Morning
•• •
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·
!.,),J.-.....,o...,.,
cratlc governors, flexing their
newfound political muscle,.
want Jean Westwood out as the
party's national chairwoman,
but a UP! survey shows they
haven't agreed on who should
tal!e her place.
'
As mosl of the Democratic
governors] or governors-elect
from 33 states assembled here
for a special ,one day meeting
Sunday, tJje leading candidate
to succeed Mrs. Westwood was
former party treasurer Robert
Strauss of TeJtllS.
But sentiment also was
evident for , former party
chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien and for Maine national
committeeman George Mitchell.
The governors' meeting is a
prelude to the showdown over
control of the Democratic
party next weekend in
Washington, when the full 303member national committee
meets for the first time since
Sen. George S. McGovern's

to President
"'
n.
,
n
Takes Softer Stance
A move to oust Mrs. westwood if she does not resign is
expected at the .meeling. A
longtime party stalwart from
Utah and McGovern's personal
choice to head the natibnal
committee, Mrs . westwood
was the first target of
Democrats determined to
wrest party leadership from
the McGovernites .
At first, she defied the opposition, but when her support
softened
even
among
Democrats who backed McGovern, Mrs. Westwood took a
more conciliatory stance. As
the Dec. 9 national committee
session approached, it seemed
more likely than ever that she
would be out of a job when it's
all over.
The governors have only
· three of the 234 votes on the
national committee In the
name of their national
organization, but they claim
more influence within state

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While drug !inns "deserve to
be exposed and censured and
the law needs to be tightened to
control their advertising," Nelson said, "the public itself must
share the blame for the fact
that we have become a nation
of irrational pill-poppers."
As a result, he said,
Americans now swallow a pill
for every ill - be it headache, a
sluffy nose, a twinge of pain or
even the ordinary stresses and
strains of daily life.
"In short," he said, "we have
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laking drugs whether we need
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"Most of the drug companies'
promotion and advertising of
these products is simply a
generous mixture of false
claims and outright nonsense
'
... ," he sat'd . "The masswe
promotion of drugs for selfmedication is nothing short of
scarida1ous."

estwood d Oomed
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WORKERS OF THE GENERAL
Glass Co., Parkersburg, are conipleting the installation
of this gold aluminum siding at the Citizens National Bank in Middleport. The siding is used
above the first story permastone exterior Of the bank. Drive-in banking facilities are also being
installed at the Middleport bank.

P.;.tlfS

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Flare

Waffle

President Niilon gave final
instructions Saturday to Henry
A. Kissinger ·before the White
House special envoy flies to
Paris Sonday to resume the
secret talks to end the war in
Vietnam. White House officials
privately expressed optimism
that peace is near.
Wbile Niilon aild Kissinger
met at Key Biscayne, Fla.,
there were similar optimistic
reports from Saigon and Paris,
some· indicating a settlement
within two to three weeks.
Vietnamese government

'

VELVET
FLEECE .

Print

cease-fire to take effect Dec. no convoy is on the road after
th~t dat~," said the Le Monde
has told an envoy of President 12.
Notificatill!i has· been given dispatch . The article said that
Nguyen Van ..Thieu that he
wants to sign a peace treaty by "to the anny and to . ll'e if Nixon signs the draft peace
government adminlstr~tion to agreement by Dec. 14, two~- 15. They said the N!lflh
Vietnamese negotiator, Le IA!c take all steps necessary in view thirds of U.S. prisoners of war
Tho, has suggested Dec. 19 for of a declaration of armistice could be repatriated by Christbeginning Dec. 12," said Le m~s.
sign in~.
Kissinger's latest secret
The later date Is the eve of Monde in a dispatch from
the 12th .amiversary of the Saigon. "Everything indicates talks with Tho in Paris,
establishment of tbe Viet Cong now that the American-Nqrth described at their outset as the
Vietnamese negotiations, "final round," were suspended
National ti~alion FTont.
which .reswne Dec. 4 in the for eight days until next
Delivery Deadline Set
In Paris, the daily Paris suburbs, will be the last. · Monday to provide an op"For example, the order has ,portunity for Nixon and his
newspaper Le Monde said
Saturday Thieu's government been given to deliver all war foreign affairs' adviser to
appeared to be preparing for a materiel before Dec. 12 so that confer during the past week

' By U!]iled Press lnternalioilal sources in Saigon said Nixon

.

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by Aileen

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COLDWATER, Ohio (UP!) The young mother of a newborn
one-pound, 91'.1 ounce baby girl
said from her hospital bed Saturday night she and her hus·
band are "hoping the baby can
hang on - that's all we can
do."
Mrs. Thomas Lefeld, 22, of
nearby Sl. Henry gave birth to
the tiny infant late Thursday
night. Her doctor says he was
"surprised" that the child which a nurse held in one hand
- was born alive. ·
The 12-inch long baby was
transferred Friday to a specia·lized children's hospital in Dayton and placed in an incubator.
Oxygen was piped in and intravenous feeding started.
The parents said their la~t
report from Dayton was tba t
the baby - named Usa Marie
- was conllnulng In "satisfactory" condition.
· Dr. Emillano Feliciano, who
, delivered the three months premature baby at this small northwestern Ohio commonlty's hospital, said he hadn't upected
the child to live,
"I was IIUI'[lliled It wu alive
andnow,mlraculously; the baby
has a VerY &amp;ood chance of liD'•
viving,'' the doctor aakl. "I had
told MrS. Lefeld thai lhe wu ,
ready to. atve birth and that
we would go ' ahea~ and hope
for the belt."

Mrs, Lefeld said she had fea~­
ed death for her first child.
"When the doctor told me it
was time, I was prepared for
the worst," said the young mother, who was awake during delivery. "I didn't think the baby
would live because it was so
soon."
·Mrs. Lefeld saw her daughter
only a short time before the
baby was transferred to Dayton and didn't get to hold her:
''I looked at her and she was
.so tiny," she said." Anurse held
·her in one hand. She looked
awfully red, but she moved
around and I was just so happy
she was alive."
Dr. Feliciano said It was tbe
smallest surviving baby he bad
ever delivered. The Guiness
Book of World Recor11s lists
the smallest surviving baby
at 10 ounces, born in England
in 1938. ·
·Mrs. Lefeld.- who expecis to
be released from the hospilal
Monday-wants to travel to
Dayton to see her child. The
doctor said he may order otherwise.
"I'm very anxious to see her
again," Mra. Lefeld 1181d. "I
want to go on Tuesday if I'm
able.
Dr. Feliciano said he woul~
give Mrs. Lefeld a checlcup Monday but recommend no traveling
for a week.
'

delegatlons." They occupy a
majority of the statehollses 30 in 1971).72 and 31 in the next
two years -and are eager to
seize a greater share of
responsibi.lity for national
party policy.
The UP! pOll of the 30
Democrats now holding governorsbips or soon to take office,
completed Saturday, showed 20
either publicly favoring Mrs.
Westwood's departure or leaning toward it,
Strauss Backers Confident
Several· governors stopped
short of demanding that she be
fired, expressing the wish
instead that she voluntarily
give up the four-year term to
which she was elected last
July.
Only five expressed support
for her to continue as chairman, even temporarily.
Five governors -David Hall
of Oklahoma, John West of
South Carolina, Wendell Ford
of Kentucky, Jimmy Carter of
Georgia and Bruce King of
New Mexico -named Strauss
as their top choice. Bruce also
endorsed outgoing Gov.
Warren Hearnes of Missouri
and West said he also would
support fonner Gov. Robert
McNair of South Carolina.
Two others, Robert Docking
of Kansas and Hearnes; either
hinted their support for Strauss
or predicted he would be the
majority choice ·of the conterence.
Others Supported
O'Brien had the open support
of Gov.-elect Thomas P. Salmon of Vermont, Milton J. Shapp
of Pennsylvania, William· Guy
of North Dakota and Robert
Kneip of South Dakota, who
rriade clear he would rather not
see Mrs. Westwood go.
Kneip also mentioned Mitchell as a possible successor if
Mrs. Westwood resigns as did
Gov. Kenneth Curtis of Maine,
who was in the forefront of the
anti-Westwood governors.

I

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New Cox's Department Store • • • m
the
Silver
Bridge
Shopping
Plaza!
!
Easy
'

Knit ·
Vest

(

.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, I 972

PAG.E

.f ; •.

with Tbieu's ·envoy,, Ng\lyen
Ptiu Due.
Ziegler Skirtll Issue
Due reportedly relayed
Thieu's demand that · Nortb
VIetnam withdraw all Its
forces from South VIetnam
before a cease.fire is ordered
and also raised some · oiMr
objections to the proposed
settlement. Tile optilllism
expressed by •Wlllte · Hause ·
officials indicated that .
Saigon's objections had l!een
overcome.
In Key Biscayne, Wlilte
House Prest Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler avoided any direct
characterization of the forthcoming round of talks.
"We expect the negotiallons
to last several days," he •lei,
"but I can't pr~ct the outcome or the length of the
negotiations. R's , the Preai-

17 ~g~;s :~ec~ve ~~~~:O~t-~

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Indian Bureau chief scalped
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Interior Secretary Rogers C.
B. Morton 'stripped Commissioner Louis R. Bruce of all
authority over the Bureau of Indian Affairs Saturday,
exactly a month after hundreds of militant Indians began
a week4o.ng takeover of the BIA's national headquarters
here.
In addition to the action against Bruce, an Indian who
had supported the protesters' grievances, Morton also
took Assistant Interior Secretary Harrison Loesch out of
e&lt;~ntrol of Indian affairs - a key demand of the demon·
strators - and sidelined Deputy (BIA) Commissioner
John Crow, widely crllized by organizers of the Indian
occupation.
At the same lime, In what were termed "secretarial
orders," Morton pot Richard S. Bodman, an assistant
interior secretary for management and budget, in lm·
mediate command of ludlail operations.

Aussie Labor
Party in power
CANBERRA (UPI) - The said the new government, will
Australian Labor Party (ALP), seek immediate diplomatic
after 23 y~ars in. opposition, relations ":ith China . Labor
was swept mto offtce Saturday sent a mtsston to Pekmg,
on a "it's time for a change" , headed by Whitlam, 18 months
platform, ousting the rulll\g ago. .
',
conservative coalition.
The prime minister-elect,
who
'
With 70 per cen t of the vote will hold the .foreign minish·y
counted at the national tally post, already said he feels there
room, the ALP, led by Edward is only one China and that
Gough Whitlam, was assured of Taiwan is ils province.
at least a majority of 10 seats
The Labor spokesman said
111 the 125-member House of the
new government will
Representatives.
continue to closely cooperate
The counting in the elections with the United Slates and New
will end late Saturday and Zealand in the Pacific and will
resume Sunday evening .
seek to make ANZUS "an
The defeat of the coalition insll'ument for justice and
government, led by the Liberal peace and political social and
party, follows the Nov. 25 economic advancement ."
landslide victory by the New
One of the first'llctions of the
Zealand Labor Party over lhe new government will be .to
National Party.
apply to the International Cow·t
Many of Australia's long-held of Jus tice for an injunction
foreign policies are du~ for restraining France from conmajor revision.
dueling further nuclear lesls.
Despite its name, the Liberal
The Labor Party is traditionparty followed a conservative ally isolationist in treaty
political line . Conservative gov- obligations with other countries.
ernments since 1949 have The party under Whitlam
followed a cautious line of opposed Australian involvement
general adherence to and in Vietnam and Whitlam has
dependence on more powerful promised an immediate end to
allies, first Brllain, and, in the draft.
more recent years, the United
Slates.
As a result, Anstralia became
involved in Malaysian affairs,
the Vietnam War, the purchase
REFORM LAGS
ofthe controversial Flll fighter
COLUMBUS (UP! )
-bomber, and in such treaties Harlem Congressman Charles
as the Southeast Asian Treaty Ran ge l, D-N.Y. , sa id here
Organization (SEATO), lhe Saturda y there has been
Australia-New Zealand-United "absolutely" no prison reform
States (ANZUS) Treaty and the . since the Attica riots because
five-power treaty with Britiain, . New York slate legislators
New Zealand, Malaysia and have refused to appropnate
Singapore.
necessary funds.
A Labor Party spokesman

k
•
Strl e maY
'
sh
out
'
1
'
'
7
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'

.

In Saigon Saturday, . the
govenunent television station
said Foreign Miniater Tran
Va.n Lam had said SOUth
Vietnam will 'refuse to atp.any

forces. And In a aepllate
commentary, the station llllid
Hanoi must agree to the withCAPE KENNEDY (UPi) - Government labor specialists . drawal publicly and In lfl'lllng,
tried Saturday to head off a threatened strike that could delay
The North Vletnamue )iav~
Wednesday night's scheduled launch of Apollo 17's 13-&amp;y moon never admitted that any of
landing mission.
their troops are In lhe SOUth,
insisting
that the cOl1UJIIIIIlst
Federal mediator William Rose met separately with both sides
and a source close to the negotiations said there were Indications , forces there are solely Vietnamese "patriots" fighting
progress was being made toward averting a strike.
er of the Ylet
The wage dispute between the Boeing Co., a NASA contractor onder he
and 60 moonport technical writers and illustrators was the only Cong.
apparent obstacle to the 9:53p.m. EST start of moon mission. New Law Decreed
The commentary on , the •
Picket lines could turn away large numbers of ground support
govenunent-a&gt;ntrolled
stJtlon
workers.
Apollo 17 will end the historic 12-year-(lld Apollo lonar ex' rejected a commonly held
viewpoint that Saigon woWd
ploratlon project. Dr. James C. Fletcher, the NASA adminis- accept an unpubllcbl!d IIIII
trator, said Americans woulti not go back to the moon before the unwritten allfeement lor withmid-19BOs, at the earliest.
drawal of North Vletnadllle
Mission commander Eugene A. Cernan and geologist Harrison troops from the South, IIIII
H. "Jack" Schmitt are to land Dec. 11 in a northeastern lunar enabling IWioi to refrain
valley covered by what scientists believe is volcanic ash from the admitting what It prevloiuly
moon's las\ gasp of life. Ronald E. Evans will survey the moon · has denied. .
for six days from orbit.
"This Is really ai1Jy bec•t•
Cernan and Schmitt practiced driving a moon buggy Saturday then there would be no
morning and Evans got a geology briefing. Then all three guarantee," the station llld.
astronatus put aside their rigid training schedules for the "The North Vietnamese Cllmweekend. Sunday they plan to watch television football games. munists must 'withdraw· Ill,
The launch crew also will have Sunday off, with tbe countdown withdraw publicly, on. '111ll"
in a 30-llour "hold" perlod.'Launch Direct~ Walter J . Kapryan paper and dark ink."
said "ll wll be Ollf last chance to gl\le the crew .time to really • In another Saigon !lmiop·"
"'-~ :- ~ ""'
, •. ,
merit, !he semi-officii! VIetre tax.
.
A recora number is expected to' watch tbe shot-the first nam Preas 118id Tbleu bu
nighttime maMed launching here-and estimates of the crowd decreed a new law that will
expected in Brevard County around the moonport trange from a give him and his army Clllll·
plete control of the population
half million to fiv.e million.
and the economy In cw of an
Weather Forecut Good
In-place ceuellre.
Motels have been booked solid within 50 miles of the Cape and
The three·polnt dearee
tourists, industry representatives and newsmen started flowing signed a week aso ·glvs &amp;be
into the area Saturday,
president the right to Im;oee
The weather forecast for launch lime is good with partly martial law and order full
cloudy skies and moderate southwesterly winds expected.
military mobilization, ciQn
In addition to the federal mediator, space agency labor states of alert and emeraeacy,
specialistS and representatives of the National Labor Relations Impose curfews, ban all
Board ( NLRB) were attempting to head off a strike.
demonstrations and labor
The 60 workers were represented by the International Alliance strlku, fix prices and have the
of Theatrical and Stage Employes (IATSE) and they were army arrest pei'SOIII believed
seeking reinslatement of 30to50 per cent pay cuts they took wben to be dangerOUI to h1a IOVVDBoeing won the support contract in April, 1971.
ment. Troops would have, the
The onion and Boeing bave filed unfair labor practice charges right to shoot to kill "for telf
defense or pursuit."
against each other .
_
If Apollo 17 is not laonched by Dec. 7, the shot would be pOBtponed to Jan. 4 NASA 118ld such a delay would cost the Kennedy
Space Center alone $2.5million plus $8 million if the delay forced
a similar delay in the Skylab space station project set to begin
April 30.

rro.n

Air arm
attacks

Investigation may linger on
BATON ROUGE, La. (UP!)
- The slate commission inves tigating the death of two
&amp;outhern University students
during a clash with police has
indicated the investigation
might continue indefinitely and
testimony might be taken from
as many as 100 persons.
The Louisiana Board of
Education said Saturday it
would ask for the permanent
closing of Southern University

SAIGON (UP!) - U.S.
warplanes, flying near-record
strikes throughout Indoclllna,
began a second month of
concentrated strategic born·
bing Saturday In an effort to
hatter Communbtt troops and
slow their southbound supplies.
Monsoon downpours slowed
ground fighting In northern
~ang Trl Province.
The U.S. command said that
the past month of bombing was
conducted by nearly 3,000 ~
bombers and thotisaoda of
conventional jet fighter-bombers in Vietnam alone. Other
warplanes hit dally agalnBt the·
Ho Chi Minh supply trail In
man , to put out whatever fires Laos and Its extenSl'ona In
may develop."
Cambodia:
"My being a minority mayor Bogged down by five days of
cannot blink out the fact the continues monsoon ""
...,wnthat the high Incidence of crime pours, South and North.
in this community does involve Vietnamese troops facing -·h
blacks," Berry said. "But at Ute other In South Vietnam's
same time, 48 per cent of the northernmost' Quang Trl
unemployed in Cincinnati are Province eased their fi•""ft«
..,_
black. That is significant."
and •belling.
The new mayor said he will UP!
. correspond""t
~· Ke~•
,....,,
look to business and Industry F. Englade reporte"u ' .,.,.,...
"~'""-y
to help eliminate the root of the from the Quang Trl area that
crime problem. .
-~
floods caused by the ·••·vy
"It's not just the task of the monsoon rains slowed fa~*
poli~ force., " he said. "We all face battle acUvity. io much In
have to get togethe~ in solving the past 24 hours that jllllthis." ,
small aldmdsh was "'"'lid. :•.
Berry said Cincinnati is at a Gov--t
- ..tr•an• •• •,".
~ ·~-·
..-"sensitive" Stage.
CJaJmed to •-""''-' ..__
,,.,~ ...,_
_. &gt;,'•,
"It doesn't yet bave the prob- North '"·"'-•IOidla'lllt
, __.,.....
a
lem of a city the _size of ~Mil- ·COli Of two of their own Aid
mgton or St. LolliS, so tt s liD· and slJ: wounded, blllid.
porlant for us to define our · Communist artiii~J llld
pro~lems and discover our mortar barraaee, 1lllk!tl Jut
strengths and weaknesses now," m011th had ~ •
M,sai~, "before these problems 3,400 rounds per day llcl•&lt;lll
anse.
·
oil, Englade uid.
in New Orleans if students
there continued their monthlong boycot of classes.
The slate commission said
Friday it had already determined that Denver Smith and
Leonard Brown, both 20, were
killed by pellets fired from a
shotgun and that deputy
sheriffs and state police fired
!ear gas first In the Nov. 16
confrontation.

Ex-Newsboy Cincinnati's Mayor

· tY·
CINCINNATI (UPI )- SIX
SI'Ven-year old Thendore M.
Berry, who once hawked newspapers while listening to poI•·.
ticians exhort neighborhood ral.
has beeorne Cmcmna
· · t'1•s
Ites,
first black mayor.
An Intelligent and complex
man, Berry climbed from pov·
· to prospererty and desoIalton
· and fulf ilimen! t hrough a
tty
PROBE TO SATURN?
· and instinccombination of guts
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. live drive.
(UP!) - The Space Agency
At an early age, .Berry took
said . Saturday a spacecraf.t jobs washing windows, shining
scheduled for a mission beyond shoes,' delivering coal, waiting
Jupiter may instead be sen't on · lables and working in steel
a seven-year journey lor a look miiiS. Butwithitcamedegiees
at the ice-covered planet from Woodwird High SchooI,
Saturn and ill three dust rings. the University of Cincinnati and
the UC College of Law.
"When 1 was 1n ~igh IIChool,
TRESTLE FAIJ.S
my
elder sister and brothers
WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - A
111o0 trestle collapsed just were encouraging me to stUdy
IIOfth of here Saturd8y, burlifl8 medicine," •Berry Recalls.
14 C8l'l of a ukar freiaht train "When 1 go to college, !found 1
Into a gqlly. No injuries .were was more lntereated in the
science of people as they telate
r~ted.

to their comm un·tt y, So I ch ose Cotnmt'tlee ~•ndorsed slate and
'I begtn·
to go into law, and after \hat, was elected tr counc1,
into politics."
ni ng his polilict ~areer "more
Berry sat'd he ft'rst J'ot'ned the through gravltat.on than actt've
Republican patty "because I pursuit," he said.
was told that all young lawyers By 1965, 0=·rry had attracted
who wanted to get anywhere national attention and was apshould join." But he dropped out pointed by President Johnson to
Wlthl·n 10 years "because I took be assistant d'•ector
of the war
~
a J'ob wt' th ""'
••- Offt' ce of War on Poverty, ·,0 charge of the
Informatt'on In 1942 when commun'tty act'ton program .
0 ·rry;s wt'!e 'Johnnt'e .M
Rooseve It was Prest
ae,
· ' dent , and ""
that was regarded as political says she plans t~ enjoy her
heresy b.y the Republt'cans"
• he year·as Ct' nct'nnatt' 's First Lady
sajd.
'
"to the fullest" and use her job
Berry said he looked on it as as .librarian at the Cincinnati
patrtotic duty, and principles Technicallnstituteiis "therapy"
meanmoretohimthanpersonal to contend with her husband's
·he· cUe tile.
success.
•
I
ae'rry sat'd •he Wt'JJ ••espond tO
For example, in 1945 he was
a...
·"edtorun forct'ty counc t'l, but
.
w
' hatever ract'al pressures stem
declined because he was presi- from being Cincinnati's first
dent of the local NAACP. He black mayor.
',
said he "didn't want it to l"'!k
"I don'tforsee any trouble, but
like I was nsing the organization 1 hOpe 1 have the necessary
as a political ~pringboard."
· equipment to handle it if it arisFour years later, Berry ac- es," he said. "I'll just have to
ceplel' a b!!rth on the Cl)arter be ready; like any good fire-

I

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•TIII8··8111lao~. SloDday, Dec.~.l972 .

.' '

. . . DAILY
9:30 TO 9 .

OPEN DAILY

I

.

I

•

'

'

'.

OPIIIAILY
9-.30 TO 9

I

9:30 T0· 9

. .

.

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'OPEN ·

OPEN

TODA,Y

JODAY .
12 :TOOON

12 NOON
TO

.

.· SPM

DEC. 3&amp;4WHILE ANTI TIES LAST .·

DEC 3&amp;4WHILE QUANTITIESLAST
WINCHESTER
SUPER X.

4 AMP

BATTERY CHARGER

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Dovblo, loLtd '" "1IIOICn~r ~ lttf\ P"&gt;IIC I•O~ o"d 9o-od loa ~ o •n o choo&lt;t ol ) Qo lf o• ·
1 nr co•-toor do no lod &lt;ulm o wa,ho~lf. ond colo r laor, .lo•a•lab l'* '" oaloP ba ck or oplot
bock modol•

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HECK'S REG.

HD OR REGULAR

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

Available in assorted colors.

HECK'S

6-PAK

HECK'S REG. 38' QT.

HAIIDWARE DEPT.

FEEDING &amp; TRAINING SET

REG. .
514.96

. MOTOROIL

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $21.88

BABY DISH
HECK'S

$1588

88

PRIZE PENN

$,1 00

Ma ster Se rie s t,o s unique
features to boost ga il'l
where i't 's molt needed for
p111ok rece pt ion on a ll
channels.

tr:tl lnob nM.i•-' (Qn~ 1,1, t&gt;•&lt;hoomo ~ ·· •
elr.,.~M, n~"'''" of &lt;I ·~ O"• • '"" ~ •a' &lt;:li1h•bu

GE MODEL1).4.

G.E. STYLING

51).1

bwuhlol

Ruggedly buil t to ~er ve lor
y~ars Ia come , th~ Co lor

""•'f ,;,.,.

DEPT.

88

WAFFLE BAKER
lf&gt;•r"""''&lt;&gt;1 «&gt;n'r~l' h~n• &lt;11 .•\1 th• ''9"'' ,.,.,
Pf'"''"e fo• ~ol&lt;i~' ~oil • •
Ptoc l~ &lt;l ... '0hqnd~11t
,.,d

HECK'S REG. 124.96

IEWIIr

SUPER ElECTRIC
A,

PPO TRANMISSION
FLUID
5 QUARTS

Unequalled perfo rman ce
in an economy ardenr10
1erie!! The Color Ma ste r
dillerence ~ flow ~ in color
and black and wh i t~.

he ~ oht• ~'"' ''''"""' ''Q~ cwl ~""'l'e• •.ol

'1

HECK'S REG .
$32.95

HAMILTON

G. E.

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11- Tile s.dlyTimes·Sentlnel, Sunday, Dt&gt;c. 3, 1972

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. others wearing, 'wouldn't it'!
More .excitin~ than time-lapse
If you can find pictures of Eskimos
photo~ruphy . · If you listen carefully,
or I.applanders tNalionai Geographic somelimc~ you CLin even hear it
magazines are gOOd sources, and I'm growing, like corn in July '
sure the !Jbrary has copies), notice
COI;D WINTER ·.AIR is inhow heavily decorated with bright vigorating. When your body gels so
wools their winter garments are. The
vigorous you can't stand it any more,
BY KATI MEEK
'rich colors are mental health insurance
Artlst-ia-Resldeoce
look for the. house with the gold windnws and y&lt;•u ' llli~d that your favorlie
GALUPOUS - No denying it, for them, and for us, too.
AUTUMN
.BROUGHT
US
gold
and
chair and afghan offer more c~mfort
winter has come to (;allia County.
Winter makes driving hazardous, red riverbanks ·apd hills in place of . and security than,you ever imagined.
AND REMEMBEn: without
bodies uncomfortable, and" fuel bills summ~r greens. Winter takes away
everything but black . Then , winlers, th~re could. be no springs.
high.
· Seems pretty grim, but winter iJ,n't crystallized rain called snow, piles up
everywhere; we see a world in con ~
• THERE IS A NEW LOOM in my
all bad - really - even for grownups.
trasls,
like
iblack
and
white
studio. It came in eight crates and
Here are some helpful hints on how to
boxes. This is the loom I've been saving
enjoy winter' from a grown-up who photograph.
.
Photographers
often
prefer
black
for since I first took up weaving. It is a
hasn't grown up, that is.
12-harness jack loom, and if that sounds
First hint: because one can't stay and while film to color fibn because it
like Greek, and you're curious, come
indoors all the time, dress to keep has greater dramatic potential. It may
warm. Wear wool. Wool is expensive, be easier to comprehend the real nature down to the studio. Explaining it to
yes; and wool doesn't thrive in washing of an object when the eyes and mind are · someone else helps me to know it better
too.
machines. But do·you know that wool not cluttered with color messages.
sheds dirt better than any other fiber? When the snow is on, take time to look
THERE IS A NEW EXHIBIT
opening today at the French Art
Wool is tpe only fiber that actually at the old, everyday world and see the
patterns of light and dark that change
Colony : "Contempor,a ry American
generates heal when wet.
l)'ith
the
wind
direction
and
tpe
snow
Graphics."
·
Pretty smart stuff, that wool, and a ·
definite a !!Set for enjoying a cold world . . plow.
I haven't seen the exhibit yet, and
Wool takes dye colors better than other
THEN THERE ARE TIMES like
know very little about graphic art, but
fibers and that brings us to the first last Tuesdy, when the fog gathered on
Graphics is two dime~sional printing.
source of delight in winter - the colors · cold branches and weeds to make hoarThat means pictures, words and :-,.
~.'
frost. If you get out early enough, you
wrapped around people.
designs on paper, the medium we're *i
Red inittens, purple sweaters, wine saw It growing. Hoar-frost happens so
familiar with through magazines. Hope *"
~·
and gold scarves and white caps; It quickly that if you get quite close, and
I can learn more at the show at French ~
would be sad. never to have such don't warm it with your breath, you
Art Colony, First Ave., open 1·5 ::::
.•&gt;
delightful things to wear, or to see can watch a crystal grow!
Saturday and Sunday; 9-3 Tuesday.
·:·~~.
""11ff~fl!;&gt;,:;~:::;··'$1$:»"•~·u..-..~.:.·.:.•;.'o'o'•'•"•Y•:."•'•'-:
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Notes from
·the Studio

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Leadership jobs opened

in.Senate by elections

1 , • . • . • . • .• . • .

r--I Bea

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'I

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I Of the Bend

TICKETS FOR

1HE

NEW 'YEAR'S

DANCE

AT
THEW. VA.
ARMY
NATIONAL ·
GUARD

ON SALE

AT THE ARMORY

MON. ntRU FRI.
9 AM TO 4 PM

'10

BAND WIU. BE
JAN HADDOX
MUSIC DEPT.

Favors &amp; Snacks
Furnished

I By Bob Hoeflich

C ' '1 I Filii IIIIo RM!I hrt """"tlllrida- . _ , ..

- .,., - - ~~~·

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I ... II"*IItw!P.. CorttrC.HSIIIIoROMI!P..
11
IIIJ.. -IIIII 141-1111 01,. Min, 111.. -

HM a "four for Fun" mini-vacation In any of ~he above
NHit parb. One tow price covers lodging for two nights •
IJIId Ill IMIIs from evenlna dinner on the day of arrival
lhnllllh luncll the third doy, (M~Is may be ordered from
1M llllftU,)

~®

Includes: 3 Breast Quarters with backs,
3 Leg Quarters with backs, ~ Pkgs.
Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

SOUTHERN STAR
SELECTED PORK
U. $. GOVT.INSPECTED
FAMILYPAK · ·

CHILDREN '1.25

lheir own expenses, and other
'
res!!!Jrces.
T!1e Council prepares an
operating budge\ to serve the
uni t.&lt;, and these funds come
from Uni ted Ways and thz
annual sustaining membership
enrollment among members,
pare nts, and friends of
Scouting.
Finally , Monk s~id , the
na ti o.nal o·rga nizalion c;oordi nates an~ stimulates the
pr o~ ram
nationally and
develops program materials.
These services are paid from
membership . fees and other
income that is put back into the
program .
Tile Tri-State Area Council is
a member agency of the United
Community Services in
Huntingto n and Boyd Coun ty
Community Chest , which
provide about 48 percent of the
local operating budget.

WINS lWICE
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) Mrs. Ruth DeVito of Sayreville
won $25 in New Jersey's daily
lottery recently.
She took first · prize in the
millionaire lottery drawing in
June, 1971.

.•1 to 9 SUNDAY
137 PINE STREET
MICHAEL SHAFER
MIDDLEPQRT- Michael
W. Shafer, formerly of
Middleport, bas been named
Associate Professional
Representative for Merck
Sharp &amp; Dohme, subarban
Philadelphia manufacturer
of pharmaceuticals and
biologicals. A graduate of
Marshall · University where
he received an A.B. degree
in Psychology,, Shafer Is
married to the former Adele ·
P. Sismondo ol New Haven.
They reside at 23845 Princeton Ave., Dearborn, Mich.
Shafer is the son of Mrs. Ray
R. Pickens and the grandson
of Mr. and Mrs. George
Hackett, Sr., all of Mid·
dleport.

GAlliPOUS, OHIO
700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
RWULAR

.

.

.APPIAN WAY PIZZA MIX

80XES.

PORK

~----~--------------~ Increase to

"at 0 V

'

Family Pa~ - 5·tils. or More,

9-11 Choll$ Per Pkg.

' is on us!"
the last one

"jic

lb.

BELL-VIEW

RICHTEX

LUCKY LEAF

APRICOT, PEACH &amp; PINEAPPLE

Preserves

Shortening

·~,APPLE

1-lb. 2-oL Jars

3-lb. Can

SAUCE
.1-lb. Cans

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL'S Future Farmers of America
took on a new project this year, selling fruit for the holiday
season. Response was good and the chapter is extending thanks
to the public for its help.

..........,

•

O~tw l/4
[;~

for

GRAPE JAM .•. ....•.•.••.•. • ,,.,•.,.. ,.,.,49c
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM ... ,.,.......,,77c
BLACKBERRY JELLY •... , ... ...•.,.......,., 75c
GRAPE JELLY .•. , .•• • ..••.••• ,........., •.-51c
WALNUT leo Crnm Tapping ••• , , , • , , , , , 5-or.Jar 54C
CHOC. FUDGE, CARMEL &amp;
BUTTERSCOTCH ,.. cr..m Topplno ••••• , ..,. ' " 36c

STOKELY'S VALUES
TOMATO $A UCE .• ....•.. , •...•. , ... con 12c
FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS .••• ,.,. can 29c
WHOLE KERNEL CORN •.•.••. ,,.,•. ,... con25c
FRUIT COCKTAIL ...•..•. , .... ·"•·,.... con31c
CATSUP ...... ., ..... ., ., . ., .........aot. 24c
SLICED Y.C. PEACHES •••.••••. , .,...... c•• 19c
FLEISCHMANN'S
CORN OIL

POIAIO CHIPS
14-oz.
Pkg.

I

lime charge."

I

I

l-Ib.
Pkg .

45~

·CHASE &amp; SIIBORI
COFFEE ··
2·1b.
Can

$177

REYNOLDS

LIQUID PLUIR

ALUMINUM FOIL

DRAIN Cl~NER

12"x 25Ft. 33~
· Roil

• HEINZ STRAINED

Ot.
Bot.

DETERGENT

JUICES
4-oz. Can 12~

4 ~:·55~

BO PEEP

DUICO
Hl•s
BLUEBERRY

4-oz. Jar

25~

Off

.Label

9~

AMMONIA
LEMON &amp; PINE SCENTED

DEODORANT SOAP

.FFII •1
13-oz.
Pkg.

55$

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Department of Transportation
Is proposing strict means of
enforcing a new law
prohibiting used car dealers
from turning back the mileage
indicator on vehicles. A trade
association representing
dealers praised the move.
The proposed rule , an·
nounced Friday , would require
lhe S.ller of a car to "make a
written disclosure concerning
the odometer mileage and its
The 1972 Motor Vehicle In· ·
formation and Cost Savings
Act makes it illegal to tamper
with the odometer to conceal
the true mileage. The Trans,
portation ' Department 's
proposal goes one step further
- requiring the seller to give
the buyer a written statement
to confirm the mileage.
If the new owner then
discovered that the odometer
had been tampered with, the
written statement would be
grounds
for
ctiminal
prosecution by the local U.S.
attorney's office, Transportation officials said.

FRES~P

BOLD

~1 -·

DROWSY
TALKING DOLL

NORTHERN
TOWELS
FOR

$'

$

99
EACH

PRICES GOOD
TODAY tHROUGH
SUNDAY, "
DEC. lOTH
G.E. 10 INCH

I

' ~ lt ••

.

GLADE
•

PORTA.COLOR II

AIR FRESHENERS

TELEVISION

5 FRAGRANCES

$

7 oz.

'
AEROSAL
CANS

··WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST!

Odometer law
getting teeth

MATIEL'S

JUMBO ROLLS

BWE BONNET
•

AUTOMATIC

MARGARINE

CORN POPPER
H.B.

pkgs.

'

88

accuracy.11

89~

BABY FOODS

5-lb. 4-oL Pkg.

NAMED EPA ASSISTANt
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cincinnati business executive
•John W. Kroeger was appointed Friday as -ts!ant
director of the Ohio En·
vlronmental Protection Agency by Direct« Ira Whitman.
Kroeger, currently vice
Jll'tllident of the Frederick F.
Levey Co., Cincinnati,
ovenee Internal operaUCIIIII,
operallnB goals, methoda and
!l'OC*iures Whitman aald.

MARGARINE

69c

KEEBLER COOKIE FUTURES
Pecan Sandies ~~;.··
Coconut Chocolate Drops

Join NOW •.• we make
your last payment FREE!

DAN•DII

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
special salary study commission for elected state and
local officials recommended
Friday that the annual salaries
of state legislators be raised
from $12,750 to $14,000. The
commission, appointed by Gov.
John J. Gilligan, agreed to
submit its recommendation ih
an interm report to the
governor
and
General
Assembly immediately, so
action might be taken before
the end of the year.
Howard L. Collier of Toledo,
commission chairman 1 noted
tha t the $11,000 figure was
"well within" the II per cent
biennial pay increase ceiling
set by the federal Pay Board .
The commission also proposed
Increasing the .salaries of the
top leader in the House and the
Senate from $16,750 a year to
The commission vote was 42, with three members absent.
Voling in favor of the increase
were Collier, and former slate
Senator John H. Weeks of
Lakewood, both Republicans,
and Democratic members
Donald D. Day of Columbus
and James J. Gilvary of
Ketlering. Opposing the in·
crease on grounds they lacked
sufficient information about
the activities of legislators
were Democrat Dorothy M.
Reyn olds and Republican
Richard D. Rogovin , both of
Columbus.

.l

for

SMUCKER'S FEATURES

$14,000

$18,500.

CHRISTMAS ClUB

highly accessible to all Ohioans
affli cted with kidney disease."
Cashman said the current
'rate of in-patient treatment is
between $20,000 and $35,000.'
''Our intent will be to move
lrealment into the communities and the patients'
homes, thereby cutting the cost
down to $5,000 to $\0,000," he
explained. "The real answer,
however, is · the transplant
which is about $3,000 for one

-. . .

gallon.

PUMP ACTION
SHOT GUN

CLOROX
BLEACH

3 ROLL PKG.

CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP

.,

.. your.'wrmess

Valley

HAWAIIAN

PUNCH
1,Qt.
14:oz.

'

Can

Alaska's doctors, lawyers.
guides and bunters use tha
airplane to travel. Sorrie 500
airports dot the state.
\

PENNYFARE
U,S. GpVT. INSPECTED .

&lt;

PA'ITY ANN LEE, NINE·YEAR OLD daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, Gary Lee (the former Dorothy Howell, Pomeroy) of Elyria,
was a color guard with Edna Kaye's Steel City Strutters of
Lorain when the group appeared on nationwide television as a
part of the annual Girnbles' Thanksgiving parade. Patty was the
youngest member of the unit. She is the granddaughter of Ed·
ward Howeli,Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, and Betty Howell, Bailey
Run Road, near Pomeroy .

DAf!JitP,.,_AS
AND SON

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
JOIN US FOR OUR BUSINESSMAN'S BUFFET
MONDAY lHRU' FRIDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS
11:30 AM TO 2:00 PM. ALL YOU WANT TO
EAT FROM OUR BEAUTIFUL BUFFET.

BANANAS

fill

'. '

FamilyPak ChickenPa

SOUND-RIPE

BEEN AWAY OVERNIGHT LATELY?
Would you believe that Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hamrn, Minersville area residents, were away overnight for the first time in 21
years over the Thanksgiving holiday period? They spent a
greater part of the week with their son, Robert, and family in
Columbiana.

llllfl JIIUI' IIOIIclay durtns the week or on 1 weokend
~1M plio - • then once. The plln 1, avo liable In "th~
• _.. fOur 111/111 only, November 15 through March 31,

J.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

nalional organization.
The boy' pays a national
membership fee, buys his own
uniform. books, and equip·
ment, and pays dues into his
uni t treasury - preferably
earning the money for these
personal expenses.
His troop or pack pays its
way from the boys' weekly
dues and money earned
through approved projects.
Even
the
chartered
organization , which owns the
uni t, is responsible for a
meetin~ place, competent
volun teer leadership who pay

recommend

POMEROY - Mrs. Maxine Allensworth, formerly of Middleport, now of St. Albans, W. Vii., keeps right up on Meigs
County activities.
·
She's not alone , however. Other Meigs residents, Mildred
Asbury Moseley, Frances Pickens Drenner, Margaret Ball
Capehart, Florence Mackin Pauley and Phyllis Evans Given,
live in Maxine's area and you can bet that Pomeroy and Mid·
dleport are under much discussion.
Incidentally, Phyllis Evans Given has been appointed to the
post of permanent chairman of the membership committee of the
National Society of State Legislators. Phyllis is the daughter of
Mrs. Ethel Jones Evans of Pomeroy and the late Ray Evans. She
was elected Kanawha County Democrat delegate in 1970 and was
reelecte&lt;l again this year.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
Health Director Dr. John W
_Cashman appointed a 15:
member advisory committee
Friday to design and implement a state-wide plan to
make dialysis treatment and
transplant facilities available
to Ohioans suffering from
chronic kidney disease.
"Recent federal social
security legislation will finally
make treatment and trans·
plants for kidney disease
financially possible under
Medicare next July," Cashman
said. "ll is therefore necessary
to act now .to de,signate or
develop an aqequate number of
treatment and transplant
facilities and make them

: HUNTINGTON - Quality
: Scoutmg for boys in this area is
' fOStly in dollars but dividends
: are high in the 4,500 boys who
are getting a practical
: program
in
character
;development, citizenship
;training, and mental and
;physical fitness .
' Richard Monk, Tri-State·
; Area Council President, said
the cost to bring the BSA
program to boys in the council
is shared by the boy himself
his unit, the organization that
is chartered to use the
program, and the local and

ADULTS '1.95

I
I
I
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I
I
II

Ohio to plan for dialysis

OFFER

We reserve tM rtghi 10 limltqutn1111~s on tlllftlftl lnlhll ad. Prlc.s effKtlve thru S.turdty. Dec. 9, lt72. Ncmt 10ld ta detlen.

1

'IllE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK will go for an old,
fashioned Christmas to wrap up the observance of its lOOth birthday year. ·
Bank employes are working now towards creating a
Christmas tree of 100 years ago. They are making strands of
popcorn and cranberries, crocheted bells and snowflakes, gilded
wishbones and walnuts, paper chains and lanterns and some
wooden birds have been purchased. This will all be used on a live
tree which employes will decorate on Tuesday evening. Lighting
on the tree will be new type lights resembling old fashioned
candles.
To further. wrap up their anniversary, employes will wear
their old-fashioned costumes on Saturday mornings, Dec. 16, 23:
and 30, and Christmas cookies and coffee will be served to the
An acre of desert may sup- public all three mornings.
port as m any as 100,000
beetles, among the most
CHUCK RIFFLE haS had on display at the Swisher-[,phse
abundant aruma! form in
Drug Store colored pictures taken of him and his deer killed.
arid lands.
Chuck got a deer on the first day out and that took care of
trudging for the rest of the deer season.

STATE RESORT PARKS

SUPER MARKETS

------- .--------------~,

I
COLUMBUS (UP!)- House new-found power in a way that I

Democrats have been ex· will keep everybody happy.
. periencing some difficulty
Lillie noticed, but just as
. dividing up the spoils of their real; are the troubles of Senate
President Pro Tempore
Theodore M. Gray; R-Piqua,
who has only one vote more
than a working majority and is
losing eight senators, several
in key positions, with an
aggregate of 83 years of Senate
service.
Five committee chair·
manships will open up, and
Gray; as party leader, will
!)ave the unenviable responsibility for restructuring the
.
committee system and
selecting capable leaders.
The Senate is the last hope of
Republicans as far as the
legislative process is concerned. Democrats will be in
control of the House and Gov.
.John J. Gilligan, also very
muc a
mocrat, is downstairs.
So it )s Important for Gray to
have committee chairmen that
know their way around and do
not make mistakes.
Gone are Sens. Robert R
Shaw, R.Columbus, chairman
of the Finance Committee with
20 years' service; Oakley C.
Collins, R-Ironton, chairman of
the Education Committee with
18 years' in the Senate;
promoted to Congress are
Sens. Tennyson Guyer, R·
Findlay·, a 12-year veteran and
chairman of the Agriculture,
Insurance and Financial Institutions Committee, and
RalphS. Regula, R-Navarre, a
six,year veteran and chairman
of the fi;nvironmental Affairs
Committee, and Sen. Robin T.
Turner, R-Marion, chairman of
the Commerce and Labor
couple Committee,
lost a bid for reelection.

9 TO 9 DA,ILY
Q.OSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE

•'•'~V~"'.'o'il"i.?i.o;o.•.-,·,.~.-.o;

· ' · ' ·

,

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:Investment,
·dividends .both
..
: high in Scouting-pr~grams

.

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.. 2l-TheSunday1'imes.Seritinel,Sunday,Dec. J,J972

0db 0«,
"« ~)'$:: ''' 0~~:::-·:0:~:.:•:•~•:•:~:•},!·,:-:•:•:~:~:•:~:•:•,"•:•:•:•:•:0:•!•:•:•:••••••o',~l:o',O;•~O:.•:•W:•~·Q···~•N~~-~.•.h*
...•~.YN.
&gt;V oon
,._., • • • •
n , •••._,,._,._.,,;o;o:..;o"o"i"o'o 'i-"o

3ftc
"'11 •

"the now bank tha( ~ppreciate1 your bu.siness"

PLUS
TAX
INW.VA.

Mt(riber. Federal 0tpo!llt huurAnce Corporation

420 lHIID AVENUE

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

,/

'·
•'

Marriage Uceues
POMEROY - Allen TurneJ
Downie, 27, Pomeroy anr
Janet, Kay Baker Frank, '!1,
Athens; Pearlle F. Jewell, Jr.,
. 30, Rutland, and Mary Louise
Sigler, 19, Ru.tland i John
Anslin Elias, 18, Mason, and
Kathy Jane King, 18, Mld·
dleport: .

PK~

REGULAR $124.95

REGULAR 52''

~

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·.

...

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·~

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.

11- Tile s.dlyTimes·Sentlnel, Sunday, Dt&gt;c. 3, 1972

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o',O.t'ff..'~~.t'~"'F.N'R

'
-- ii
'
. others wearing, 'wouldn't it'!
More .excitin~ than time-lapse
If you can find pictures of Eskimos
photo~ruphy . · If you listen carefully,
or I.applanders tNalionai Geographic somelimc~ you CLin even hear it
magazines are gOOd sources, and I'm growing, like corn in July '
sure the !Jbrary has copies), notice
COI;D WINTER ·.AIR is inhow heavily decorated with bright vigorating. When your body gels so
wools their winter garments are. The
vigorous you can't stand it any more,
BY KATI MEEK
'rich colors are mental health insurance
Artlst-ia-Resldeoce
look for the. house with the gold windnws and y&lt;•u ' llli~d that your favorlie
GALUPOUS - No denying it, for them, and for us, too.
AUTUMN
.BROUGHT
US
gold
and
chair and afghan offer more c~mfort
winter has come to (;allia County.
Winter makes driving hazardous, red riverbanks ·apd hills in place of . and security than,you ever imagined.
AND REMEMBEn: without
bodies uncomfortable, and" fuel bills summ~r greens. Winter takes away
everything but black . Then , winlers, th~re could. be no springs.
high.
· Seems pretty grim, but winter iJ,n't crystallized rain called snow, piles up
everywhere; we see a world in con ~
• THERE IS A NEW LOOM in my
all bad - really - even for grownups.
trasls,
like
iblack
and
white
studio. It came in eight crates and
Here are some helpful hints on how to
boxes. This is the loom I've been saving
enjoy winter' from a grown-up who photograph.
.
Photographers
often
prefer
black
for since I first took up weaving. It is a
hasn't grown up, that is.
12-harness jack loom, and if that sounds
First hint: because one can't stay and while film to color fibn because it
like Greek, and you're curious, come
indoors all the time, dress to keep has greater dramatic potential. It may
warm. Wear wool. Wool is expensive, be easier to comprehend the real nature down to the studio. Explaining it to
yes; and wool doesn't thrive in washing of an object when the eyes and mind are · someone else helps me to know it better
too.
machines. But do·you know that wool not cluttered with color messages.
sheds dirt better than any other fiber? When the snow is on, take time to look
THERE IS A NEW EXHIBIT
opening today at the French Art
Wool is tpe only fiber that actually at the old, everyday world and see the
patterns of light and dark that change
Colony : "Contempor,a ry American
generates heal when wet.
l)'ith
the
wind
direction
and
tpe
snow
Graphics."
·
Pretty smart stuff, that wool, and a ·
definite a !!Set for enjoying a cold world . . plow.
I haven't seen the exhibit yet, and
Wool takes dye colors better than other
THEN THERE ARE TIMES like
know very little about graphic art, but
fibers and that brings us to the first last Tuesdy, when the fog gathered on
Graphics is two dime~sional printing.
source of delight in winter - the colors · cold branches and weeds to make hoarThat means pictures, words and :-,.
~.'
frost. If you get out early enough, you
wrapped around people.
designs on paper, the medium we're *i
Red inittens, purple sweaters, wine saw It growing. Hoar-frost happens so
familiar with through magazines. Hope *"
~·
and gold scarves and white caps; It quickly that if you get quite close, and
I can learn more at the show at French ~
would be sad. never to have such don't warm it with your breath, you
Art Colony, First Ave., open 1·5 ::::
.•&gt;
delightful things to wear, or to see can watch a crystal grow!
Saturday and Sunday; 9-3 Tuesday.
·:·~~.
""11ff~fl!;&gt;,:;~:::;··'$1$:»"•~·u..-..~.:.·.:.•;.'o'o'•'•"•Y•:."•'•'-:
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Notes from
·the Studio

'

are

l

Leadership jobs opened

in.Senate by elections

1 , • . • . • . • .• . • .

r--I Bea

I
'I

.

t ' ' '

I Of the Bend

TICKETS FOR

1HE

NEW 'YEAR'S

DANCE

AT
THEW. VA.
ARMY
NATIONAL ·
GUARD

ON SALE

AT THE ARMORY

MON. ntRU FRI.
9 AM TO 4 PM

'10

BAND WIU. BE
JAN HADDOX
MUSIC DEPT.

Favors &amp; Snacks
Furnished

I By Bob Hoeflich

C ' '1 I Filii IIIIo RM!I hrt """"tlllrida- . _ , ..

- .,., - - ~~~·

,

... ,

••.l(r.,"""- •zzac

I ... II"*IItw!P.. CorttrC.HSIIIIoROMI!P..
11
IIIJ.. -IIIII 141-1111 01,. Min, 111.. -

HM a "four for Fun" mini-vacation In any of ~he above
NHit parb. One tow price covers lodging for two nights •
IJIId Ill IMIIs from evenlna dinner on the day of arrival
lhnllllh luncll the third doy, (M~Is may be ordered from
1M llllftU,)

~®

Includes: 3 Breast Quarters with backs,
3 Leg Quarters with backs, ~ Pkgs.
Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

SOUTHERN STAR
SELECTED PORK
U. $. GOVT.INSPECTED
FAMILYPAK · ·

CHILDREN '1.25

lheir own expenses, and other
'
res!!!Jrces.
T!1e Council prepares an
operating budge\ to serve the
uni t.&lt;, and these funds come
from Uni ted Ways and thz
annual sustaining membership
enrollment among members,
pare nts, and friends of
Scouting.
Finally , Monk s~id , the
na ti o.nal o·rga nizalion c;oordi nates an~ stimulates the
pr o~ ram
nationally and
develops program materials.
These services are paid from
membership . fees and other
income that is put back into the
program .
Tile Tri-State Area Council is
a member agency of the United
Community Services in
Huntingto n and Boyd Coun ty
Community Chest , which
provide about 48 percent of the
local operating budget.

WINS lWICE
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) Mrs. Ruth DeVito of Sayreville
won $25 in New Jersey's daily
lottery recently.
She took first · prize in the
millionaire lottery drawing in
June, 1971.

.•1 to 9 SUNDAY
137 PINE STREET
MICHAEL SHAFER
MIDDLEPQRT- Michael
W. Shafer, formerly of
Middleport, bas been named
Associate Professional
Representative for Merck
Sharp &amp; Dohme, subarban
Philadelphia manufacturer
of pharmaceuticals and
biologicals. A graduate of
Marshall · University where
he received an A.B. degree
in Psychology,, Shafer Is
married to the former Adele ·
P. Sismondo ol New Haven.
They reside at 23845 Princeton Ave., Dearborn, Mich.
Shafer is the son of Mrs. Ray
R. Pickens and the grandson
of Mr. and Mrs. George
Hackett, Sr., all of Mid·
dleport.

GAlliPOUS, OHIO
700 WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
RWULAR

.

.

.APPIAN WAY PIZZA MIX

80XES.

PORK

~----~--------------~ Increase to

"at 0 V

'

Family Pa~ - 5·tils. or More,

9-11 Choll$ Per Pkg.

' is on us!"
the last one

"jic

lb.

BELL-VIEW

RICHTEX

LUCKY LEAF

APRICOT, PEACH &amp; PINEAPPLE

Preserves

Shortening

·~,APPLE

1-lb. 2-oL Jars

3-lb. Can

SAUCE
.1-lb. Cans

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL'S Future Farmers of America
took on a new project this year, selling fruit for the holiday
season. Response was good and the chapter is extending thanks
to the public for its help.

..........,

•

O~tw l/4
[;~

for

GRAPE JAM .•. ....•.•.••.•. • ,,.,•.,.. ,.,.,49c
SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY JAM ... ,.,.......,,77c
BLACKBERRY JELLY •... , ... ...•.,.......,., 75c
GRAPE JELLY .•. , .•• • ..••.••• ,........., •.-51c
WALNUT leo Crnm Tapping ••• , , , • , , , , , 5-or.Jar 54C
CHOC. FUDGE, CARMEL &amp;
BUTTERSCOTCH ,.. cr..m Topplno ••••• , ..,. ' " 36c

STOKELY'S VALUES
TOMATO $A UCE .• ....•.. , •...•. , ... con 12c
FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS .••• ,.,. can 29c
WHOLE KERNEL CORN •.•.••. ,,.,•. ,... con25c
FRUIT COCKTAIL ...•..•. , .... ·"•·,.... con31c
CATSUP ...... ., ..... ., ., . ., .........aot. 24c
SLICED Y.C. PEACHES •••.••••. , .,...... c•• 19c
FLEISCHMANN'S
CORN OIL

POIAIO CHIPS
14-oz.
Pkg.

I

lime charge."

I

I

l-Ib.
Pkg .

45~

·CHASE &amp; SIIBORI
COFFEE ··
2·1b.
Can

$177

REYNOLDS

LIQUID PLUIR

ALUMINUM FOIL

DRAIN Cl~NER

12"x 25Ft. 33~
· Roil

• HEINZ STRAINED

Ot.
Bot.

DETERGENT

JUICES
4-oz. Can 12~

4 ~:·55~

BO PEEP

DUICO
Hl•s
BLUEBERRY

4-oz. Jar

25~

Off

.Label

9~

AMMONIA
LEMON &amp; PINE SCENTED

DEODORANT SOAP

.FFII •1
13-oz.
Pkg.

55$

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Department of Transportation
Is proposing strict means of
enforcing a new law
prohibiting used car dealers
from turning back the mileage
indicator on vehicles. A trade
association representing
dealers praised the move.
The proposed rule , an·
nounced Friday , would require
lhe S.ller of a car to "make a
written disclosure concerning
the odometer mileage and its
The 1972 Motor Vehicle In· ·
formation and Cost Savings
Act makes it illegal to tamper
with the odometer to conceal
the true mileage. The Trans,
portation ' Department 's
proposal goes one step further
- requiring the seller to give
the buyer a written statement
to confirm the mileage.
If the new owner then
discovered that the odometer
had been tampered with, the
written statement would be
grounds
for
ctiminal
prosecution by the local U.S.
attorney's office, Transportation officials said.

FRES~P

BOLD

~1 -·

DROWSY
TALKING DOLL

NORTHERN
TOWELS
FOR

$'

$

99
EACH

PRICES GOOD
TODAY tHROUGH
SUNDAY, "
DEC. lOTH
G.E. 10 INCH

I

' ~ lt ••

.

GLADE
•

PORTA.COLOR II

AIR FRESHENERS

TELEVISION

5 FRAGRANCES

$

7 oz.

'
AEROSAL
CANS

··WHILE
QUANTITIES
LAST!

Odometer law
getting teeth

MATIEL'S

JUMBO ROLLS

BWE BONNET
•

AUTOMATIC

MARGARINE

CORN POPPER
H.B.

pkgs.

'

88

accuracy.11

89~

BABY FOODS

5-lb. 4-oL Pkg.

NAMED EPA ASSISTANt
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cincinnati business executive
•John W. Kroeger was appointed Friday as -ts!ant
director of the Ohio En·
vlronmental Protection Agency by Direct« Ira Whitman.
Kroeger, currently vice
Jll'tllident of the Frederick F.
Levey Co., Cincinnati,
ovenee Internal operaUCIIIII,
operallnB goals, methoda and
!l'OC*iures Whitman aald.

MARGARINE

69c

KEEBLER COOKIE FUTURES
Pecan Sandies ~~;.··
Coconut Chocolate Drops

Join NOW •.• we make
your last payment FREE!

DAN•DII

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
special salary study commission for elected state and
local officials recommended
Friday that the annual salaries
of state legislators be raised
from $12,750 to $14,000. The
commission, appointed by Gov.
John J. Gilligan, agreed to
submit its recommendation ih
an interm report to the
governor
and
General
Assembly immediately, so
action might be taken before
the end of the year.
Howard L. Collier of Toledo,
commission chairman 1 noted
tha t the $11,000 figure was
"well within" the II per cent
biennial pay increase ceiling
set by the federal Pay Board .
The commission also proposed
Increasing the .salaries of the
top leader in the House and the
Senate from $16,750 a year to
The commission vote was 42, with three members absent.
Voling in favor of the increase
were Collier, and former slate
Senator John H. Weeks of
Lakewood, both Republicans,
and Democratic members
Donald D. Day of Columbus
and James J. Gilvary of
Ketlering. Opposing the in·
crease on grounds they lacked
sufficient information about
the activities of legislators
were Democrat Dorothy M.
Reyn olds and Republican
Richard D. Rogovin , both of
Columbus.

.l

for

SMUCKER'S FEATURES

$14,000

$18,500.

CHRISTMAS ClUB

highly accessible to all Ohioans
affli cted with kidney disease."
Cashman said the current
'rate of in-patient treatment is
between $20,000 and $35,000.'
''Our intent will be to move
lrealment into the communities and the patients'
homes, thereby cutting the cost
down to $5,000 to $\0,000," he
explained. "The real answer,
however, is · the transplant
which is about $3,000 for one

-. . .

gallon.

PUMP ACTION
SHOT GUN

CLOROX
BLEACH

3 ROLL PKG.

CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP

.,

.. your.'wrmess

Valley

HAWAIIAN

PUNCH
1,Qt.
14:oz.

'

Can

Alaska's doctors, lawyers.
guides and bunters use tha
airplane to travel. Sorrie 500
airports dot the state.
\

PENNYFARE
U,S. GpVT. INSPECTED .

&lt;

PA'ITY ANN LEE, NINE·YEAR OLD daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, Gary Lee (the former Dorothy Howell, Pomeroy) of Elyria,
was a color guard with Edna Kaye's Steel City Strutters of
Lorain when the group appeared on nationwide television as a
part of the annual Girnbles' Thanksgiving parade. Patty was the
youngest member of the unit. She is the granddaughter of Ed·
ward Howeli,Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, and Betty Howell, Bailey
Run Road, near Pomeroy .

DAf!JitP,.,_AS
AND SON

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
JOIN US FOR OUR BUSINESSMAN'S BUFFET
MONDAY lHRU' FRIDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS
11:30 AM TO 2:00 PM. ALL YOU WANT TO
EAT FROM OUR BEAUTIFUL BUFFET.

BANANAS

fill

'. '

FamilyPak ChickenPa

SOUND-RIPE

BEEN AWAY OVERNIGHT LATELY?
Would you believe that Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hamrn, Minersville area residents, were away overnight for the first time in 21
years over the Thanksgiving holiday period? They spent a
greater part of the week with their son, Robert, and family in
Columbiana.

llllfl JIIUI' IIOIIclay durtns the week or on 1 weokend
~1M plio - • then once. The plln 1, avo liable In "th~
• _.. fOur 111/111 only, November 15 through March 31,

J.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

nalional organization.
The boy' pays a national
membership fee, buys his own
uniform. books, and equip·
ment, and pays dues into his
uni t treasury - preferably
earning the money for these
personal expenses.
His troop or pack pays its
way from the boys' weekly
dues and money earned
through approved projects.
Even
the
chartered
organization , which owns the
uni t, is responsible for a
meetin~ place, competent
volun teer leadership who pay

recommend

POMEROY - Mrs. Maxine Allensworth, formerly of Middleport, now of St. Albans, W. Vii., keeps right up on Meigs
County activities.
·
She's not alone , however. Other Meigs residents, Mildred
Asbury Moseley, Frances Pickens Drenner, Margaret Ball
Capehart, Florence Mackin Pauley and Phyllis Evans Given,
live in Maxine's area and you can bet that Pomeroy and Mid·
dleport are under much discussion.
Incidentally, Phyllis Evans Given has been appointed to the
post of permanent chairman of the membership committee of the
National Society of State Legislators. Phyllis is the daughter of
Mrs. Ethel Jones Evans of Pomeroy and the late Ray Evans. She
was elected Kanawha County Democrat delegate in 1970 and was
reelecte&lt;l again this year.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - State
Health Director Dr. John W
_Cashman appointed a 15:
member advisory committee
Friday to design and implement a state-wide plan to
make dialysis treatment and
transplant facilities available
to Ohioans suffering from
chronic kidney disease.
"Recent federal social
security legislation will finally
make treatment and trans·
plants for kidney disease
financially possible under
Medicare next July," Cashman
said. "ll is therefore necessary
to act now .to de,signate or
develop an aqequate number of
treatment and transplant
facilities and make them

: HUNTINGTON - Quality
: Scoutmg for boys in this area is
' fOStly in dollars but dividends
: are high in the 4,500 boys who
are getting a practical
: program
in
character
;development, citizenship
;training, and mental and
;physical fitness .
' Richard Monk, Tri-State·
; Area Council President, said
the cost to bring the BSA
program to boys in the council
is shared by the boy himself
his unit, the organization that
is chartered to use the
program, and the local and

ADULTS '1.95

I
I
I
I
I
I
II

Ohio to plan for dialysis

OFFER

We reserve tM rtghi 10 limltqutn1111~s on tlllftlftl lnlhll ad. Prlc.s effKtlve thru S.turdty. Dec. 9, lt72. Ncmt 10ld ta detlen.

1

'IllE POMEROY NATIONAL BANK will go for an old,
fashioned Christmas to wrap up the observance of its lOOth birthday year. ·
Bank employes are working now towards creating a
Christmas tree of 100 years ago. They are making strands of
popcorn and cranberries, crocheted bells and snowflakes, gilded
wishbones and walnuts, paper chains and lanterns and some
wooden birds have been purchased. This will all be used on a live
tree which employes will decorate on Tuesday evening. Lighting
on the tree will be new type lights resembling old fashioned
candles.
To further. wrap up their anniversary, employes will wear
their old-fashioned costumes on Saturday mornings, Dec. 16, 23:
and 30, and Christmas cookies and coffee will be served to the
An acre of desert may sup- public all three mornings.
port as m any as 100,000
beetles, among the most
CHUCK RIFFLE haS had on display at the Swisher-[,phse
abundant aruma! form in
Drug Store colored pictures taken of him and his deer killed.
arid lands.
Chuck got a deer on the first day out and that took care of
trudging for the rest of the deer season.

STATE RESORT PARKS

SUPER MARKETS

------- .--------------~,

I
COLUMBUS (UP!)- House new-found power in a way that I

Democrats have been ex· will keep everybody happy.
. periencing some difficulty
Lillie noticed, but just as
. dividing up the spoils of their real; are the troubles of Senate
President Pro Tempore
Theodore M. Gray; R-Piqua,
who has only one vote more
than a working majority and is
losing eight senators, several
in key positions, with an
aggregate of 83 years of Senate
service.
Five committee chair·
manships will open up, and
Gray; as party leader, will
!)ave the unenviable responsibility for restructuring the
.
committee system and
selecting capable leaders.
The Senate is the last hope of
Republicans as far as the
legislative process is concerned. Democrats will be in
control of the House and Gov.
.John J. Gilligan, also very
muc a
mocrat, is downstairs.
So it )s Important for Gray to
have committee chairmen that
know their way around and do
not make mistakes.
Gone are Sens. Robert R
Shaw, R.Columbus, chairman
of the Finance Committee with
20 years' service; Oakley C.
Collins, R-Ironton, chairman of
the Education Committee with
18 years' in the Senate;
promoted to Congress are
Sens. Tennyson Guyer, R·
Findlay·, a 12-year veteran and
chairman of the Agriculture,
Insurance and Financial Institutions Committee, and
RalphS. Regula, R-Navarre, a
six,year veteran and chairman
of the fi;nvironmental Affairs
Committee, and Sen. Robin T.
Turner, R-Marion, chairman of
the Commerce and Labor
couple Committee,
lost a bid for reelection.

9 TO 9 DA,ILY
Q.OSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE

•'•'~V~"'.'o'il"i.?i.o;o.•.-,·,.~.-.o;

· ' · ' ·

,

..

.

'

~.~.

·

:Investment,
·dividends .both
..
: high in Scouting-pr~grams

.

......-n;o;·~.-

t

.. 2l-TheSunday1'imes.Seritinel,Sunday,Dec. J,J972

0db 0«,
"« ~)'$:: ''' 0~~:::-·:0:~:.:•:•~•:•:~:•},!·,:-:•:•:~:~:•:~:•:•,"•:•:•:•:•:0:•!•:•:•:••••••o',~l:o',O;•~O:.•:•W:•~·Q···~•N~~-~.•.h*
...•~.YN.
&gt;V oon
,._., • • • •
n , •••._,,._,._.,,;o;o:..;o"o"i"o'o 'i-"o

3ftc
"'11 •

"the now bank tha( ~ppreciate1 your bu.siness"

PLUS
TAX
INW.VA.

Mt(riber. Federal 0tpo!llt huurAnce Corporation

420 lHIID AVENUE

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

,/

'·
•'

Marriage Uceues
POMEROY - Allen TurneJ
Downie, 27, Pomeroy anr
Janet, Kay Baker Frank, '!1,
Athens; Pearlle F. Jewell, Jr.,
. 30, Rutland, and Mary Louise
Sigler, 19, Ru.tland i John
Anslin Elias, 18, Mason, and
Kathy Jane King, 18, Mld·
dleport: .

PK~

REGULAR $124.95

REGULAR 52''

~

�-·

,•

... .
22- The Sundl)' Tlmea ·Sentinel, Suoday. Dec, 3, 1972

~Salem
&lt;

~

'

.

Center pupils in Christmas Musi.cal play Monday night.
'

•

•

•

•

I

, ··

'

'•

ra·n
t~W•IIIt 1172- TIIIt lrq1r
C1. ltr•s IN Pritts Ctt•
UJ,. Dtrt..et II~. 1172-

I

THE TOY BANO PLAYERS, are back row, 1-r, Cindy
Priddy, Keith Barrett, Mary Sturgeon, Gloria Bryant, Larry
Rmnine, Paul Janey, Jimmy Spires, David Barr, Kenny
Thomas, Jeff Gilkey, Melody Bumem, Bryan Hi~ and
Terina Johnston, front row are second graders wlj(l will

"'

r

particlpaie, 1-r, Harold Fetty, Timmy Spires, Shirley McDonald, Gene Klein, Jtmmy Metheny, Jeanette Freemllll,
Jiernard Romine, Carl White, Rocky Johnson, Keith Johnston, Gloria Barrett, Pat Bryant, Mike Willford, Greg
Burnem and Tammy Ward,

Wt rlltl'ft tilt ,,._ It
hl!li1 'llllllilitl . Ntlt Stt•

t• •ulm.

!DME OF THE Gallipolis studen~Jn a mini art course are, standing, I tor, Debbie Bur·
nette, Tonia McCoy, Teresa Stevens; Sandy Brown and Karen Snyder; sitting, Debbie Burnell,
Penny Skidmore, Sberri Evans, and Mrs. Kati Mee~ and daughter,

MAKING UP THE CHOIR in the musical play "Christmas Comes to Our School" are these pupils of the
third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades,

Second mini ·

Curtain
•
to nse
at 7:30

I

'

Anna E. Turner.
The program will open with a,
welcome by Sharon·Shultz. The
first grade will present vocally
"Jingle Bells," "Up on the
Houae Top," and "Rudolph the

,.

'KEITH.GOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE
November 28, 1972
Standings:
Team
Won Lost
No.3
70 34
No, 5
68 36
No.8
68 36
No, 2
61&gt; 38
No, 12
60 «
No.4
57 47
No. 6
56 A8
No, 14
56 A8
No.9
54 so
No. 11
50 s.1
No, 13
43 61
No, 1
38 66

U
· 16

~ N~10

,,No.7

l
'

.I

'
j

I

mas."
Born," and "Little. Drummer
The third, fourth, fifth and Boy", The fourth grade will
sixth grades will present the present three vocal numbers,
Christmas story , The third nAwayin a Manger," "Go Tell
grade will present vocally It On A Mountain," and "Do
" Joseph Dearest", "~e Is You Hear What I Hear."
The fifth grade will sing
"Hark the Herald Angels
Sing," ''One for the Llitle Bitty.
Baby," and "Morning CaroL"
Ma)ling up the choir are:
Third Grade -Mike Adkins,
Karen Barrett, Eddie Burnem,
Tammy Fetty, Shari Freeman,
Patricia Kunath, Chris Lee,
Mark McGuire, Jimmy

SALEM CENTER ·- A ,
musical play "Christmas •'
Comes to Our School" under
the dir!lction of Mrs. Maurita
Miller will be presented by
pupils of Salem Center
Elementary Monday at 7:30
p,m, at the schooL
Other staff members
assisting Mrs. Miller are Mrs.
Roberta Wilson, principal, and
Mrs. Olive ' Page, Mrs. Unda
McManus, Mrs. Lind!' Hunrer,
Mrs, Wykle Whitley and Mrs,

Local Bowling

I

Red Nosed Reindeer,"
The second grade will ,do a
choral reading, "Waiting'.' and
present vocally, "Santa Claus
is Coming to Town", and "We
Wish You A Merry Christ-

NATIVITY SCEN!ii -Places lil 'the Nativity scene are played by front row, 1-r, David
Thornton, DoUglas Gloyd and Paul Matson, portraying kings, Mary portrayed by Shirley
Smith, Donkey protrayed by Ronnie Dugan, Cow portrayed by Craig Swick and Sheep by Gary
Holliday; bsck row, Eugene &amp;nlth and Ricky Adkins, portraying shepherds, Joseph portrayed
by Randy Tackett, Dennis Puckett, Billy Withrow and Dennis Grant portraying shepherds. The
play will be presented Monday nightattheschoolat 7:30p.m.
·

GIVE lHEM A

Early Thursday Mloed
November 16, 19~2

Mr, and Mrs.
Allay Cats
· .'
AllintheFamlly
Lucl&lt;y Strll&lt;ers
ThemandU•

Four Joken

Pis
53
S2
40
36
31

28

T•m High • Series-Alley
Catl2132, Lucky Strikers 2102.
T..,. High Gam.-.AII In
1M Flmlly 741, Lucky Slrlken
724.
Min's hiGh strltl - Ray
R•dl !97, Wally Hatfield 517.
Min's high game - Ray
45, GtnOt Murray 214,
•s high 1111'111 - Barb

Forty-one of the 50 United
States are larger than
Switzerland, a country in
which linguists ,have listed
more than 70 dialects.

'

In maple, black' or white

e CHAIRS; All Styles
' and Colors .

Several business career
All VA

Gallipolis
·Business College ..
36 Locust
State Req .

Gallipolis

"

N•. ?1 . ~· '30328

htly
l.!lnOIIrtlh I 6o, S1n11v 1Cor11

1!0,

eBOOKCASES
'
• Sofa·Throw Cushions ·
e MIRRORS e PICTURES·
.
.
e DESKS e HASSOCKS
-- "
'

.

Hour.~

.e

sted.... q aqhetti
~~~

BOUSE

Mon., Tun,, Wed,, Thun,··
II A.M. to 10 P.M .
Fri. &amp; Sal··11 A.M, to 1.1 P.M.

e TABLES, COFFEE , STEP
&amp;' COCKTAIL
e GUN CABINETS

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

Italian Spaghetti
SPAGHET.TI DINNER with Meat Sauce ,. , , , , , , , , ... , 1 .95
RAVIOLI DINNI!R with Meat Sauce , . , . , , , , , , , , , , , , 2.25
, Includes: Sol ad and Drink •.• Rye &amp; French Bread

.Dinners ..
FILET MIGNON, Wrapped wtth Bacon , . , , • , , , . , , , ,
T-BONE STEAK, ( 16 oz.) U.S. Prime . , . , . . . . . . . . . . .
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce .. , , . , .. , , , , .
HOME-BAKED HAM, Hawaiian Pineapple Ring . ... ..
ALLEY OF WHITE FISH, Tortor:Sauce ! ... , , , . , .. , . , .
GRILLED CUBESTEAK , , , , , , . , , , . , , ... , , .
Entree Include• Solod, Vegetable,' ond Odnk

':. Chili,.n'a Portion' Available·

POLE lAMPS

And All OtherTypes

Cioted Sunday

•

Mora, Redovian elected

..

December 23rd Delivery Guaranteed if Purchased Now!

Meigs Local Teachers' Association to represent Meigs Local at
I the Ohio Education Association Representative Assembly to be
''~\
I held December 6-9 in Cincinnati.
Mora has taught in the district eight years after receiving a
&gt;:Tames Wheaton
Bachelor of Science degree from Rio Grande College and a
-~~·
Master of Education degree from Ohio University, For the past
'&lt;: GALLIPOLIS - James·'' two summers he has attended the National Science Foundation's
;Wheaton, 35, a native of Gallia Mathematics Institute at the University of Vermont. He is
..CoUI1ty, died as a result of presently teaching Mathematics at Meigs High SchooL Mora
'injuries suffered about 4 a.rri, served. as president of the teachers' association for the school
d~y in ~n ·~u!Qmobile ac'"""
. ., . . ,~" 1 ,- . , . . .~ ~···
tidi!!\t at Georgesville, OHio, yearl~9.
' 'Red6VIan haS been a teacher and counselor in the district
near''colunibus,
since 1960. He served in the U.S, Army three and a half years. He
He was born Oct. 5, 1937, in received his Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of
, :Morgan Twp. , (Bidwell), son of
Education ~egree from Ohio University. He has been an English
'the late Joe Wheaton, and Mrs,
··Anna Wheaton , who survives teach~ and librarian, and for two years directed the Occupational Work Adjustment class at Meigs HighSchooL He is
'and resides in Columbus.
presently a guidance counselor at the junior and senior high
~ Mr. Wheaton, a resident of
peorgesville. was employed by schools.
a Columbus trucking firm .
;, ~ He is survived by his wife,
daughters, Mrs, · Evelyn
· ~hirley; three daughters,
Simmons and Mrs . Mary
t aylene, Rhonda and Court· William Harry Jones, 76, of Holliday, both of North
ey, all at home; a brother,
Olmstead; Mrs. June Estep of
Wade, Grove City; and two North Olmstead, Ohio, died Rupert and Mrs, Ruby Wyant
, ~isters , Helen Taylor, Texas, Thursday at his home. He was of Huntington; sons, Roy and
tlie father of Roy Jones of New
i nd Mildred ,Barnes, MidHaven and Joseph Jones of Joseph, and Thurman, the
8leport.
latter of Olmstead; sisters,
Mason.
l, Funeral services will be held ·
I'; I
Mr. Jones lived in North Mrs . Lola Lee of Saltville, Va.,
•at Skillman Funeral Home,
Olmstead seven years and was and Miss Ida Jones of Quarry,
~Me chanicsburg , at 2 p,m ,
a member of the Moose Lodge Va.; a brother, James of
'tun day . Burial will be in
and
·Brotherhood
of Saltville; 16 grandchildren and
.:Mechanicsburg Cemetery.
Locomotive Engineers. He was five great-grandchildren,
The body is at Wallacea retired employ~ of the c and
I ,,
Wallace Funeral Home at
0 Railroad,
~t
.
Rainelle,
W.Va., where the
Survivors include the wife,
•1 Larry K. Lee
deceased
formerly
lived.
Etta
Huffman
Jones;
\

siitford

4.95
4.95

WE CARRY
OUR OWN

3.25

ACCOUNTS

2.25
2.25
1.95

• Use Our Christmas Lay-Away

·-I

I

COUCH, CHAIR
AND OTTOMAN ,
Approxlmately .S500 Veluo.
Will be given away Sat., l)ec, ·
23rd at 2 p.m, Como In, browse
around and register, No

intheS...

------------~
KROGER I

purdtaM

.......

-rv. , '

I

,.. ,~ "'"--

J-

.........,.....,.....,.,,
....
,
~

N--

I
I

Is....

;

c~

-.No
You MU,I,l Be 18

•

I ,_

YeQot

;
I
I

Ole! or Old ,,

........ Ct . • ...,.,_ ..... ""' ,_.lito ... ,... .......

WI~-. Mil IN ""11..

IH

.

'

·-----------------~

F,9llowing Items Ar,¥~:Exclusiv.e. Fr0111 YQur

Supers·tore Spectalty Departm.ents

Gourmet Specials
Lyndcle Smo~ed

Oysters
~::·7

s,-

German Speda/s.
Chompignon

Brie Cheese
Camebert Cheese
Chompignon

., Sorolll Fancy

St10

Candy

4'12·•··
Pkg,

••

4'1Box
•····$145
Sorotti Fancy

Asparagus
1

Imported Cand

•·~t·••·
S110
Pkg .

lyndale White

Candy

~~:··99i'

9'/t •Ol,
Box

Wild Rice

for Soup or Oip

Knorr Leek Soup

. :~:~·$219

2'4·01,45

DEVELOPMENT CORP.
NEW HOMES FOR SALE

SPLIT LEVEL

oLD

·

"

4 BR, 2 baths, Fa$ "'"m, Iota I eledric with Will iamson
Heating and C!l
"''..,ing, General Eledrlc
:aped, conc"!'te drive &amp;
appliances, full·,
streets, 2v2 car garag•, • .
lcony, lot 75x175, county

' water. Tara sewer system.

II-LEVEL
3 Bedroom, J bath room s, 2 car garage , elecfr}c f~rced 'a ir

furnace and air conditioner. family room , 14 x26 master
bedroom, diQing balcony.

.SOUTHERN COLONIAL

o£·

A•sorte~·3d~o~r~~~~~

3 BR, 21t2 biths, fl$ 11 " room , basement, total elect. ric
with Williamson r
••ntra l air conditioning ,
General E,l eclrlc'
D ,arpeled, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; streel~. _
Jrage, dining balcony,
lot 9Sx175, county water, Tara &gt;o.Her system.

Viva Towels·

FIVE LEVELS
2111

baths, 2 car g,arage, 12x24 livinO" room,

Building Sites Available.
Ki ngsberry Homes built to fit
specifications.
,
All Underground Utilities Provided .

rolls$
any

FOR INFORMATION OR APPOINTMENT
.367-7250
ADI)ISON, OHIO

I,

•

'

.

$279

Soup

lyndole

total eledrlc family room : flrep}ace .

James (Skip) Neal, Sr., 74,
311·7tb Street, Point Pleuant,
died at 8:351hla lll4ll'llinlat hll
·flame following a brief lllna:
Till bixly Ia at lbe t\'owHIIillll Fiinenl Bema frum

I'I

ENTRY BLANK

Pkg.

3 Bedrooms,

James Neal

WAGO

Fill Out lntry llank aft This
Page and D•poslt ht lox ,ovlded

I

I
POMEROY - John Mora and John Redovian, faculty
I members at Meigs High School, were elected recently by the

• CLIFTON, W. Va . - Army
•,Private Larry Keith Lee, 20,
Clifton, recenUy assigned to
.:the 7th Engineer Brigade in
Heilbronn , Germany, died
, Nov, 29 in Germany, Pvt. Lee
.was born May 21, 1952, in
Mason. the son of James and
Doris Lee of Clifton, who
survive,
Pvt. Lee is also survived by
'his wife, Debra Gibbs Lee; one
daughter, Keith Ann; a sister,
·Mrs. Roger (Marsha) Klein ,
Middleport; three brothers,
Kenneth of Mason, and James
and Daniel, both of Clifton; his
grandfather, Paul Davis ,
Athens, and his grandmother,
Mary Davis, Clifton.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Foglesong
Funeral Home pending arrival
of the body,
Pvt. Lee was a bucket loader
operator in Company A of the
tirigade 's 327th Engineer
Battalion. He entered the
Army in May, completed bssic .
training at Ft. Knox, Ky.,.and
was last stationed at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo. He attended Wahama High Schl50t

e RECORD CABINm

Write, tall or Visit for free
bulletin of courses.

·Enter Now!
Enter Often!
Drawing
Dec. 9,1972

JOHN REDOVIAN

JOHN MORA

.....

e FARMHOUSE
ROCKERS
In maple

WINTER QUART-ER
BEGINS DEC, 11

7

GALLIPOLIS - Second in a
series of mini art courses got
underway Thursday in the
Gallipolis City Schools.
Malcolm B. Orebaugh,
director of guidance, said the
courses.are under the direction
. of Mrs. Kati Meek, artist-inresidence at Washington
,, SchooL Mrs. Meek's specialties
are ceramics and weaving.
~ The first mini art course was
,.: laken by approximately 40
•~ upils in the first, second, third
.:.and fourth period. The second
': ':'course is for pupils in the fifth,
' ,sixth and seventh periods,

William Jones

e BOSTON ROCKERS

You Can Still Enter
College In '72

411. Belly Langstrelh

IIIII Dllnt Hawley IH.
Women• a hlah ~me-

·."·:)

• STRATOLOUNGER RECLINERS

•

game?"

[l

'

· NARRATORS OF1he play are, front row, 1-r, Mary Colwell, Donna Metheney, Marvelea
Brown, Joyce Stewart, Brenda Smith and Robie Bryant; back row, Patty Dyer, Valorie
Matson, Clnda Davis, Sbaron Shultz, Ricky McCieUan andBrynn Sutphin,

Second High Series - Mary
Voss 48~.
·
Team ' High Game Dorothy's Pinnettes 815.
Team High Series - King
Bulld~rs Supply 2248,

•
m
progress

-

WILL.HOLD 'TIL CHRISTMAS

532,

'

D
h
':~11
eat s

10% DOWN

S.

,

, ·I
"I

.

courses available approved,

I

J-A.-;~;--~ Meigs representatives

EMPIRE

WASHERS, DRYERS,
SWEEPER
, DISHWASHERS,
This 011i$1ri1as
TRASH MASHERS,
REFRIGERATORS,
~e·
· ~~
·ii;,
~ .. ~~·
..
RANGES, .FREEZERS. ~.

Morning Glories
November 21,1972
Gibb's Grocery
62
Dick's Grocery
58
Newell Sunoco
51
G&amp;J Auto Paris
42
Spencer's Market
~0
Excelsior 011 Co.
3~
High Ind. Game - April •
Smllh 175; Ann Radford 172 ·
High Series - D. Grale and
Korn 455 : Margaret Follrod
448,
Team High Game - Spen.
co r's Market 790; G. &amp; J, Auto
Parts 2179,

'

,,

HOOVER

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Early Bird
League
Nov,22, m2
Standings
Team
W, L,
Dorothy 's Pinnelles
80 24
King Builders Supply
62 42
R. H. Rawlings
40 ~~
Bertha 's Grocery
50 5~
Royal Crown
32 72
Evelyn's Grocery
28 76
High Individual Game
Lois Pauley 217,
Second High Ind . Game Louise Harrison 179.
High Series - Lois Pauley

art class is

·'

THE

*

*

n

Other 200 games rolled
Tuesday nlghlwere: BOb Teed,
· 218; Larry Bragg (sub) 232;
, Gilbert Meal, 200: Steve
Cartoir, 202; Jack Janey, 212;
Burl Cook 221 and 202; and Bill
Johnson. 201.
Also, a note to Mary Look ado
- " Don'! give up, Mary ,,
remember lhe last night las!
yeer when you rolled that high

Johnson, John VanMeter, Billy
Sixth Grade - Ricky Adkins,
• Dyer, and Terry Hutton,
Teresa Brogan, Marvelea
Fifth Grade - Debbie Brown, Mary Colwell, Cinda
Adkins, Saundra Burnem, Davis, Ronnie Dugan, Patricia
Vickie Garnes, Kay Jacks, Dyer, Douglas Gloyd, Gary
Linda Jacks, Penny Jacks, Holliday, Dennis Grant,
Lanny Longstreth, Paul Valerie Matson, Ricky McMatson, Floyd McClellan, Clellan, ·Donna Metheney,
Michael McGuire, Barbara Ricky Pridd)', Dennis Puckett,
Peyton, Darlene Priddy, Kyle Sharon Shultz, Brenda Smith,
Rupe, Tammy Shuler, Jill Eugene Smith, Shirley Smith,
Smith, John Sturgeon, Paul Joyce Stewart, Kathleen
Sturgeon, David Thornton, Sturgeon, Craig SWick, RanGreg Walker, Teresa White, dall Tackett, Robie Bryant,
Van Willford, Anna Bryant, Billy Withrow, and Brynn
and Mike Withrow.
· SUtphin.

FROM

18

On Nov , 28, 1972. Team 3 spill
' 8 points with Team 2. Sieve
Carter was high lor Team 3
with 531 pins. and Betty Merry
was high lor Team 2 with 540
pins.
Team 4 took 6 points from
Team 5. Jack Janey was high
.... ,qr; Team , ~ with 582 pins, and
Buri ' CO&lt;il&lt; was high for Team 5
with 603 pins.
Team 8 took 8 points from
Team 1, Louise Baird was high
for Team 6 wilh 488 pins and
Ora Baird was high for Team 1
with 521 pins.
Team 6 took 8 points from
Team 12, John Fuller was high
for Team 6 with 526 pins and
Dave Holley was high for Team
12 wilh 511 pins,
Team 11 look 8 points from
Team 7, Bill Johnson was high
for Team 11 with 556 pins and
Waller Allie was high lor Team
7 with 440 pins,
Team 14 took 8 points from
Team, 10, Helen Oseland was
high for Team 14 with 568 pins
and Bob Teed was high for
Team 10 with 539 pins.
.
Team 13 look 6 polnls from
Team 9. Wayne Shaver was
high tor Team 13 wllh 457 pins
and Helen Thomas (sub) was
high for Team 9 with 442 pins.
High single game tor the
ladies for the evening was 216
pins held by Belly Merry and
for the men was 232 pins held
by Larry Bragg (sub) ,
High series for the ladles was
568 total pins, held by Helen
Oseland and for. the men 603
total pins held by Burl Cook,
Scores were high on Tuesday
night as Belly N\errv of Team 2
&gt;;et a new high fi&gt;r single game
for the season ol216 pins. Belly
rolled a 201 the previous week,
which we failed to note
(apologies to you, Belly l and
this week had a series of 540
which was second lo Helen
Oseland's high series of 568
which Included a 209 game,
Louise Baird who ~olds an
average of 122, rolled a 210
game and had a high series of

••

Peyton. Bonnie Smith, CurtiSs
Smith, Mary Smith, Lawrence
Sullivan, Timmy Tackett,
Dennis Thornton and Barbara
Shuler,
Fourth Grade - Wesley
Withrow, Barbara Mowery,
Katrena Hale; Teresa Fetty,
Sandy Herdman, Mary Matson, Sheila Fetty, Walter
Garnes, Dwight Sturgeon,
Charles Stewart, Tammy
Kunath, Patti Dugan, Annette
Romine, Joyce Janey, Dean
Colwell, Kelly Thomas, Dennis
Shuler, Floyd.Holliday, Stoney

,

�-·

,•

... .
22- The Sundl)' Tlmea ·Sentinel, Suoday. Dec, 3, 1972

~Salem
&lt;

~

'

.

Center pupils in Christmas Musi.cal play Monday night.
'

•

•

•

•

I

, ··

'

'•

ra·n
t~W•IIIt 1172- TIIIt lrq1r
C1. ltr•s IN Pritts Ctt•
UJ,. Dtrt..et II~. 1172-

I

THE TOY BANO PLAYERS, are back row, 1-r, Cindy
Priddy, Keith Barrett, Mary Sturgeon, Gloria Bryant, Larry
Rmnine, Paul Janey, Jimmy Spires, David Barr, Kenny
Thomas, Jeff Gilkey, Melody Bumem, Bryan Hi~ and
Terina Johnston, front row are second graders wlj(l will

"'

r

particlpaie, 1-r, Harold Fetty, Timmy Spires, Shirley McDonald, Gene Klein, Jtmmy Metheny, Jeanette Freemllll,
Jiernard Romine, Carl White, Rocky Johnson, Keith Johnston, Gloria Barrett, Pat Bryant, Mike Willford, Greg
Burnem and Tammy Ward,

Wt rlltl'ft tilt ,,._ It
hl!li1 'llllllilitl . Ntlt Stt•

t• •ulm.

!DME OF THE Gallipolis studen~Jn a mini art course are, standing, I tor, Debbie Bur·
nette, Tonia McCoy, Teresa Stevens; Sandy Brown and Karen Snyder; sitting, Debbie Burnell,
Penny Skidmore, Sberri Evans, and Mrs. Kati Mee~ and daughter,

MAKING UP THE CHOIR in the musical play "Christmas Comes to Our School" are these pupils of the
third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades,

Second mini ·

Curtain
•
to nse
at 7:30

I

'

Anna E. Turner.
The program will open with a,
welcome by Sharon·Shultz. The
first grade will present vocally
"Jingle Bells," "Up on the
Houae Top," and "Rudolph the

,.

'KEITH.GOBLE FORD
BOWLING LEAGUE
November 28, 1972
Standings:
Team
Won Lost
No.3
70 34
No, 5
68 36
No.8
68 36
No, 2
61&gt; 38
No, 12
60 «
No.4
57 47
No. 6
56 A8
No, 14
56 A8
No.9
54 so
No. 11
50 s.1
No, 13
43 61
No, 1
38 66

U
· 16

~ N~10

,,No.7

l
'

.I

'
j

I

mas."
Born," and "Little. Drummer
The third, fourth, fifth and Boy", The fourth grade will
sixth grades will present the present three vocal numbers,
Christmas story , The third nAwayin a Manger," "Go Tell
grade will present vocally It On A Mountain," and "Do
" Joseph Dearest", "~e Is You Hear What I Hear."
The fifth grade will sing
"Hark the Herald Angels
Sing," ''One for the Llitle Bitty.
Baby," and "Morning CaroL"
Ma)ling up the choir are:
Third Grade -Mike Adkins,
Karen Barrett, Eddie Burnem,
Tammy Fetty, Shari Freeman,
Patricia Kunath, Chris Lee,
Mark McGuire, Jimmy

SALEM CENTER ·- A ,
musical play "Christmas •'
Comes to Our School" under
the dir!lction of Mrs. Maurita
Miller will be presented by
pupils of Salem Center
Elementary Monday at 7:30
p,m, at the schooL
Other staff members
assisting Mrs. Miller are Mrs.
Roberta Wilson, principal, and
Mrs. Olive ' Page, Mrs. Unda
McManus, Mrs. Lind!' Hunrer,
Mrs, Wykle Whitley and Mrs,

Local Bowling

I

Red Nosed Reindeer,"
The second grade will ,do a
choral reading, "Waiting'.' and
present vocally, "Santa Claus
is Coming to Town", and "We
Wish You A Merry Christ-

NATIVITY SCEN!ii -Places lil 'the Nativity scene are played by front row, 1-r, David
Thornton, DoUglas Gloyd and Paul Matson, portraying kings, Mary portrayed by Shirley
Smith, Donkey protrayed by Ronnie Dugan, Cow portrayed by Craig Swick and Sheep by Gary
Holliday; bsck row, Eugene &amp;nlth and Ricky Adkins, portraying shepherds, Joseph portrayed
by Randy Tackett, Dennis Puckett, Billy Withrow and Dennis Grant portraying shepherds. The
play will be presented Monday nightattheschoolat 7:30p.m.
·

GIVE lHEM A

Early Thursday Mloed
November 16, 19~2

Mr, and Mrs.
Allay Cats
· .'
AllintheFamlly
Lucl&lt;y Strll&lt;ers
ThemandU•

Four Joken

Pis
53
S2
40
36
31

28

T•m High • Series-Alley
Catl2132, Lucky Strikers 2102.
T..,. High Gam.-.AII In
1M Flmlly 741, Lucky Slrlken
724.
Min's hiGh strltl - Ray
R•dl !97, Wally Hatfield 517.
Min's high game - Ray
45, GtnOt Murray 214,
•s high 1111'111 - Barb

Forty-one of the 50 United
States are larger than
Switzerland, a country in
which linguists ,have listed
more than 70 dialects.

'

In maple, black' or white

e CHAIRS; All Styles
' and Colors .

Several business career
All VA

Gallipolis
·Business College ..
36 Locust
State Req .

Gallipolis

"

N•. ?1 . ~· '30328

htly
l.!lnOIIrtlh I 6o, S1n11v 1Cor11

1!0,

eBOOKCASES
'
• Sofa·Throw Cushions ·
e MIRRORS e PICTURES·
.
.
e DESKS e HASSOCKS
-- "
'

.

Hour.~

.e

sted.... q aqhetti
~~~

BOUSE

Mon., Tun,, Wed,, Thun,··
II A.M. to 10 P.M .
Fri. &amp; Sal··11 A.M, to 1.1 P.M.

e TABLES, COFFEE , STEP
&amp;' COCKTAIL
e GUN CABINETS

HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

Italian Spaghetti
SPAGHET.TI DINNER with Meat Sauce ,. , , , , , , , , ... , 1 .95
RAVIOLI DINNI!R with Meat Sauce , . , . , , , , , , , , , , , , 2.25
, Includes: Sol ad and Drink •.• Rye &amp; French Bread

.Dinners ..
FILET MIGNON, Wrapped wtth Bacon , . , , • , , , . , , , ,
T-BONE STEAK, ( 16 oz.) U.S. Prime . , . , . . . . . . . . . . .
GOLDEN FRIED SHRIMP, Tartar Sauce .. , , . , .. , , , , .
HOME-BAKED HAM, Hawaiian Pineapple Ring . ... ..
ALLEY OF WHITE FISH, Tortor:Sauce ! ... , , , . , .. , . , .
GRILLED CUBESTEAK , , , , , , . , , , . , , ... , , .
Entree Include• Solod, Vegetable,' ond Odnk

':. Chili,.n'a Portion' Available·

POLE lAMPS

And All OtherTypes

Cioted Sunday

•

Mora, Redovian elected

..

December 23rd Delivery Guaranteed if Purchased Now!

Meigs Local Teachers' Association to represent Meigs Local at
I the Ohio Education Association Representative Assembly to be
''~\
I held December 6-9 in Cincinnati.
Mora has taught in the district eight years after receiving a
&gt;:Tames Wheaton
Bachelor of Science degree from Rio Grande College and a
-~~·
Master of Education degree from Ohio University, For the past
'&lt;: GALLIPOLIS - James·'' two summers he has attended the National Science Foundation's
;Wheaton, 35, a native of Gallia Mathematics Institute at the University of Vermont. He is
..CoUI1ty, died as a result of presently teaching Mathematics at Meigs High SchooL Mora
'injuries suffered about 4 a.rri, served. as president of the teachers' association for the school
d~y in ~n ·~u!Qmobile ac'"""
. ., . . ,~" 1 ,- . , . . .~ ~···
tidi!!\t at Georgesville, OHio, yearl~9.
' 'Red6VIan haS been a teacher and counselor in the district
near''colunibus,
since 1960. He served in the U.S, Army three and a half years. He
He was born Oct. 5, 1937, in received his Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of
, :Morgan Twp. , (Bidwell), son of
Education ~egree from Ohio University. He has been an English
'the late Joe Wheaton, and Mrs,
··Anna Wheaton , who survives teach~ and librarian, and for two years directed the Occupational Work Adjustment class at Meigs HighSchooL He is
'and resides in Columbus.
presently a guidance counselor at the junior and senior high
~ Mr. Wheaton, a resident of
peorgesville. was employed by schools.
a Columbus trucking firm .
;, ~ He is survived by his wife,
daughters, Mrs, · Evelyn
· ~hirley; three daughters,
Simmons and Mrs . Mary
t aylene, Rhonda and Court· William Harry Jones, 76, of Holliday, both of North
ey, all at home; a brother,
Olmstead; Mrs. June Estep of
Wade, Grove City; and two North Olmstead, Ohio, died Rupert and Mrs, Ruby Wyant
, ~isters , Helen Taylor, Texas, Thursday at his home. He was of Huntington; sons, Roy and
tlie father of Roy Jones of New
i nd Mildred ,Barnes, MidHaven and Joseph Jones of Joseph, and Thurman, the
8leport.
latter of Olmstead; sisters,
Mason.
l, Funeral services will be held ·
I'; I
Mr. Jones lived in North Mrs . Lola Lee of Saltville, Va.,
•at Skillman Funeral Home,
Olmstead seven years and was and Miss Ida Jones of Quarry,
~Me chanicsburg , at 2 p,m ,
a member of the Moose Lodge Va.; a brother, James of
'tun day . Burial will be in
and
·Brotherhood
of Saltville; 16 grandchildren and
.:Mechanicsburg Cemetery.
Locomotive Engineers. He was five great-grandchildren,
The body is at Wallacea retired employ~ of the c and
I ,,
Wallace Funeral Home at
0 Railroad,
~t
.
Rainelle,
W.Va., where the
Survivors include the wife,
•1 Larry K. Lee
deceased
formerly
lived.
Etta
Huffman
Jones;
\

siitford

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·-I

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AND OTTOMAN ,
Approxlmately .S500 Veluo.
Will be given away Sat., l)ec, ·
23rd at 2 p.m, Como In, browse
around and register, No

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Gourmet Specials
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James (Skip) Neal, Sr., 74,
311·7tb Street, Point Pleuant,
died at 8:351hla lll4ll'llinlat hll
·flame following a brief lllna:
Till bixly Ia at lbe t\'owHIIillll Fiinenl Bema frum

I'I

ENTRY BLANK

Pkg.

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James Neal

WAGO

Fill Out lntry llank aft This
Page and D•poslt ht lox ,ovlded

I

I
POMEROY - John Mora and John Redovian, faculty
I members at Meigs High School, were elected recently by the

• CLIFTON, W. Va . - Army
•,Private Larry Keith Lee, 20,
Clifton, recenUy assigned to
.:the 7th Engineer Brigade in
Heilbronn , Germany, died
, Nov, 29 in Germany, Pvt. Lee
.was born May 21, 1952, in
Mason. the son of James and
Doris Lee of Clifton, who
survive,
Pvt. Lee is also survived by
'his wife, Debra Gibbs Lee; one
daughter, Keith Ann; a sister,
·Mrs. Roger (Marsha) Klein ,
Middleport; three brothers,
Kenneth of Mason, and James
and Daniel, both of Clifton; his
grandfather, Paul Davis ,
Athens, and his grandmother,
Mary Davis, Clifton.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Foglesong
Funeral Home pending arrival
of the body,
Pvt. Lee was a bucket loader
operator in Company A of the
tirigade 's 327th Engineer
Battalion. He entered the
Army in May, completed bssic .
training at Ft. Knox, Ky.,.and
was last stationed at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo. He attended Wahama High Schl50t

e RECORD CABINm

Write, tall or Visit for free
bulletin of courses.

·Enter Now!
Enter Often!
Drawing
Dec. 9,1972

JOHN REDOVIAN

JOHN MORA

.....

e FARMHOUSE
ROCKERS
In maple

WINTER QUART-ER
BEGINS DEC, 11

7

GALLIPOLIS - Second in a
series of mini art courses got
underway Thursday in the
Gallipolis City Schools.
Malcolm B. Orebaugh,
director of guidance, said the
courses.are under the direction
. of Mrs. Kati Meek, artist-inresidence at Washington
,, SchooL Mrs. Meek's specialties
are ceramics and weaving.
~ The first mini art course was
,.: laken by approximately 40
•~ upils in the first, second, third
.:.and fourth period. The second
': ':'course is for pupils in the fifth,
' ,sixth and seventh periods,

William Jones

e BOSTON ROCKERS

You Can Still Enter
College In '72

411. Belly Langstrelh

IIIII Dllnt Hawley IH.
Women• a hlah ~me-

·."·:)

• STRATOLOUNGER RECLINERS

•

game?"

[l

'

· NARRATORS OF1he play are, front row, 1-r, Mary Colwell, Donna Metheney, Marvelea
Brown, Joyce Stewart, Brenda Smith and Robie Bryant; back row, Patty Dyer, Valorie
Matson, Clnda Davis, Sbaron Shultz, Ricky McCieUan andBrynn Sutphin,

Second High Series - Mary
Voss 48~.
·
Team ' High Game Dorothy's Pinnettes 815.
Team High Series - King
Bulld~rs Supply 2248,

•
m
progress

-

WILL.HOLD 'TIL CHRISTMAS

532,

'

D
h
':~11
eat s

10% DOWN

S.

,

, ·I
"I

.

courses available approved,

I

J-A.-;~;--~ Meigs representatives

EMPIRE

WASHERS, DRYERS,
SWEEPER
, DISHWASHERS,
This 011i$1ri1as
TRASH MASHERS,
REFRIGERATORS,
~e·
· ~~
·ii;,
~ .. ~~·
..
RANGES, .FREEZERS. ~.

Morning Glories
November 21,1972
Gibb's Grocery
62
Dick's Grocery
58
Newell Sunoco
51
G&amp;J Auto Paris
42
Spencer's Market
~0
Excelsior 011 Co.
3~
High Ind. Game - April •
Smllh 175; Ann Radford 172 ·
High Series - D. Grale and
Korn 455 : Margaret Follrod
448,
Team High Game - Spen.
co r's Market 790; G. &amp; J, Auto
Parts 2179,

'

,,

HOOVER

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Early Bird
League
Nov,22, m2
Standings
Team
W, L,
Dorothy 's Pinnelles
80 24
King Builders Supply
62 42
R. H. Rawlings
40 ~~
Bertha 's Grocery
50 5~
Royal Crown
32 72
Evelyn's Grocery
28 76
High Individual Game
Lois Pauley 217,
Second High Ind . Game Louise Harrison 179.
High Series - Lois Pauley

art class is

·'

THE

*

*

n

Other 200 games rolled
Tuesday nlghlwere: BOb Teed,
· 218; Larry Bragg (sub) 232;
, Gilbert Meal, 200: Steve
Cartoir, 202; Jack Janey, 212;
Burl Cook 221 and 202; and Bill
Johnson. 201.
Also, a note to Mary Look ado
- " Don'! give up, Mary ,,
remember lhe last night las!
yeer when you rolled that high

Johnson, John VanMeter, Billy
Sixth Grade - Ricky Adkins,
• Dyer, and Terry Hutton,
Teresa Brogan, Marvelea
Fifth Grade - Debbie Brown, Mary Colwell, Cinda
Adkins, Saundra Burnem, Davis, Ronnie Dugan, Patricia
Vickie Garnes, Kay Jacks, Dyer, Douglas Gloyd, Gary
Linda Jacks, Penny Jacks, Holliday, Dennis Grant,
Lanny Longstreth, Paul Valerie Matson, Ricky McMatson, Floyd McClellan, Clellan, ·Donna Metheney,
Michael McGuire, Barbara Ricky Pridd)', Dennis Puckett,
Peyton, Darlene Priddy, Kyle Sharon Shultz, Brenda Smith,
Rupe, Tammy Shuler, Jill Eugene Smith, Shirley Smith,
Smith, John Sturgeon, Paul Joyce Stewart, Kathleen
Sturgeon, David Thornton, Sturgeon, Craig SWick, RanGreg Walker, Teresa White, dall Tackett, Robie Bryant,
Van Willford, Anna Bryant, Billy Withrow, and Brynn
and Mike Withrow.
· SUtphin.

FROM

18

On Nov , 28, 1972. Team 3 spill
' 8 points with Team 2. Sieve
Carter was high lor Team 3
with 531 pins. and Betty Merry
was high lor Team 2 with 540
pins.
Team 4 took 6 points from
Team 5. Jack Janey was high
.... ,qr; Team , ~ with 582 pins, and
Buri ' CO&lt;il&lt; was high for Team 5
with 603 pins.
Team 8 took 8 points from
Team 1, Louise Baird was high
for Team 6 wilh 488 pins and
Ora Baird was high for Team 1
with 521 pins.
Team 6 took 8 points from
Team 12, John Fuller was high
for Team 6 with 526 pins and
Dave Holley was high for Team
12 wilh 511 pins,
Team 11 look 8 points from
Team 7, Bill Johnson was high
for Team 11 with 556 pins and
Waller Allie was high lor Team
7 with 440 pins,
Team 14 took 8 points from
Team, 10, Helen Oseland was
high for Team 14 with 568 pins
and Bob Teed was high for
Team 10 with 539 pins.
.
Team 13 look 6 polnls from
Team 9. Wayne Shaver was
high tor Team 13 wllh 457 pins
and Helen Thomas (sub) was
high for Team 9 with 442 pins.
High single game tor the
ladies for the evening was 216
pins held by Belly Merry and
for the men was 232 pins held
by Larry Bragg (sub) ,
High series for the ladles was
568 total pins, held by Helen
Oseland and for. the men 603
total pins held by Burl Cook,
Scores were high on Tuesday
night as Belly N\errv of Team 2
&gt;;et a new high fi&gt;r single game
for the season ol216 pins. Belly
rolled a 201 the previous week,
which we failed to note
(apologies to you, Belly l and
this week had a series of 540
which was second lo Helen
Oseland's high series of 568
which Included a 209 game,
Louise Baird who ~olds an
average of 122, rolled a 210
game and had a high series of

••

Peyton. Bonnie Smith, CurtiSs
Smith, Mary Smith, Lawrence
Sullivan, Timmy Tackett,
Dennis Thornton and Barbara
Shuler,
Fourth Grade - Wesley
Withrow, Barbara Mowery,
Katrena Hale; Teresa Fetty,
Sandy Herdman, Mary Matson, Sheila Fetty, Walter
Garnes, Dwight Sturgeon,
Charles Stewart, Tammy
Kunath, Patti Dugan, Annette
Romine, Joyce Janey, Dean
Colwell, Kelly Thomas, Dennis
Shuler, Floyd.Holliday, Stoney

,

�t •
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.o;_ . ,

'.

(
(

j

•

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~

•

M -The~Times-Sentinel,Sunday,Dec. 3,1972

on
top
23·15
.
'

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'

.,

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Bobcats topple
•
sw ve, 66-55
•

••
'

OSU upset 67-63
SEATTLE I UP! ) . - The
University of . Wa$hington
conU.ined Ohio Slate's Luke
Witte Friday night, and upset
the Buckeyes 67-63 in college
basketball.
.
The Huskies' 6-7 senior John
Quigg held the seven-foot Witte
IJo nine points and forced him
into three offensive fouls in the
first hall.
Meanwhile Allan Hornyak
scored.17 points in the first half
tu give the Bucks a 30-29
halftime lead. But early in the
second half, Washingtonreel~d
off eight straight points to give
the Huski~s the lead which they

·rush .tOps ackson

j

Southwes tern o~tscored points while David Whitt led
CHESHIRF: - A 22 point
Kyger'
Creek, 19•16 in the final . the IJttle Highlanders wtth H
s&lt;:uring ~ prec in Lhe third
•
PHILADELPHIA (UPil - Army, victimized
· . .
,
quarter here Friday night s t&lt;~nza . Wood and Walker led pomts.
early in the game by a fake Na\ly field goal, blocked
th
e
Highlanders
while
•
McCarty,enJoymgone
of
the
63
carri ed t he Ky ger Creek
junior
center
D.~vid
Clay
paced
~st 111ghts of hiS high s.chooJ
hlter three-point attempt and defensive back Scott
Bobcats to a 66-!iS victory over
the
Bobcats
with
eight
points.
career,
led, all sco~ers ,wt!h 20
· t- Beaty dashed 84 yards for the go-ahead touchdown
Southwestern .
The charts show Kyger ]J(Jints . wh1le playmg a fme
II was Kyger Creek's first'
, that gave the Cadets a 23-15 victory Saturday in the
win' of the season while South- Creek sank 30 of 70 field at· defenstve game.
,'7Srd meeting of the two service academies.
Kyger Creek t~avels to
western lost its second straight tempts for 40.2 pet. while
f' Navy, which had scored two
Southwestern hit 22 of 71 at- Southern Tuesday mght whtle
til! ,
! .
r
ftrst period touchdowM, was the third quarter.
Coach Richard Hamilton 's tempts for 30.9 pet . The . Southwestern hosts North
Army, scoring its second
, W.ding 12-7in tbe third quarter
hit 11 of 27 free Galha.
Highlanders, playing catch-up Highlanders
· when Roger Laming tried a •straight win ov~r the Middies,
.
Southwestern 155) - Carter
ball most of the first half, tied throws while ihe Bobc.ats only 1. 2.16; Bush 2-0-4; Dillon 2·2-6;
·:field goal from tbe Army 18. added to its margin early in the
Walker 3·2-8; Wood 6-2-14;
the score in the waning canned six of 17.
' Junior linebacker Tim fourth period when tailback
Kyger Creek had'60 re~ounds Frasher 1-1-3; Lewis 1-1·3:
minutes of the second period.
· Pfister broke through to bloc~ Bruce Simpson burst through
·hJ h
.
Crouse 0·1-1. Totals 22· 11-55.
The half enaed with a 28-28 tie. WI! 0 n Rumley leadmg, the
Kyger Creek i66) - McCarty
the kick and Beaty, whose the middle on a draw 'play for a
way
'
with
10.
SW
grabbed
33
8·4-20:
Curry 1·0-2; Hudson 7·0·
Coach Jim Arledge's Bob~lier interference caD aided 21-yard touchdown run to make '
rebound
s.
Wood
was
the
14;
Rumley
4·1 -9; Wise 1-0·2:
.
cats came out "fired up ~~
,'the Navy drive, picked up the it 2t).l2.
H'
•hi
·
d
•
t
b
d
Stidham
0-0-0:
Clay 4-0-8;
hilling · 12 straight baskets to
1g an ers op re oun er Tailor 4.o.a: Cremeans 1-0·2:
iJoose ball, He lumbered un- Navy's Lanning later kicked
l.ake a commanding, 40.281ead. wllh 14. Kyger Creek also won ·Gordon 0-1-1. Totals 30-6-66.
a 37-yard field goal to cut the
1!DOI~ted down the ~idelines
By Quarters: ·
The explosion was led by Clay the reserve game, %-35.
ATHENS Bulldog fall8 plastered the AHS gym with nwneroos signs Friday containing
wl.tb d COIIVOY Of blockers margin to 2t).15 but on a later
· . f · h'
sw
13 t5 8 19- 55
,
T
K
Hudson, 5·11 junior guard.
om . ern, a res mah, KC
1111corlng him for tbe gCH~head Navy series Army · stopped
15 13 22 16--66
slogans such as the one pictured a~ve. Last January, GAHS trailed .Atheils 10 points with a
paced
the
Bobcats
with
24
Hudson scored 10 points on the
'~~core with 7:57 remaining in Navy on the Middle 38 and Jim
minute left to play, but the Gallians rallied for a sensational ~9 upset victory over the
'·
.
Bobcat fast break.
Barclay booted a 23-yard field · Bulldogs. It was Gallia's first win at Athens in 16 years. Friday night, GAHS made it two
Greg McCarty, 5-9 senior
goal to end the scoring.
straight over the Bulldogs at Athens, 59-01.
guard;
.' Lawrence Tabor, 5-7
Army halfback Bob Hines,
junior guard and John Rumley,
the workhorse in ~'~ cadet
.
6-0 junior forward eacht'
backfield, scored the cadets'
dumped in four points each.
first touchdown early in the
Although he scored only two
first period after . an in·
terception. He carried the ball
poinls, George Curry aided the
skein in m~jor college history,
United Press International
Bobcat offense with his
30 times for 172 yards.
UCLA ho-hummed its way to topped only by the University
Hines lo&lt;&gt;k a pitcho~t. ran tO
rebuilding.
The Highlanders managed its 47th straight victory Friday of San Francisco's 60 straight
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. his right and appeared to be
only eight points in the same night and was a sure bel to in the days of Bill Russell .
'(UP!) _ Big Jack Nicklaus, stopped several times when he
For Wooden, the win was the
suddenly burst through a
"j)eriod . Terry Carter, 5·9 break its school record with
working for his seventh victorY, crowd of Navy tacklers and
sophomore guard, who finished . another .triumph Saturday B03rd of his coaching career,
.of the season, shot a 67 raced 44 yards into the end
with 16 points on the night, night as Coach John Wooden which includes 11 high school
Saturday for a two..stroke lead
•
scored four to lead the celebrated the l,OOOth game of seasons, two years at fndiana
In the third round of the 150,000 zo~~ying before a crowd of
Highlander attack . Carter's his 38-year coaching career. State and 25 years at UCLA.
Walt Disney World Golf 95 ,774 on a mild, sunny day,
Saturday, he sent his No. I·
With a 73-38 romp over stallthird shots against the taller according to Phillips . The poin ts all came from 25 to 30
BY KEITH WISECUP
Ch8mpionship and gave thanks Navy jumped into its early lead
ranked
squad
against
minded Bradley, the 'Bruins
feet away.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Steve Wildcats," Coach Phillips Eagles had 22 turnovers.
to the weatherman.
with two first period touch- Dill, a 6·2 junior center, popped concluded after the game.
The Eagles are now 1-U both
Playing a steady defensive scored their second triumph of University of Pacific.
"The weather made the
·
The Bruins were led by Bill
"Our defense boxed out well. overall and in the SVAC while game, KC jumped into a 6-0 the season and tied a school
in a six foot jumper after
difference today," said do~i.liddies bad a fourth and
Walton
with 16 points and '17
record
for
most
consecutive
Hannan
Trace
is
1-1
overall
lead in the opening stanza
laking a beautiful pass from 5-9 II was just a tremendous team
.Nicklaus as ~ecords fell on IOwhenquarterback AJ Glenny senior guard Randy Boring effort that won the game for and in the SV AC. The Eagles behind the shooting of Mc- victo'ries which was set in the rebounds. He had 12 of his
Disney's 7,222-yard Magnolia knelt at the Army 37 lor the
will play at Kyger Creek next Carty . Southwestern came Lew Alcindor-era (1967-68). It rebounds in the first half when
wi th just six seconds left to us." Phillips added.
CoUrse .. ·
apparent field goal attempt by give the Eastern Eagles an
Phillips gave much credit to Friday wh ile the Wildcats have back as Lloyd Wood, is the second longest victory he also blocked eight shots.
1 Nicklaus , who has been Lanning. But Glenny {ook the upset 55-53 win over Southern his bench, which came in and a crucial meeting with the sophomore center, hit a short
playing touch football with his pass from center, straightened Valley Conference favorite did a fine job defensively. Symmes Valley Vikings this jumper. Kevin Walker, 5-10
·sons to get his legs back in up and tossed to fullback Andy Hannan Trace before a packed Starters were Boring, Duvall, Tuesday at Hannan Trace.
S&lt;•phomore forward , Mike
·~pe, hit six birdie putts from Pease on the Army 17 yard line
Eastern 155) - Boring J.4-10, Dillon, 5-10 senior forward, and
house at Eastern High School Dill , Sheets, and Tim Spencer.
U · far away as 30 feet and for a 13-yard play that kept the
Spencer
1·1-3, Dill 6-2-14, Carter began scoring to cut the
Corning off the bench and
Friday night.
Duvall
4-0-8,
Sheets 7-0-14,
'Jieillted a three round total of drive alive.
The Wildcats had rallied playin g well were Larry Cross 3·0·6, Atherton o.oco, Bobcat lead to 15-13 at the end
113, 13 under par.
Four plays later sopbomore from a seven point deficit after Atherton , Rick Cross, and Tim Baum 0-0-0. Totals 24-7-55.
of the first period.
, , Jim Dent, a 3~-year-old Clevelfd Cooper, who set a three quarters to tie it up at 53· Baum .
Hannan Trace (53) With Carter connecting from
Caldwell
2·2·6,
Lusher
8-5-21
,
avy single season all with 53 seconds left and had
•!o~rner caddie from Los new
The Eagles hit on 24 of 56 Halley 0-2-2, Wells 6 2-14, far outside and Wood hitting
Angeles, shot a hot 65 to move rushin record by going over
field
attempts for 43 pet.' but Dunfee 2-2-6, M. Swa in Q-4-4, underneath , Southwestern
possession of the ball. The
, Into second place with a 207 l,OOOyards, dashed Into the end much taller Hannan Trace five managed to drop .only seven of Shaeffer 0-0·0. Totals 18·17-53. moved back into the game and
~ lOla!, ' J;Wo strokes behind the zone from one yard out.
By Quarters
look a shot but missed and the 18 at the foul line. Eastern had Hannan Trace
10 16 II 16- 53 held a three point lead midway
· ~er.
Dn the next series of downs Eagles' gained possession with 33 total rebounds, about the Eastern
13 16 15 11- 55 in the second quarter.
' ~George Archer carded a Army quarterback Kingsley 33 seconds left.
Carter and Wood collected
. same anwunt as Hannan Trace
88 finish in third place,at 206. Fink's. was intercepted to
seven
points •each. 1 MCI3artyj,
boach Bill Phillips' Eagles
Goalby and Dave Marr give the ~lddles possession of. played for the final shot and the
'
and Hudson led the Bobcat
aJ$l turned in 65s to leap up in midfield. Glenny then capped a
allack
with five and fourth
strategy worked to perfection
the standings with nine under nine-yard scoring drive with an
poin ts respectively.
when Dill hit the game-winning
totals of 207.
11-yard touchdown pass to bucket.
In with 206 totals, five halfback Dan Howard.
Hannan Trace turned the
~lrokes of! the pace were Bert
After the Beaty shocker,
ball over after Dill's shot and
'Yancey•, ~rank. Beard and Len Navy, paced by Cooper's
the Eagles also turned it over
Thjlrnpson.
• . .
ounnlng, roared back and wilh just three seconds left, but
'(ancey, winner of the ,;marched 60 yards to the Army
the Wildcats couldn 't get off a
BIRMINGHAM, Ala . (UP!) tercepted a pass earlier,
BOSTON (UPI) - Tony
~rlcan Golf Classic earlier, ' five. But ·on fourth ·and two,
Speedy David Langner waited for the ball to fall into Sukiennik returned a punt 64
final shot.
' birdied hiS first seven holes on Glenny tried a keeper but was
Dill and 6-0 junior forward converted two blocked punts his arms, then scampered 25 yards for one touchdown and
. hl8 way to scoring a course tackled for a one-yard loss by
John Sheets paced Eastern in to touchdowns Saturday to yards for the six points. Five Pat Bentzel recovered a
record 64.
Army's Joe Furloni, whose
: "1 thought it was a Mickey earlier inte;·ception had set up with 14 points each while lead ninth-ranked Auburn to an minutes hiler he repeated the fumble to set up another
Boring added 10 ~nd played a upset 17-t6 victory over second- play from the Alabama 20.
Saturday as Boston College
MOjlseco~rse last year and it's
Army's first touchdown - by
spectacular
floor
game.
Alan
ranked
Alabama.
He
intercepted
his
second
rolled over Holy Cross, 41-11,
s'tilf a little goofy," said Hines.
Duvall, 6-1 senior forward, led
Alabama, headed for a pass of the day with 49 seconds before a record Alumni
Yancey.
The victory was Army's 36th
the Eagles with 11 rebounds Cotton Bowl match with Texas, to play to clinch the victory for Stadium crowd of 30,187.
.. :V.ancey 's birdie string is a against 31 losses in the series
and
Dill added eight retrieves. was only 5:30 away from its the jubilant Tigers.
Eagles never trailed · after
•record for the 1972 tour, but which began in 1890. There· John
lith consecutive victory and
Lusher,
a
6-0
junior
Auburn was trailing 16-0 Bentzel pounced on Joe
·Qoalby· holds the all-time have been six ties.
second straight perfect season when Gardner Jett kicked a Wilson's fumble at the Holy
guard
,
led
the
Wildcats
with
21
~ wilh eight straight at
points while 6-S junior center when junior linebacker Bill final period ·42 yard fie ld goal Cross 30 and Dave Bucci
·ihe 'SL Pe.tersburg Open in TWO TO PLAY
Newton broke through the Tide with 9:15 to play.
Don Wells added 14.
carried to the one on the next
1961.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)line
to
block
a
punt
at
the
"Our
offense
played
par·
After a scoreless first period, play to set up a touchdown dive
Qent, whose best finish this Green Bay Packers Coach Dan
Alabama 25.
well
on
the
boards
as
licularly
Alabama
went on the by Mike Esposito and a 7-0 lead
.year so rar was a tie for lith , Devine said Friday wide
Langner, who · had in· scoreboard with II: 16 to play in at 11:45 of the first quarter.
we got plenty of second and
pla,ce in the Kemper Open at receiver Carroll Dale and
the first half on a three yard
Boston College built a 13-3
;Charlotte, N. C., shot only 23
offensive tackle Dick HimesM
run
by
Steve
Bisceglia.
Bill
advantage
at 2:12 of the third
iplltts In sinking seven birdies would play Sunday against the
Davis kicked a 29-yard field quarter when Tom Rock
and no bogeys.
Detroit Lions.
goal and Wilbur Jackson added punted a short 21 yards to
.

BY KEITH WISECUP
year history.
for."•ard Andy Vaughan, who ·
ROCK SPRINGS - A torrid
Jimmy Boggs, a 5-9 senior played a goo,d floor game,
third period that saw Meigs guard who has that unique had 10. White topped
outscore the Jackson Ironmen knack of popping in 20-fovt Ja&lt;·kson with ' ll. The
31-10 - including 16 unan- jumpers, collected 21 points ·Marauders "'utreboundcd
. ' swered points midway into. the giving him · 47 jn Meigs' two Jarksou 3ll·3l.
period ·- wiped out -a Jackson games. Boggs, whil hasn 't'
Strangely enough, Jackson
28-20 halftime lead and lifted missed a free throw in nlne hit 011 50 pet. of its shots,
the Marauders to their first win · tries this year, hit on 8 of 17 nHJki11g 23 of 46. Meigs sank 28
this season, 67-li7, at Meigs from lhe field .
of 65 for a cooler but not bad 43
High Friday night,
Several other Marauders · pel. The Marauders hit on 11 of
Coach Carl Wolfe ordered a also played brilliantly, 18 from the foul line, Jackson
zone press at the ouiset of the especially in the third period. made II of 25.
third quarter w)lich worked to Rich Bailey came off the bench
The lronmcn now have a I·
perfection as it forced several to drop in 13 markers', center 2 overall record and are 0.1
Ironmen turnovers in the Bill Chaney hit 10 and Bill in league play. Meigs is 1·1 ·
Marauder backcourt.
Vaughan ; who led the Meigs • overall and tied [or first
Tralllng 35-%8 with just
comeback with four straight place in the league with a t.U
over
three
minutes
baskel.s in the third canto, had mark. The Marauders will
remaining in that third
nine points.
host the loop favorite and one
quarte&lt;!r' , the Marauder~
Paul White, a 6-2 forward , of top teams in the state,
scored 16 straight points
led Jackson with 14 points Waverly, next Friday.
within 90 seconds to go ahead
while Dan Morrow added II
Meigs opened up an 8-2 lead
1!·35.
and the lronn)ell's leading four mi nutes into the game ;
This
opening
1972-73 scorer, Tom Conroy, had 10, . tins dwi ndled due to sloopy
Southeastern. Ohio Athletic inducting Jackson's first eight fl uor play against a Jackson
League game bas to rank as points of the game.
·
press . Coa ch 'AI Burger 's
the greatest come-from-behind
Chaney led Meigs in charged led 14·13 after one
· win in Meigs basketball sixrebounding with 12 while period.

e

•'

Bruins make. it
47 ·in row 73~48

~Jack . eyes

seventh
:golf title

.I
I

Eagles upset
Wildcats, 55-53

MEIGS' Andy Vaughan (24) batUes Jackson's Rocky
Martin (23) and Dan Morrow (II) for loose ball during
Friday night's SEOAL cage opener at Rock Springs. ·The
Marauders evened their season record with a 67.,';7 win.

Marauder reserves post
Second Vl•ClOry, 45-32

"

Auburn upsets

par

'Bam_a, 17-16

Boston humbles
Holy Cross

e

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GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP!)
The Florida defense, led by
- Tailback Nat Moore ran (or All-Southeastern Conference
103 yards and one touchdown Fred Abbott, held the
Saturday to spark Florida to a. Hurricanes to 50 yards rushing
17-&lt;l victory over Miami in a and picked off three Mian;li
biller struggle between the passes.
lntrasU!te 'rivals.
Miami's only other serious
Florida broke open .the · threat came right after the
defensive battle in the fourth kickoff when the Hurricanes
period, marching 35 yards for' reached the Florida 19. A lew
the game's first touchdown plays later, Mike Burke's 45after a short Miami punt. yard field goal attempt struck
Moore got the' tally on a one- the right goal post and bounyard plunge with 10:04 Jell In ced.
the game.
The Gators also missed a
Just46seconds later, Florida first half field goal attempt
freshman defensive back when Williams' 27-yard effort
Wayne Fields picked off an E;d fell short. Moore, an All·
Carney pass and streaked 54 Conference running back,
yards down the sideline for the gained 72yards in the first half.
second Gator touchdown.
The junior tailback sat out the
Miami drove 92 yards for its third quarter with an ankle
only touchdown in the closing Injury before returning in. the
minutes with a 35-yard pass final period to spark Florida's
from Coy Hall to Chuck scoring burst.
Miami finished the season
Foreman setting up the score.
Foreman was knocked out of with a 5-6 record, the
• bounds on the Gator three and Hurricanes' fourth straight
two plays later, tailback losing effort.
Johnny Williams ran tllree
yards for the score,
Florida's John Williams
SOONERS ROMP
kicked a 35-yard !leld goal in
NORMAN, Okla. (UP!) the second quarter for the only
Oklahoma
quarterback ilave
scoring before the fourth
Robertson passed lor two first
period flurry.
'
The Gators, now H-1 with a quarter touchdowns and fresh.
season finale with North man halfback Joe Washington
Carolina next week, decked ran for two scores Saturday io
Miami quarterbacks 10 times pace the third·ranked and
during the game, keeping the Sugar-Bowl bound Sooners to a
Hurricanes iri poor field 38-15 victory agalMt Oklahoma
State.
position most of the time.

six more points on a five yard SUkiennik, who picked up a key
run .
·
block from Bentzel and raced
Langner, a !i-9, 171).pound 64 yards along the left sideline
defensive back from Bir- for the score.
mingbam, put the initial slop
Holy Cross was unable to
on Alabama's passing game, move the ball on the next
intercepting the only aerial · series, and again gave the
Terry Davis threw in the first Eagles good field position when
half.
Rich Pelletier's punt went out
. .' '
Playing one-on-one wi·th of bounds at the Crusaders' 43Alabama wid~ receiver Wayne yard line.
Wheeler, Langner prevented :__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
the standout receiver, who that could have given Alabama
came into the game with 30 a tie.
catches for 573 yards, from . .- -....""!'...."'!!"~""'~..,""!'1111111111-~llllll~"!"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.,
rnak,ing
single reception.
Davis acompleted
only one of
.

Fill your stockings at:

With the air game stifled,
Alabama turned to its stable of
running backs. Bisceglia led
the Tide attack, piling up 102
yards on 24 carries as the Tide
netted 23S yards on the ground.
The game was a perfect
climax to Auburn's Cinderella
season in which the Tigers had
been expected to win only four·
games. Auburn takes a 9-1
recor&lt;l to Its Gator Bowl
meeting with Colorado.
Auburn, averaging~ yards
pet · game In ils first nine
outings, was held to eight yards
in the first half and 80 yards for
the game, while Alabama had
•uotal.
The first quarter ended in a
scoreless heat, but Alabama
began driving late In that
period and marched 71 yards in
1~ Jilays to put the first points
on the board with II :16 to play
In the half. A stubborn Auburn
defense blocked the extra point

·

••

•·

Meigs-Jackson box store
MEIGS-JACKSON CAGE STATISTICS
MEIGS
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB PF . TP

Sayre

A. Vaughan

Chaney
Boggs
.
B. Vaughan
Bailey
Price

Score

~Y

Myers

Werry
Fl. Burney
Fr. Burney

White
Morrow
Martin
DeStephen
Conroy
McDonald
Henderson
Jenkins
Billman
Fannin
TOTALS
Score by Quarters:
Jackson
.
· Meigs
Officials; Wallis and Craft.

Reserve score: Waverly 45,

I· 3

~
~
~

~
~
~

0
0
2

4
4
3

8
6

10

3 ,21 .
0
4 '9
2
2 13
0 0 0
1 · I
0
5 2 '0 .

0

0
1

o- 1

o. o o o· o

0- 0

0- 0

•5

•· 7
2· 5
0- 0
2·· 2

2- 3
2· 3
.0· 0
o. 1

0
1
1
3

J. 3
11·25

31

4-10

0-1

1• I

23-46

1· 4

2
0
2
9
3 . 10·

1

5
0

6
0

18

57

0
0
2

1

0·0

0

14 10 19--57
7 31 16--67

I~

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CHANEY CLOBBERED - BID Olaney (34) was clobbered from the rear on this play by an unidentified Jacbon
Ironrnan during Friday's Meigs-Jackson SEOAL cage battle
at Rock Springs. Meigs won the game, 61.,';7.

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10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

The Amber Lounge Opens At 11100 A.M.
\.

0 .
0
3

GET ACASE

quarters :

Wellston 17.

4- 8.

6

10
12
3

0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0
0- 0 0- 1 0 0 0
28-65 ll·t8 39 23 67
JACKSON
6- 9 2- 511
1 14
4·11 3- 6 7 2 11

May
TOTALS

16 19 24 18- 71
4 13 8 2Q-45

0· 2
2- 3
o. 0

s.to . 3· 3

I; Workman 0·1-1; Scott i -0·2;
Swindler 1·4-6. TOTALS 32·1377.
WELLSTON (45)- Souders
9-0-18 ;
Snare
5·4·14;
Warrington 2-2-6 : Arnold 2-3-7;
Gilliland 0·0·0; Holzapfel 0·0-0.
TOTALS 18·9-45.
Waverly
Wellston

4-11
2· 5
5· 11

8-17 ' 5. 5

The
gigantic
for·
tlflcatlon, known as the
Great Walt of C~lna
stretches over 1500 miles of
hills and valleys and Is
crowned by 25,000 wat-

·

DATEAND SITE SET
HAMILTON, On l. (UP!)-The
1974 Grey Cup game, the tiUe
contest in the Canadian Foot.
ball League, will be held In
Vancouver.
The executive committee of
. the CFL also set the date lor
the 1973 game- to be played in
Toronto-for Dec. 2.

~

KIRK·wooD
.

with 18 points while
Mike Oyer added 17, and Ed
Tlwmpson, an All-Ohio transfer fr om New Boston , chipped
in 16 points for the winners.
Dave Souders ·of Wellston
s hared game honors with
Maloy by dumping in 18 points
with Charlie Snare getting 14.
The Tigers rammed in 32 of
64 shots for a hot SO pet. and
added 13 of 24 free throws.
They also grabbed off 36
rebounds with Oyer getting 12.
The Golden Rockets connected on 18 of 41 attempts for
44 pel. and converted nine of 19
free throws, but managed to
grab only 18 rebounds.
The box score:
WAVERL '\' i77) - Maloy 9·
0-18 ; Oyer 6-S-t7; Thompson 80-16: Shoemaker 3·0·6: Pfleter
i -0-4; Salyers 2·2-8; Tracy 0-1-

In posting their big win
Log~n hit 20 of S9 from the floor
and dropped in 16 of 25 free
throws.
The Tigers made good on 19
of 51 field goals and converted
II of 23 at the charity stripe.
Big Bill Mar kin pulled down
14 of . Ironton's 42 rebounds
while Randy Norris snagged 10
of Logan's 40.
The box score:
IRONTON (49) -Markin 4·
5·13 ; Hannon 5-0·10; S. Carter
4-0-8; Green 2-0-4; Ferguson 45-13; Rann0-1·1. TOTALS 19·11·
49.
LOGAN (56) - Pierce 5·2·12;
Whitcraft 1-0-2: Norris 0 ·11;
Wright 6-2-14; Kemper 2-5-9;
Campbell 0-3-3; Culbertson 2·1·
5. TOTALS 20-t6-56.

Ironton 41.

TOTAL.ELECTRIC MOBILE.
BY ·
·

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SMITH AUTO SALES

seven passes for 16 .yards and
had two intercepted.

1 •

WELLSTON - Coach C. D.
Hawhee·s defending sEoAL
champion Waverly Tigers
again appear the team to beat
in the·Jeague this year as they
~pened the 1972-73 campaign
Friday night sma shing
Wellston 77-45.
The Tigers 'have now won 26
consecutive conference games
since losing 63-&lt;ll at Athens on
Dec . ll, 1970. In three years
inside the SEOAL, Waverly
owns a 28·1 mark. Waverly is
now 23 games shy of the all·
tim e conference winning
streak of 49 in a row, set by the
Gallipolis Blue Devils from
1953 through 1956.
It was simply a Tiger onsia'ughl as they led by quarter
scores of 16-4, 35-17, and 59-25.
Senior Bill . Maloy led the

Ironton
13 14 12 IQ--49
Logan
14 13 14 15-56
Reserve score : Logan 48,

From Mighty to Mini,
Honclcl has it aiL

count.

Logan· Waverly records 26th
•
downs straight SEOAL wzn
l ...OR*On

LOGAN - New head coaches
made their debut at Logan
Friday night with Logan's
ROCK SPRINGS - The the game, but a flurry of Scott Fitzgerald guiding his
Meigs Marauder resetves baskets in the final minutes Chieftains to a 56-49 victor.y
over Coach Paul Aikman's
coasted to their second win in widened Meigs' lead.
Meigshilon21of46frornthe
Ironton Tigers.
as many starts at Meigs High
It was the first SEOAL enSchool Friday night, defeating field for 45 pet. and made 3 of 5
the Jackson reserves 45-32 in fr om the foul ·line . Jackson, counter for both coaches and
the SEOAL opener of both now 1-2 on the year, made 15 of the hot.,;hooting Chiefs broke
43 shots for 34 pet. and hit on 2 out of a 27-27 halftime deadlock
teams.
of
6 f(pm the line . There were to notch their first league
Danny Dodson led the little
Marauders with 23 points as only lli'~ersonal fouls called in victory .
Logan led 14-13 at the end of
.
the ta)ented cetiter hit the hoop th e game.
Meigs (451 - Quails 5·0-10, the first period and following
11 times out of 16 attempts.
Cremeans
2-2·6, Ebersbach 0-0· the 27-all halftime score the
Freshman Terry Qualls
0,
Dodson
. Au!l . 1·0-2, host team went out front 41-39
foll\!i.ved ,wj th JLRandy.RJOge Co lb ur.~ ·0-11-2-23,
4 Totals 21·3·45. ,&lt;
.
,
.,
.
Jackson (321 - Ridge 7-1-! 5, 1 '~'a[t.er• tllree quarters . n"
· ' •·
Je.P.!I.ckson with 15.
Mitch Wright fired In 16
Coach Roger Birch's Meigs Fannin 1-1-3, M. Ridge 1-0-2,
o 1-0-2, Josepli 2-0-4, points to lead [he Chiefs with
reserved opened up an early 10. Grill.
Gentile 3-0·6. Totals 15-2-32.
J' Pi
dd'
!2
d
By Quarters
1m
erce a mg
, an
2 lead and led' 12-li after one
5 13 6 8-32 Randy Norris 11 markers.
quarter. Meigs was still hard· Jackson
Meig~ .
12
14 4 15-45
Mark Ferguson and Bill
pressed by the fronbovs late in
Officials, Sarver and Neal. Markin each canned 13 points
, ._ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
for the losing Tigers.

HONDA

It was the Marauders' dull
and drabby play in the second
quarte1· that gave the hustling
Ironmen the 28·20 lead . at
the half, the biggest lead for
Jackson in .the game.
Coach Wolfe must have
given something like a "win
one for the Gipper", speech
at the Intermission as a
totally revived -Marauder
five came out !Ired up, ready
to show what they could do.
The Marauders played near
perfect basketball the next
eight minutes. They hustled,
played better defense, forced
Jackson
into countless
mistakes, and hit the open man .
on offense. Marauder fans saw
hustle a.nd dedication like
they've never 'seen before.
It was beautiful.
Jackson outscored Meigs g..2
in the final minutes with
reserves of both teams on . the
floor . This lowered Meigs
biggest lead of 65-48 to the final

never relinquished.
Hornyak led all scorers with
24 p.oints, while three Huskies
contributed 16 each ~ l.ools
Nelson , Reggie Ball and Ray · .
Price.
Washingtcin t67) - Bolt t.-ol16; Pr ice 7-2-16: Williams 2·0·4)
Williams H -10; Nelson 7-2-16;
Hawes 0:1·1; Totals 28-11-67,
Ohio State (63) - Slekmann .
3-0-6; Jackson 5-2·12; Witte :1-:1&lt; ·
. -9; Hornyak 10-4-24i G,..,h'ard 3·
2·8: Andreas !·0·2; 'Totals 26-11·
63.
Halftime: Ohio Stale 30
Washington 29.
.
Fouled Out: Ball, Jackson.
Total Fouls:. Ohio State 20
Washington 17. ,
Attendance : 4,750.

LUNCHES 11 'A.M. TO 2 P,M., DINNERS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet Luncheon H :OOto 1:30, Mondavthru Saturday I
JACK W. CARSEY, MANAGER
PH.f92-2111
Serving Meigs, G. INa ond Milson
Counties
·
· store Open ,,..,,....,.

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR ~EK
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I

~

•

M -The~Times-Sentinel,Sunday,Dec. 3,1972

on
top
23·15
.
'

.

'

.,

.

Bobcats topple
•
sw ve, 66-55
•

••
'

OSU upset 67-63
SEATTLE I UP! ) . - The
University of . Wa$hington
conU.ined Ohio Slate's Luke
Witte Friday night, and upset
the Buckeyes 67-63 in college
basketball.
.
The Huskies' 6-7 senior John
Quigg held the seven-foot Witte
IJo nine points and forced him
into three offensive fouls in the
first hall.
Meanwhile Allan Hornyak
scored.17 points in the first half
tu give the Bucks a 30-29
halftime lead. But early in the
second half, Washingtonreel~d
off eight straight points to give
the Huski~s the lead which they

·rush .tOps ackson

j

Southwes tern o~tscored points while David Whitt led
CHESHIRF: - A 22 point
Kyger'
Creek, 19•16 in the final . the IJttle Highlanders wtth H
s&lt;:uring ~ prec in Lhe third
•
PHILADELPHIA (UPil - Army, victimized
· . .
,
quarter here Friday night s t&lt;~nza . Wood and Walker led pomts.
early in the game by a fake Na\ly field goal, blocked
th
e
Highlanders
while
•
McCarty,enJoymgone
of
the
63
carri ed t he Ky ger Creek
junior
center
D.~vid
Clay
paced
~st 111ghts of hiS high s.chooJ
hlter three-point attempt and defensive back Scott
Bobcats to a 66-!iS victory over
the
Bobcats
with
eight
points.
career,
led, all sco~ers ,wt!h 20
· t- Beaty dashed 84 yards for the go-ahead touchdown
Southwestern .
The charts show Kyger ]J(Jints . wh1le playmg a fme
II was Kyger Creek's first'
, that gave the Cadets a 23-15 victory Saturday in the
win' of the season while South- Creek sank 30 of 70 field at· defenstve game.
,'7Srd meeting of the two service academies.
Kyger Creek t~avels to
western lost its second straight tempts for 40.2 pet. while
f' Navy, which had scored two
Southwestern hit 22 of 71 at- Southern Tuesday mght whtle
til! ,
! .
r
ftrst period touchdowM, was the third quarter.
Coach Richard Hamilton 's tempts for 30.9 pet . The . Southwestern hosts North
Army, scoring its second
, W.ding 12-7in tbe third quarter
hit 11 of 27 free Galha.
Highlanders, playing catch-up Highlanders
· when Roger Laming tried a •straight win ov~r the Middies,
.
Southwestern 155) - Carter
ball most of the first half, tied throws while ihe Bobc.ats only 1. 2.16; Bush 2-0-4; Dillon 2·2-6;
·:field goal from tbe Army 18. added to its margin early in the
Walker 3·2-8; Wood 6-2-14;
the score in the waning canned six of 17.
' Junior linebacker Tim fourth period when tailback
Kyger Creek had'60 re~ounds Frasher 1-1-3; Lewis 1-1·3:
minutes of the second period.
· Pfister broke through to bloc~ Bruce Simpson burst through
·hJ h
.
Crouse 0·1-1. Totals 22· 11-55.
The half enaed with a 28-28 tie. WI! 0 n Rumley leadmg, the
Kyger Creek i66) - McCarty
the kick and Beaty, whose the middle on a draw 'play for a
way
'
with
10.
SW
grabbed
33
8·4-20:
Curry 1·0-2; Hudson 7·0·
Coach Jim Arledge's Bob~lier interference caD aided 21-yard touchdown run to make '
rebound
s.
Wood
was
the
14;
Rumley
4·1 -9; Wise 1-0·2:
.
cats came out "fired up ~~
,'the Navy drive, picked up the it 2t).l2.
H'
•hi
·
d
•
t
b
d
Stidham
0-0-0:
Clay 4-0-8;
hilling · 12 straight baskets to
1g an ers op re oun er Tailor 4.o.a: Cremeans 1-0·2:
iJoose ball, He lumbered un- Navy's Lanning later kicked
l.ake a commanding, 40.281ead. wllh 14. Kyger Creek also won ·Gordon 0-1-1. Totals 30-6-66.
a 37-yard field goal to cut the
1!DOI~ted down the ~idelines
By Quarters: ·
The explosion was led by Clay the reserve game, %-35.
ATHENS Bulldog fall8 plastered the AHS gym with nwneroos signs Friday containing
wl.tb d COIIVOY Of blockers margin to 2t).15 but on a later
· . f · h'
sw
13 t5 8 19- 55
,
T
K
Hudson, 5·11 junior guard.
om . ern, a res mah, KC
1111corlng him for tbe gCH~head Navy series Army · stopped
15 13 22 16--66
slogans such as the one pictured a~ve. Last January, GAHS trailed .Atheils 10 points with a
paced
the
Bobcats
with
24
Hudson scored 10 points on the
'~~core with 7:57 remaining in Navy on the Middle 38 and Jim
minute left to play, but the Gallians rallied for a sensational ~9 upset victory over the
'·
.
Bobcat fast break.
Barclay booted a 23-yard field · Bulldogs. It was Gallia's first win at Athens in 16 years. Friday night, GAHS made it two
Greg McCarty, 5-9 senior
goal to end the scoring.
straight over the Bulldogs at Athens, 59-01.
guard;
.' Lawrence Tabor, 5-7
Army halfback Bob Hines,
junior guard and John Rumley,
the workhorse in ~'~ cadet
.
6-0 junior forward eacht'
backfield, scored the cadets'
dumped in four points each.
first touchdown early in the
Although he scored only two
first period after . an in·
terception. He carried the ball
poinls, George Curry aided the
skein in m~jor college history,
United Press International
Bobcat offense with his
30 times for 172 yards.
UCLA ho-hummed its way to topped only by the University
Hines lo&lt;&gt;k a pitcho~t. ran tO
rebuilding.
The Highlanders managed its 47th straight victory Friday of San Francisco's 60 straight
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. his right and appeared to be
only eight points in the same night and was a sure bel to in the days of Bill Russell .
'(UP!) _ Big Jack Nicklaus, stopped several times when he
For Wooden, the win was the
suddenly burst through a
"j)eriod . Terry Carter, 5·9 break its school record with
working for his seventh victorY, crowd of Navy tacklers and
sophomore guard, who finished . another .triumph Saturday B03rd of his coaching career,
.of the season, shot a 67 raced 44 yards into the end
with 16 points on the night, night as Coach John Wooden which includes 11 high school
Saturday for a two..stroke lead
•
scored four to lead the celebrated the l,OOOth game of seasons, two years at fndiana
In the third round of the 150,000 zo~~ying before a crowd of
Highlander attack . Carter's his 38-year coaching career. State and 25 years at UCLA.
Walt Disney World Golf 95 ,774 on a mild, sunny day,
Saturday, he sent his No. I·
With a 73-38 romp over stallthird shots against the taller according to Phillips . The poin ts all came from 25 to 30
BY KEITH WISECUP
Ch8mpionship and gave thanks Navy jumped into its early lead
ranked
squad
against
minded Bradley, the 'Bruins
feet away.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Steve Wildcats," Coach Phillips Eagles had 22 turnovers.
to the weatherman.
with two first period touch- Dill, a 6·2 junior center, popped concluded after the game.
The Eagles are now 1-U both
Playing a steady defensive scored their second triumph of University of Pacific.
"The weather made the
·
The Bruins were led by Bill
"Our defense boxed out well. overall and in the SVAC while game, KC jumped into a 6-0 the season and tied a school
in a six foot jumper after
difference today," said do~i.liddies bad a fourth and
Walton
with 16 points and '17
record
for
most
consecutive
Hannan
Trace
is
1-1
overall
lead in the opening stanza
laking a beautiful pass from 5-9 II was just a tremendous team
.Nicklaus as ~ecords fell on IOwhenquarterback AJ Glenny senior guard Randy Boring effort that won the game for and in the SV AC. The Eagles behind the shooting of Mc- victo'ries which was set in the rebounds. He had 12 of his
Disney's 7,222-yard Magnolia knelt at the Army 37 lor the
will play at Kyger Creek next Carty . Southwestern came Lew Alcindor-era (1967-68). It rebounds in the first half when
wi th just six seconds left to us." Phillips added.
CoUrse .. ·
apparent field goal attempt by give the Eastern Eagles an
Phillips gave much credit to Friday wh ile the Wildcats have back as Lloyd Wood, is the second longest victory he also blocked eight shots.
1 Nicklaus , who has been Lanning. But Glenny {ook the upset 55-53 win over Southern his bench, which came in and a crucial meeting with the sophomore center, hit a short
playing touch football with his pass from center, straightened Valley Conference favorite did a fine job defensively. Symmes Valley Vikings this jumper. Kevin Walker, 5-10
·sons to get his legs back in up and tossed to fullback Andy Hannan Trace before a packed Starters were Boring, Duvall, Tuesday at Hannan Trace.
S&lt;•phomore forward , Mike
·~pe, hit six birdie putts from Pease on the Army 17 yard line
Eastern 155) - Boring J.4-10, Dillon, 5-10 senior forward, and
house at Eastern High School Dill , Sheets, and Tim Spencer.
U · far away as 30 feet and for a 13-yard play that kept the
Spencer
1·1-3, Dill 6-2-14, Carter began scoring to cut the
Corning off the bench and
Friday night.
Duvall
4-0-8,
Sheets 7-0-14,
'Jieillted a three round total of drive alive.
The Wildcats had rallied playin g well were Larry Cross 3·0·6, Atherton o.oco, Bobcat lead to 15-13 at the end
113, 13 under par.
Four plays later sopbomore from a seven point deficit after Atherton , Rick Cross, and Tim Baum 0-0-0. Totals 24-7-55.
of the first period.
, , Jim Dent, a 3~-year-old Clevelfd Cooper, who set a three quarters to tie it up at 53· Baum .
Hannan Trace (53) With Carter connecting from
Caldwell
2·2·6,
Lusher
8-5-21
,
avy single season all with 53 seconds left and had
•!o~rner caddie from Los new
The Eagles hit on 24 of 56 Halley 0-2-2, Wells 6 2-14, far outside and Wood hitting
Angeles, shot a hot 65 to move rushin record by going over
field
attempts for 43 pet.' but Dunfee 2-2-6, M. Swa in Q-4-4, underneath , Southwestern
possession of the ball. The
, Into second place with a 207 l,OOOyards, dashed Into the end much taller Hannan Trace five managed to drop .only seven of Shaeffer 0-0·0. Totals 18·17-53. moved back into the game and
~ lOla!, ' J;Wo strokes behind the zone from one yard out.
By Quarters
look a shot but missed and the 18 at the foul line. Eastern had Hannan Trace
10 16 II 16- 53 held a three point lead midway
· ~er.
Dn the next series of downs Eagles' gained possession with 33 total rebounds, about the Eastern
13 16 15 11- 55 in the second quarter.
' ~George Archer carded a Army quarterback Kingsley 33 seconds left.
Carter and Wood collected
. same anwunt as Hannan Trace
88 finish in third place,at 206. Fink's. was intercepted to
seven
points •each. 1 MCI3artyj,
boach Bill Phillips' Eagles
Goalby and Dave Marr give the ~lddles possession of. played for the final shot and the
'
and Hudson led the Bobcat
aJ$l turned in 65s to leap up in midfield. Glenny then capped a
allack
with five and fourth
strategy worked to perfection
the standings with nine under nine-yard scoring drive with an
poin ts respectively.
when Dill hit the game-winning
totals of 207.
11-yard touchdown pass to bucket.
In with 206 totals, five halfback Dan Howard.
Hannan Trace turned the
~lrokes of! the pace were Bert
After the Beaty shocker,
ball over after Dill's shot and
'Yancey•, ~rank. Beard and Len Navy, paced by Cooper's
the Eagles also turned it over
Thjlrnpson.
• . .
ounnlng, roared back and wilh just three seconds left, but
'(ancey, winner of the ,;marched 60 yards to the Army
the Wildcats couldn 't get off a
BIRMINGHAM, Ala . (UP!) tercepted a pass earlier,
BOSTON (UPI) - Tony
~rlcan Golf Classic earlier, ' five. But ·on fourth ·and two,
Speedy David Langner waited for the ball to fall into Sukiennik returned a punt 64
final shot.
' birdied hiS first seven holes on Glenny tried a keeper but was
Dill and 6-0 junior forward converted two blocked punts his arms, then scampered 25 yards for one touchdown and
. hl8 way to scoring a course tackled for a one-yard loss by
John Sheets paced Eastern in to touchdowns Saturday to yards for the six points. Five Pat Bentzel recovered a
record 64.
Army's Joe Furloni, whose
: "1 thought it was a Mickey earlier inte;·ception had set up with 14 points each while lead ninth-ranked Auburn to an minutes hiler he repeated the fumble to set up another
Boring added 10 ~nd played a upset 17-t6 victory over second- play from the Alabama 20.
Saturday as Boston College
MOjlseco~rse last year and it's
Army's first touchdown - by
spectacular
floor
game.
Alan
ranked
Alabama.
He
intercepted
his
second
rolled over Holy Cross, 41-11,
s'tilf a little goofy," said Hines.
Duvall, 6-1 senior forward, led
Alabama, headed for a pass of the day with 49 seconds before a record Alumni
Yancey.
The victory was Army's 36th
the Eagles with 11 rebounds Cotton Bowl match with Texas, to play to clinch the victory for Stadium crowd of 30,187.
.. :V.ancey 's birdie string is a against 31 losses in the series
and
Dill added eight retrieves. was only 5:30 away from its the jubilant Tigers.
Eagles never trailed · after
•record for the 1972 tour, but which began in 1890. There· John
lith consecutive victory and
Lusher,
a
6-0
junior
Auburn was trailing 16-0 Bentzel pounced on Joe
·Qoalby· holds the all-time have been six ties.
second straight perfect season when Gardner Jett kicked a Wilson's fumble at the Holy
guard
,
led
the
Wildcats
with
21
~ wilh eight straight at
points while 6-S junior center when junior linebacker Bill final period ·42 yard fie ld goal Cross 30 and Dave Bucci
·ihe 'SL Pe.tersburg Open in TWO TO PLAY
Newton broke through the Tide with 9:15 to play.
Don Wells added 14.
carried to the one on the next
1961.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)line
to
block
a
punt
at
the
"Our
offense
played
par·
After a scoreless first period, play to set up a touchdown dive
Qent, whose best finish this Green Bay Packers Coach Dan
Alabama 25.
well
on
the
boards
as
licularly
Alabama
went on the by Mike Esposito and a 7-0 lead
.year so rar was a tie for lith , Devine said Friday wide
Langner, who · had in· scoreboard with II: 16 to play in at 11:45 of the first quarter.
we got plenty of second and
pla,ce in the Kemper Open at receiver Carroll Dale and
the first half on a three yard
Boston College built a 13-3
;Charlotte, N. C., shot only 23
offensive tackle Dick HimesM
run
by
Steve
Bisceglia.
Bill
advantage
at 2:12 of the third
iplltts In sinking seven birdies would play Sunday against the
Davis kicked a 29-yard field quarter when Tom Rock
and no bogeys.
Detroit Lions.
goal and Wilbur Jackson added punted a short 21 yards to
.

BY KEITH WISECUP
year history.
for."•ard Andy Vaughan, who ·
ROCK SPRINGS - A torrid
Jimmy Boggs, a 5-9 senior played a goo,d floor game,
third period that saw Meigs guard who has that unique had 10. White topped
outscore the Jackson Ironmen knack of popping in 20-fovt Ja&lt;·kson with ' ll. The
31-10 - including 16 unan- jumpers, collected 21 points ·Marauders "'utreboundcd
. ' swered points midway into. the giving him · 47 jn Meigs' two Jarksou 3ll·3l.
period ·- wiped out -a Jackson games. Boggs, whil hasn 't'
Strangely enough, Jackson
28-20 halftime lead and lifted missed a free throw in nlne hit 011 50 pet. of its shots,
the Marauders to their first win · tries this year, hit on 8 of 17 nHJki11g 23 of 46. Meigs sank 28
this season, 67-li7, at Meigs from lhe field .
of 65 for a cooler but not bad 43
High Friday night,
Several other Marauders · pel. The Marauders hit on 11 of
Coach Carl Wolfe ordered a also played brilliantly, 18 from the foul line, Jackson
zone press at the ouiset of the especially in the third period. made II of 25.
third quarter w)lich worked to Rich Bailey came off the bench
The lronmcn now have a I·
perfection as it forced several to drop in 13 markers', center 2 overall record and are 0.1
Ironmen turnovers in the Bill Chaney hit 10 and Bill in league play. Meigs is 1·1 ·
Marauder backcourt.
Vaughan ; who led the Meigs • overall and tied [or first
Tralllng 35-%8 with just
comeback with four straight place in the league with a t.U
over
three
minutes
baskel.s in the third canto, had mark. The Marauders will
remaining in that third
nine points.
host the loop favorite and one
quarte&lt;!r' , the Marauder~
Paul White, a 6-2 forward , of top teams in the state,
scored 16 straight points
led Jackson with 14 points Waverly, next Friday.
within 90 seconds to go ahead
while Dan Morrow added II
Meigs opened up an 8-2 lead
1!·35.
and the lronn)ell's leading four mi nutes into the game ;
This
opening
1972-73 scorer, Tom Conroy, had 10, . tins dwi ndled due to sloopy
Southeastern. Ohio Athletic inducting Jackson's first eight fl uor play against a Jackson
League game bas to rank as points of the game.
·
press . Coa ch 'AI Burger 's
the greatest come-from-behind
Chaney led Meigs in charged led 14·13 after one
· win in Meigs basketball sixrebounding with 12 while period.

e

•'

Bruins make. it
47 ·in row 73~48

~Jack . eyes

seventh
:golf title

.I
I

Eagles upset
Wildcats, 55-53

MEIGS' Andy Vaughan (24) batUes Jackson's Rocky
Martin (23) and Dan Morrow (II) for loose ball during
Friday night's SEOAL cage opener at Rock Springs. ·The
Marauders evened their season record with a 67.,';7 win.

Marauder reserves post
Second Vl•ClOry, 45-32

"

Auburn upsets

par

'Bam_a, 17-16

Boston humbles
Holy Cross

e

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GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UP!)
The Florida defense, led by
- Tailback Nat Moore ran (or All-Southeastern Conference
103 yards and one touchdown Fred Abbott, held the
Saturday to spark Florida to a. Hurricanes to 50 yards rushing
17-&lt;l victory over Miami in a and picked off three Mian;li
biller struggle between the passes.
lntrasU!te 'rivals.
Miami's only other serious
Florida broke open .the · threat came right after the
defensive battle in the fourth kickoff when the Hurricanes
period, marching 35 yards for' reached the Florida 19. A lew
the game's first touchdown plays later, Mike Burke's 45after a short Miami punt. yard field goal attempt struck
Moore got the' tally on a one- the right goal post and bounyard plunge with 10:04 Jell In ced.
the game.
The Gators also missed a
Just46seconds later, Florida first half field goal attempt
freshman defensive back when Williams' 27-yard effort
Wayne Fields picked off an E;d fell short. Moore, an All·
Carney pass and streaked 54 Conference running back,
yards down the sideline for the gained 72yards in the first half.
second Gator touchdown.
The junior tailback sat out the
Miami drove 92 yards for its third quarter with an ankle
only touchdown in the closing Injury before returning in. the
minutes with a 35-yard pass final period to spark Florida's
from Coy Hall to Chuck scoring burst.
Miami finished the season
Foreman setting up the score.
Foreman was knocked out of with a 5-6 record, the
• bounds on the Gator three and Hurricanes' fourth straight
two plays later, tailback losing effort.
Johnny Williams ran tllree
yards for the score,
Florida's John Williams
SOONERS ROMP
kicked a 35-yard !leld goal in
NORMAN, Okla. (UP!) the second quarter for the only
Oklahoma
quarterback ilave
scoring before the fourth
Robertson passed lor two first
period flurry.
'
The Gators, now H-1 with a quarter touchdowns and fresh.
season finale with North man halfback Joe Washington
Carolina next week, decked ran for two scores Saturday io
Miami quarterbacks 10 times pace the third·ranked and
during the game, keeping the Sugar-Bowl bound Sooners to a
Hurricanes iri poor field 38-15 victory agalMt Oklahoma
State.
position most of the time.

six more points on a five yard SUkiennik, who picked up a key
run .
·
block from Bentzel and raced
Langner, a !i-9, 171).pound 64 yards along the left sideline
defensive back from Bir- for the score.
mingbam, put the initial slop
Holy Cross was unable to
on Alabama's passing game, move the ball on the next
intercepting the only aerial · series, and again gave the
Terry Davis threw in the first Eagles good field position when
half.
Rich Pelletier's punt went out
. .' '
Playing one-on-one wi·th of bounds at the Crusaders' 43Alabama wid~ receiver Wayne yard line.
Wheeler, Langner prevented :__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
the standout receiver, who that could have given Alabama
came into the game with 30 a tie.
catches for 573 yards, from . .- -....""!'...."'!!"~""'~..,""!'1111111111-~llllll~"!"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.,
rnak,ing
single reception.
Davis acompleted
only one of
.

Fill your stockings at:

With the air game stifled,
Alabama turned to its stable of
running backs. Bisceglia led
the Tide attack, piling up 102
yards on 24 carries as the Tide
netted 23S yards on the ground.
The game was a perfect
climax to Auburn's Cinderella
season in which the Tigers had
been expected to win only four·
games. Auburn takes a 9-1
recor&lt;l to Its Gator Bowl
meeting with Colorado.
Auburn, averaging~ yards
pet · game In ils first nine
outings, was held to eight yards
in the first half and 80 yards for
the game, while Alabama had
•uotal.
The first quarter ended in a
scoreless heat, but Alabama
began driving late In that
period and marched 71 yards in
1~ Jilays to put the first points
on the board with II :16 to play
In the half. A stubborn Auburn
defense blocked the extra point

·

••

•·

Meigs-Jackson box store
MEIGS-JACKSON CAGE STATISTICS
MEIGS
FG-FGA FT-FTA RB PF . TP

Sayre

A. Vaughan

Chaney
Boggs
.
B. Vaughan
Bailey
Price

Score

~Y

Myers

Werry
Fl. Burney
Fr. Burney

White
Morrow
Martin
DeStephen
Conroy
McDonald
Henderson
Jenkins
Billman
Fannin
TOTALS
Score by Quarters:
Jackson
.
· Meigs
Officials; Wallis and Craft.

Reserve score: Waverly 45,

I· 3

~
~
~

~
~
~

0
0
2

4
4
3

8
6

10

3 ,21 .
0
4 '9
2
2 13
0 0 0
1 · I
0
5 2 '0 .

0

0
1

o- 1

o. o o o· o

0- 0

0- 0

•5

•· 7
2· 5
0- 0
2·· 2

2- 3
2· 3
.0· 0
o. 1

0
1
1
3

J. 3
11·25

31

4-10

0-1

1• I

23-46

1· 4

2
0
2
9
3 . 10·

1

5
0

6
0

18

57

0
0
2

1

0·0

0

14 10 19--57
7 31 16--67

I~

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CHANEY CLOBBERED - BID Olaney (34) was clobbered from the rear on this play by an unidentified Jacbon
Ironrnan during Friday's Meigs-Jackson SEOAL cage battle
at Rock Springs. Meigs won the game, 61.,';7.

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The Amber Lounge Opens At 11100 A.M.
\.

0 .
0
3

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quarters :

Wellston 17.

4- 8.

6

10
12
3

0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0
0- 0 0- 1 0 0 0
28-65 ll·t8 39 23 67
JACKSON
6- 9 2- 511
1 14
4·11 3- 6 7 2 11

May
TOTALS

16 19 24 18- 71
4 13 8 2Q-45

0· 2
2- 3
o. 0

s.to . 3· 3

I; Workman 0·1-1; Scott i -0·2;
Swindler 1·4-6. TOTALS 32·1377.
WELLSTON (45)- Souders
9-0-18 ;
Snare
5·4·14;
Warrington 2-2-6 : Arnold 2-3-7;
Gilliland 0·0·0; Holzapfel 0·0-0.
TOTALS 18·9-45.
Waverly
Wellston

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The
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·

DATEAND SITE SET
HAMILTON, On l. (UP!)-The
1974 Grey Cup game, the tiUe
contest in the Canadian Foot.
ball League, will be held In
Vancouver.
The executive committee of
. the CFL also set the date lor
the 1973 game- to be played in
Toronto-for Dec. 2.

~

KIRK·wooD
.

with 18 points while
Mike Oyer added 17, and Ed
Tlwmpson, an All-Ohio transfer fr om New Boston , chipped
in 16 points for the winners.
Dave Souders ·of Wellston
s hared game honors with
Maloy by dumping in 18 points
with Charlie Snare getting 14.
The Tigers rammed in 32 of
64 shots for a hot SO pet. and
added 13 of 24 free throws.
They also grabbed off 36
rebounds with Oyer getting 12.
The Golden Rockets connected on 18 of 41 attempts for
44 pel. and converted nine of 19
free throws, but managed to
grab only 18 rebounds.
The box score:
WAVERL '\' i77) - Maloy 9·
0-18 ; Oyer 6-S-t7; Thompson 80-16: Shoemaker 3·0·6: Pfleter
i -0-4; Salyers 2·2-8; Tracy 0-1-

In posting their big win
Log~n hit 20 of S9 from the floor
and dropped in 16 of 25 free
throws.
The Tigers made good on 19
of 51 field goals and converted
II of 23 at the charity stripe.
Big Bill Mar kin pulled down
14 of . Ironton's 42 rebounds
while Randy Norris snagged 10
of Logan's 40.
The box score:
IRONTON (49) -Markin 4·
5·13 ; Hannon 5-0·10; S. Carter
4-0-8; Green 2-0-4; Ferguson 45-13; Rann0-1·1. TOTALS 19·11·
49.
LOGAN (56) - Pierce 5·2·12;
Whitcraft 1-0-2: Norris 0 ·11;
Wright 6-2-14; Kemper 2-5-9;
Campbell 0-3-3; Culbertson 2·1·
5. TOTALS 20-t6-56.

Ironton 41.

TOTAL.ELECTRIC MOBILE.
BY ·
·

£1

Ti get:~

Score by Quarters :

SMITH AUTO SALES

seven passes for 16 .yards and
had two intercepted.

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WELLSTON - Coach C. D.
Hawhee·s defending sEoAL
champion Waverly Tigers
again appear the team to beat
in the·Jeague this year as they
~pened the 1972-73 campaign
Friday night sma shing
Wellston 77-45.
The Tigers 'have now won 26
consecutive conference games
since losing 63-&lt;ll at Athens on
Dec . ll, 1970. In three years
inside the SEOAL, Waverly
owns a 28·1 mark. Waverly is
now 23 games shy of the all·
tim e conference winning
streak of 49 in a row, set by the
Gallipolis Blue Devils from
1953 through 1956.
It was simply a Tiger onsia'ughl as they led by quarter
scores of 16-4, 35-17, and 59-25.
Senior Bill . Maloy led the

Ironton
13 14 12 IQ--49
Logan
14 13 14 15-56
Reserve score : Logan 48,

From Mighty to Mini,
Honclcl has it aiL

count.

Logan· Waverly records 26th
•
downs straight SEOAL wzn
l ...OR*On

LOGAN - New head coaches
made their debut at Logan
Friday night with Logan's
ROCK SPRINGS - The the game, but a flurry of Scott Fitzgerald guiding his
Meigs Marauder resetves baskets in the final minutes Chieftains to a 56-49 victor.y
over Coach Paul Aikman's
coasted to their second win in widened Meigs' lead.
Meigshilon21of46frornthe
Ironton Tigers.
as many starts at Meigs High
It was the first SEOAL enSchool Friday night, defeating field for 45 pet. and made 3 of 5
the Jackson reserves 45-32 in fr om the foul ·line . Jackson, counter for both coaches and
the SEOAL opener of both now 1-2 on the year, made 15 of the hot.,;hooting Chiefs broke
43 shots for 34 pet. and hit on 2 out of a 27-27 halftime deadlock
teams.
of
6 f(pm the line . There were to notch their first league
Danny Dodson led the little
Marauders with 23 points as only lli'~ersonal fouls called in victory .
Logan led 14-13 at the end of
.
the ta)ented cetiter hit the hoop th e game.
Meigs (451 - Quails 5·0-10, the first period and following
11 times out of 16 attempts.
Cremeans
2-2·6, Ebersbach 0-0· the 27-all halftime score the
Freshman Terry Qualls
0,
Dodson
. Au!l . 1·0-2, host team went out front 41-39
foll\!i.ved ,wj th JLRandy.RJOge Co lb ur.~ ·0-11-2-23,
4 Totals 21·3·45. ,&lt;
.
,
.,
.
Jackson (321 - Ridge 7-1-! 5, 1 '~'a[t.er• tllree quarters . n"
· ' •·
Je.P.!I.ckson with 15.
Mitch Wright fired In 16
Coach Roger Birch's Meigs Fannin 1-1-3, M. Ridge 1-0-2,
o 1-0-2, Josepli 2-0-4, points to lead [he Chiefs with
reserved opened up an early 10. Grill.
Gentile 3-0·6. Totals 15-2-32.
J' Pi
dd'
!2
d
By Quarters
1m
erce a mg
, an
2 lead and led' 12-li after one
5 13 6 8-32 Randy Norris 11 markers.
quarter. Meigs was still hard· Jackson
Meig~ .
12
14 4 15-45
Mark Ferguson and Bill
pressed by the fronbovs late in
Officials, Sarver and Neal. Markin each canned 13 points
, ._ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
for the losing Tigers.

HONDA

It was the Marauders' dull
and drabby play in the second
quarte1· that gave the hustling
Ironmen the 28·20 lead . at
the half, the biggest lead for
Jackson in .the game.
Coach Wolfe must have
given something like a "win
one for the Gipper", speech
at the Intermission as a
totally revived -Marauder
five came out !Ired up, ready
to show what they could do.
The Marauders played near
perfect basketball the next
eight minutes. They hustled,
played better defense, forced
Jackson
into countless
mistakes, and hit the open man .
on offense. Marauder fans saw
hustle a.nd dedication like
they've never 'seen before.
It was beautiful.
Jackson outscored Meigs g..2
in the final minutes with
reserves of both teams on . the
floor . This lowered Meigs
biggest lead of 65-48 to the final

never relinquished.
Hornyak led all scorers with
24 p.oints, while three Huskies
contributed 16 each ~ l.ools
Nelson , Reggie Ball and Ray · .
Price.
Washingtcin t67) - Bolt t.-ol16; Pr ice 7-2-16: Williams 2·0·4)
Williams H -10; Nelson 7-2-16;
Hawes 0:1·1; Totals 28-11-67,
Ohio State (63) - Slekmann .
3-0-6; Jackson 5-2·12; Witte :1-:1&lt; ·
. -9; Hornyak 10-4-24i G,..,h'ard 3·
2·8: Andreas !·0·2; 'Totals 26-11·
63.
Halftime: Ohio Stale 30
Washington 29.
.
Fouled Out: Ball, Jackson.
Total Fouls:. Ohio State 20
Washington 17. ,
Attendance : 4,750.

LUNCHES 11 'A.M. TO 2 P,M., DINNERS 5 TO 10 P.M.
(Buffet Luncheon H :OOto 1:30, Mondavthru Saturday I
JACK W. CARSEY, MANAGER
PH.f92-2111
Serving Meigs, G. INa ond Milson
Counties
·
· store Open ,,..,,....,.

37 GUEST ROOMS - NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR ~EK
PARTY AND BANQUET ROOMS - B~ RESERVATION
.. I
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28- The SundaY Tlmes - senUnel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972 .

2'1- Tile Sunday Times· ~ntlnel, Swtdlly, Dec. 3, 1972

'

Pirates ·top

GA.HS knocks off
Athens five ·59-51

Ohio League hardwood opener for both squads.
The Blue Devils upped their season mark to 2-().
Coach Charles McAfee's Bulldogs dropped to 1-2 on
the year.
·

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Bullpups rally,
·down Imps 31-27

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The host Bulldogs, fired up
by a capacity crowd, jumped
ahead ·6-1! in the firs t two
minu tes of play . Mark
Kiesling's free throw at the
5: 12mark broke the scoring ice
for Coach Jim Osborne's lads.
Afhens held the upper
hand during the first six
minutes of play. Jimmy
Noe's long jumper with 1:28
left in the first period put
GAHS on lop for the first
lime, 9-8. The Gallians were
never headed.
Gallipolis led 12-10 after one
period of action.
During the first three and
one-half minutes of the second
period , Noe and Kiesling each
pil.ched in fo ur points to up the
Devils' lead to 20-10.
The Blue Devils built up their
bigges t advantage of the game
- 12 points - late in the first
half. Two free throws by Noe
g11ve GAHS a 26-14 margin with
2:30 left in the half. Kiesling hit
lwo charity tosses with 39
seconds left to make it 28-16.
Two costly GAHS turnovers
in the final 30 seconds of play
resulted in four quick AHS
puinls by Don Skinner and
Mark Mace. The Gallians took
a 21!-20 halftime lead into the
lockerroom.
Mace and Steve Inbody cut
Gallla's margin to four - 3026 - with 5:32 left in the
third stanza. However, Noe,
Klcsllng, Gil Price and Steve
Lee pushed the Devils lead
back to leu, 4tl-30,...,1th 1: o2
showing on the clock. GAHS
led 41-32 after three periods.
P•·ice and Kiesling traded'
goals with Ted Essex and Mace
earl y in the final period. With
GAHS on lop 49-39 at the 5:06
ma rk, Athens made its last
despera te bid to overtake the
visiturs.

THE PLAINS - Coach Fred Chonko 2·1-5; Green 3 - 2 - ~ .
Gibson's Athens Bulldogs TOTALS 13-S-31.
By Quarters:
rallied from a 17-16 halftime Blue Imps
6 11 6 4- 27
8 8 9 6- 31
deficit to defeat Coach Ed Bullpups
Pauley's Gallipolis Blue Imps
31,27 in the Southeastern Ohio
SEO standings
League reserve opener for both
ALL GAMES
squads here Friday night.
TEAM
W L P OP
The lmps' fell behind 25-23 Gallipolis
2 o 138 99
I 0 77 45
after three periods, trailing 29- Waverly
Chesapeake
1 0 64 44
'll with U9 remaining. The
South Point
2 1 212 162
Imps blew several chances to Portsmouth
2 1 176 175
knot the score. Two free throws Logan
2 1 192 168
Meigs
1 1 117 118
by Bob Green with 29 seconds
Ironton
1 1 128 117
left iced the win for the Athens
1 2 156 164
Bullpups.
Jackson
1 .2 142 191
0 I 48 79
The Imps hit only 10 of 42 Fed-Hocking
o 2 94 141
field goal attempts for an 'icy Wellston
Friday 's Results:
23.8 pet. H~d the Imps been Gallipolis 59 Athens 51
Wellston
0 I 17 45
able to hit 70 pet., at the foul Meigs 67 Jackson 57
TOTALS
4 4 286 286
77 Wellston 45
Rese rve Results:
circles, they would have won Waverly
Logan 56 Ironton 49
Wave rl y A5 Well ston 17
going away. The Imps were 7- Chesapeake. 64 Oak Hill 44
Logan 48 Iron ton 41
17 at the charity circles for a Rock Hill 73 South Poinl 69
Meigs 45 Jackson 32
cold 41 pet. The visitors pulled Ashland, Ky . S8 Portsmouth 54 Athens 31 Ga llipolis 27
Dec. 5 Game i
Dec. 8 Games:
·down 26 rebounds, 11 by Mike Gallipolis at Chesapeake ,
Wellston at Gall ipolis
Sickles, and had only nine
SEOAL VARSITY
Meigs al Waverly tto be pl ayed
TEAM
W L POP · at Meigs, new Wa ver l y, gym
turnovers. Both teams comWaverly
I 0 77 45 will nol be fini shed until Jan.
mitted 14 personals.
.
Meigs
1 o 67 57 ~.)
Tommy ValenUne pac¢&lt;1 the Gallipolis
I 0 59 51 Logan at Jackson
1 0 S6 49 Athens at Ironton .
Imps with' nine points. Jim Logan
Ironton
0 1 49 56
SEOAL FROSl;l
Niday, who only played the Athens
0 1 Sl 59 TEAM
W L P OP
first half, finished with eight. Jackson
o 1 57 67 Waverly
1 0 81 29
0 1 45 77 Jackson
Faulkner and Green each Wellston
1 0 52 32
TOTALS
4 4 461 461 Gallipolis
1 0 30 21
had eight for the winners.
Ir onton
1 0 29 28
Box score:
SEOAL RESERVES
Logan
0 1 28 29
GAHS tB) (27) - Groth 0·0· TEAM
W L P OP Athens
o 1 21 30
o. Burris 0-0-0; Watson 2·2-6; Waverly
I 0 45 17 Meigs
o 1 32 52
Valentine 3-3-9; Sickles 2-0-4; Meigs
I 0 45 32 Wellston
0 1 29 81
T. Myers 0-0-0; Niday 3-2-8. Logan
1 0 48 41 TOTALS
4 4 302 302
Athens
1 0 31 27
TOTALS 10-7-27.
Thursday's Results:
ATHENS 'B' (31) - Ellwood Gallipolis
0 1 27 31 Ironton 29 Logan 28
b 1 41 48 Waverl y 81 Wel lston 29
1-0-2; Gardner 0-0-0; Slempel3· Ironton
0 I 32 45 Jackson 52 Mei gs 32
0.6 · Heady 1-0-2; Butner 0-0-0; Jackson
Fa~tkner 3-2-8 ; Smith 0-0-0;
Ga llipolis 30 Athens 21
, - - - - - - - - - - - -...-:-:-:------.,. Oec. 7 Games :
\raoc"~~~n a~t ALtch,•,n,ns
Wavertv at Mei•ls

DANCE NIGHTLY

To The Most Popular Band
On The River.
'

11

THE ROVERS"

The final four minutes of
ac tion was a doozy. Mace cut
loose with six poi~ts. Essex and
Mark Handley each had two as
the Bulldogs narrowed the gap
lo illl'ee, 54-51, with 1:38left in
!he game.

After a GAHS timeout, the
Bulldogs were forced to come
uut afte r the ball . Noe hit a free
lhruw with 1:3l left to make it
55-51. Noe missed a second
attempt, but Gil Price lapped
in a loose ball to make it 57-51
al the 1:2!i mark .
With 1:06 left, At hens
committed its 20th turnover of
KJESUNG HITS FROM OUT · FRONT--Senior Blue
the game. GAHS played keep- ·Devil guard Mark Kiesling, (31) hitting from afar out front,
away the final minute of acenjoyed the best night of his two-year varsity career against
li un. Topper Orr completed the
Athens Friday, scoring 16 points against a seldom-used
game's scoring as he eluded a · Bulldog zone defense. Athens players are Andy Chonko (54)
Bulldog defender fur an easy
and Mark Handley (32). That's Galllil•s Topper Orr (15) on
layup at the 0:43 mark.
right. GARS won, 59-lil.
Athens, normally a man-toman defensive team, surprised
lhe Gallians with a 1-3-1 zone
defense, but the Gallians
played it cool, worked for the
good shot, and the result 'was
ihe Blue Devils third consecutive win over the Bulldogs
within a 12-month period.
HONOLULU (UP! ) - Earl
From the field, GAHS ·hit
Six deals were consummated
Weaver tells about the little list Friday and they came in
21 of ~0 shots for 52.8 pet. The
the Baltimore Orioles had firecracker order with Charlie
Gallians sank 17 of 24 free
when they came here.
Finley, who wasn't even here,
throw attempts for 70.8 pet.
"Maybe
I
shouldn
't
give
out
swapping first baseman Mike
GAHS committed 22 perthe
names,
but
oh,
well,
it
was
sonals. Steve Lee fouled out
Epstein and outfielder Brant
our ow n private list and l can't Alyea to the Texas Rangers for
with 5:55 left in the game.
reliever Horacia Pina.
The Gallians picked off 27 see any harm,'' he sayd.
"We had a Jim Wynn on it, a
rebounds. Noe hauled down
Bob Short, the Rangers boss
Bobby
Bonds, a Nate Colbert," man, wasn't worried over the
12, Price nine. The Gallians
said the Baltimore manager, fact Epstein went zip-for•l6 for
had 17 turnovers.
'"a'lnd ' i" ·' the ·' W'o"Itl "~"n"e's'•
Noe led all scorers with"22 . ' ' b ~1:. the _top; l'l~!ne;op th~ : list, Oa "'
"
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points. Kiesling added 16 for ·the one we wanted most, was against Cincin nati.
" Look,"
said
Short ,
th e winners. ·Price finished Earl Williams."
The
Orioles
finally
landed
wilh 13. Price sat outs :35 of the
"anybody can have a bad
firs! half with three fouls .' the 24-year-&lt;lld, rig hl~1anded Series , can't he? He led the
Noe sat out half of the · third hitting catcher-slugger Friday Oakland club in home runs,
and half of the fourth period following 48 hours of frantic didn't he, and they've gOt some
with fo ur personals. Starting soul-searching by the Atlanta pretty fair power hitters like
guard Jim Singer sprained his Braves, who wanted to make Reggie Jackson, Sal Ban do and
ankle midway through the first sure they weren't giving away Joe Rudi."
period, and did not see any the National League's 1971
In Friday's other deals,
more action. He was replaced Rookie of the Year too cheaply. Cincinnati obtained outfielder
They didn'L
by Kev Sheets.
Richie Scheinblum and rightFor
Williams
and
Taylor
Mace was the only Bulldog in
handed pitcher Roger Nelson
double figu res. The 6-1 AHS Duncan, a good-looking 19- from Kansas City for outjunior tossed in 17 points, 10 in year-&lt;lld infielder who hit .279 fi elder-third baseman Hal
with Greenwood, S. C., of the McRae and righthander Wayne
lhe final period.
Western
Carolina League, the Simpson; the Reds also picked
Athens shot 45 pet., from •lhe
fi eld , hitting 18 of 40 attempts. Braves got second baseman up outfielder Larry Stahl from
AHS hit 68.1 pel., from the foul Dave Johnson, Pat Dobson , a San Diego in a straight cash
circles, making 15 of 22. The 20-game winner in 1971, cat- deal, the Padres added outBulldogs committed 20 per- cher Johnny Oates and big fielder Dave Marshall from the
sonals. Skinner fouled out with Rorie Harrison , a right-handed Mets for relief pitcher Al
eight seconds left in the third reliever,
Severin sen; Cleveland obperiod .
collected
22
Athens
rebounds. Essex and Mace
each had six snags for the
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS tS91
. losers.
PLAYER- Pas.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
The Blue Devils will hit the · Gil l Pri ce, c.f
6-10
1· 2 3 9 3 13
3 22
JimmyNoe,
t
7-11
8-10
4 12
road again Tuesday for a
Mark Kiesl ing, g
S-10
6· 9 2 1 4 16
non-league contest at TopperOrr. l
2· 4 • 2· 2 4 5 2 6
Chesa peake. Athens next
Jim Singer, g
o. 0 0· 0 2 0 1 0
Kev Sheets, g
0· 2 0- I 2 0 2 0
outing Is Friday, at Ironton.
Steve
Lee,
g
1- 3 o. 0 S 0 2 2
GAHS. will host Wellston TOTALS
21·40 17-24 22 27 17 59
Friday in its first home ga me
ATHENS BULLDOGS tS1)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP·
PLAY ER- Pos.
of the 1972-73 campaign.
4
5
4
1I
2· 5
3
Andy Chonko, c
6
.
I
8
3·
8
2·
2
3
Ted Essex, f
1- 2 3· 5 3 0 3 5
Mark Handley. g
6-16
5-5 0 6 3 17
.Mark Mace, f
2
0
7
34
•
1- 3
5
Don Skinner, f
0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
Jeff Williams, g
2· 7
o. 0 3 3 s 4
Steve Inbody, g
PHlLCO®
3
6
2·
2
2- 2 3 . 0
John Locke. g
1
0
0
00
00
0
Alex
Topping,
I
STERfO SOUND
18-40 IS-22 2) 22 20 SI
TOTALS

Six more trades

top winter meet

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and name, address arid
signature of the buyer.
Wool sales prices are needed,
Roush explained, to determine
the incenUve payment rate the percentage necessary to
bring the average return for all
wool marketed up to the incenlive level of 72 cents a
poun~ .......
Each applicant's payment is
determined by applying the
national percentage figure to
the individual's net return
sold,
number
of
head
and
from
sale of wool. In this way,
li veweight of unshorn lambs
sold, gross and net proceeds, grdwers who market the wool
in most demand and who do the

POMEROY - As soon as shorn wool. This is to
mar ketin g is completed, discourage unusual shearing of
producers who plan to file for lambs before marketing, which
incentive payments on wool could result in shorter, lower
and unshorn lambs are asked quality wool," said Orion
to bring the sales documents to Roush, Chairman of the Meigs
their County ASCS Offices..
Cou nty
Agricultural
A special reminder was Stabilization and Conservation
given l,hal . growers who Committee.
mar~ted , ij~orn r lam.b~ this ,.' . ·Sales• ducnments ' brought•
fall may apply for payment: . in by producers ·should include
"Payments authorized under name and address of the seller,
the National Wool Act apply to date of sale, net weight of wool

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ifreneh
uarter ·

·Panthers
bomb Oaks
•
m
opener

the NEW in FARMING

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Score By Quarters:

Gallipolis Blue Devils
12 16 13 18-59
Athens Bulldogs
10 10 12 19-51
Officials - Dave Wrightsel and Bob Overly.

with built-In:
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
. • 4-SPEEO AUTOMATIC . ;.I
RECORD' CHANGER
' FM STEREO, FM/ AM
RADIO .
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eOPEN 2:30P.M.
TO
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Paced by the hot outside 6-1 junior forward 1was the only
shooting of senior guard T. J. other Pirate hitting double
Robinson and junior speedster figures with ll points. ·
Dan Miller, North Gallia . Coach Bob O~d's Tornadqes
jumped into a 12-6 first period were led by the shooting
lead and were never headed. provided by Norman Curfman ,
The ·Pirates held a com- 6-1 junior forward and big Ron
manding 30-14 lead at the half. Hill, 6-3 senior center. Curfman
Robinson, enjoying the best canned 11 points on four
night of his high school career, baskets and three free throws
was the game's leading scorer while Hill had 10 points . Bob~y
wi th 16 points. Miller finished Miller, 5-9 junior guard had
with 14 points. Dave Robinette, nine points .for Southern. .
The Pira'tes led 44-21 at the
end of the third period and
scored IS points in the final
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eight minutes.
North Gallia hit 24 of 63 field
goal attempts for 38 pet. while
Southern sank only 15 of 56
puin ts for a poor 26.7 pet. The
Pirates hit nine of 13 foul shots
•'If
CHESAPEAKE - Coach while the Tornadoes canned 10
Lewis O'Antoni's Chesapeake of 29 free throws.
Pan tilers looked sharp here
Southern committed 14
Friday night as they riddled turnovers while North Gallia
\&lt;!siting Oak Hill 64-44 in an had on ly seven,
Ohio Valley Conference cage
The Pirates held a 43-30.edge
opener for both teams.
in the rebounding department.
Big 6-5 senior center Ron Keith Weddington, 6-2 junior
Roesch paced the Panthers forward, led North Gallia with
with •l9 points and 16 rebounds. 13. Hill had 12 for the TorRandy Hall chipped in with 12 nadoes.
points. Ron Wood and Gary
North Gallia edged Southern,
Sheets also finished in double 31-30 in the reserve game . Mike
figures with 10 points apiece. Camden paced the Pirates with
It was a close battle for three nine points. Pete Sayre had 12
periods. Chesapeake held the in a losing cause.
upper hand at 14-12, 30-22 and ' North Gailia travels to
39-32. In the final period, Southwestern Tuesday night
Cllesapeake employed a full while Southern plays Kyger
court press and outscored the Creek.
Southern (4Dl - lhle 1-2-4;
Oaks 25-12 to win going away.
Curfman
4-3-11 ; Hill 4·2-10 ;
Alan Hayes paced the losers
Nease 2-0-4; Miller 3-3-9;
with 18 points. Mike Gollihue Knighting 1-0-2. Totals, tS-10·
40,
11 .
added 10.
North
Gallia
(571
Wed·
The Panthers will host dington 1-0-2; Janies 2·0-4;
Gallipolis Tuesday in a non- Robinette 3-5·11; Miller 7·0-1 4;
conference game. Oak Hill Robinson 7-2- 16; Smith 2-2-6;
2·0·4. Totals, 24-9-57 .
dropped to 0-2 on the year. The Payne
By Quarters :
Oaks will host Ironton St. Joe Southern
6 8 7 19- 40
Norlh Gallia 12 18 1• 13-17
Friday.
OAK HILL 1441- Hayes 6-6·
18 ; T. Carter 0·4·4: D~vis 1-1-3;
Gollihue S-0-1Q; Willis 0-0-0;
NHL Standings
Bangert 1-2-4; Warren 0-u-0;
By United Press International
Pastor 0-0·0. TOTALS 14-16•44.
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East
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·CHESAPEAKE (64)· - Hall
·
,. . w ). •J: 1: .; 14 ga ,
,
~ ~53
,. 4,4-12 ; Wood 4-2-10;1Roesch,Z,-1 · Mon
19'; Edwards 0'0-0; F'Oit6n -v-O· NY ~angeh s
3' .3 98 67
o; Wilcox 3-3-9; G. Sheets 5·0· Boston
14 7 3 ·31 108 83
10; D. Sheets o.o.o; Smith 1-0-2; Buffalo
10 7 7 27 80 68
Holbrook 1·0·2. TOTALS 27-10· Detroit
10 9 2 22 76 74
64.
Vancouver
8 15 2 18 74 102
By Quarters:
Toronto
7 13 3 17 74 78
Oak Hill
12 10 10 12- 44 NY Islanders 3 16 2 8 47 106
14 16 9 25- 64
West
Chesapeake
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Minnesota 13 7 3 29 71 53
!&lt;lined outfielders Roger Freed Chicago
13 8 2 28 84 68
and Oscar Gamble from the Pi ttsburgh 12 10 2 26 94 77
Los Angeles 10 II 4 24 84 84
Phillies [or outfielder- Del Atlanta
10 12 4 24 59 81
Unser and minor league third Phil adelphia
10 11 3 23 85 89
baseman Terry Wedgewood,
Louis
7 10 S 19 57 70
and infielder Rich McKinney St.
California
4 IS 5 11 61 101
went to Oakland from the
Friday's Results
Calif 3 New York 3, lie
Yankees to complete the Matty
St. Louis 6 Vancouver 2
Alou deal made a week ago.
(Only games scheduled\

GAHS-Athens box score

CENTER

eNO COVEl! CHARGE,'
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ePOPULAR PRICES

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Exte..loo Agent, ~!culture
·
POMEROY -: While ~eigs County seems to be faring better
than many others mOhio m regard to corn harvest, there still are
· many farmers with unharve$led corn.
Acooidin~ fo extension .speciallsts at Ohio State University,
there is a.poss1b1Uiy of ~esting this mature corn for silage if it
can be ptcked, then SpecUll attention giv.n to gelling the grain
dry.
.
Specialists caution however, that mature corn silage should
be made from only those fields that were planted specifically for

'
VINTON - Coach Jim Foster's North Gallia
Pirates opened defense of their 1972 SVAC t.itle here
Friday night with a 57-40 triumph over the Southern
Tornadoes.

THE PLAINS ..,.. Gallipolis defeated Athens 59-51
here Friday night. It was the 1972-73 Southeastern

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period of two weekS. Animals that are suddenly allowed to
consume grain free-choice may develop entertoumla (over.eating disease), founder of simple off feed due to excessive grain
mtake.
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Corn fields that were !~tended for mechanical grain harvest
ticular importanCe neat the tw of the · silo. The. cold en- should not be harvested or gleaned by ruminants if aldrin
crop ~s grain. The ensiling prPCCSS' will stop the growth of. mold
vironmental temperature of late fall and early winter should dieldrin or chlordane were used to control soil insects. Such in:
and will stabilize the feeding value of the material harvested . .
Do nol'\(ld urea·or ammonla containing additives to mature · reduce the· amount or •poilage observed.
secticides can appear as contaminants of meat and milk by way
IF RUMINANTS ARE TO BE USED to harvest corn, they of systemic contamination of the forage portion of the plant andcorn silage. Water can be added to mature c.Jrn silage to Te!lucc
the dry matter percentage and increase the effectiveness of should be accustomed to the increased level of grain con- or by way of soil contamination of the material rema_inlng ln the
packing. Adding 200 pounds (25 gallons) of water per ton would sumption slowly. This can be done in the barn or lot prior to the field .
"'
reduce the dry matter percentage of chopped material by ap- time the animals are turned out. A second possibility is to allow
DAIRY AND BEEF CATTLE seem to be less affected than
proximately 10 pet. Such a reduction in dry matter is of par- the animals to ~ raze these fields only a short lime
per
day
for
a
most other species of animals by molds that develop on corn ill
.
the field prior to harvest. U the mold content of the corn is high
enough to reduce dry matter intake, production will be red.Jlced.
Severely molded corn may hav·e a reduced feeding .valoo. This
reduction in feeding value is imPossible to judge in advance. ·
It is unlikely that' toxins \Qat will affect ruminants wUl be
produced by field molds. Harvesiect grain should be stored in a
GALLiPOLIS - Englisll I students of Gallia AcaJemy are Finn and the disappearance of Jim may be related. Some say manner that prey_e,vts lh~rtle;elopment of storage .molds. Molds
putting their classroom work to use. The six classes, under the Jim is on Jackson Island. People have seen smoke and a party is that develop during the storage period are more likely to produce
leadership of master teacher Mrs. Lola Napier and student expected to search t~ere some lime in the future.
toxins that will affect ruminants.
teacher Mius Margaret Tracy, have been studying a unit on the
No one knows why Jim left, but the Widow Douglas says he
Good quality, high-moisture corn can be preserved by ennews)laper.
might have overheard her say that they were planning to sell him siling or treatment with propionic acid or a combination of acetic
·The students have learned newspaper terms, where to find at New Orleans.
and propionic acids. If any of these procedures are to be uUIIZed,
certain items iri the paper, and most recently have written their
it is important that lhe.recornmendalions or the manufacturer be
own articles. The class has also been studying Mark Twain's
I'RAUDS ESCAPE WITII LOOT
followed carefully. The acid treatment of high moisture eorn is
famous novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. To tie the
By John Kidwell
presently recommended only for whole-kernel, shelled com:
projects \Ogether the students each wrote a news article on ·one
ONE HORSE, Ark. - Two men posing as actors collected Neither acid treatment or ensiling will destroy or inactivate
scene from Huckleberry Finn.
fou r hundred sixty-five dollars in a three-night stand here ending toxins that developed prio~ to harvesting and treatment.
Three samples are included below, one written with great last night. This act consisted of a man prancing around the stage
If the cobs of ear corn are rotten, it is recommended that
care, in the dialect of the place and lime, just as Mark Twain· on all fours, naked and painted.
such corn be shelled prior to grinding and mixing with other feed
may have written:
The two fugitives, David Garrick and Edmm\d Kean, which ingredients for ruminant concentrate mixtures,
HUCK FINN'S DED
are probably assumed names, arrived in town days ago.
By Mark Crawford
They barely escaped being tarred and feather.ed after the first
Yesderdee a boy who's called Huck Finn was thought ded . performance. The'mob was stopped by our own Dr. Kinkaid, who
Whal happened, you see, was that Huck had been taken from the allegedly told the crowd to talk up the show so that the rest of the
,
Widow ·Douglas's by his Pap. I reckon the old man had left fo' town would be taken, too. If there was indeed a plan, it worked.
town and'while he's away sumpbody kilt Huck. The way lfigger, Most of the town attended the second performance,
ya see, is that some robber kilt him wif an ax then drug his body
The third performance never came off. A capacity crowd ·
on the groun' and flung him into the river. Then they took all again attended, this time with fruits and vegetables with which to
Huck's Pap,had out of the house. This happened 'round the time bomb the frauds. When the time for the performance had passed,
,~
Jim, a nigger slave, stole away. Some people bleve that Jim kill the building was searched, revealing no trace of the fugitives.
Huck, while others bleve it was Huck's own Pap. I don't know
t
who dun it. Who do ya think did?
THESE ENGLISH I students study many forms of com\' .. ....;..
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munication. Each year lime is spent on reading, writing, and
\,.;.....,.,....._
SLAVE ESCAPES
speaking. Audio-visual equipment is used, as are the newspaper,
By Michael Vallee
traffic signs, oral presentations, and the traditional grammar
AUGUST 7, 1853 - Today a slave was reported missing by and literature studies. Reading is encouraged by the large
Miss Watson and Widow Douglas. It is not known when or how he paperback library in tl)e room and a certain day each week is
got away but search parties that began this morning .could find alloted for the student to read a book he chooses. Writing and
MAN&amp;E MITES,
no trace of the runaway.
speaking come as natural follow-ups to the grammar and
LICE, ~LEAS
Lately people have suspected the recent murder. of Huck literature studies as students comment on what they have read.

There's still time to get the com crop picked

SHS, 57-40

N9e, Kiesling,
Price lead way;
Mace tallies 17

ORR STEALS BAIL - Senior Blue Devil forward
TQPper Orr (15, dark uniform) steals a pass intended for an
unidentified Athens Bulldog during Friday's SEOAL cage
opener at The Plains gym. It was one of 20 Athens turnovers
during the 32-rninute contest.

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best job of selling it, receive
the highes t incentive return.
When the necessary sales
documents are brought to the
Coun ty ASCS Office, personnel
there will assist producers in
completin g payment aP·
plications. Payments will be
made next April on wool and
unshorn lambs marketed this
year . Applications should be
made by the end of J~nuary,
1973, .but may be !!Ia(!~ at any
lime after the wool and lambs
are marketed .

PURINA HO&amp; _and CATTLE DUSTIN&amp; POWDER

Ready lo use, Purina /Jog ond Ca ttle Dusting Powder with
Lindane goes to work on mites, lice a nd flea&amp; immt.-diolely18!ely, in. coldest. weBther - and keeps on working to prevent
remreatahon.
.'
Slop scratching, help speed rate of &amp;aln, get more return on your
nveMlment. Come in and we'll explain how enay it is to u11.

Carmel News, By the Day
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circ le, Verna and
Wavie, for the Thanksgiving
holiday weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Mutti and family of
New Philadelphia, Dixie Circle
of Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Circle and Patrece of Oak
Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harden and family of Nease
Settlement and Harold Circle
and sons, Racine R. D.
Mrs. Mabel Lax of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla ., spent a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle and Florence Circle.
Paul Moore spent the
weekend with his sister, Mr.
and Mrs . . Aidan Springer of
Vinton, Va., and attended the
wedding of his niece, Paula Jo
Springer.
Thanksgiving day guests at
the home of Douglas .,Circle
were Mr. ·and Mrs. Garrell
Circle of Racine, Mrs. Mabel
Lax and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Follrod, and Kim, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl
LeAnn spent a recent evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson of Racine.
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl
LeAnn Johnson and Eunie
Brinker called on Mrs. Mary
Roush a recent afternoon.
. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr. and Mrs. RQy van
Meter and family and Chester
Van Meter of Morning Star
recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson,
Toni of Racine and Mr. and
Mrs . Shelby Pickens and
family of ,Syr;~cuse spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Perry,
Dannie, Francine of Hollon ,
Ohio spent Wednesday night
through Friday with Mrs.
Mary Circle. Others calling
over the weekend were Mrs.
D&lt;&gt;nald Pierce of Athens, Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Circle and
family of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. George Circle and James
Circle of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Swepston and family of
Columbus spent Thanksgiving
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee,
Bob BiD, Becky and Ralph Lee.
Mr. Robert Lee, Bob Bill and

Becky visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester
recently .

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3

FLORIDA FIRST
TALLAHASSEE, Fla . (UPIJ
- Florida is the first slate to
reimpose the death penalty
after the Supreme Court's
hislori c ban this summer, and
the state attorney gene ral
predicted a test of the new law
within two years.

Christmas Sale Price

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1346 95
$3Q995
Regular Price
Christmas Sale Price

UN ICO 20 cu. ft.

CHEST FREEZER

Gravely's exclusive rotary

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no raking. di&amp;cing,
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or harrowing,
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PloWA up to
• Jf

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Ch ristmas

Sale Pri ce

7" dee,8"

wide. Come
1- in for dem1} onotration.

·, r·. __..:··lt:
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{

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1973 Modeli are here .
Purchase your Gravely

- --tJ

WE ALSO HAVE:
Dominion, Sunbeam, West Bend

small appliances, Shopcraft
&amp; Shopmate Power Toof~

·'·

Tractor now, at Special

Winter Prices, and a SO.OO
deposil will ~old your purchase unlit April 1, 19)3.
Bring rour Gravely in for
tune.up or overhaui now and
Save ...

25%
ON LABOR COST

Gravely Tractor
992-!IIS

Pomeroy, O,

and Shop!
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J'lenty of Free Parking ·
~

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•

"':

&lt;

..

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28- The SundaY Tlmes - senUnel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972 .

2'1- Tile Sunday Times· ~ntlnel, Swtdlly, Dec. 3, 1972

'

Pirates ·top

GA.HS knocks off
Athens five ·59-51

Ohio League hardwood opener for both squads.
The Blue Devils upped their season mark to 2-().
Coach Charles McAfee's Bulldogs dropped to 1-2 on
the year.
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Bullpups rally,
·down Imps 31-27

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The host Bulldogs, fired up
by a capacity crowd, jumped
ahead ·6-1! in the firs t two
minu tes of play . Mark
Kiesling's free throw at the
5: 12mark broke the scoring ice
for Coach Jim Osborne's lads.
Afhens held the upper
hand during the first six
minutes of play. Jimmy
Noe's long jumper with 1:28
left in the first period put
GAHS on lop for the first
lime, 9-8. The Gallians were
never headed.
Gallipolis led 12-10 after one
period of action.
During the first three and
one-half minutes of the second
period , Noe and Kiesling each
pil.ched in fo ur points to up the
Devils' lead to 20-10.
The Blue Devils built up their
bigges t advantage of the game
- 12 points - late in the first
half. Two free throws by Noe
g11ve GAHS a 26-14 margin with
2:30 left in the half. Kiesling hit
lwo charity tosses with 39
seconds left to make it 28-16.
Two costly GAHS turnovers
in the final 30 seconds of play
resulted in four quick AHS
puinls by Don Skinner and
Mark Mace. The Gallians took
a 21!-20 halftime lead into the
lockerroom.
Mace and Steve Inbody cut
Gallla's margin to four - 3026 - with 5:32 left in the
third stanza. However, Noe,
Klcsllng, Gil Price and Steve
Lee pushed the Devils lead
back to leu, 4tl-30,...,1th 1: o2
showing on the clock. GAHS
led 41-32 after three periods.
P•·ice and Kiesling traded'
goals with Ted Essex and Mace
earl y in the final period. With
GAHS on lop 49-39 at the 5:06
ma rk, Athens made its last
despera te bid to overtake the
visiturs.

THE PLAINS - Coach Fred Chonko 2·1-5; Green 3 - 2 - ~ .
Gibson's Athens Bulldogs TOTALS 13-S-31.
By Quarters:
rallied from a 17-16 halftime Blue Imps
6 11 6 4- 27
8 8 9 6- 31
deficit to defeat Coach Ed Bullpups
Pauley's Gallipolis Blue Imps
31,27 in the Southeastern Ohio
SEO standings
League reserve opener for both
ALL GAMES
squads here Friday night.
TEAM
W L P OP
The lmps' fell behind 25-23 Gallipolis
2 o 138 99
I 0 77 45
after three periods, trailing 29- Waverly
Chesapeake
1 0 64 44
'll with U9 remaining. The
South Point
2 1 212 162
Imps blew several chances to Portsmouth
2 1 176 175
knot the score. Two free throws Logan
2 1 192 168
Meigs
1 1 117 118
by Bob Green with 29 seconds
Ironton
1 1 128 117
left iced the win for the Athens
1 2 156 164
Bullpups.
Jackson
1 .2 142 191
0 I 48 79
The Imps hit only 10 of 42 Fed-Hocking
o 2 94 141
field goal attempts for an 'icy Wellston
Friday 's Results:
23.8 pet. H~d the Imps been Gallipolis 59 Athens 51
Wellston
0 I 17 45
able to hit 70 pet., at the foul Meigs 67 Jackson 57
TOTALS
4 4 286 286
77 Wellston 45
Rese rve Results:
circles, they would have won Waverly
Logan 56 Ironton 49
Wave rl y A5 Well ston 17
going away. The Imps were 7- Chesapeake. 64 Oak Hill 44
Logan 48 Iron ton 41
17 at the charity circles for a Rock Hill 73 South Poinl 69
Meigs 45 Jackson 32
cold 41 pet. The visitors pulled Ashland, Ky . S8 Portsmouth 54 Athens 31 Ga llipolis 27
Dec. 5 Game i
Dec. 8 Games:
·down 26 rebounds, 11 by Mike Gallipolis at Chesapeake ,
Wellston at Gall ipolis
Sickles, and had only nine
SEOAL VARSITY
Meigs al Waverly tto be pl ayed
TEAM
W L POP · at Meigs, new Wa ver l y, gym
turnovers. Both teams comWaverly
I 0 77 45 will nol be fini shed until Jan.
mitted 14 personals.
.
Meigs
1 o 67 57 ~.)
Tommy ValenUne pac¢&lt;1 the Gallipolis
I 0 59 51 Logan at Jackson
1 0 S6 49 Athens at Ironton .
Imps with' nine points. Jim Logan
Ironton
0 1 49 56
SEOAL FROSl;l
Niday, who only played the Athens
0 1 Sl 59 TEAM
W L P OP
first half, finished with eight. Jackson
o 1 57 67 Waverly
1 0 81 29
0 1 45 77 Jackson
Faulkner and Green each Wellston
1 0 52 32
TOTALS
4 4 461 461 Gallipolis
1 0 30 21
had eight for the winners.
Ir onton
1 0 29 28
Box score:
SEOAL RESERVES
Logan
0 1 28 29
GAHS tB) (27) - Groth 0·0· TEAM
W L P OP Athens
o 1 21 30
o. Burris 0-0-0; Watson 2·2-6; Waverly
I 0 45 17 Meigs
o 1 32 52
Valentine 3-3-9; Sickles 2-0-4; Meigs
I 0 45 32 Wellston
0 1 29 81
T. Myers 0-0-0; Niday 3-2-8. Logan
1 0 48 41 TOTALS
4 4 302 302
Athens
1 0 31 27
TOTALS 10-7-27.
Thursday's Results:
ATHENS 'B' (31) - Ellwood Gallipolis
0 1 27 31 Ironton 29 Logan 28
b 1 41 48 Waverl y 81 Wel lston 29
1-0-2; Gardner 0-0-0; Slempel3· Ironton
0 I 32 45 Jackson 52 Mei gs 32
0.6 · Heady 1-0-2; Butner 0-0-0; Jackson
Fa~tkner 3-2-8 ; Smith 0-0-0;
Ga llipolis 30 Athens 21
, - - - - - - - - - - - -...-:-:-:------.,. Oec. 7 Games :
\raoc"~~~n a~t ALtch,•,n,ns
Wavertv at Mei•ls

DANCE NIGHTLY

To The Most Popular Band
On The River.
'

11

THE ROVERS"

The final four minutes of
ac tion was a doozy. Mace cut
loose with six poi~ts. Essex and
Mark Handley each had two as
the Bulldogs narrowed the gap
lo illl'ee, 54-51, with 1:38left in
!he game.

After a GAHS timeout, the
Bulldogs were forced to come
uut afte r the ball . Noe hit a free
lhruw with 1:3l left to make it
55-51. Noe missed a second
attempt, but Gil Price lapped
in a loose ball to make it 57-51
al the 1:2!i mark .
With 1:06 left, At hens
committed its 20th turnover of
KJESUNG HITS FROM OUT · FRONT--Senior Blue
the game. GAHS played keep- ·Devil guard Mark Kiesling, (31) hitting from afar out front,
away the final minute of acenjoyed the best night of his two-year varsity career against
li un. Topper Orr completed the
Athens Friday, scoring 16 points against a seldom-used
game's scoring as he eluded a · Bulldog zone defense. Athens players are Andy Chonko (54)
Bulldog defender fur an easy
and Mark Handley (32). That's Galllil•s Topper Orr (15) on
layup at the 0:43 mark.
right. GARS won, 59-lil.
Athens, normally a man-toman defensive team, surprised
lhe Gallians with a 1-3-1 zone
defense, but the Gallians
played it cool, worked for the
good shot, and the result 'was
ihe Blue Devils third consecutive win over the Bulldogs
within a 12-month period.
HONOLULU (UP! ) - Earl
From the field, GAHS ·hit
Six deals were consummated
Weaver tells about the little list Friday and they came in
21 of ~0 shots for 52.8 pet. The
the Baltimore Orioles had firecracker order with Charlie
Gallians sank 17 of 24 free
when they came here.
Finley, who wasn't even here,
throw attempts for 70.8 pet.
"Maybe
I
shouldn
't
give
out
swapping first baseman Mike
GAHS committed 22 perthe
names,
but
oh,
well,
it
was
sonals. Steve Lee fouled out
Epstein and outfielder Brant
our ow n private list and l can't Alyea to the Texas Rangers for
with 5:55 left in the game.
reliever Horacia Pina.
The Gallians picked off 27 see any harm,'' he sayd.
"We had a Jim Wynn on it, a
rebounds. Noe hauled down
Bob Short, the Rangers boss
Bobby
Bonds, a Nate Colbert," man, wasn't worried over the
12, Price nine. The Gallians
said the Baltimore manager, fact Epstein went zip-for•l6 for
had 17 turnovers.
'"a'lnd ' i" ·' the ·' W'o"Itl "~"n"e's'•
Noe led all scorers with"22 . ' ' b ~1:. the _top; l'l~!ne;op th~ : list, Oa "'
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points. Kiesling added 16 for ·the one we wanted most, was against Cincin nati.
" Look,"
said
Short ,
th e winners. ·Price finished Earl Williams."
The
Orioles
finally
landed
wilh 13. Price sat outs :35 of the
"anybody can have a bad
firs! half with three fouls .' the 24-year-&lt;lld, rig hl~1anded Series , can't he? He led the
Noe sat out half of the · third hitting catcher-slugger Friday Oakland club in home runs,
and half of the fourth period following 48 hours of frantic didn't he, and they've gOt some
with fo ur personals. Starting soul-searching by the Atlanta pretty fair power hitters like
guard Jim Singer sprained his Braves, who wanted to make Reggie Jackson, Sal Ban do and
ankle midway through the first sure they weren't giving away Joe Rudi."
period, and did not see any the National League's 1971
In Friday's other deals,
more action. He was replaced Rookie of the Year too cheaply. Cincinnati obtained outfielder
They didn'L
by Kev Sheets.
Richie Scheinblum and rightFor
Williams
and
Taylor
Mace was the only Bulldog in
handed pitcher Roger Nelson
double figu res. The 6-1 AHS Duncan, a good-looking 19- from Kansas City for outjunior tossed in 17 points, 10 in year-&lt;lld infielder who hit .279 fi elder-third baseman Hal
with Greenwood, S. C., of the McRae and righthander Wayne
lhe final period.
Western
Carolina League, the Simpson; the Reds also picked
Athens shot 45 pet., from •lhe
fi eld , hitting 18 of 40 attempts. Braves got second baseman up outfielder Larry Stahl from
AHS hit 68.1 pel., from the foul Dave Johnson, Pat Dobson , a San Diego in a straight cash
circles, making 15 of 22. The 20-game winner in 1971, cat- deal, the Padres added outBulldogs committed 20 per- cher Johnny Oates and big fielder Dave Marshall from the
sonals. Skinner fouled out with Rorie Harrison , a right-handed Mets for relief pitcher Al
eight seconds left in the third reliever,
Severin sen; Cleveland obperiod .
collected
22
Athens
rebounds. Essex and Mace
each had six snags for the
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS tS91
. losers.
PLAYER- Pas.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
The Blue Devils will hit the · Gil l Pri ce, c.f
6-10
1· 2 3 9 3 13
3 22
JimmyNoe,
t
7-11
8-10
4 12
road again Tuesday for a
Mark Kiesl ing, g
S-10
6· 9 2 1 4 16
non-league contest at TopperOrr. l
2· 4 • 2· 2 4 5 2 6
Chesa peake. Athens next
Jim Singer, g
o. 0 0· 0 2 0 1 0
Kev Sheets, g
0· 2 0- I 2 0 2 0
outing Is Friday, at Ironton.
Steve
Lee,
g
1- 3 o. 0 S 0 2 2
GAHS. will host Wellston TOTALS
21·40 17-24 22 27 17 59
Friday in its first home ga me
ATHENS BULLDOGS tS1)
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP·
PLAY ER- Pos.
of the 1972-73 campaign.
4
5
4
1I
2· 5
3
Andy Chonko, c
6
.
I
8
3·
8
2·
2
3
Ted Essex, f
1- 2 3· 5 3 0 3 5
Mark Handley. g
6-16
5-5 0 6 3 17
.Mark Mace, f
2
0
7
34
•
1- 3
5
Don Skinner, f
0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
Jeff Williams, g
2· 7
o. 0 3 3 s 4
Steve Inbody, g
PHlLCO®
3
6
2·
2
2- 2 3 . 0
John Locke. g
1
0
0
00
00
0
Alex
Topping,
I
STERfO SOUND
18-40 IS-22 2) 22 20 SI
TOTALS

Six more trades

top winter meet

!Closed Sundayl

SI(YLINE LANES
and P.,_SHOP

Happy Hour Daily 2:30p.m .- 8:30p.m .

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100 lbs. •7.90 50 lbs. •3.
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25 lb.

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3rd &amp; S ,..~more Sts.

Bills of Sale wanted when
wool and lambs marketed

r-:::;':;-::;:===::::::::G:al:l:ipo:lis~,:O:h:io=~u~•ns•h•or•n1 •la1m1•b•s,~as;.w1e1:ll.:as

~

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ARLINGTON

is the best time to get our careful, (NO RUSHJ, servicl'!
now. If your tractor needs minor repairs or a complete
overhaul, why not get it done now BEFORE SPRING.
It.'s the wise and convenient thing to do. We're ready to
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'3_9 95

AMN'i'ION V_mRANSI
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ON MOBILE HOMES ·

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deep molded doors.

AVAIIAILI

FOREMAN. &amp; A.B BOn

"AU NetiJ A.MF Equipmeiat"
•

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Upper lt. 7 Konaugo, Ohio ·· •
-

MOBILE
HOME
SALES
liH
..tsor Joe Gilts -

·Meigs Equipment·
Co.
-.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph. 992-2176

Jtm :~ot

UpJMr Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto Auction
. ~ne .446·f340
· Gllllpolls, 0111o

'

•

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'

and name, address arid
signature of the buyer.
Wool sales prices are needed,
Roush explained, to determine
the incenUve payment rate the percentage necessary to
bring the average return for all
wool marketed up to the incenlive level of 72 cents a
poun~ .......
Each applicant's payment is
determined by applying the
national percentage figure to
the individual's net return
sold,
number
of
head
and
from
sale of wool. In this way,
li veweight of unshorn lambs
sold, gross and net proceeds, grdwers who market the wool
in most demand and who do the

POMEROY - As soon as shorn wool. This is to
mar ketin g is completed, discourage unusual shearing of
producers who plan to file for lambs before marketing, which
incentive payments on wool could result in shorter, lower
and unshorn lambs are asked quality wool," said Orion
to bring the sales documents to Roush, Chairman of the Meigs
their County ASCS Offices..
Cou nty
Agricultural
A special reminder was Stabilization and Conservation
given l,hal . growers who Committee.
mar~ted , ij~orn r lam.b~ this ,.' . ·Sales• ducnments ' brought•
fall may apply for payment: . in by producers ·should include
"Payments authorized under name and address of the seller,
the National Wool Act apply to date of sale, net weight of wool

YOUR TRACTOR NOW

furnished, etc. The clean neat exterior gives fho .!rot clue
to what's in store for you Inside ELCONA's new double
wide GLEN ARVIN. Every feature, from the embo5sed
aluminum exterior to the finished closets, contributes
elegance and practicality for your personal comfort and

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Specializing In AMF &amp; ~&lt;-'/
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12x50 Mobile

• 24 New AMF Lanes
• · Snaci Bar and
Captains lounge
.,~\ /

Meclllerr•nNn Armoire

See tfae .-•••

silag~. o~ frot)l fields intended for grain but produced und er
conditions recommended for corn silage. Do not harvest mature
_Corn silage from fielps that were trea\ed.with dieldrin, aldrin or
chlordan~ to control soil insecls. Fields treated in this )Danner
should be harvested only for corn grain.
\.
CONTRO~D FEEDING trial data irom experimJ~ts in
which g~ quality, matur~ corn silage has been compare~with
g.oodquality, ~ormal corn silage silage indicate that mature ~rn
stlage Is a des~rable feedstuff for ruminants. Although some dry
matter losses have occurred with increasing" maturity, the
feeding value of mature corn silage is very similar on a per
pound of dry matter basis to normal corn silage.
Therefore, making mature corn silage appears to be the best
alternative for ruminant feeders to maximize the yield of
nutrients per acre. Mature corn silage should be chopped finely
but not pulverized. If cross-section slices of cobs appear in the
material to be ensiled, the use of a recutter screen is desirable.
The largest possible recutter screen that will break up the cross
section of cobs is recommended. Do not pulverize the chopped
material in order to break every last kernel of corn .
CORN BADLY DAMAGED BY STALK ROT, cob rot or mold
on the kernels will not make good quality silage, but ensiling such
corn will salvage more nutrients per acre than harvesting the

'Ol Huck got tuk one way or 'tother

area, embossed aluminum exterior, recessed po ch, fully

Ladies Nights - Tues. &amp; Wed.

ifreneh
uarter ·

·Panthers
bomb Oaks
•
m
opener

the NEW in FARMING

~-

Score By Quarters:

Gallipolis Blue Devils
12 16 13 18-59
Athens Bulldogs
10 10 12 19-51
Officials - Dave Wrightsel and Bob Overly.

with built-In:
• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
. • 4-SPEEO AUTOMATIC . ;.I
RECORD' CHANGER
' FM STEREO, FM/ AM
RADIO .
.

eOPEN 2:30P.M.
TO
.
'
. . 2:30A.M.

Paced by the hot outside 6-1 junior forward 1was the only
shooting of senior guard T. J. other Pirate hitting double
Robinson and junior speedster figures with ll points. ·
Dan Miller, North Gallia . Coach Bob O~d's Tornadqes
jumped into a 12-6 first period were led by the shooting
lead and were never headed. provided by Norman Curfman ,
The ·Pirates held a com- 6-1 junior forward and big Ron
manding 30-14 lead at the half. Hill, 6-3 senior center. Curfman
Robinson, enjoying the best canned 11 points on four
night of his high school career, baskets and three free throws
was the game's leading scorer while Hill had 10 points . Bob~y
wi th 16 points. Miller finished Miller, 5-9 junior guard had
with 14 points. Dave Robinette, nine points .for Southern. .
The Pira'tes led 44-21 at the
end of the third period and
scored IS points in the final
..
'
eight minutes.
North Gallia hit 24 of 63 field
goal attempts for 38 pet. while
Southern sank only 15 of 56
puin ts for a poor 26.7 pet. The
Pirates hit nine of 13 foul shots
•'If
CHESAPEAKE - Coach while the Tornadoes canned 10
Lewis O'Antoni's Chesapeake of 29 free throws.
Pan tilers looked sharp here
Southern committed 14
Friday night as they riddled turnovers while North Gallia
\&lt;!siting Oak Hill 64-44 in an had on ly seven,
Ohio Valley Conference cage
The Pirates held a 43-30.edge
opener for both teams.
in the rebounding department.
Big 6-5 senior center Ron Keith Weddington, 6-2 junior
Roesch paced the Panthers forward, led North Gallia with
with •l9 points and 16 rebounds. 13. Hill had 12 for the TorRandy Hall chipped in with 12 nadoes.
points. Ron Wood and Gary
North Gallia edged Southern,
Sheets also finished in double 31-30 in the reserve game . Mike
figures with 10 points apiece. Camden paced the Pirates with
It was a close battle for three nine points. Pete Sayre had 12
periods. Chesapeake held the in a losing cause.
upper hand at 14-12, 30-22 and ' North Gailia travels to
39-32. In the final period, Southwestern Tuesday night
Cllesapeake employed a full while Southern plays Kyger
court press and outscored the Creek.
Southern (4Dl - lhle 1-2-4;
Oaks 25-12 to win going away.
Curfman
4-3-11 ; Hill 4·2-10 ;
Alan Hayes paced the losers
Nease 2-0-4; Miller 3-3-9;
with 18 points. Mike Gollihue Knighting 1-0-2. Totals, tS-10·
40,
11 .
added 10.
North
Gallia
(571
Wed·
The Panthers will host dington 1-0-2; Janies 2·0-4;
Gallipolis Tuesday in a non- Robinette 3-5·11; Miller 7·0-1 4;
conference game. Oak Hill Robinson 7-2- 16; Smith 2-2-6;
2·0·4. Totals, 24-9-57 .
dropped to 0-2 on the year. The Payne
By Quarters :
Oaks will host Ironton St. Joe Southern
6 8 7 19- 40
Norlh Gallia 12 18 1• 13-17
Friday.
OAK HILL 1441- Hayes 6-6·
18 ; T. Carter 0·4·4: D~vis 1-1-3;
Gollihue S-0-1Q; Willis 0-0-0;
NHL Standings
Bangert 1-2-4; Warren 0-u-0;
By United Press International
Pastor 0-0·0. TOTALS 14-16•44.
., .
East
1 ~ •
·CHESAPEAKE (64)· - Hall
·
,. . w ). •J: 1: .; 14 ga ,
,
~ ~53
,. 4,4-12 ; Wood 4-2-10;1Roesch,Z,-1 · Mon
19'; Edwards 0'0-0; F'Oit6n -v-O· NY ~angeh s
3' .3 98 67
o; Wilcox 3-3-9; G. Sheets 5·0· Boston
14 7 3 ·31 108 83
10; D. Sheets o.o.o; Smith 1-0-2; Buffalo
10 7 7 27 80 68
Holbrook 1·0·2. TOTALS 27-10· Detroit
10 9 2 22 76 74
64.
Vancouver
8 15 2 18 74 102
By Quarters:
Toronto
7 13 3 17 74 78
Oak Hill
12 10 10 12- 44 NY Islanders 3 16 2 8 47 106
14 16 9 25- 64
West
Chesapeake
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Minnesota 13 7 3 29 71 53
!&lt;lined outfielders Roger Freed Chicago
13 8 2 28 84 68
and Oscar Gamble from the Pi ttsburgh 12 10 2 26 94 77
Los Angeles 10 II 4 24 84 84
Phillies [or outfielder- Del Atlanta
10 12 4 24 59 81
Unser and minor league third Phil adelphia
10 11 3 23 85 89
baseman Terry Wedgewood,
Louis
7 10 S 19 57 70
and infielder Rich McKinney St.
California
4 IS 5 11 61 101
went to Oakland from the
Friday's Results
Calif 3 New York 3, lie
Yankees to complete the Matty
St. Louis 6 Vancouver 2
Alou deal made a week ago.
(Only games scheduled\

GAHS-Athens box score

CENTER

eNO COVEl! CHARGE,'
"'
ePOPULAR PRICES

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Exte..loo Agent, ~!culture
·
POMEROY -: While ~eigs County seems to be faring better
than many others mOhio m regard to corn harvest, there still are
· many farmers with unharve$led corn.
Acooidin~ fo extension .speciallsts at Ohio State University,
there is a.poss1b1Uiy of ~esting this mature corn for silage if it
can be ptcked, then SpecUll attention giv.n to gelling the grain
dry.
.
Specialists caution however, that mature corn silage should
be made from only those fields that were planted specifically for

'
VINTON - Coach Jim Foster's North Gallia
Pirates opened defense of their 1972 SVAC t.itle here
Friday night with a 57-40 triumph over the Southern
Tornadoes.

THE PLAINS ..,.. Gallipolis defeated Athens 59-51
here Friday night. It was the 1972-73 Southeastern

•
period of two weekS. Animals that are suddenly allowed to
consume grain free-choice may develop entertoumla (over.eating disease), founder of simple off feed due to excessive grain
mtake.
·
"
Corn fields that were !~tended for mechanical grain harvest
ticular importanCe neat the tw of the · silo. The. cold en- should not be harvested or gleaned by ruminants if aldrin
crop ~s grain. The ensiling prPCCSS' will stop the growth of. mold
vironmental temperature of late fall and early winter should dieldrin or chlordane were used to control soil insects. Such in:
and will stabilize the feeding value of the material harvested . .
Do nol'\(ld urea·or ammonla containing additives to mature · reduce the· amount or •poilage observed.
secticides can appear as contaminants of meat and milk by way
IF RUMINANTS ARE TO BE USED to harvest corn, they of systemic contamination of the forage portion of the plant andcorn silage. Water can be added to mature c.Jrn silage to Te!lucc
the dry matter percentage and increase the effectiveness of should be accustomed to the increased level of grain con- or by way of soil contamination of the material rema_inlng ln the
packing. Adding 200 pounds (25 gallons) of water per ton would sumption slowly. This can be done in the barn or lot prior to the field .
"'
reduce the dry matter percentage of chopped material by ap- time the animals are turned out. A second possibility is to allow
DAIRY AND BEEF CATTLE seem to be less affected than
proximately 10 pet. Such a reduction in dry matter is of par- the animals to ~ raze these fields only a short lime
per
day
for
a
most other species of animals by molds that develop on corn ill
.
the field prior to harvest. U the mold content of the corn is high
enough to reduce dry matter intake, production will be red.Jlced.
Severely molded corn may hav·e a reduced feeding .valoo. This
reduction in feeding value is imPossible to judge in advance. ·
It is unlikely that' toxins \Qat will affect ruminants wUl be
produced by field molds. Harvesiect grain should be stored in a
GALLiPOLIS - Englisll I students of Gallia AcaJemy are Finn and the disappearance of Jim may be related. Some say manner that prey_e,vts lh~rtle;elopment of storage .molds. Molds
putting their classroom work to use. The six classes, under the Jim is on Jackson Island. People have seen smoke and a party is that develop during the storage period are more likely to produce
leadership of master teacher Mrs. Lola Napier and student expected to search t~ere some lime in the future.
toxins that will affect ruminants.
teacher Mius Margaret Tracy, have been studying a unit on the
No one knows why Jim left, but the Widow Douglas says he
Good quality, high-moisture corn can be preserved by ennews)laper.
might have overheard her say that they were planning to sell him siling or treatment with propionic acid or a combination of acetic
·The students have learned newspaper terms, where to find at New Orleans.
and propionic acids. If any of these procedures are to be uUIIZed,
certain items iri the paper, and most recently have written their
it is important that lhe.recornmendalions or the manufacturer be
own articles. The class has also been studying Mark Twain's
I'RAUDS ESCAPE WITII LOOT
followed carefully. The acid treatment of high moisture eorn is
famous novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. To tie the
By John Kidwell
presently recommended only for whole-kernel, shelled com:
projects \Ogether the students each wrote a news article on ·one
ONE HORSE, Ark. - Two men posing as actors collected Neither acid treatment or ensiling will destroy or inactivate
scene from Huckleberry Finn.
fou r hundred sixty-five dollars in a three-night stand here ending toxins that developed prio~ to harvesting and treatment.
Three samples are included below, one written with great last night. This act consisted of a man prancing around the stage
If the cobs of ear corn are rotten, it is recommended that
care, in the dialect of the place and lime, just as Mark Twain· on all fours, naked and painted.
such corn be shelled prior to grinding and mixing with other feed
may have written:
The two fugitives, David Garrick and Edmm\d Kean, which ingredients for ruminant concentrate mixtures,
HUCK FINN'S DED
are probably assumed names, arrived in town days ago.
By Mark Crawford
They barely escaped being tarred and feather.ed after the first
Yesderdee a boy who's called Huck Finn was thought ded . performance. The'mob was stopped by our own Dr. Kinkaid, who
Whal happened, you see, was that Huck had been taken from the allegedly told the crowd to talk up the show so that the rest of the
,
Widow ·Douglas's by his Pap. I reckon the old man had left fo' town would be taken, too. If there was indeed a plan, it worked.
town and'while he's away sumpbody kilt Huck. The way lfigger, Most of the town attended the second performance,
ya see, is that some robber kilt him wif an ax then drug his body
The third performance never came off. A capacity crowd ·
on the groun' and flung him into the river. Then they took all again attended, this time with fruits and vegetables with which to
Huck's Pap,had out of the house. This happened 'round the time bomb the frauds. When the time for the performance had passed,
,~
Jim, a nigger slave, stole away. Some people bleve that Jim kill the building was searched, revealing no trace of the fugitives.
Huck, while others bleve it was Huck's own Pap. I don't know
t
who dun it. Who do ya think did?
THESE ENGLISH I students study many forms of com\' .. ....;..
~
munication. Each year lime is spent on reading, writing, and
\,.;.....,.,....._
SLAVE ESCAPES
speaking. Audio-visual equipment is used, as are the newspaper,
By Michael Vallee
traffic signs, oral presentations, and the traditional grammar
AUGUST 7, 1853 - Today a slave was reported missing by and literature studies. Reading is encouraged by the large
Miss Watson and Widow Douglas. It is not known when or how he paperback library in tl)e room and a certain day each week is
got away but search parties that began this morning .could find alloted for the student to read a book he chooses. Writing and
MAN&amp;E MITES,
no trace of the runaway.
speaking come as natural follow-ups to the grammar and
LICE, ~LEAS
Lately people have suspected the recent murder. of Huck literature studies as students comment on what they have read.

There's still time to get the com crop picked

SHS, 57-40

N9e, Kiesling,
Price lead way;
Mace tallies 17

ORR STEALS BAIL - Senior Blue Devil forward
TQPper Orr (15, dark uniform) steals a pass intended for an
unidentified Athens Bulldog during Friday's SEOAL cage
opener at The Plains gym. It was one of 20 Athens turnovers
during the 32-rninute contest.

I•

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\'

'

best job of selling it, receive
the highes t incentive return.
When the necessary sales
documents are brought to the
Coun ty ASCS Office, personnel
there will assist producers in
completin g payment aP·
plications. Payments will be
made next April on wool and
unshorn lambs marketed this
year . Applications should be
made by the end of J~nuary,
1973, .but may be !!Ia(!~ at any
lime after the wool and lambs
are marketed .

PURINA HO&amp; _and CATTLE DUSTIN&amp; POWDER

Ready lo use, Purina /Jog ond Ca ttle Dusting Powder with
Lindane goes to work on mites, lice a nd flea&amp; immt.-diolely18!ely, in. coldest. weBther - and keeps on working to prevent
remreatahon.
.'
Slop scratching, help speed rate of &amp;aln, get more return on your
nveMlment. Come in and we'll explain how enay it is to u11.

Carmel News, By the Day
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circ le, Verna and
Wavie, for the Thanksgiving
holiday weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Mutti and family of
New Philadelphia, Dixie Circle
of Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Circle and Patrece of Oak
Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harden and family of Nease
Settlement and Harold Circle
and sons, Racine R. D.
Mrs. Mabel Lax of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla ., spent a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle and Florence Circle.
Paul Moore spent the
weekend with his sister, Mr.
and Mrs . . Aidan Springer of
Vinton, Va., and attended the
wedding of his niece, Paula Jo
Springer.
Thanksgiving day guests at
the home of Douglas .,Circle
were Mr. ·and Mrs. Garrell
Circle of Racine, Mrs. Mabel
Lax and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Follrod, and Kim, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E.
Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl
LeAnn spent a recent evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson of Racine.
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl
LeAnn Johnson and Eunie
Brinker called on Mrs. Mary
Roush a recent afternoon.
. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr. and Mrs. RQy van
Meter and family and Chester
Van Meter of Morning Star
recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson,
Toni of Racine and Mr. and
Mrs . Shelby Pickens and
family of ,Syr;~cuse spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Allan Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Perry,
Dannie, Francine of Hollon ,
Ohio spent Wednesday night
through Friday with Mrs.
Mary Circle. Others calling
over the weekend were Mrs.
D&lt;&gt;nald Pierce of Athens, Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Circle and
family of Columbus, Mr. and
Mrs. George Circle and James
Circle of New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Swepston and family of
Columbus spent Thanksgiving
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee,
Bob BiD, Becky and Ralph Lee.
Mr. Robert Lee, Bob Bill and

Becky visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester
recently .

~

I
3

FLORIDA FIRST
TALLAHASSEE, Fla . (UPIJ
- Florida is the first slate to
reimpose the death penalty
after the Supreme Court's
hislori c ban this summer, and
the state attorney gene ral
predicted a test of the new law
within two years.

Christmas Sale Price

UN ICO 21 cu. ft .

UPRIGHT FREEZER
1346 95
$3Q995
Regular Price
Christmas Sale Price

UN ICO 20 cu. ft.

CHEST FREEZER

Gravely's exclusive rotary

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a perfect seedbe~ in JU Bt
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no raking. di&amp;cing,
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or harrowing,
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wide. Come
1- in for dem1} onotration.

·, r·. __..:··lt:
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1973 Modeli are here .
Purchase your Gravely

- --tJ

WE ALSO HAVE:
Dominion, Sunbeam, West Bend

small appliances, Shopcraft
&amp; Shopmate Power Toof~

·'·

Tractor now, at Special

Winter Prices, and a SO.OO
deposil will ~old your purchase unlit April 1, 19)3.
Bring rour Gravely in for
tune.up or overhaui now and
Save ...

25%
ON LABOR COST

Gravely Tractor
992-!IIS

Pomeroy, O,

and Shop!
.
"
J'lenty of Free Parking ·
~

�....

.-·· '

29-Tbe

28- Thi. Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei,Sunday, Dec. 3,1972

· }'or Fast Results Use ·The Sunday
Notice

.

Notice

Times~Sentinel

Notice

.
'.•
,.

. ' '&lt;,

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
9n2448
Pomeroy,O.

...
•

.
!...
..

----------

IN MEMORY of our son and
brother,
Kenneth
Ray
Graham , who died one _year
ago, December 2, 1971. Sadly
mi ssed by Mommie, Daddy
and brothers, D. G. and
Michael.
12-3-ltc
'

Card of Thanks
MAY we express our heartfelt
thank s to. relatives, friends

ne'ig h bars for the
SELLARDS Markel, Rutland ,
beau t l l ul
floral
Ohio Is · now owned and · arrangements, food, cards
opera ted by Roger E. Car
and for the comforting words
penter. Store hours are a a.m.
of Rev . Chester Lemley
to 8 p.m. weekdays and 12 to 8
during the death of Anthony
p.m. Sunday.
L. Schuler . The Schu ler
11 -29-61c
family .
12-3·llp
WE WISH to ex pre ss our heartte ll thanks to the Graduating
Cla ss of 1934 tor the beautiful
floral arrangement for An thony L. Schuler. The Schuler
Family.
ln-ltp

•

t'

"...
~

w

•
M
~

..•

~

•
~

N:OI.lfl"IOS

mo ..

21-Phlllpplne
knife
22-food fish
23-Frult
24-Witty Vlilr$1
26-lndlvlduals
28-Relles on
29-Limb
30-Su In Asia

32-Aims

bollll$

33-Dilpatched
34-GoH mound
35-Hawellan
wrteths
37--Grtenland

settlement
B~Worthless

•
luvlne;
40-ConJunc:tlon
41-Writes
42-Dirk
44-FUJitlve
arl1tocrat
4G-Obatrved
47-Seuey
48-Withtrtd

50-Gave
52-Averaa•
63-Prlvy Council
(abbr.)
55-Food proaram

57-Printer's
8UT W11H llfl, eoNNAZ

OFFER I. COUlD &amp;EE
a.tffl.!G~T. I'LL CALL
Fl ~

"THING IN iHI;:
MORNING.

measure
58-Sitndard
59-Bard
60---lt ttal• (abbr.)
62-Limb
64- Weak food
66-Eplltle
{abbr.)
61--Nott of scalt
69-Mttal
}Ct-Slnk In
I . middle
71-Actu•l
73-FIIal'rt of steps

75-Sum•n

7a..:-:NOrse aOds
80--Mountllns
In Asia
81-Prlnter's
measure (pl.)
82-Tolllnl
84--Qdors
86-Hay spreader
87-Kind of dog
89-0penwork
fabric
92-Take
unlawfully
95-Challena•s
98-levels

99-Period of
time
101-Sums
103-Rornan tyrtnt
104-Hieh card
105-Aecompllshad
106-lndeflnlte
ilirtlcle
107-Ptrt of
"to be''

140-Diries
141-Lelk's
throuah
J.u-crles like

cow
145-Female dear
ur-.loose
&amp;arments
148-DIIItreement
150-Form of
Insurance
152-Beer mup
153-5top

Six cyl., standard trans .• one owner,
ready for - you . .

1972 DODGE
Dart. Swinger. p .steermg, T-flite, air
cond . , v-roof, rallye
wheels, dark green .

1971 HORNET SST

bulla1
132-Moccasln•
133-Unlt of

134-ExploJiv•
noln
135--M•n't n1m1
137-Frult •••ds
139-Southem
blackbird

92-Mu•le: n

43-Goddess of
discord

written
93-small bird
94-Latln
conjunction
96-SIIkworm
97--QffsprinJ (pl.)
too-campus
point
102-Pierce
105-Force

2f-Collett
offiCII I
31-Lantem

33-lUft·tO
36-Sow

38-lease
40-Abound

41-Fual

ctrol
!56-Sounded
a horn.
157-Shouts
158-Emmeu
159-Strlke hard
.
(colloq.)
160--Manaaerlal
• (colloq.)

47-Polnt of
hammer
49-Lempreys
51-Pertainlne:
to Norwey
52-Anchored
53-Brulllan
estuary
54-AI&amp;onqultn

suddenly
112-Army mul
113- Let It sltnd
114-Reverberttlons
116-Poktr Stlkl
118-Handl•
120-Unlt for
muturlnJ

lndl•n

15-Compan

113-Pinttll duck
115-Symbol for
1•ntalum
117-Tolled
119-conjunctlon
120-LIIrs
121-Sewlnc
124-Prohlbltl
~2&amp;-For fear thtt
127-Auxlllary verb
128-Haberd•sher
l3o-Pfnks with a

fl ..:.~i:t)odr1tie 1' ·' '· •

109-Braak

measurtmCint

112~~~~~~;

I

point
16-Lamp
17-Notch
18-Crates
2D-Challence

23--Twltttd .

56--Addlnl
59-Par:t of ship
tiO-Proflt
61-Astlr
63-Rubdown
65--Cron111
(colloq.)
67-Gretk letter

69--N•e•tlve
p~fi)(

7o--cooked In
buttertd dish
72-Palnts
74-Pronoun
76-~lsta

77--City In
Ntw York
79-Unlt of

PortUIUtse

currency
83-Sum up
Bs--cltrus
fruit (pl.)
86--South Afrfc.n
dltlect
87-Antl•rtd
anlmtl

88-RJtt of speed
89-Gr..k letter
90--Sttr In
Dr•C.Orls

~

IOUnd
121-Piacu
122-0ccurs
123-Microbe
125-Aicohollc

bever•aes

126-Woally
127-Fiylnl
mammals
129- Disturbanct
131-Racks
132-Fall IUY
(colloq.)
133-Small lumps .
.134-Nulsancn
136-Rall bird
138--Shabby
(colloq.)
140-Su aacles
141-Deposlt of
fine urth
142-Wintar
prtclpltatlon
144-Superclllous
ptrson
147-Be Ill

145---Man's
nlcknama
149-Aftemoon
party
151-Aiso
153-Exclamatlon
l !55-Army officer
(abbr.)

- - ' " " luggage rack, mag
type wheel covers.
silver- with red vlnyl
,interior. .
,-..._
/

'3395

1968 RAMBLER AMERICAN WAGON

L.•2095

Six cylinder. automatiC, luggage
rack, here you are .

--·
it

'i'OWN A
CADILLAC,.

USEO CARS

va .

Of Course You Can"

Auto Sales

'·

72 t'idillac Coupe DeVille

1967 CHEVROLET Impala ;
phone 949-2977 .
12-1-31c

Dark grey fin iSh with r'ed leather ir:~t . , full power
equipment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Control air
condltion~ng, s new whitewall tires .

'6500
70 t'idillac Sedan DeVille
Sliver metallic finish, blue interior, full power equipment,
Climate Control air conditioning , AM-FM radio, one
owner new Cadillac trade.

'3800

CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614 - 423-~531.
4-13-lfc

S?l ?&lt;

70 t'idillac' Sedan DeVille

("

.;. ~lfOMEROY,
·•

Wh ite with black vinyl top, turquoise Interior, full
power equipment, Climate Control air conditioning

'4000

72 Oldsmobile Toronado
Bamboo finish with saddle vinyl top, saddle vinyl int.,
full power equipment, Comfortron air conditioning,
T&amp; T wheel, only 15,000 miles.

OHI? .

•

EXPERT

• No Payments .until After Jan. l, 1973

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

Wheel Alignment

1971 65 X 12 W~NDSOR mobile
home with expando on large
lot, located ·on old Rt. 33;
phone 992-6615.
11-29-5tc

.

•5.55 .

Cadillac - Oldsmobile
992-5341

On Most American Cars

DID YOU know that wintertime
-GUARANTEEDis the best time to buy a good
Phone 992-2094
used Mobile Home at BerryMiller Mobile Home Sales?
You can buy "now" and take
delivery In the spring with no
· oP.nl Tils
additional storage charge. We
Monday thru Saturday
have a complete selection of
606 E,' Main, Pomeroy,,O.
-· ·-.
8, 10 and 12 wldes In stock and
__ _
we are ready to deal. So take ·SEE US FOR: Awn ings, storm
advantage of our greatly
doors and windows, carports.
reduced prices now - you'll
marquees, aluminum sldln!;J.:
be glad you did. Berry-Miller
and railing . A. Jacob, sales,
Mobile Home Sa le s, 705
representative. For .. free•
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
estimates, phone Charles
Ll s1e,
Phone 423-9531.
yr a cu se , V . V .,·
11 ·30·3t c
Johnson and San, Inc.
1
·
3-2-ttc.
I
•BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
· Air Conditioners·
Septic tanks Installed. George
•Awnings
(BIIIl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
· •'Underoiiming
4-25-lfc

GMAC Financing Available

s P.M.

Open Eves. Til 6-Til

Pomeroy
Sat.

"You'l_l Like ('•;• Quality Way of Doing Business"

'

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

-

s

.

67 FORD GALAXIE 500
Auto., air condition.
'795

. Complete

mqblle hQme.
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
~ervice ~ plus gigantic
.. S~WAGE SYSTEMS
C[EANED:
REPAIR-Eli:
· 'display of mobile homes :
MILLER SANITATION,
:always .avallable.at ...
I;
STEWART, OHI0 .. PHONE
662-3035.
•
10-4-tfc

MILLER
MOBILE
HOMES~.
.

t.413-75ll
1110 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE, D.
. .

Pets For Sale

69 BUICK l.aSABRE ........ ~l495
2

1

delivered right to your
proj ect. Fasf and easy . Free
estimates . Phone 992· 3284.'
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,'
Mlddlep&lt;&gt;rt, Olllo,
·

SIAMESE kittens, 8 weeks old, -:-::-:::------6-·JO·Ifc
blue -eyed an~
lovable;
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
housebroken. Phone 992-3214. REASONABLE rates. Ph. M&lt;SI )-J0-3tp
4782, Galllj&gt;olls, John Russell,
Owner &amp; oper a1or.
· 1
puppies
AKC;
POODLE
5-12-tfc
apricot, black, sliver ; will
hold till Christmas; phone C: BRADFORD, Auctioneer
992-5443.
Complete Service
•
ll-19-lfc
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
AKC Toy Poodle· puppies,.
Crllt Bradford
•'
wormed and shots, well -bred
and healthy, $75 . Phone =:-:--"'-':
·· ~----,--5:...:·1 -lfc
Coolville 667-6214.
WILL CUT or trim trees ,
11 -22-12tp ' reasonable. Also clean out
--------------basements, attlcs.and cellars.
Phone 949-3221.
11-22-JOtc

Custom
P.B.

For Sale
. .

WANTED ·
AT ONCE!

Molcl Route
~iUI'

The .Daily Sentinel
PHONE 'm-2156

Impala. auto., air co'nditlon.

Roadrunner, stand .,

'h

Ton V-8, 302.

396,

4 sp., 2 dr .

882-2980

Wanted To Rent
HOUSE In M iddleport or
Rutland . Contact Janet Tillis
at 992-2709 from 9 a. m. fo 5 p.

m.

.TREES

:i
·

11-J0-3tc

AND ~ ROOM furnished and
unlurnlohod apartments.
Phone 992-54A.
4-12-lfc

31iociM itoilse aild

both, ideal

10r couples, utilities paid,
near Middleport, phone 992-

IIOWINIIIAvenuo

Mldd..,.,., ONo

ml.

Par•lltl 111 MltNJepwt Hill.

Pomeroy

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
noMochlnlcSt.
· Pomeroy, Ohio ~171t

For Sale
ONE PONY saddle and bridle,
$25 ; one i6" bicycle, $12.1() ;
phone 992·5815.
12-1-Jic

SALE
1972 CHEVROLET Qiprice ......... s3995
4-door, new car title &amp; bill of warranty, covert with blk .
vinyl roof. tinted glass, factory air , front &amp; rear guards,
radio &amp; rear speaker. whitewall .t ir es. Nice and clean .
Retail 14860. Priced to move .

1970 CAMARQ ........................$1999
Hardtop coupe, local low mileage, 1-owner car, 307.
engine, 3-speed transmission, power steering, bucket
seats, console, sharp blue linish, rad io. SHARP IS THE
WORD!

1971 PINTO FORO_. .................51599
2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage; good tires,· clean ·In·
terlor, green finish, radio, 2000cc engine, 4-speed.
.
REDUCEDTO

"''1910 FORD RANCH

WAGOft::~stft5

2 Seat, beige linlsh, vinyl Interior. v.e engin e, automatic
trans ., good tires . radio . Runs out good.

REDUCED TO

1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 .......... s1795

Hardtop coupe, V-B eng_lne, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl Interior, white-wa ll tires, like new, radio .

1968 CHEVELLE .......................!1695
Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power
steering, power brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop and
black vinyl Interior, r~dlo, good whi te-wall tires.

1968 CAMARO CONVT. ;............ !1695
Local 1-oWner, low mileage car, beaut ifu l cream finish
with black top, bucket seats, with console, new white-wall tires , power steering , and automatic transmission, radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.

1969 CHEVY BISCAYNE ............ s1295

1972 Pontiac Catalina Brougham 2 dr. H.T.,
red with black vinyl top. black vinyl Interior,
factory air, new Pontiac trade-ln. Just like
new. Get your Xmas present early. Make
yourself &amp; family happy with this beauty. $3895
1971 Pontiac Catalina Wagon. all red with
black vinyl Interior, auto., air. Local one
owner. Make a real nice family car. Go get
your Xmas tree In this beauty .
$3895
1971 Pontiac Grandville, 2 dr . H. T., color
silver cloud with black cloth Interior, factory

,~lr,.,oflo\Ntf\, windows" AM-LF M.S...taRt:fiaver.,.,,
new Grand Prix trade-ln. This car sold new for
almosl$6,000. Priced to sell.
$4195
1971 Int. 1/1 Ton Pickup. · long wheel base,
custom cab, low mileage, V -8. Priced
Right.
S2495
1969 Ford F IL Wagoll, all red, small V -B, auto ••
P. S., P. B, Real clean lillie car. Makes a real
nice family wagon .
Only S1495. ·
1968 Cadillac Eldorado. 2 dr •. H.T., black with ·
black vinyl top . This car is loaded. Has the
works on it. Priced to sell.
Special$2495
1966 Buick LeSabre 400, 4 dr. H. T., red &amp;
white. with black interior . Ole of the cleanest
66's anywhere. Local owner. New Buick
trade.
Only S895

' Dr., V-8, automatic, P. steering, blk . vinyl trim, white
finish, good tires.

SPECIAL THIS WEEK

1968 CHEVY BELAIR .. .... .. .•. ..... '995
St. Wagon, 2 seats. V-8, std. trans ., good fires, radio. grn .
fin ish.
·

1968 OPEL ................... ··.. ·..... 5795

1968 Chrysler New.Port, 4 dr . sed., factory air.
This car has a lot of miles on it but a good buy
forth is price .
$895

Statll&gt;rl wagon, beige finish, good tires. 4.speed transmission, radio. A clean unit and very economical.

•

Remember

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1969 CHEVROLET ................~?~..'2095

We Service What We Sell.

1·ton Truck 102t1 cab to axle, 292 cu. ln. englne1 15,000 lbs.
2-speed.rear axle, 825x20, tO ply tires, full depth loam seat,
heav.y duty springs, solid cab . Ready to go to work .

. Our Word 18 Our Bond

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale

Sat.

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Til 5 p.m.
Service &amp; Parts for your convenience til 12
noon on Sat.

· 12·3-3tc

l

.

.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992-2174

For Sale

c

j,

J

WINTERIZED
USED CAR

Virgil B.

APPLES. Fitzpatrick Or chards, State Route 689,
10 ACRES
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
Just off Rl. 33 - Mostly
8-30-lfc
level, barn , garage. out
cellar, 2 sheds. home has 3
B. R., bath, dining R. New 'cOAL, Limestone, Excelsior
" Your Chevy Dealer"
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
FA furnace, porches. THE
992-2126
Open Eves. Ti18
Pomero~
Pomer oy . Phone 992-3891.
BUY OF THE YEAR ~8.900 .
• ·12-lfc .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
I
RUTLANp
4 room frame, 2 B. R., bath,
porches, n.W garage 24x28 HOMELITE Super XL Chain
Saw, automatic oiler, like
Inside, large lot, storm doors
new;
call 992-71 28.
AKC BEAGLE pups, male and SINGER Automallc sewing
and ·windows. JUST 15,500.
12·3-3tc
female, · five months old,
machine. Like new In walnut
30 FENCED ACRES
cabinet . Makes design sill•
.hot
D
I
M
F
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS -1,600 ·BAL-E
I
-·s· of· good ml x·.s
s.
on e
c ar and,
""
Mason
w
v
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
NEW HAVEN
- This home has had a lot of
hay ; 150 bu. of corn ; 1 super C
' · a.
blind hems. overcasts. etc .
work done, 4 bedrooms ~
11 •28 ·6tp
Farmall fractor with two
S85. Call Ravenswood 273 -9521
both, 8 ft. bose cabinets,
point hitch ; 1 stokermatlc BEAUTIFUL Maple stereoor 273-9893.
double bowl sink. New deep
stove; 357 magnum plslolct-;_ r,_.a"!d!i.o....comb!Mtlon_ AM-£.")---=====.:::::::==='11;::·
= l:::O_:_·If:c
--f~wilh-pu m p;-good·spt'l
arm mach1nery ; 6: Fwd
radio, 4 speed Intermixed
cistern,
buildings and
TRAILER In Pomeroy." Phone
L TO ;
Rolland Searles,
changer, 4 speaker sound 8 FT. CAMPER top, Sl90 ;
garage .
$12,9~0 .
992-3318.
Rutland, Ohio; phone 7~2system, balance $/9. 3 ~. Use
Hoover washer , portable,
l2-3-3tc
MINERALS.
-4626
b d t 1
coppertone.
$65 .
Allis
11·-" ·61p
our
.
· -- - - - - : - : ALMOST rACRE.
7085. u ge erms. all 992Chalmer B Trae t or w lth
3 FURNISHED rooms and both.
plows and cultivators, $600.
MIDDLEPORT - Grant St.,
11 •28 -6lc
North Second Ave ., Mid Phone 949-3746.
.grand older home, 9 rooms, 4 PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig -Zag
dleport; references required ;
sewing mac~lnes . Still In
11 -30·llc
bedrooms, bath, porches,
phone 992-5293.
orlglnal cartons. No at garage apartment for ad11-29-lfc
tachments needed as our NOW at ShOYfalter's Wet Pet HUNTERS! I have two fine
ditional Income, large
controls
are bulll·ln. Sews
Chester, Ohio . DOLLAR
guns for sale, No. I Franchi,
workshop. Sl8,500. .
TRAILER spaces; extra large
with
1
or
2
~eedles; makes
SALE.
Gold
Swords,
4
for
$1
;
12 gauge 0-u full &amp; mOd.
POMEROY
lots. $25 a month, Velma
buttonholes,
sew
on
b&lt;Jtton•,
Sun•et
Variatus,
~ far $1 ;
barrels,
single selective
2 story frame, new roof, new
· Zuspan , Mason, W. Va . •
mon~rams, and blind hem
Sphenops Mollles, 5 for $1 ;
trigger, auto, ejectors, only
siding, new carporl, 3
11-29-JOip
stitch. Full cash price $38.50
Neon Tetra, nice size, 3 for $1 ;
6', pounds; No. 2 Winchester
bedrooms, bath, small lot.
or budget plan available.
Zebra Danlo, 6 for $1.
MOdell2, 28" mOd .. 12 gauge,
$5,000.
UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom
Phone m -5641.
1J .J0.3tp
very good condition. Phone
TO BUY OR SELL CON house, 1'12 bolho, living room ,
11 ·29·61c
992 -50~~ or 992·5579.
TACT US.
dining room. kitchen and
1968 INTERNAT.fONAL '-" ton,
11-30-llp
HENRY E. CLELAND
utility room; completely
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
overloads, 6 ply tires, solid
carpeted,
cherry
wood
m-1Z59, if no •n•wer m mOdel. Complete with all
tall racks, deluxe cab and DOLL CLOTHES. Handmade
paneling; electric heat ; must . 2568
extras; must sell ; State Route
for Barbie, Ken, Crlssy ,
cleaning tools. Small paint
... to appreciate, In Hertford
damage In,shipping. Will fake
338 across from Kaiser
Kerry, Mia and Velvet .
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
facing Ohio River ; phone I · .
$27 casH or budGet plan
Aluminum. Gall Bradford,
Assorted prices. Call alter 5 p.
S.ltst.d,-fU-42"
available. Phone m-56~1.
Racine, 0., Rt. 2. .
m. 696-1207, Marge .
:IOUI'l-3235. .
· HENRY CLELAND Jll.
11-2•-lfc .
ll-29-6tc
ll
-J0-3tc
11•30-ltp
S.tesman-fl5-420t

SAYRE'S USED CARS

,!

For Rent

BRADFORD'S

101 E. Main ·

LOWER
WINTER PRICES

69 CHEVEUE ...............:.. ~1595

BACHE LOR- TYPE furnished
apartment. Phone 992-5131.
11-J0-3tc

Scotch Pine

HbUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, 3 bedrooms, excellenf
locati " n. close to schOOl and
city; contact Lou Osborne or
call 992-5898.
ll -26·1fC

70 PICKUP TRUCK .........$2195

aiRISJMAS
Fresh Cut

..
CLELAND·
ld:ALTY

P. S.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Estate For Sale

NEW LISTING
START YOUR FUTURE 1970 DODGE car, white with
New brick business building .
black top ; new snow 1ires.
Has 4 large rooms. Ideal tor
Clean and good condition .
contractor,
store. etc. Best of
Phone 696-1135.
location
if
you
want in on the
12-3-ltp
ground floor . 2900 sq. It . 1100
paneled and tiled, 2 ceramic
baths. Plenty of parking . No
information over the phone.
.lOUSE in Long Bottom ," phone
985.3529.
NEW LISTING
RENOVATED
3
6-11-lfc
COMFORTABLE two star
bedrooms, ne~ bath, new
home, full basement, bat~
kttchen, panel1ng and many
and •; 2, attached garage, and
other features . . Large lot.
extra ,s.~QJ~,.J,IeM Pomer'O')htH ~~lng $6500 .0Q,.,I'1 ,_,,,1.
Elementary . Basic furniture
4 BEDROOMS
available. Phone 992-7384 or
LEVEL LOT ~ Here's your
99Ul33 for appointment.
chance to buy low, fix up,
ll -28-6tc
and sell . Located tn town on
-=~-------good street near' stores .
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
Asking only $7500.00.
large lot, natural gas, buill -In
VILLAGE
cabinets in kitchen, close to
radio stallon in Bradbury ;
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, large
phone 992-2602.
living, large dining, and
11 -27-301p
front porch. Large level lot.
::::=-:-:-:--:-:--Ideal tor garden or pony.
SPECIAL : Move In before
Want $10,500.00.
winter ..... • bedroom ranch
WANT TO BUILD?
hom~ on 3fA acre lot. Bath and
CR
ES
0
8 A
n proposed
a half, built-in kitchen, wall to
wall carpet and garage. Price
water line and blacktop
$20.750.00; also a 5 bedroom
road . Asking 14500.00 .
colon ial house on a l/4 acre lot.
BRICK
Bath and a .half, buill-In
4 BEDROOMS - Large
kitchen, dining room, family
living, dining, kitchen. and
room and the works, priced
foyer . 2 porches. Barn, arld a
$30.000.00. Call Sherman E.
string of garages. 2 acres of
Summerfield, 985-3598 or 985·
good · land . Ask ing only
4177.
11 2 30tc
$21.500.00.
- .
'ONE ACRE
-A- N
- IC_E_ p_la_c_
e _i_n_t_h_
e _h_ll_ls- of
NEAR TOWN - • bedroom
Meigs County with or without
home. Kitchen and . large
dining. Full basement. Some
furniture ; 11 acres land ; call
949-5201 for appointment after
long needle pines. Asking
112,000.00.
6 p.m .; be home all day
Saturday and Sunday. ·
LOTS-ACRES-FARMS
1l -29-6tp
HOUSES SCARCE, DON'T
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE
ALL-ELECTRIC brick home,
PLENTY, SOME THAT
lOlf2 acres of ·land; close to
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
school; contact Joyce E.
TOMORROW.
COME SEE
Manual,
Greenwood
FOR
YOURSELF
.
Cemetery Road, Racine,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Ohio.
ll -29-6tc
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
m-332s

4 sp ., 2 dr.

..

Loeally GrDWII

1966 POLARO 4 door, V8 motor,
power steering, pr ice $795 .
Phone 949.32 11 , Racine, Ohio.
11 -30·3tp

69 PLYMOUTH;................ ~ll95

lfelp Wanted

Woman to live In nice home with ATTE NT-ION FARMERs :
elderly lady. Good salary, no
Largest choice ala II breeds of '
laundry, day off. Phone 992A.I. Sires by phoning Leland
5397 or 992-3507.
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
ll-30-3tc
call station for service, Information or dlred sales.
I
DAYTIME barmaid at Red's
11-9-JOtc
Club i~ Mason, W. Va . Hours
10 a. m. Ill 7 p. m. Phone 7735788.
11-30-Jtc

br .. 8 cyL

70 CHEV. 2 DR.........:......$2295

•R EADv-,
!M
._,_-1x~~
c~
oN -cR_ET_E

·~

' 71 CHEVROLET Caprice
sedan, 14,900 miles, 5 new
tires, Comfortron air, lull
power equip., incl . door lock
and windows. green finish,
vinyl top , all accessories,
wife 's personal car. Bill
Grueser 992-3874.
12-1-Jip

~~al

'69 UP .•. 1950 THRU 19&amp;9 •••
.ALL PRICED TO SEU

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

Real Estate For Sale

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE

10 MOBILE home oocau•a
on large lot, Main St., · Rutland ; phone 992-6615.
11 -29-51c

ll-30·31c

992-2151

18 ODIER MODELS IN STOCK FROM

Six cylinder. automatic . Sharp
and easy on gas ..

I

Cow Hides $8.50; Deer Hides
$1.50; Wild Gensing $51.0&lt;1 lb.
Highest prices for all wild raw
fur . Open daily at 4 p. m .
Saturday and Sunday, 1 p . m .
Maran Fur House. 0 . 0.
Wright and Sons, Mason, W.

Mobile Homes For Sale

4~1ass

tlectrlctl

111-Earth
eaddus

r

!steering,
brakes,
windows, seats) tilt
steering wheel, AMF M stereo, air cond .,
Climate
Control,
Rosewood
With
saddle vinyl roof.

Wanted

CATERING

25-,.rtner · ·,_,,
27-Shleld

._'7

Sportabout six cy.l . ,
automatic
trans .,
deluxe
interior,

1971 GREMLIN 2 DR. SEDAN

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US DO DIE

-f--1

••

V -8, automatic, p. -st ., p .-br ., special
this week .

--

~~========~

46-Brook

1-Work In 'tums
2-lndlan tents
3-Sealnnlnlt
4-HOI
15-Rall blrcl
6-Hebrtw
month
7-cleanln&amp;:
utensil
. 8-Appellttlon
of Athant
9-Terrllled
fear {pl .)
10-Europnn
ermine
11- Piays on
words
12-Abstrtct
balna
13-Symbol for
tantalum
14--Most serious

108-Permlts
110-Nolse

Dozer &amp; Enit loader work,
ponds, basemenJ, land~
scaping. We have 1 size

BARGAIN CENTER

154-chrtstmas

DOWN

.

KUHL'S

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1972
lh-t-·;,,,. ii

:·-£AR1H MOVING

Wanted To Buy

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1-HIIts
6--0rlentll nurse
10-Barracuda
14-Keepsakt
19-Punctuation

ALL MODELS
READY
TO GO!

llozers, 2 site loaders. Work
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1
done by, hour or contract.
p. m . Factory choked guns
Free EStlmatn. ·We
·
only. Second place shooters
. ..
get free shot. In next match .
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dum~
Assorted mea ts. Racine Gun DOZER and back hoe work,
trucks and low.-boY ·tor h_
ino.
ponds and septic tanks; dit Club.
See Bob or Rog,er JeHors,
ching service ; tqp soiL fill . Pomeroy. Phone 991-3515
11-30-Jfc
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavating . Phone 992 -5367,. after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
PORCH SALE, Dec. I and 2nd.
5131.
.
Dick Karr. Jr.
Few antiques, miscellaneous.
9-l -tfc
At James 0. Swain residence,
111 mile above Eastern High ··
-~ · --·· ,--;:-:::-==-==-:-:-:~----;
Schaal on County Road 28.
ELNA and White Sew ing
SPE.ND TIME
SAVES's
11 _30 .31c · Mach ines ... se rvice . on al l
- - - - - - - -, - makes . Reasonable rates .
Th e Sewi ng Center, Mid dl eport, Ohio.
11 ·16-ttc
WANTED .:... Old upright
pianos, grand · pianos, old
Rt. 7 "at caution li9ht"
pump organs . Any condition . G &amp; E APPL lANCE Repair;
TUPPERS PLAINS
r epair of all laundry equip Paying 110 each. Write giving
Used
furniture, appliances.
ment , r efrigeration equip ·
directions. Witten Piano Co .,
Clean
&amp; guaranteed.
ment
and
house
wiring;
ca
ll
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946 .
614-992-6050.
NEW
FURNITURE
.
12-1-61p
11 -24-JOip
Sola Beds 8. Recliners .
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Discount priced. ·
organs,:. dishes, clocks, brass AUTOMOBILE Insurance been·
cancelled?
Lost
your·
beds, ·or:complele households .
operator 's license? Call 992 LAYAWAY FOR XMAS ·
Write M . 0 . Miller, Rt . 4,
Open to7; closed Mondays
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992 -6271.
6-15-tfc f
2966. '
- - - - - . . , . . -= - 6-_28-tfc -,-----~WANTED beef h~ide s . - Phone SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
773 _5600 , Grover c. Roush,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Pomeroy St., Mason, W. Va.
11 -16-15tp
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
·- 3-29-tfc,
Ca!rll - t;ree
Party
Pn!pcVations at a Low,
MOBILE Home with lot and 35
Low Cost - Whether It
ft . patio; Albert Hill, Racine, 1973 HOLLY Park, 14 x 65, all be
a Wedding - Anelectric, 2 bedroom, shag
949·2261 .
carpe t, washer and dryer,
niversary get-together
11 -26 -71c
110,600 ; phone 992-5709.
or a Special Holiday.
12-3-31c
we will cater delicious
19_6_
8~
M~O~B~I~
L~
E ~h-am
-e ,~3~b-ed
~
room ,
aishes' to ·your homj! partly furnished ; phone 742 or party rooms.
4833.
11 -28-6tc
CALL 992-5786

For Rent or Sale

SIIT/SFY YOIII/ NEEDS

'· f 1•."1\Q~O~S q" '·I

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service.
tune up ary~ brake service.
balanced
elecWheels
tronical ly .
All
work!
guaranteed.
Reasonable,
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992-'
3213.
7-27-tfc
~

r~ nd

:•

Biscayne 4 Dr . V-8,
· automatic, p .-st., air ·
.cond., dark · blue, very
nice '68.··

1969 DODGE OORONET 4 DR.

1967 Merti!IJ Colony Part Wagon

eRANGER
•RANGER

O'DEL~ WHEEL alignment

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club. Sunday! Dec. 3,
New Haven, W. Va. 'Noon
till.. ..
11-J0-3tc

Furni3ce Controls
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

eCUSTOM

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display •

Notice

HUMIDIFIERS

Dr.

1969 CADIUAC ·
Eldorado all power - -..

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

'•.,

•F-100

1968 atEVROI.ET

USED CAR -.CITY

sedan. ' V -8, T - .
flite, p .- st., p. -br .,
drivers
education
unit, 16,000 miles .

4

' -XLT

"HElL"
\
•

1972 DODGE POlARA

SELECTION OF 19J3 PICKUPS

Ill HAVE
ToGo
· Take Me To

-----------

M6. W1NI(LE

WE HAVE AREAL GOOD·

Business Services-

TRIPLE A Driver Education
Cl~ sses will -begin Monda y •
December 4th ; for t n·
formation ca ll AAAolfice 4460699 or Ben S!awter at 992·
5628.
12-3 2tc

, 8GT,, 811Ul"ISZ!).,,• u•~ •- •

:JI,_

..

Classifieds

Notice

Para sol HAYMAN'S Auction - a goOd IF YOU' want more tor your
SKATE-A-WaY Hol iday Par- A NNOUNCING
place Ia qa each Friday
m one y stop at Sy ra c use
Bou
ti
que
Bea
u
ty
Sal on
. ties ; Thanksgiving , Dec. lsi,
Drive. ln . Dinner s served on
evening,
7
p.m
.
at
Lau
i~l
.
open inQ Nov. 28th next to
Christmas, Dec. 15th; · New
Cli
fl
on
old
Rl.
7,
I
mile
wesl
Sunday.
Open 11 a.m . to 9
Skat.. A-Way Roller Rink ;
Year's, Sat .. Dec . 30th ; open
p .m . J\o\onday thru Thursday,
ol Roc k Springs Fairground.
open Tuesday thru Sah.1rday
Wed , Fri., ·Sal. , 7:30-10: 30;
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
10-10-tfc
and Tuesday even in~s ; phone
avaiiable for private parties,
11 a .ni . to 11 p.m .
985·4141 l or appointment ; HAVE a vacancy in mY home
Mon .,
Tues .,
Thursday
12-l -3tc
operato
r
,
Sandra
Tr
ussel
l
evenings , Sat. and Sun. af.
for two wOm~n pat ients. Iva
ternoons; phone 985-3929, 985Kerns.
- Stewart . Phone 992-2785.
KOSCOT KDSME TICS &amp; WIG S.
ll -26-12!c
9996 or 985-4141.
12-l -Jic
SPE CIALS
M O NT HLY .
11 -26-12tc - - - - - - - - PHONE
HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPOR T.
OHI O 992-5 113
12-3-tfc

,'

Ded,l972

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
'

For Sale

.

For Sale

WALNUT, ~~~~~~~[-~/J~~~~rJ!~~~~~..::_~
--radio, ~
speaker sound system , ~
· phone 882-2638.
speed automatic changer .
12-3-31c
Balance $69.51. Use our - - -- - - - - - - -budget terms. Call 992-7085. SOLID OAK church pews, 18
11-28-61c
and 8 feet long. Reasonable.
Syracuse Asbury U~lled
NOW WRECKING the former
Methodist Church; phone 992Epple's
Grocery
Store
2039.
·
building In Pomeroy. All
12-3-3tc
kinds of building materials
for sale on thejol:i Including 2 GIVE an Aq&lt;HOrlum this Christand 3 ln. heavy material,
mas from Showalter's Wet
sheeting and cherry stair
Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
railing; call 992-5946 or 882l2·3-61p
!219.
11-10-lfc H&amp;N day old or started Leghorn
pullets. Both floOr or cage
- - - - -- - : - - grown avalfablt. ·Poultry
4 HEAD of Hereford heifers to
housing &amp; •utomatlon.
be fresh this spring, also 4
Modern Poultrv; 399W. Mlltn.
, vear old Hereford cow brecl to
Pomeroy, 991-~1...
·
· Hereford bull and 1 Hereford
·12·3-lt(
bull 3 years o[d. Rhone 992- ·
2292 .
·
1.12 ACRE lot&gt;; phone 14-M56.
11-30-Jtc
12-3-21p

- - -- - -

�....

.-·· '

29-Tbe

28- Thi. Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei,Sunday, Dec. 3,1972

· }'or Fast Results Use ·The Sunday
Notice

.

Notice

Times~Sentinel

Notice

.
'.•
,.

. ' '&lt;,

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
9n2448
Pomeroy,O.

...
•

.
!...
..

----------

IN MEMORY of our son and
brother,
Kenneth
Ray
Graham , who died one _year
ago, December 2, 1971. Sadly
mi ssed by Mommie, Daddy
and brothers, D. G. and
Michael.
12-3-ltc
'

Card of Thanks
MAY we express our heartfelt
thank s to. relatives, friends

ne'ig h bars for the
SELLARDS Markel, Rutland ,
beau t l l ul
floral
Ohio Is · now owned and · arrangements, food, cards
opera ted by Roger E. Car
and for the comforting words
penter. Store hours are a a.m.
of Rev . Chester Lemley
to 8 p.m. weekdays and 12 to 8
during the death of Anthony
p.m. Sunday.
L. Schuler . The Schu ler
11 -29-61c
family .
12-3·llp
WE WISH to ex pre ss our heartte ll thanks to the Graduating
Cla ss of 1934 tor the beautiful
floral arrangement for An thony L. Schuler. The Schuler
Family.
ln-ltp

•

t'

"...
~

w

•
M
~

..•

~

•
~

N:OI.lfl"IOS

mo ..

21-Phlllpplne
knife
22-food fish
23-Frult
24-Witty Vlilr$1
26-lndlvlduals
28-Relles on
29-Limb
30-Su In Asia

32-Aims

bollll$

33-Dilpatched
34-GoH mound
35-Hawellan
wrteths
37--Grtenland

settlement
B~Worthless

•
luvlne;
40-ConJunc:tlon
41-Writes
42-Dirk
44-FUJitlve
arl1tocrat
4G-Obatrved
47-Seuey
48-Withtrtd

50-Gave
52-Averaa•
63-Prlvy Council
(abbr.)
55-Food proaram

57-Printer's
8UT W11H llfl, eoNNAZ

OFFER I. COUlD &amp;EE
a.tffl.!G~T. I'LL CALL
Fl ~

"THING IN iHI;:
MORNING.

measure
58-Sitndard
59-Bard
60---lt ttal• (abbr.)
62-Limb
64- Weak food
66-Eplltle
{abbr.)
61--Nott of scalt
69-Mttal
}Ct-Slnk In
I . middle
71-Actu•l
73-FIIal'rt of steps

75-Sum•n

7a..:-:NOrse aOds
80--Mountllns
In Asia
81-Prlnter's
measure (pl.)
82-Tolllnl
84--Qdors
86-Hay spreader
87-Kind of dog
89-0penwork
fabric
92-Take
unlawfully
95-Challena•s
98-levels

99-Period of
time
101-Sums
103-Rornan tyrtnt
104-Hieh card
105-Aecompllshad
106-lndeflnlte
ilirtlcle
107-Ptrt of
"to be''

140-Diries
141-Lelk's
throuah
J.u-crles like

cow
145-Female dear
ur-.loose
&amp;arments
148-DIIItreement
150-Form of
Insurance
152-Beer mup
153-5top

Six cyl., standard trans .• one owner,
ready for - you . .

1972 DODGE
Dart. Swinger. p .steermg, T-flite, air
cond . , v-roof, rallye
wheels, dark green .

1971 HORNET SST

bulla1
132-Moccasln•
133-Unlt of

134-ExploJiv•
noln
135--M•n't n1m1
137-Frult •••ds
139-Southem
blackbird

92-Mu•le: n

43-Goddess of
discord

written
93-small bird
94-Latln
conjunction
96-SIIkworm
97--QffsprinJ (pl.)
too-campus
point
102-Pierce
105-Force

2f-Collett
offiCII I
31-Lantem

33-lUft·tO
36-Sow

38-lease
40-Abound

41-Fual

ctrol
!56-Sounded
a horn.
157-Shouts
158-Emmeu
159-Strlke hard
.
(colloq.)
160--Manaaerlal
• (colloq.)

47-Polnt of
hammer
49-Lempreys
51-Pertainlne:
to Norwey
52-Anchored
53-Brulllan
estuary
54-AI&amp;onqultn

suddenly
112-Army mul
113- Let It sltnd
114-Reverberttlons
116-Poktr Stlkl
118-Handl•
120-Unlt for
muturlnJ

lndl•n

15-Compan

113-Pinttll duck
115-Symbol for
1•ntalum
117-Tolled
119-conjunctlon
120-LIIrs
121-Sewlnc
124-Prohlbltl
~2&amp;-For fear thtt
127-Auxlllary verb
128-Haberd•sher
l3o-Pfnks with a

fl ..:.~i:t)odr1tie 1' ·' '· •

109-Braak

measurtmCint

112~~~~~~;

I

point
16-Lamp
17-Notch
18-Crates
2D-Challence

23--Twltttd .

56--Addlnl
59-Par:t of ship
tiO-Proflt
61-Astlr
63-Rubdown
65--Cron111
(colloq.)
67-Gretk letter

69--N•e•tlve
p~fi)(

7o--cooked In
buttertd dish
72-Palnts
74-Pronoun
76-~lsta

77--City In
Ntw York
79-Unlt of

PortUIUtse

currency
83-Sum up
Bs--cltrus
fruit (pl.)
86--South Afrfc.n
dltlect
87-Antl•rtd
anlmtl

88-RJtt of speed
89-Gr..k letter
90--Sttr In
Dr•C.Orls

~

IOUnd
121-Piacu
122-0ccurs
123-Microbe
125-Aicohollc

bever•aes

126-Woally
127-Fiylnl
mammals
129- Disturbanct
131-Racks
132-Fall IUY
(colloq.)
133-Small lumps .
.134-Nulsancn
136-Rall bird
138--Shabby
(colloq.)
140-Su aacles
141-Deposlt of
fine urth
142-Wintar
prtclpltatlon
144-Superclllous
ptrson
147-Be Ill

145---Man's
nlcknama
149-Aftemoon
party
151-Aiso
153-Exclamatlon
l !55-Army officer
(abbr.)

- - ' " " luggage rack, mag
type wheel covers.
silver- with red vlnyl
,interior. .
,-..._
/

'3395

1968 RAMBLER AMERICAN WAGON

L.•2095

Six cylinder. automatiC, luggage
rack, here you are .

--·
it

'i'OWN A
CADILLAC,.

USEO CARS

va .

Of Course You Can"

Auto Sales

'·

72 t'idillac Coupe DeVille

1967 CHEVROLET Impala ;
phone 949-2977 .
12-1-31c

Dark grey fin iSh with r'ed leather ir:~t . , full power
equipment, AM-FM stereo, Climate Control air
condltion~ng, s new whitewall tires .

'6500
70 t'idillac Sedan DeVille
Sliver metallic finish, blue interior, full power equipment,
Climate Control air conditioning , AM-FM radio, one
owner new Cadillac trade.

'3800

CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614 - 423-~531.
4-13-lfc

S?l ?&lt;

70 t'idillac' Sedan DeVille

("

.;. ~lfOMEROY,
·•

Wh ite with black vinyl top, turquoise Interior, full
power equipment, Climate Control air conditioning

'4000

72 Oldsmobile Toronado
Bamboo finish with saddle vinyl top, saddle vinyl int.,
full power equipment, Comfortron air conditioning,
T&amp; T wheel, only 15,000 miles.

OHI? .

•

EXPERT

• No Payments .until After Jan. l, 1973

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

Wheel Alignment

1971 65 X 12 W~NDSOR mobile
home with expando on large
lot, located ·on old Rt. 33;
phone 992-6615.
11-29-5tc

.

•5.55 .

Cadillac - Oldsmobile
992-5341

On Most American Cars

DID YOU know that wintertime
-GUARANTEEDis the best time to buy a good
Phone 992-2094
used Mobile Home at BerryMiller Mobile Home Sales?
You can buy "now" and take
delivery In the spring with no
· oP.nl Tils
additional storage charge. We
Monday thru Saturday
have a complete selection of
606 E,' Main, Pomeroy,,O.
-· ·-.
8, 10 and 12 wldes In stock and
__ _
we are ready to deal. So take ·SEE US FOR: Awn ings, storm
advantage of our greatly
doors and windows, carports.
reduced prices now - you'll
marquees, aluminum sldln!;J.:
be glad you did. Berry-Miller
and railing . A. Jacob, sales,
Mobile Home Sa le s, 705
representative. For .. free•
Farson Street, Belpre, Ohio,
estimates, phone Charles
Ll s1e,
Phone 423-9531.
yr a cu se , V . V .,·
11 ·30·3t c
Johnson and San, Inc.
1
·
3-2-ttc.
I
•BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
· Air Conditioners·
Septic tanks Installed. George
•Awnings
(BIIIl Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
· •'Underoiiming
4-25-lfc

GMAC Financing Available

s P.M.

Open Eves. Til 6-Til

Pomeroy
Sat.

"You'l_l Like ('•;• Quality Way of Doing Business"

'

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

-

s

.

67 FORD GALAXIE 500
Auto., air condition.
'795

. Complete

mqblle hQme.
SEPTIC
TANKS
AROBIC
~ervice ~ plus gigantic
.. S~WAGE SYSTEMS
C[EANED:
REPAIR-Eli:
· 'display of mobile homes :
MILLER SANITATION,
:always .avallable.at ...
I;
STEWART, OHI0 .. PHONE
662-3035.
•
10-4-tfc

MILLER
MOBILE
HOMES~.
.

t.413-75ll
1110 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE, D.
. .

Pets For Sale

69 BUICK l.aSABRE ........ ~l495
2

1

delivered right to your
proj ect. Fasf and easy . Free
estimates . Phone 992· 3284.'
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,'
Mlddlep&lt;&gt;rt, Olllo,
·

SIAMESE kittens, 8 weeks old, -:-::-:::------6-·JO·Ifc
blue -eyed an~
lovable;
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
housebroken. Phone 992-3214. REASONABLE rates. Ph. M&lt;SI )-J0-3tp
4782, Galllj&gt;olls, John Russell,
Owner &amp; oper a1or.
· 1
puppies
AKC;
POODLE
5-12-tfc
apricot, black, sliver ; will
hold till Christmas; phone C: BRADFORD, Auctioneer
992-5443.
Complete Service
•
ll-19-lfc
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
AKC Toy Poodle· puppies,.
Crllt Bradford
•'
wormed and shots, well -bred
and healthy, $75 . Phone =:-:--"'-':
·· ~----,--5:...:·1 -lfc
Coolville 667-6214.
WILL CUT or trim trees ,
11 -22-12tp ' reasonable. Also clean out
--------------basements, attlcs.and cellars.
Phone 949-3221.
11-22-JOtc

Custom
P.B.

For Sale
. .

WANTED ·
AT ONCE!

Molcl Route
~iUI'

The .Daily Sentinel
PHONE 'm-2156

Impala. auto., air co'nditlon.

Roadrunner, stand .,

'h

Ton V-8, 302.

396,

4 sp., 2 dr .

882-2980

Wanted To Rent
HOUSE In M iddleport or
Rutland . Contact Janet Tillis
at 992-2709 from 9 a. m. fo 5 p.

m.

.TREES

:i
·

11-J0-3tc

AND ~ ROOM furnished and
unlurnlohod apartments.
Phone 992-54A.
4-12-lfc

31iociM itoilse aild

both, ideal

10r couples, utilities paid,
near Middleport, phone 992-

IIOWINIIIAvenuo

Mldd..,.,., ONo

ml.

Par•lltl 111 MltNJepwt Hill.

Pomeroy

Teaford, Sr.
Broker
noMochlnlcSt.
· Pomeroy, Ohio ~171t

For Sale
ONE PONY saddle and bridle,
$25 ; one i6" bicycle, $12.1() ;
phone 992·5815.
12-1-Jic

SALE
1972 CHEVROLET Qiprice ......... s3995
4-door, new car title &amp; bill of warranty, covert with blk .
vinyl roof. tinted glass, factory air , front &amp; rear guards,
radio &amp; rear speaker. whitewall .t ir es. Nice and clean .
Retail 14860. Priced to move .

1970 CAMARQ ........................$1999
Hardtop coupe, local low mileage, 1-owner car, 307.
engine, 3-speed transmission, power steering, bucket
seats, console, sharp blue linish, rad io. SHARP IS THE
WORD!

1971 PINTO FORO_. .................51599
2-door, local 1-owner, low mileage; good tires,· clean ·In·
terlor, green finish, radio, 2000cc engine, 4-speed.
.
REDUCEDTO

"''1910 FORD RANCH

WAGOft::~stft5

2 Seat, beige linlsh, vinyl Interior. v.e engin e, automatic
trans ., good tires . radio . Runs out good.

REDUCED TO

1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 .......... s1795

Hardtop coupe, V-B eng_lne, automatic transmission,
power steering &amp; brakes, white finish, black vinyl top,
vinyl Interior, white-wa ll tires, like new, radio .

1968 CHEVELLE .......................!1695
Malibu sport coupe, air conditioned, 307 engine, power
steering, power brakes, red finish with black vinyl lop and
black vinyl Interior, r~dlo, good whi te-wall tires.

1968 CAMARO CONVT. ;............ !1695
Local 1-oWner, low mileage car, beaut ifu l cream finish
with black top, bucket seats, with console, new white-wall tires , power steering , and automatic transmission, radio.
ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NICE AS THEY
COME.

1969 CHEVY BISCAYNE ............ s1295

1972 Pontiac Catalina Brougham 2 dr. H.T.,
red with black vinyl top. black vinyl Interior,
factory air, new Pontiac trade-ln. Just like
new. Get your Xmas present early. Make
yourself &amp; family happy with this beauty. $3895
1971 Pontiac Catalina Wagon. all red with
black vinyl Interior, auto., air. Local one
owner. Make a real nice family car. Go get
your Xmas tree In this beauty .
$3895
1971 Pontiac Grandville, 2 dr . H. T., color
silver cloud with black cloth Interior, factory

,~lr,.,oflo\Ntf\, windows" AM-LF M.S...taRt:fiaver.,.,,
new Grand Prix trade-ln. This car sold new for
almosl$6,000. Priced to sell.
$4195
1971 Int. 1/1 Ton Pickup. · long wheel base,
custom cab, low mileage, V -8. Priced
Right.
S2495
1969 Ford F IL Wagoll, all red, small V -B, auto ••
P. S., P. B, Real clean lillie car. Makes a real
nice family wagon .
Only S1495. ·
1968 Cadillac Eldorado. 2 dr •. H.T., black with ·
black vinyl top . This car is loaded. Has the
works on it. Priced to sell.
Special$2495
1966 Buick LeSabre 400, 4 dr. H. T., red &amp;
white. with black interior . Ole of the cleanest
66's anywhere. Local owner. New Buick
trade.
Only S895

' Dr., V-8, automatic, P. steering, blk . vinyl trim, white
finish, good tires.

SPECIAL THIS WEEK

1968 CHEVY BELAIR .. .... .. .•. ..... '995
St. Wagon, 2 seats. V-8, std. trans ., good fires, radio. grn .
fin ish.
·

1968 OPEL ................... ··.. ·..... 5795

1968 Chrysler New.Port, 4 dr . sed., factory air.
This car has a lot of miles on it but a good buy
forth is price .
$895

Statll&gt;rl wagon, beige finish, good tires. 4.speed transmission, radio. A clean unit and very economical.

•

Remember

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1969 CHEVROLET ................~?~..'2095

We Service What We Sell.

1·ton Truck 102t1 cab to axle, 292 cu. ln. englne1 15,000 lbs.
2-speed.rear axle, 825x20, tO ply tires, full depth loam seat,
heav.y duty springs, solid cab . Ready to go to work .

. Our Word 18 Our Bond

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

For Sale

Sat.

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp;
Til 5 p.m.
Service &amp; Parts for your convenience til 12
noon on Sat.

· 12·3-3tc

l

.

.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992-2174

For Sale

c

j,

J

WINTERIZED
USED CAR

Virgil B.

APPLES. Fitzpatrick Or chards, State Route 689,
10 ACRES
Phone Wilkesville 669·3785.
Just off Rl. 33 - Mostly
8-30-lfc
level, barn , garage. out
cellar, 2 sheds. home has 3
B. R., bath, dining R. New 'cOAL, Limestone, Excelsior
" Your Chevy Dealer"
Salt Works, E. Main St.,
FA furnace, porches. THE
992-2126
Open Eves. Ti18
Pomero~
Pomer oy . Phone 992-3891.
BUY OF THE YEAR ~8.900 .
• ·12-lfc .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
I
RUTLANp
4 room frame, 2 B. R., bath,
porches, n.W garage 24x28 HOMELITE Super XL Chain
Saw, automatic oiler, like
Inside, large lot, storm doors
new;
call 992-71 28.
AKC BEAGLE pups, male and SINGER Automallc sewing
and ·windows. JUST 15,500.
12·3-3tc
female, · five months old,
machine. Like new In walnut
30 FENCED ACRES
cabinet . Makes design sill•
.hot
D
I
M
F
NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS -1,600 ·BAL-E
I
-·s· of· good ml x·.s
s.
on e
c ar and,
""
Mason
w
v
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
NEW HAVEN
- This home has had a lot of
hay ; 150 bu. of corn ; 1 super C
' · a.
blind hems. overcasts. etc .
work done, 4 bedrooms ~
11 •28 ·6tp
Farmall fractor with two
S85. Call Ravenswood 273 -9521
both, 8 ft. bose cabinets,
point hitch ; 1 stokermatlc BEAUTIFUL Maple stereoor 273-9893.
double bowl sink. New deep
stove; 357 magnum plslolct-;_ r,_.a"!d!i.o....comb!Mtlon_ AM-£.")---=====.:::::::==='11;::·
= l:::O_:_·If:c
--f~wilh-pu m p;-good·spt'l
arm mach1nery ; 6: Fwd
radio, 4 speed Intermixed
cistern,
buildings and
TRAILER In Pomeroy." Phone
L TO ;
Rolland Searles,
changer, 4 speaker sound 8 FT. CAMPER top, Sl90 ;
garage .
$12,9~0 .
992-3318.
Rutland, Ohio; phone 7~2system, balance $/9. 3 ~. Use
Hoover washer , portable,
l2-3-3tc
MINERALS.
-4626
b d t 1
coppertone.
$65 .
Allis
11·-" ·61p
our
.
· -- - - - - : - : ALMOST rACRE.
7085. u ge erms. all 992Chalmer B Trae t or w lth
3 FURNISHED rooms and both.
plows and cultivators, $600.
MIDDLEPORT - Grant St.,
11 •28 -6lc
North Second Ave ., Mid Phone 949-3746.
.grand older home, 9 rooms, 4 PAINT Damage. 1972 Zig -Zag
dleport; references required ;
sewing mac~lnes . Still In
11 -30·llc
bedrooms, bath, porches,
phone 992-5293.
orlglnal cartons. No at garage apartment for ad11-29-lfc
tachments needed as our NOW at ShOYfalter's Wet Pet HUNTERS! I have two fine
ditional Income, large
controls
are bulll·ln. Sews
Chester, Ohio . DOLLAR
guns for sale, No. I Franchi,
workshop. Sl8,500. .
TRAILER spaces; extra large
with
1
or
2
~eedles; makes
SALE.
Gold
Swords,
4
for
$1
;
12 gauge 0-u full &amp; mOd.
POMEROY
lots. $25 a month, Velma
buttonholes,
sew
on
b&lt;Jtton•,
Sun•et
Variatus,
~ far $1 ;
barrels,
single selective
2 story frame, new roof, new
· Zuspan , Mason, W. Va . •
mon~rams, and blind hem
Sphenops Mollles, 5 for $1 ;
trigger, auto, ejectors, only
siding, new carporl, 3
11-29-JOip
stitch. Full cash price $38.50
Neon Tetra, nice size, 3 for $1 ;
6', pounds; No. 2 Winchester
bedrooms, bath, small lot.
or budget plan available.
Zebra Danlo, 6 for $1.
MOdell2, 28" mOd .. 12 gauge,
$5,000.
UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom
Phone m -5641.
1J .J0.3tp
very good condition. Phone
TO BUY OR SELL CON house, 1'12 bolho, living room ,
11 ·29·61c
992 -50~~ or 992·5579.
TACT US.
dining room. kitchen and
1968 INTERNAT.fONAL '-" ton,
11-30-llp
HENRY E. CLELAND
utility room; completely
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
overloads, 6 ply tires, solid
carpeted,
cherry
wood
m-1Z59, if no •n•wer m mOdel. Complete with all
tall racks, deluxe cab and DOLL CLOTHES. Handmade
paneling; electric heat ; must . 2568
extras; must sell ; State Route
for Barbie, Ken, Crlssy ,
cleaning tools. Small paint
... to appreciate, In Hertford
damage In,shipping. Will fake
338 across from Kaiser
Kerry, Mia and Velvet .
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
facing Ohio River ; phone I · .
$27 casH or budGet plan
Aluminum. Gall Bradford,
Assorted prices. Call alter 5 p.
S.ltst.d,-fU-42"
available. Phone m-56~1.
Racine, 0., Rt. 2. .
m. 696-1207, Marge .
:IOUI'l-3235. .
· HENRY CLELAND Jll.
11-2•-lfc .
ll-29-6tc
ll
-J0-3tc
11•30-ltp
S.tesman-fl5-420t

SAYRE'S USED CARS

,!

For Rent

BRADFORD'S

101 E. Main ·

LOWER
WINTER PRICES

69 CHEVEUE ...............:.. ~1595

BACHE LOR- TYPE furnished
apartment. Phone 992-5131.
11-J0-3tc

Scotch Pine

HbUSE FOR SALE, 114 Brick
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
house, 3 bedrooms, excellenf
locati " n. close to schOOl and
city; contact Lou Osborne or
call 992-5898.
ll -26·1fC

70 PICKUP TRUCK .........$2195

aiRISJMAS
Fresh Cut

..
CLELAND·
ld:ALTY

P. S.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Estate For Sale

NEW LISTING
START YOUR FUTURE 1970 DODGE car, white with
New brick business building .
black top ; new snow 1ires.
Has 4 large rooms. Ideal tor
Clean and good condition .
contractor,
store. etc. Best of
Phone 696-1135.
location
if
you
want in on the
12-3-ltp
ground floor . 2900 sq. It . 1100
paneled and tiled, 2 ceramic
baths. Plenty of parking . No
information over the phone.
.lOUSE in Long Bottom ," phone
985.3529.
NEW LISTING
RENOVATED
3
6-11-lfc
COMFORTABLE two star
bedrooms, ne~ bath, new
home, full basement, bat~
kttchen, panel1ng and many
and •; 2, attached garage, and
other features . . Large lot.
extra ,s.~QJ~,.J,IeM Pomer'O')htH ~~lng $6500 .0Q,.,I'1 ,_,,,1.
Elementary . Basic furniture
4 BEDROOMS
available. Phone 992-7384 or
LEVEL LOT ~ Here's your
99Ul33 for appointment.
chance to buy low, fix up,
ll -28-6tc
and sell . Located tn town on
-=~-------good street near' stores .
8 ROOM house and bath, nice
Asking only $7500.00.
large lot, natural gas, buill -In
VILLAGE
cabinets in kitchen, close to
radio stallon in Bradbury ;
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, large
phone 992-2602.
living, large dining, and
11 -27-301p
front porch. Large level lot.
::::=-:-:-:--:-:--Ideal tor garden or pony.
SPECIAL : Move In before
Want $10,500.00.
winter ..... • bedroom ranch
WANT TO BUILD?
hom~ on 3fA acre lot. Bath and
CR
ES
0
8 A
n proposed
a half, built-in kitchen, wall to
wall carpet and garage. Price
water line and blacktop
$20.750.00; also a 5 bedroom
road . Asking 14500.00 .
colon ial house on a l/4 acre lot.
BRICK
Bath and a .half, buill-In
4 BEDROOMS - Large
kitchen, dining room, family
living, dining, kitchen. and
room and the works, priced
foyer . 2 porches. Barn, arld a
$30.000.00. Call Sherman E.
string of garages. 2 acres of
Summerfield, 985-3598 or 985·
good · land . Ask ing only
4177.
11 2 30tc
$21.500.00.
- .
'ONE ACRE
-A- N
- IC_E_ p_la_c_
e _i_n_t_h_
e _h_ll_ls- of
NEAR TOWN - • bedroom
Meigs County with or without
home. Kitchen and . large
dining. Full basement. Some
furniture ; 11 acres land ; call
949-5201 for appointment after
long needle pines. Asking
112,000.00.
6 p.m .; be home all day
Saturday and Sunday. ·
LOTS-ACRES-FARMS
1l -29-6tp
HOUSES SCARCE, DON'T
BELIEVE IT. WE HAVE
ALL-ELECTRIC brick home,
PLENTY, SOME THAT
lOlf2 acres of ·land; close to
YOU CAN MOVE INTO
school; contact Joyce E.
TOMORROW.
COME SEE
Manual,
Greenwood
FOR
YOURSELF
.
Cemetery Road, Racine,
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Ohio.
ll -29-6tc
ASSOCIATE
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
m-332s

4 sp ., 2 dr.

..

Loeally GrDWII

1966 POLARO 4 door, V8 motor,
power steering, pr ice $795 .
Phone 949.32 11 , Racine, Ohio.
11 -30·3tp

69 PLYMOUTH;................ ~ll95

lfelp Wanted

Woman to live In nice home with ATTE NT-ION FARMERs :
elderly lady. Good salary, no
Largest choice ala II breeds of '
laundry, day off. Phone 992A.I. Sires by phoning Leland
5397 or 992-3507.
Parker 992-2264. Pomeroy or
ll-30-3tc
call station for service, Information or dlred sales.
I
DAYTIME barmaid at Red's
11-9-JOtc
Club i~ Mason, W. Va . Hours
10 a. m. Ill 7 p. m. Phone 7735788.
11-30-Jtc

br .. 8 cyL

70 CHEV. 2 DR.........:......$2295

•R EADv-,
!M
._,_-1x~~
c~
oN -cR_ET_E

·~

' 71 CHEVROLET Caprice
sedan, 14,900 miles, 5 new
tires, Comfortron air, lull
power equip., incl . door lock
and windows. green finish,
vinyl top , all accessories,
wife 's personal car. Bill
Grueser 992-3874.
12-1-Jip

~~al

'69 UP .•. 1950 THRU 19&amp;9 •••
.ALL PRICED TO SEU

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS

Real Estate For Sale

SHAMMY'S
CATERING SERVICE

10 MOBILE home oocau•a
on large lot, Main St., · Rutland ; phone 992-6615.
11 -29-51c

ll-30·31c

992-2151

18 ODIER MODELS IN STOCK FROM

Six cylinder. automatic . Sharp
and easy on gas ..

I

Cow Hides $8.50; Deer Hides
$1.50; Wild Gensing $51.0&lt;1 lb.
Highest prices for all wild raw
fur . Open daily at 4 p. m .
Saturday and Sunday, 1 p . m .
Maran Fur House. 0 . 0.
Wright and Sons, Mason, W.

Mobile Homes For Sale

4~1ass

tlectrlctl

111-Earth
eaddus

r

!steering,
brakes,
windows, seats) tilt
steering wheel, AMF M stereo, air cond .,
Climate
Control,
Rosewood
With
saddle vinyl roof.

Wanted

CATERING

25-,.rtner · ·,_,,
27-Shleld

._'7

Sportabout six cy.l . ,
automatic
trans .,
deluxe
interior,

1971 GREMLIN 2 DR. SEDAN

PARTY PLANNING?
LET US DO DIE

-f--1

••

V -8, automatic, p. -st ., p .-br ., special
this week .

--

~~========~

46-Brook

1-Work In 'tums
2-lndlan tents
3-Sealnnlnlt
4-HOI
15-Rall blrcl
6-Hebrtw
month
7-cleanln&amp;:
utensil
. 8-Appellttlon
of Athant
9-Terrllled
fear {pl .)
10-Europnn
ermine
11- Piays on
words
12-Abstrtct
balna
13-Symbol for
tantalum
14--Most serious

108-Permlts
110-Nolse

Dozer &amp; Enit loader work,
ponds, basemenJ, land~
scaping. We have 1 size

BARGAIN CENTER

154-chrtstmas

DOWN

.

KUHL'S

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1972
lh-t-·;,,,. ii

:·-£AR1H MOVING

Wanted To Buy

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1-HIIts
6--0rlentll nurse
10-Barracuda
14-Keepsakt
19-Punctuation

ALL MODELS
READY
TO GO!

llozers, 2 site loaders. Work
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1
done by, hour or contract.
p. m . Factory choked guns
Free EStlmatn. ·We
·
only. Second place shooters
. ..
get free shot. In next match .
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dum~
Assorted mea ts. Racine Gun DOZER and back hoe work,
trucks and low.-boY ·tor h_
ino.
ponds and septic tanks; dit Club.
See Bob or Rog,er JeHors,
ching service ; tqp soiL fill . Pomeroy. Phone 991-3515
11-30-Jfc
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K Ex cavating . Phone 992 -5367,. after 7 p.m. or phone 992·
PORCH SALE, Dec. I and 2nd.
5131.
.
Dick Karr. Jr.
Few antiques, miscellaneous.
9-l -tfc
At James 0. Swain residence,
111 mile above Eastern High ··
-~ · --·· ,--;:-:::-==-==-:-:-:~----;
Schaal on County Road 28.
ELNA and White Sew ing
SPE.ND TIME
SAVES's
11 _30 .31c · Mach ines ... se rvice . on al l
- - - - - - - -, - makes . Reasonable rates .
Th e Sewi ng Center, Mid dl eport, Ohio.
11 ·16-ttc
WANTED .:... Old upright
pianos, grand · pianos, old
Rt. 7 "at caution li9ht"
pump organs . Any condition . G &amp; E APPL lANCE Repair;
TUPPERS PLAINS
r epair of all laundry equip Paying 110 each. Write giving
Used
furniture, appliances.
ment , r efrigeration equip ·
directions. Witten Piano Co .,
Clean
&amp; guaranteed.
ment
and
house
wiring;
ca
ll
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946 .
614-992-6050.
NEW
FURNITURE
.
12-1-61p
11 -24-JOip
Sola Beds 8. Recliners .
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Discount priced. ·
organs,:. dishes, clocks, brass AUTOMOBILE Insurance been·
cancelled?
Lost
your·
beds, ·or:complele households .
operator 's license? Call 992 LAYAWAY FOR XMAS ·
Write M . 0 . Miller, Rt . 4,
Open to7; closed Mondays
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992 -6271.
6-15-tfc f
2966. '
- - - - - . . , . . -= - 6-_28-tfc -,-----~WANTED beef h~ide s . - Phone SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992-2284.
773 _5600 , Grover c. Roush,
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Pomeroy St., Mason, W. Va.
11 -16-15tp
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
·- 3-29-tfc,
Ca!rll - t;ree
Party
Pn!pcVations at a Low,
MOBILE Home with lot and 35
Low Cost - Whether It
ft . patio; Albert Hill, Racine, 1973 HOLLY Park, 14 x 65, all be
a Wedding - Anelectric, 2 bedroom, shag
949·2261 .
carpe t, washer and dryer,
niversary get-together
11 -26 -71c
110,600 ; phone 992-5709.
or a Special Holiday.
12-3-31c
we will cater delicious
19_6_
8~
M~O~B~I~
L~
E ~h-am
-e ,~3~b-ed
~
room ,
aishes' to ·your homj! partly furnished ; phone 742 or party rooms.
4833.
11 -28-6tc
CALL 992-5786

For Rent or Sale

SIIT/SFY YOIII/ NEEDS

'· f 1•."1\Q~O~S q" '·I

located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service.
tune up ary~ brake service.
balanced
elecWheels
tronical ly .
All
work!
guaranteed.
Reasonable,
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992-'
3213.
7-27-tfc
~

r~ nd

:•

Biscayne 4 Dr . V-8,
· automatic, p .-st., air ·
.cond., dark · blue, very
nice '68.··

1969 DODGE OORONET 4 DR.

1967 Merti!IJ Colony Part Wagon

eRANGER
•RANGER

O'DEL~ WHEEL alignment

GUN SHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club. Sunday! Dec. 3,
New Haven, W. Va. 'Noon
till.. ..
11-J0-3tc

Furni3ce Controls
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

eCUSTOM

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display •

Notice

HUMIDIFIERS

Dr.

1969 CADIUAC ·
Eldorado all power - -..

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

'•.,

•F-100

1968 atEVROI.ET

USED CAR -.CITY

sedan. ' V -8, T - .
flite, p .- st., p. -br .,
drivers
education
unit, 16,000 miles .

4

' -XLT

"HElL"
\
•

1972 DODGE POlARA

SELECTION OF 19J3 PICKUPS

Ill HAVE
ToGo
· Take Me To

-----------

M6. W1NI(LE

WE HAVE AREAL GOOD·

Business Services-

TRIPLE A Driver Education
Cl~ sses will -begin Monda y •
December 4th ; for t n·
formation ca ll AAAolfice 4460699 or Ben S!awter at 992·
5628.
12-3 2tc

, 8GT,, 811Ul"ISZ!).,,• u•~ •- •

:JI,_

..

Classifieds

Notice

Para sol HAYMAN'S Auction - a goOd IF YOU' want more tor your
SKATE-A-WaY Hol iday Par- A NNOUNCING
place Ia qa each Friday
m one y stop at Sy ra c use
Bou
ti
que
Bea
u
ty
Sal on
. ties ; Thanksgiving , Dec. lsi,
Drive. ln . Dinner s served on
evening,
7
p.m
.
at
Lau
i~l
.
open inQ Nov. 28th next to
Christmas, Dec. 15th; · New
Cli
fl
on
old
Rl.
7,
I
mile
wesl
Sunday.
Open 11 a.m . to 9
Skat.. A-Way Roller Rink ;
Year's, Sat .. Dec . 30th ; open
p .m . J\o\onday thru Thursday,
ol Roc k Springs Fairground.
open Tuesday thru Sah.1rday
Wed , Fri., ·Sal. , 7:30-10: 30;
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
10-10-tfc
and Tuesday even in~s ; phone
avaiiable for private parties,
11 a .ni . to 11 p.m .
985·4141 l or appointment ; HAVE a vacancy in mY home
Mon .,
Tues .,
Thursday
12-l -3tc
operato
r
,
Sandra
Tr
ussel
l
evenings , Sat. and Sun. af.
for two wOm~n pat ients. Iva
ternoons; phone 985-3929, 985Kerns.
- Stewart . Phone 992-2785.
KOSCOT KDSME TICS &amp; WIG S.
ll -26-12!c
9996 or 985-4141.
12-l -Jic
SPE CIALS
M O NT HLY .
11 -26-12tc - - - - - - - - PHONE
HELEN JANE
BROWN , MIDDLEPOR T.
OHI O 992-5 113
12-3-tfc

,'

Ded,l972

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
'

For Sale

.

For Sale

WALNUT, ~~~~~~~[-~/J~~~~rJ!~~~~~..::_~
--radio, ~
speaker sound system , ~
· phone 882-2638.
speed automatic changer .
12-3-31c
Balance $69.51. Use our - - -- - - - - - - -budget terms. Call 992-7085. SOLID OAK church pews, 18
11-28-61c
and 8 feet long. Reasonable.
Syracuse Asbury U~lled
NOW WRECKING the former
Methodist Church; phone 992Epple's
Grocery
Store
2039.
·
building In Pomeroy. All
12-3-3tc
kinds of building materials
for sale on thejol:i Including 2 GIVE an Aq&lt;HOrlum this Christand 3 ln. heavy material,
mas from Showalter's Wet
sheeting and cherry stair
Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
railing; call 992-5946 or 882l2·3-61p
!219.
11-10-lfc H&amp;N day old or started Leghorn
pullets. Both floOr or cage
- - - - -- - : - - grown avalfablt. ·Poultry
4 HEAD of Hereford heifers to
housing &amp; •utomatlon.
be fresh this spring, also 4
Modern Poultrv; 399W. Mlltn.
, vear old Hereford cow brecl to
Pomeroy, 991-~1...
·
· Hereford bull and 1 Hereford
·12·3-lt(
bull 3 years o[d. Rhone 992- ·
2292 .
·
1.12 ACRE lot&gt;; phone 14-M56.
11-30-Jtc
12-3-21p

- - -- - -

�...

. ...

.

•
\

.i

30- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

•

For Fast Results Use · The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.

r

'

Real Estate F.or Sale

In Memory

•

IN lOVING memory ·of our son
and brothei, Richard (Mi.ke)
· ·Slone who passed away two
yeers ago, Dece111ber 2, 1970.
We · will alway~ remember the
way he looked.
The Way he spoke and smiled,
The little things he said and dl&lt;t
Are with us all the while.
FOr down the lane of memories.

Lost
2 BEAGLES. One Male, one
female from Pea rl Kemper's
farm on Prospecl Church Rd .•
Ph . 446-4579.
283-4

Notice

1'

'

'''
''

GARAGE SALE

1
1

.

Wanted To Do

Furniture, antiques, dishes,

'JANITOR work night or day.
Ph·. 245-5687.
.284-6

Christrl,ls decorations and

=-:::---:---:---

other i'fms too numerous to
menlion . 2 miles out Mill
Creek Road from town .

~·

.'

FOR SALE BY OWNER
House, brand new. 3 BR, all .electric with air
cond., beautiful kitchen with dish wa.sher and
disp., family room opening to a large patio.
Electric garage door. Very nice neighborhood
near new hospital In Pleasant Valley. Priced
in low $30's. Phone 446-1854 or 446-1079 after 5
,.

TOOL
sharpening,
saws,
scissors, shears, home. and
garden tools. Sharp Shop,
Alley rear 147 Second .
216-lf

- - - -- - -

. REMODELING, building new
rooms, cement, roofing, '
siding, furnace Ins. J. H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.
·
68-11

JET CRUISE TOUR - Seven
countrles : Greece, Greek
Isle, Egypt, Cyprus, Israel.
Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, 16
days, escorted and ' all lnclusive --t only $999, departure HANDY man for odd jobs.
July 2, 1973. Space Is limited',
Phone 245-5008.
book nOw and save. Phone
260-tf
446-4313.
---------284·3

Wanted To Buy

------

REALTY

Wanted

•
'•
!

3
BEDROOM
F ULL .
BASEMENT . SUN PORCH,
FIREPLA CE,
FAMILY
' R:OOh. , FLAT LOT . CITY
SCHOOLS 524.900 . .,

EDGE OF
AT $24,900.
OFFER . 10
THIS ONE .

'

ON
LARGE
LOT
ON
CHILLICOTHE
RD .
5
ROOMS , FIREPLACE,
BASEMENT . $14 , 900 .
WE'Ll
HELP
YOU

FINA NCE IT .

low Down
Payment
'. NEW 3 B R. RANCH. ON
HUGE COUNTRY LOT IN
CITY SCHOOL DISTR !C T.
BUILT -I N KITCHEN AND
GAR}IGE . 521,900.

You're Missing Out
On A Real Buy
NEW &lt; BEDROOM HOME,
COMPLETELY
CAR ·
PETED, CENTRAL AIR,
FAM ILY ROOM, GARAGE
S25,900. 10 PCT . DOWN, 71h
· INT . Sl72 PAYMENT. CITY

WATER. SEWER. GAS ANO
· SC HOOL S.

Very Nice
3 Bedroom Home
CLOSE IN
CELLENT
VERY

In WUkesville
· -Priced Right
CLOSE TO NEW MINING
OPERATIONS. OLD TIME ;
2 STORY, 5 BEDROOM
HOME IN WONOERFUL
CONDITION . CENTRAL
HEAl , BATH, NICE KfT .
CHEN , LOTS OF CARPET .
ON 1 1'\CRE , COULD PARK
SEVE RAL
MOBILE
.HOMES .

Home And
. Four Lots
ONE STORY FRAME AT 41.
LIN.COLN
STREET,
CAR PET EO LIVING ROOM
AND ONE BEDROOM.
N ICE
KITCHEN
AND
DINING
A REA . FULL
BASEMENT,
CARPORT,
SEVERAL FRUIT TREES.

In Bidwell
l V~ STORY FRAME. HOME
ON 1 ACRE MORE OR
LESS . NICE SIZED LIV I NG
ROOM , FOUR BEDROOMS .
LARGE KITCHEN WITH
DINING AREA . QNE CAR
GA RAGE , LARGE BLOCK
ST ORA GE BUILDING . ON
·NEW
RURAL
WATER
LINE .

Two Houses
21!2 Acres
NEAR
THURMAN
ON
STATE ROU TE 279. HOUSE
NO .1 IS llh STORY FRAME
ABOUT 15 YEARS OLO .
LIVING ROOM , KI TCHEN
AND' DINING AREA AND
TWO ,. BEDROOMS,
DOWNSTAIRS ,
TWO
BEDROOMS
UPSTAIRS ~
BAR N 50 X 15. HOUSE NO .
2,
TWO
B·E DRODMS,
LIVIN G · ROOM
AND
' KITC HEN AND RENTS
FOR $30 PER MONTH .

AND IN EX ·
CONDITION.

NICE

Farm Near
Rio Grande

NEIGH .

BORHOOD ,
LOVELY
KITCHEN, CITY SCHOOLS .
GET POP BY THE HAND,
THIS GAL WANTS THIS
HOU SE SO LD .

Here's A Beautiful
Colonial In Country
iBRAND NEW , ABOUT TO

BE FINISHED, 4 OR 5
, BEDROOM S, BEAUTIFUL
.. I( 1 T CHEN ,
HUGE
FINISHED
FAMILY
GARAGE AND
. ROOM

103 ACRES, 35 ACRES
TILLABLE , BALANCE IN
PASTURE
AND
WOODLAND . EXTRA NICE
RANCH STYLE HOME ,
FOUR
BEDROOMS,
LIVING ROOM 15 X 18,
MODERN KITChiEN, BIG
DINING AREA , LARGE
UTILITY
ROOM, HOT
WATER, CENTRAL HEAT .
P.ANELING IN ALL BUT
TWO ROOMS . WALL TO

"~~~lf~tt~T;;,~~~· - ~~gP~9 ·• ·· ~~!o~ g~·'lls~T., L~ R"'d-~
PLETELY CAR PETED .

BARN ,

RANCHO REAL TORs·
HEADQUARTERS tor Gallia
County Real Estate. Listings .

TOBACCO

~ASE .

MASSIE
Realty1 32 State St

CHESHIRE J- Trailer Park, ·:. needed .
potential Income of $l7,000 1b4 ACRE Beef or Dairy Farm .
per yr .
· Large very good· barn. Pond.
MIDDLEPORT _ 12 rm. house
Land level to rolling. Tobacco RODNEY - 6 rm. home, 3 yr.
old, all carpel, all elec. and
n
N.
nd
Ave
.
Could
be
used
base
. Located on slate high2
O
way . ·
located on a
A. flat lot. it
as 1, ·2, 3, or 4 homes .
ha s a large garage. Price only
~11,500.
POMEROY - 2 family home, 44 ACRE~ f.ii).".rm in Vinton Co.
near tn.
-;ood
fences and
ci{!nplelely modern . .
pond. Re,, J\' two story ADAMSVILLE - Older home
LOTS OF LAND
farm ~ome . V ;r bedrms.
made new, 3 bd rms., huge
Wl!t AVE farms and vacant
Bath . ·llasement
liv.
rm . and the kitchen has
lo in all directions. Whether
plenty
cabinets . II has a 2 car,
building or buying a mobile
4 ACRES. near Hospital.
new, attached gar . and
home, call STROUT.
'Modern 3 bedroom home,
located on a large flat lot.
Ranny Blackburn
bath, rural water, new forced
Price 515,750.
Branch Manager
air furnace . Compare this buy

Tel 446-1998
'I•

~

OHIO RIVER
Reily

at $11,500.

BIDWELL - 6 big rms., ufillfy
and bath. Carpel In llv. rm .,
plenty cabinets in kitchen,
lots of paneling and II has new
storm drs. and windows. Barn
40' x 60' . Located on 2 big lots.
Pr ice $16,000.

Real Estate for Sale

.For Sale
WATKINS Products Christmas
Gift Selections. Phone 446·
4761.
261 -tf

;RUSSEU. -

r.ooD .

'I'

IREAI.lOR

1971 FORD
ton P.U. $2,300.
Phone 256-6546.
275-tf

.446-UJ66.
.
'.
FIVE room doll house com -

.10% ·Off

6 ROOM mod~rn home in city,

. .

LOWER river road, 7 room
home overlooking the 'Ohto
River. bath, gas1 heat and
large lot. Shown b.y ap pointment. Price~, 516,000.

t

Plumbing &amp;Hea~ing .

2'h ACRES with all electric
home·, . large kitchen. new
stove and refrigerat or , bath
and double car garage.
Pr iced $17,000.
2 BEDROOM home In Cheshire,
with city water, . bath, nice
kitchen and small lot. $14,900.
ON LAND CONTRACT
. $5,800 BUYS a two bedroom
home . Newly painted and
decorated, new 1250 stove
with fan . Located In City .
Office 446· 1066
Evenings Call Ron Canaday
446 -3636
Russell D, Wood, 4-M-4618
John I. Richards,.446-D280 ·.

ii BEAUTIFUL

acres,- prlvate
modern home, 3to 4 BR, great
. for children, nature lovers,
edge of city limits of small
community . Close to new
hospital and Rio Grande on
Slate
Route .
Owner
relocating. Dial 388-9901 .
281 -5

FOR SALE by owner - 2 story
brick house at 452 First Ave . 7
r ooms, 2 baths, gas hot air
furnace.
Present
arrangement 2 apartments.
Ea sily converted to one
tam ily dwelling . Asking
130,000 shown
by
appointment. 446·0'208.
2F4-1

For Sale

faculty
possible thing at every
chance to go wrong.
"I didn't have to pass tQ.
three no-trum~, You can see
•
•
•t
th t • 1
a SIX n e1 er mmor SUI
wheels in but I had no idea
what
partner might put
on the table so when he went
to three no-trump, I passed."
"You · made three no·
trump, didn't you?" asked

my

What do you do.now.?
A-Bid four hearto. Yollr
partner coniC have mucb, but
you stlll want to be In rome.
TODA'l('S QUESTION
Instead of bidding two notrump, your partner has jumped
to three no-trump over your
two spades. What do you do
now?

someone,

"' RUSQLL'S
PWMIINGI HIATIH
11 0.111• Avt. 446-4711
197.
•

I

'

..

soon, calf now.

oo.

New~Mc
..
Truck Head~uarlers
1966 •;, fon GMc'Pickup · ·
1969 Olds 88
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 3 ton . Chevrolet _lr!Jc.k
1970 •;, ton Ford XL T Pickup
1970 •;, ton Chevrolet pickup
1969 •;, tpn Chevrdlel pickup
1969 International 1600
1969 3 ton GMC
1967
T. Chev. PU
1968 v; T. GMC PU .
1966 •;, T. GMC PU
.

68 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Cuslof" 2 dr. hardtop, V-8, auto.
trans :,. p. steering, tac. ettr
cond., med. blue with white
vinyJ fop, ~harp.

$1195

69 MERCURY COUGAR
2 Dr . ha rdlop, 351 engine, V·B, auto.
tra ns., med .. green , ntt vinyl gold
Inter ior.

· q695

UW..lJ. ft.. ~~m_per

f. GMC PU
1966 1;, f. i=ordPU

T.

'I•

284-3

- - - - - -DUAL four bbl. carbs. and

v.s engine, auto .
lrans., p. steering, p. brakes, fac. a1r
c:ond ., w.s.w tires, wheel covers .
radio.
2 Dr. hMdtop.

$1995

'70 CHEVROLET CHEVELLE
2 Dr. hardtop, green with gree•
vi nyl bucket seals, 350 V-8 eng ine , 4
speed trans .. fac. tachometer. This
car is a real clean sharp car.

$J I 995

TWISTER
5

2195

TRUCKS ·
62 FORD FlOO

•395

6 Cyl. with nice sel of caltle racks .

67 FORD PICKUP

--::----::---::-

ALL THE NATURAL Beauty of
every diamond Is 'broiJ!jht to
lull brilliance In our lfne of
rings. Each has a setting of
exquisite style, designed by
foremost lewelry artisans.
Let us show them to you.
28.·2
WELL kept carpels show the
resvlts of regular Blue Lustre
spot clea~tng . Rent electric
shampooer $1 at Central
Supply -Co. - .
284-lf
LOST bright carpet colors ...
restore · them with Blue
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shampooer Sl at G. C. Murphy
Lowet Store.
284-tl

PUILIC
NOTICE·

.....

.... _...,••

I Olive. .

... 1111 .. 7

,.

I

KANAUGA, OHIO .

BEST USED
CAR BUYS
IN THE
VALLEY!

- ··'--"

Bil{Joe Johnson

!7Q. MAVERICK ............... ~1495. ~
Grabber , ·6 cy l., auiorriati c.

1695

'68 CHRYSLER ,............... ~1495
New Port 4 dr. Sed., P.S., P.B., one owner.

'70 FORD LTD ................. '2295

$1295

Brougham 2 dr. H. T. , P.S .. P. B.. air.

'68 CHEVROLET...............•1295

Be lAir 4 dr sed., P.S., P.B .. air .

'69 MUSTANG ................ •1295

70 FORD F-100

M ac h I

Short wheel base , flair side body , 4
wheel d,.. , 300 cu. in. 6 cyl. engine.
high floaliltlon, mud &amp; snow I ires .

$2295

'68 CHEVROLET ..............•1195
'68 BUICK ....................... •1195

'2295

Long wheel bnse, custom deluxe model. 6 cyl., engine,
custom topper in beautiful condltion.

ATTENTION:
NP.w car and truck owners. All makes. We have the ECP
rusl pro()hng method with a 5 yr . written warr~nty . Ma ke
your .lllPOIIltm ant today .
Shop-A- Rama Tickels Giv en on · Any New or
Truck

'70 OPEL......................... •1195
Kod ette 2 Door.
All Speedometer Mileage Certified.

1971 BUICK

--·------

THOMAS ·FA.IN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg , Ohio
HAFFELT' S CAK~ETING
IF YOU are building a new
hom e or need new carpet,
phone Jerry Hallett, 446-1158
for free estimates.

'2995

'3395

1972 CHEVELLE

,

2 Dr. hdtp., auto., p. steering.
vinyl top . sharp.

·1970 BUICK

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond.,
vinyl top, one owner: Extra
nice.

'2995

&amp; Healing
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt. , Gallipolis
Ph . 379-2133.

Skylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.1
white, black vinyl top. Worth
more.

\

-Central
- ---Air Conditioning

."HOT-SHOT" WASHMOBILE.
Wash, wax and degreaslng
~ with mobile l,mih... .t46~4441.•"~ tt)
210-tf

1971 BUICK

LeSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air cond., 17,233 miles, 73
leSabre trade . Like new.

.'2595

1971 FORD
Torino, GT, V-8, automatic
transmission , P.S., one owner:
2),260 m lies.

-1969· v.w.

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

•

-

~

n

,

.,. 1

St. Wagon, local owner, 73
Buick trade .

'2695

'1295

1970 MERCURY

1969 v.w.

Monterey 4 door sedan. power
steering, power brakes, air
cond., AM-FM, one ow:1er.

Tudor, extra nice, beige, sun
roof.

1639 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis

be

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY

KANAUGA Conc ret e :::. u1Jply

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
446-3273

or Carl

4 Dr. hardtop, radio, auto . trans ., p. steering,

p. brakes, la c. air con d.. Expresso brown with
matching inferior. w-s-w tires . Excellent
cond .

.For Sale

Cnmpany . Ready mix Con cre te. 4·16·1142.

251-11
..BOB
LA
.:-N
::-E
: -,:S
:- c-om
.....,..
plel;
Bookkeeping and Tax Service, 424 112 Four1h Ave.,
Kanauga . Business by ap .
pointment . Ph . 446-1049 .
Please ca ll after 6 p.m .
278-tf
;G
· ;::1L-:L-;Ec;N:;:W
:;:A::T::E::R-::,S:--se-p-::
11-c -:-lank
cleaning and l'epalr, also
house wrecking . Ph. 446-9499 .
Established tn 1940.
169-tf
---::-----:--:--FURNISHED mobile home in
HANDY man for home mai nGallipolis, 446-0338.
, ;LEE PING room with use of
_
kitchen , hvlng room, garage, ,
lenance
(plumbi~
&amp; .
• 227-tf
private entrance. Call 675- .. 'd
heati ng ). Phone 245-5 8.
, BLUE L t
280-tf'
. us re no1 on 1y n s
3536.
• 278_11
---~-----· carpets of soi l but · te~ves pile ·
DRY WALL service 'by con soft an~ lofty. Rent electric
tract . Willard Bosley, 446·
shampooer St. Central Supply FROM wall to wall, no soil at
all. on ca rpets cleaned with
4954.
Co .
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
273-tf
282-lf
shampooer $1 at G. C. Mur phy , Lower Store.
TWO HOUSE TRAILERS. First
278-lf
- 1 BR. located on private lot.
all utilities -paid . Located 2
mi. fr om town. Second - 2 SAVE big! Oo r,our own rug and
GARAGE for boat storage. Call
upholstery c eaning wi1h Blue
BR, localedlon private lot, all
after 4 p.m. 245·5040 .
Lustre .
Rent
electric
uti lities paid. 2 m iles from
283-3
shampooer $1, Central Supply
town. Phone 379-2380.
co .
282·3
27.8-tf

For Rent

MOBILE HOMES
5 YR . OLD gai ted Palomino
FOR SALE
ridi ng horsa, gentle. 6 yr. ol d
RECONDITION ED
gaited riding mare. 388·8155.
MOBILE HOMES
280-6
Holly Cart 12'x60'.
Roycrafl 12 x 50
GOOLJ LLtAN LUMP and
Schull '12 x 50
Eastern Ave.
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Ga IIi polis, 0.
Elcona 12 x 50
Grande. Phone 245 5ll5.
960 Whitney 10 x '6
6 tf
069 &amp;talesman 12 x 60
----~--973
Pe erle"
12 x 60 SI NGER Sewing Machine Sales
BRACE yourself.for a thrill the
973 Kingswood 12 x 60
&amp; Service. All models in
SLEEPI NG rooms for rent.
first lime you use Blue Lustre .
967 Topper 12 x 60
.
stock . Free delivery. Service
Gallla Hotel, 446-9715.
DUNE Bugg y - Good shape.
to clean rugs . Rent eleclrlc
1967
FORD
excellen
t
condition
.
Atlonltc 12 x 60
Ca II 446-2861.
guaranteed. Models priced
181-tf
shampooer $1. G. C. Murphy,
Ph
one
446-3548.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
trom $69.95 . French City•
280-6
28 1·4
Lower Store,
Second &amp; VIand St .
.Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap.
267-tf
Pt. Pleasant
· - - - -- - - - 1971 FORD 'h ton P.U., $2,300. FURNISHED apartment.
proved dealer,· 58 Court St.
only
,
all
utilities
paid.
_
T
_
H_
E.L..
A
_
MA
_
Z
_I_
N
-:G-:::
B:Iu
_
e_Luslre
adults
(Next t o Heck 'sl
Ph. 446 9255.
Phone 245-5008 .
tf
446 -9523 or 446-1443.
260-ft
308-tf
280·
will leave your upholstery
27_
1.11
~:-7':'::'7::7=-:""'"i=:-=-:f.='-- beaulifully sot.! and clean •
~OCUST posts for sale~ne ·BRADBURY ' E/t ( clevncy
Rent electric shampooer $1,
NEW &amp; USED
245-5008.
Apartment
,
729
Second
Central
Supply Company.
1- BE11MS, Channel , angle ,
280· 11
Avenue
.
Adults
only,
no
pels.
267-lf
sheet and plate steel, rounds,
I
"'
~,..,.
Y"'
o
"
u
,-a
re
-:b
u"'
it"'
dt-,.
ng
a
new
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
261
-lf
flats, reinforcing ba'rs and
A 1 ROOM unfurnished house at '
mes,h, rail , pipe, culverts and
home or remodeling , see us.
129 3rd Ave . , Golllpolls.
We are builders. Distributor FUR NISH EO Apt . parking,
equipment. Prompt drilling,
Carpeted,
3 bedrooms, 2
for Ho.tpolnl Appllan~es ,
cen tral heat, two adults only,
Neiman Co., Nelsonville,
utility
room . Basement
baths,
$S,SOO,
Allison Electric.
446-0338.
Ohio; P. 0 . Box 298, Ph. 753·
and garage. Rent $175 per
154-lf
248-11
, 1554. ~all collect .
$6.500.
month. Phone 446-0111 .
181 ·11
278-ff
T
=
=
R
~
E-:
A~
T~r~
~g
s
_r
_
l~
g
h
-,-.,h-ey
'11bea
SI GNS &amp; POSTERS,. Custom
12
delight If cleaned with Blue
made, 1 copy or In quantity .,
MOBILE HOMES
Lllslre .
Rent
electric NEW 2 BR Mobile home. upper
FOR SALE
Hand painted. Silk Screen.
Route 7 by week or month.
shampoaer
$1
at
G,
C. Mur RECONDITIONED
Instant signs. Please phone
72
50-60
446-0008.
phy's.
MOBILE HOMES
Gallipolis H6 - 0706 .
266-tf
65 ft. 12
14
. 273-tf
209-tf
1968 Roycrafl 12xS1
1966 Shutt 12x50
SLEEPING rooms, weekly TWO BEDROOM 1roller In
Need Ano1her Bldg.?
1968 Etcona 12x50
Chesh ire. phone 367-7329.
rates, free garage parking ,
S.E'E our aluminum 'bldgs.
1968 Elcona 12x60
271 -tf
Libby
Hotel.
Heavy duly, with flooring,
1973 Peerless 12x60
wired
for
electric.
Also
West
241
-ff
1960 Whitney 10x46
SPACIOUS lots, Quail lree&lt;
Virginl&lt;t chunk coal, drain
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Ph. 614-259Mobile Community and Sales.
rRAILER
space
with
concrete
tile, bell tile, cement and
Second &amp; Viond St.
Contact Newt Jones 245-9374
pads,
located
on
Bulavllle
mortar.
Gallipolis
Block
&amp;
1.2
Pt. Pltasant
or 245-5021,
Road.
446
-3879
or
367-7436.
Coal
Co.,
1231;,
Pine
,
446-2783,
!Next to Heck's)
276·tf
271-tf
207 -tf
242-11

WOOD MOTOR SALES

For Sale

For Sale

'1.195

'1495

D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
Del i very Service
Your
patronaQe wi ll
ap.
precialed . Ph . 446-0463.
7-lf

I -:-:-:-::---::---::----

'69 PONTIAC CATALINA

For Sale '

-· ~~---

Station Wagon. P.S. , P.B., air.

LeSabr e 2 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B.

70 CHEV. PICK-UP

~

-:T::-:E::-:R::-:M
-::1-:T:E - P-:E-:S-:T - C:0-N:::
T:::
RO L
FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator by
Extermioal. Term ite Sevlce;
19 Bemont Dr .
267 -tf

6 Pa ss. Wagon, V-8, std. shift . .

108" wheel base. 6 cyl

ST tV• ART Electrical Service &amp;
Repair. house wiring, free
estimate . Phone 446-4561.
•
271- tf

&gt;t:PTIC TANKS ·Cleaned and Installed
Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782
297-fl

Custom cab, rvd!o , full whee l cover s.

69 CHEV. VAN

·.SAYS

,

'66 CHEVROLET................ '695

5

$5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
hofse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

.-

We take the Risk out of
buying a Used Car. All
Speedometer
Readings
Certified by Previous Onwer,

DOC
SMITH

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estimates, liability In surance. Prunrng , trimming
and cavity work, tree and
sl ump removal. Ph . 446-4953.

Heavy duty haH ton, l~rge narrow lli•d,, 6 cyl. engi ne,

Pick·up lru ck, 6 cyl eng ine, power
stpering: vinyl seals . Sharp,

DEAD STOCK.

)3.1(

-'-:-:--::-----:---

Delicious, Winesaps and
Romes. Wells Orchard, 1 1111.
S. Wilkesville, Stale Route
160. Open daily 8-5, Sundays
12-5.
28H

SMITH AUTO SALES

REDUCED
W·

'

GALLIPOLIS, ·OHIO

Services Offered

Own a18!!~! Original.

I

USED Estey Spinet plano .
Phone 446-3541.
284-3

-:--=-::-:-:-::-:-::-::---:---:
APPLES , . Red ' and yellow

lob more ... all stando11d equipment!
Test drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door Hardtop
at you r nearby Datsun dealer's and di scover why
we cal l it a Dat sun Or iginal. Drive a Datsun ...
th en decide.

72 PLY MOUTH DUSTER

Used

CARROLL .NORRIS DODGE INC.·
50 STATE STREET

; And

70 FORD TORINO

V 8 engine, standard sl1i lf, rad1o.
s-w tires, fancy wheels .

PRICES START FROM '3051.00

• Power-flow ven tilation

manifold for Chevy , $50. Ph.
245-5865.
284-2

AKC Brittany Spaniel, good
bird dog, $60. 446-2'114.
284-1

When yo u'&lt;re shopping (or a hardtop, the ob1ec t
is to be a sport ... nolthe last of th e b ig' spenders.
So lake a look at the new Dat sun 610 2-Door Hard·
top. It 's a luxury car w ith a Datsun price that in·
el ud es a lot of no·cusl exlras:
• 1800 cc overhead c am engi&lt;ie
• Power-as si st br akes ~ di scs in front

• Rear w indow d efroster
• Sporls console

$4395

1964 •;,,

1967 I T GMC Dump
1969 •;, T GMC PU
i966 v,
GM( PU
1960 1 Ton Ford flat .
1967 •;, T. GMC Pickup
1964 CO 1600 International
truck
1967.. 1h T. GMC PU
1966
T. GMC'PlJ
1967 v, T. GMC Pickup
1968 If• T. GMC Pickup
1967 lf2 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERSG.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pint St.
446-2532
267-tf '
-. -. - - - - - : .. ----~
3 AKC reg. Dachshuno pupp ies.
Ph . 388-8875.
284-3

Sporting luxury.
Sporting price.

• ll i£lepend~nt rear suspension
• Sports interior

2 dr . hardtop. full power, air cond ..
speed control , and all the many
Continental extras.

'I•

---..,....,.---

Cti.;

3 IEDROOM home at 1109
ANY. HR. 446-1"'
O!ritnut Str~t . Just recently
~nled Inside and out. Carpet
in living room r i lhrN
NEW 3 bedroom ilome, ,...._:,1
bedrooms. Would Make •
gu,
city
water,
'f ull
gnod Investment.
basement, with garage, part
Birch front, S16,100, Ptanll
· Office PheM 446-16f.l
Signed j&gt;y
Sub-division, C1ll Delbert
Evenlnts
Gallla County Board
"11rl~ M. Nlll ·446·1546
Clark,-~ ·
of Revisions
~v . 211.22, 23, 24. 25, 26, 27, ~.
271-26
J. Michael Neal 446-1503
lt.
we. 1. .
----:-___:._

NEW : Serta and Bemco
mattress and box springs.
Large selection in stock twin , full , queen size. Save
up to $40 a set.
995 Second Avenue
446-1172
276-ff

A UNIQUE lfiiTRODUCTION In the pickup truck market Is this 1913
Dodge Club Cab. ldl!al for commerc.lal and recreational applications, the
new. enfry offers 34 cubic feet of secure, weather pro_tected Interior
storage space. Typical uses of the new Dodge Include tool and equipment
storage and space for certain types of camping equipment requiring
ready access. Two optional fold down .seats are available offering tem·
porary transportation lor 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-lnch wheelbase with a 61f.!-foot or a.
foot pickup body. Heavy slide-on campers can be accommodated by the
optional7500 lb. and 9000 lb. Camper Specials. A full range of sl;te and el!jht
cylinder powerplants are offered Including a 225 cu. ln. Slant Six and a
318/ 360, and 400 CID V-8's.

4 Dr. Station Wagon , 6 · cyl., auto.
trans.

69 LINCOLN MARK Ill

-------

.

66 CHEV. II

4 dr . .5edan, (tUto. trans., n1ce.

-------

Real~

.e inv1te YOIJ to compare lle qua 1 y
and the price of our automobiles. We
know that we have a better deal for
you and ·we, would like the op.
portunity to demonstrate this.

69 RENAULT

fumiture

ALL TYPES of building •
materials, block, brick, sewer
pipes, w:Jndow~, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.
' 123-tf 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sew ing Machine
left in layaway. Beautiful
-----+--pastel color, full size model.
AKC toy poodle puppies, AKC.
All built-In to buttonhole, do
older poodles. 2 males. 3
stretch
sewing and fancy
females. One border Collie,
st
itching
.
Pay lust $48.75 cash
and 2 Reg. Rams. Ph. 446·
available.
Trade-Ins
or
terms
2947.
accepted.
Phone
446-4312.
283-3
284-6
----~-FARM Tractor, mini bike, 12.4·
28 tractor tired, '67 Ford VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
Standard changeover V-8, 388·
cleaning tools . Small paint
9906.
damage
In shipping. Will lake
283-3
$27
cash
or budget pian
--'-----available.
Phone
446-4312.
( R ISH seller puppies, AKC reg .
284-6
'Great with chil~ren. Will hold
till Christmas, Chesapeake,
FOR SALE
867-5535.
WELLSTON,
OHIO
283-2
FIRST class restaurant - D5
license and 12 lane bowling
HOUSE coal for' sale. We will
.
ailey. Call Derrill E. Wolfe,
ha ut. Ph. 256-6700.
Oscar
L. Thomas &amp; Co .,
283-2
Realtors , Columbus, Ohio,
228-2471.
.
'67 CHRYSLER "New Yorker,"
284-7
good condition, Pearl George,
446-0138 after 4 p.m .
1967 MUSTANG 1•&lt;1 hork 283-3
390 4 speed. Phone 446-1187 ..

.,-------

:~~~~~~~~~:~~:~~~~~~~~i~:~~;:::~~
•AK65 "AK65 t32 loKQ3

Cob'
r IQ &amp; Snyder

COLONIAL home 8 miles from .
town . Knotty plhe kitchen
with plenty of cabinets, new
bath , panel and carpel.
Several outbuildings on 2
acres of ground. Price $28,000.

Camping Equipment

~•

RICES

nice neighborhood. close to
school.
Bath 1'1•,_ part ,
basement, central atr, car· NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
85_4 SECOND, 446-9523
peted. fireplace . Owner
283-5
moved out of state. See this
--:--~-and make an offer.

~OTS

fieal

LIVING ROOM
SUIT SALES

pletely remodeled, .b eam
ceiling,
car pele.d,
full
basement, storll'\ doors and
windows. one car garage. · .
Priced at $15,000:
dN ALL new living room .sulles
,
. In stock when you take •I with
you.
9 ACRES of land 'on blacktop
road, two miles from town.
Price $3.500.

JUST Comr'•led. Custom built
new 3 .L,~oom
home
featuring_~~A 1 v
room ,
cen1ral heat a .U .r, sliding
glass
door to pa •• o and two
LUXURIOUS BARGAIN
car
getaQe
.
Beautiful one floor ho')1e with .
.
Gill!
EN
TOWNSHIP
MERCERVILLE Cheap
efK!rlc heal and central air,
NEIGHBORHOOD
ROAD. New
housing, nice 3 bet rm ., larg.e 1971 NOVA Coupe low mileage
hvit't kitchen with · buill-In
3 bedroom home, bath, nice
liv. rm. \ and kitchen. New
less than 6000 miles, 379.-2589.
ca81ne1s and range, ceramic '
lot,
city water and schools.
bath, fur . heal, copper
282·3
beth with shower, all rooms
Good terms . Immediate
plumbing , all tile ceiling;
except kitchen and bath are
occupancy.
large 2 car gar. Located on BUNDY TRUMPET, complete
carpeted. Only 10 minutes
near •;, A. shaded lot. Price
outfit. t:Jsed 3 mos. $125 446'
from City Park .
AND ACREAGJ for
$12.500.
31151 after 5 p. m .
residential or commercial on
262 -6
MONEY MAKER - Two story
--Rt
.
35and
Mitchell
Road
near
D.EER CREEK RD . - Near
house in town Is now two.
·
Hospital.
CONFIDENTIAL
SER
new. 4 rm . home with bath and
apartments. Each suitable for
ADDISON TOWNSHIP
VICE ... when you buy a
fur . heal, 2 rms. carpeted. 2
newlyweds or single person.
diamond from us, you're
A. rich land, gogd spring
Close to everylhfng. Needs 25 ACRES land . Some fenced .
Outbuilding. Make offer.
water, $10,000.
assured that your order will
some redecorating to be a
be treated with the utmost
first
c lass
apartment
l&lt;/, ACRES . Rural. Water. EWING TON - close new mine
confidence and care. Evening
bv~ld t ng .
.
Beautiful setting. Nice home
appointments, if desired .
opening. 8 big rms., bath and
or trailer site. Ask ing 55,000.
Tawney Jewelers .
plenty closet space. Pari of
TW~•.HOUSES IN THURMAN
Make
offer.
this
house
·
has
been
262-2
- l t ther house Is a good buy.
remodeled and is sound
· Large lots, both two story, ,
struclurally. it is loealed on 4 rr.:J PEWRITERS,
wltfl basement , room for 39 ACRES, 3 bedroom story and
Smith ;-\
half ~orne, garage, barn .
acres of land on Raccoon Cr.
expansion. Both are bargains
Corona, Royal , OtiiieftP.
Fenced . $15,000.
Asking 514.000.
at the low asking price.
Underwood , manual and
electric. Simmons Printing
Oscar Baird
NEAR NEW 4 bedroom home, EXCELLENT BLDG. LOTS, on
and Office Equipment.
Doug Woalherholl
bath and half. Patio. Large
St. Rl . 160 and St. Rt. 35 .
2354f
Brokers
tot . Price reduced.
FARMS
•
Sloven Betz, Salesman
CHEAP LAND - 163 A. S mi. PIPES. Pipes, Pipes, GBO,
LARGE RANCH HOME . 4
from Cheshire on Ward Rd .
Cheratan,
BBB. Jobey,
bedrootns . Lois · C!f closets,
No bldgs.. underlaid wllh
Hilson , and others. Tawney's
large living room, country
coal . l'h mi. from Gavin
Pipe and Trophy House, 422
kitchen, cozy family room
Convevor Bell. Price reduced
Second Ave .
.·with flreP.Iace. Garage. Extra
to
$16,000 .
Financing
199-11
land available. ·
•
available. ·
A~NM'·ffitfi'QO'Qiie;=-:p::u=m::p-::o::::rg:-::a::n,- at f
FOR
LEASE,
New
14x70
3
RtVER vtEw
original except new bellows. ·
BIDWELL - 30 A. atl tillable
bedroom Mobile Home.
WE; JUST listed a ·beaut iful 4
or develop,, 8 rm. modern Over 80 years old. Made by
Taylor and Fraley Organ
home, lJII carpet , much
- Healing &amp; Air---bedroom· River Road.
house Is
Wo(cesfer, Mass. One bellows
liomThis
e-on-tower
panelln~storm drs . and
300 Fourth Ave.
only 6 years old and was buill
type, . Phone
992-3904.'
windows, fur. heal. Price in
I!Y Ernest Brown . Special
_ Syracuse, 0 . 1
upper thirties.
· 48-11
lftlures are the beautiful :r
-~-------~
vltvi of the Ohio River, den :~
411 A. Good 7 rm . house, plenty
CAltTER'S PLUMBING
'VIth )Voodburnlng fireplace, ,~
storage rm., carpet and 1970 DUSTER 340. Ph. 446-0668.
.AND HEATING
formal dining room and
I
' 280·6
paneling. II hiS a big barn;
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pint .!l
partial basement. Lot 1$ 11 4• x
near
12
A.
rloh
bottom
land
Phor~!! 446-~ or 446..u,,.
2f01, Call today for an apand ~- lenly good water. Price
·.
· .
1fS-tf
!&gt;Oinltnent.
,
reduced
to $16,500, and In.•
etudes tractor and other farm
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
STANDARD
"'"
.
tools .
Denver K. Higley 4...0002
Plumbing&amp;Heatlng
L01"1'67' x 112' locale(j at 54
W.nda S. Ethenaur 446-0003
215 Third Ave., 446-3712
Gtflleld Avenue. $1,000.
wE HAVE a market lor good
hom•s. If you plan to . Mil
--"~,.___ _ _ _ _IV-II
·, NEW LISTING

*

+

SECLUDED

Older Home
In Town

DECEMBER , BARGAIN : 2
bedroom home. new bath, ~~ WAIT TO SEE THIS
! Due to job transfer, the
located on 100' lot. $6.800
Includes all furn iture .
has this one yr. old
brick priced to sell. A small
4 Bf:DROOM, two bath,
down payment will let you
beautiful deluxe kitchen,
en\oy this lovely 3 BR home
fireplace, family room. large
wi h WW carpel, . 1'1• baths,
workshop. 90 pel. financing .
cent . air and 2 car garage.
Price 519,500.
The wife approved kitchen
Includes gar . dlsp .. dish·
LOTS· ~ Prked from $1 ,600 to
washer, range, hood. and
$3.000. Ideal for building or
lovely cabinets .
mobile homes.
NO DOWN PAYMENT if you
FARMS - 96 acres, two barns,
qualify. This modern 6 rm .
tobacco base, all electric·
ho01e" in KC school disl. and
brick home. Located on MI. 7.
features brick. front, carport,
cent. air, utility rm. and
26 ACRES Located ' on
mOdern kitchen.
Hannan Trace Rd . All electric
home, paneled and carpeted, FOR tHE CITY FARMER basement . Large buildi!1g ,
We have a nice 4 rm. and bath
two car garage. Price $26·,500. ·· home next to the city limits
with 12 acres. $12,000.
TWO STORY HOME covered
wlfh aluminum siding, 4 BR, CITY - LARGE Double House
dining room, a dream kitchen
on Garfield Ave. for only
and laundry, large lot.
$12,000. See this one!
garage. Price $18,800.
INVESTMENTS
MIDDLE PORT Modern 6
1 MILE above the new shoppl ng
rm.. home which includes 3
center. A orre otory, 3 SR. 2
Bt, LR with WB fireplace,
bafh, family room, beaUtiful
blilil-ln kllchen&lt;~nd utility rm.
kitchen, carporf, gas forced
PLVS a separate 3 rm. and
air furnace . Price now
bath apt. PLUS 3 late model
reduced to 521,000.
mobile home's now being
rented . Live in the home and
NEW LISTING - Ran&lt;h style
collecl $555 per mo . rent.
redwood home with rail fence,
3 BR, large· living room with STATE ROUTE 160 - 2 1972 ,
fireplace, carpet throughout.
mobile homes on a 100x150
2 car carport, large lot. Quick
.llal lot. Co. water, patios,
possession. Can be seen
driveway, brand new, never
anytlme\
lived ln. Live in one and rent
.,.
MN other. S1!,900P 1 J l',hl!l' '
OWNER MOVED to Ftorlda.
Here Is a nice 3 BR home, 5 UN ITS IN CITY - 2 double
large carpeted LR , nice ea:ttn
and 1 single house on Garfield
kitchen, large garage. !'lice
Ay~ . 525,000 buys them all .
$13,000.
...:
VINTON empty
store
LARGE 2 STORY home o/1 a
building downstairs plus 2
corner lot in Middlep'ort .
apartments up. S15,000.
Plenty bedrooms, 2 ba1hs ,

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

2.

IN

' LOCATION AT
TOWN PRICED
OWNER WANTS
PCT . DOWN ON

25 Locust st.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 4..·2674
. Lucille Brannon
Evo. 446-1226or446·2674

Help Wanted

Jack ol Clubs---Ouch!

, Beautiful Bargain

KIT CHEN

ONE &amp; TWO bedroom apart- JUNK autos and scrap metaL
388-8776.
ments planning now for oc245-76
cupancy August 1973 located
in the village of Rio Grande. o.W
- :t;-:
N::-:
T::-:
E:,-0- t-o-:-ti:-u-y-,s-e-,.ll_o_r_trade,
Tnf one bedroom flats and
toy electric train , 446-4843.
two bedroom townhoUses
.
240-tf
feature all electric forced air
heal and air conditioning,
disposer, range, refrigerator,
dishwasher, wall to wall
carr,et, individual patio, SET YOUR own hours·.' High
cen ral T.V. system. Call
earnings first year . Operate
collect 368-8238.
lull or part time . Start wllh
284-3
absolute
Minimum
In vestment. Men or women ...
DAY CARE
AQe no barrier . Husband and
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
wlte can work together.
licensed by State of Ohio, 1'/o
Leisurely, dignified work .
miles west of new hospital.
Early retirement. Income
577 Sun Valley .Dr. Ph. 446·
possible.
3657 .~ y care that says "we
284-6
car~., Madge Hauldren ; - --=-::::::::-:::-:::::r;::-:-:Own , Loredlth &amp; John
SUNOCO STATiON
Hauldi'en, Operators.
AVAILABLE SOON
114-lf in Gallipolis. For information
call Sun Oil Co. 304-453-1381 or
YW'OWAY ..Radios Sales · &amp;
w. A. Atk ins 304-429-1007.
Service. New and used CB's,
282-12
pollee monitors, antennas,
etc. Bob's Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Rd ., Gallipolis. Ohio. •46-4517. COW HI DES 18.50 ; Deer Hides
vacant. The price is right and
'
212-tf
11.50: Wild Genslng $51 .00 lb.
the owner will help finance .
Highest prices for all wild raw
fur . Open dally at 4 p. m .
ROOF lNG and gutter work.
William Mitchell, 388-8507.
Saturday and Sunday 1 p . m.
Maran Fur House, 0. 0.
67-11
Wright and Sons, Mason, W.
WOMAN to cook evening-meals
Va.
RALPH'S Carpel &amp; Upholstery
and light housework, 2·6 p.m .
11 -30-Jic
Cleaning Service.
Free
5
day• wk . ·Ref . required.
estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
Write
· Box No . 243,: c-o
HOME
appliance
sales
A. Davis, owner.
Gallipolis
Tribune .
,
representative
experienced
In
9-tf
264-3
sales preferred , apply In
person at Sears in Gallipolis.
280-6 YOUNG man to work In Men's
clothing and furnishing and
WIN AT BRIDGE
shoe department. Major
medical and pension plan.
Excellent opportunity for
advancement. Apply through
Jim Kelly , Cox ' s Silver
"No 1 didn't,. was the
Bridge Plaza. Phone 446·1923.
NOR'l'H
'
'
·278-11
2
reply. "I ducked the first
.A84
heart but had to win the con· r• 2
tinuaiion. I could have gone
HEL-P WANTED ..
• Q98
right
over
to
dummy
and
MAlE
or ~tMALE
.Ql07654
taken the diamond finesse
hnllledialt Openings &gt;···
~T
EAST
but I didn't know where the Radiologic Technologist · J,
.J65
.Ql073
king was and I had an extra Registered Nurse
.,
\fKQ_Jl083
\f9654
chance to bring home my Nurse Anesthetist
•
t63
tK42
contract.
Bookkeeper with hospital
•'-93
loKJ
experience.
"I played my ace of clubs contact : Personnel OlflceSOlJTH (D)
lo see if I m1ght just drop O'Bieness
Memorial
.K92
the
king
from
East.
Sure
Hospital.
"A 7
enough, East did drop the
Hospital Drive
tAJl075
king
.
Now
the
rest
of
the
Athens,
Ollio 45701
loA82
clubs
appeared
to
be
good.
(6141
m
-5551
!loth vulner.able
I led a sec o11 d c lub and An
Equal Opportunity
West NoHh East South
played dummy's 10. East dis- L,::E;;_m;!:p;,:lo4ye:::r.:..
. _..;': - - - - - - '
lN.T.
carded
a
heart
and
W
e
s
t
Ex
pER
1
EN
c Et.
w~ttress
3 ,Y,
Pass
3
asked, 'No clubs, partner?'
wanted . Apply in person at
Pass 3 N .T. Pass Pass
"East · re plied that he
Christi Ann ~slauranl. ,
Pass
didn't
have
any,
whereupon
__
_ _ _ _ _ __ :z80.tf
Opening lead- \f K
West asked him to look care·
fully. Eventually East proBy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
duced the jack of c l u b s
The oldest expert was tell· which won the trick. He had
iog about SOflle of the things exposed a heart and had to
WINTER SALE on all Starcraff
that had happened to him lead it and I was down two."
trailer and foldouts. Wo have
durin~ his 40 years of play.
some
'72 model trailers in
(NEWSPAPER IHTIRPRIIE ASSH.I
He sa1d, "Most ·of the things
siO¢~. Priced to go. Wt ser·
were the fault of my part·
vice , what we sell. !;Imp
ners, but here is one where
Conte'y Starcratt Sal"'' Ill
North · of 'Point Pl.,...nt
I must take some share of
·
The
bidding
has
been:
behfnd Red CArpet ' tnn.ot·. '
the blame.
159-11
North
East
game was · rubber West
South
North and West were
East was one of

Business Opportunities

' ,Ph.--

WINTER CAN BE COZY with 2
WB fireplaces. This lovely 3
Need A
BR home also Includes formal
Large
dl~lng rin..
garage, full
Ranch?
basement with den finished In
knotty pine, and a large
landscaped lot in Gallipolis . 5 BEDROOMS LARGE
.CAR PETED LIVING AND
school dlst.
DINING ROOM . FANCY

Lost

ALL WEEK

Gallia Co.'s' Largest
Real Estate Sales A'gency
Office 446-3643
Evenings~ II
· E. M. "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E: to( Wiseman 446-4500

TH,
.. LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SE VING THE NATIO!'I'S
· IU ERS I. 'SELLERS.
'

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..... NEAR Lincoln Ridge. Four
Let Weight Watchers I R I help
hounds, one Walker female,
you in our local classes. For
two Walker males, one blue
information ca ll Toll -free BOO·
lick male with red tick. legs,
582-7026 (No charge to caller).
Sl,OOO reward for recovery of
280-5
dog's information leading to
arrest and conviction of
persons that stole them, Asa
Halley. Jr .• 2525 Collis Ave.,
Huntington, W. Va.
261-6

'''

Real Estate For Sale

World's Largest

Datsun610.

'

...------........-..___......_ STROUT ,. THE WISEMAN
A'GENC¥1
REALTY

The lights never dim,
We will remember him.
Sadly missed by his
parents , Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Slone and brothers
and sisters, Nancie, Jerry,
Tony and Judy.
284-1

•

.

·REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Untl1 fhe stars forget to shine

~

.

Wanled To Rent

for Rent

------

AT SPECIAL
. LOWER PRICES ------:-:-===

For Rent

For Rent
FURNISHED 4 room collage
and bath . Old age people or
elderly couple preferred.
Reas9~able rent. 446· 1~8:1- _

3

2 BED.ROOM trailer In city, all
utilities
paid,
adults
pref,erred. 446-0168.
283-lf
SLEE PING ROOMS, weekly
rates, Park Central Hotel.

'

308-11

APA~TMENT lor conolructtonl
' men . Ph. 446-0756.
.

267-lf

PAY -ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Wafer . Sewage . GariHige CollecHon ·Amp"
Parkl119 • TV Antenna • , Wall-to-Wall Carpeting •
Oroparles • Rantes • Rtlrlgtralors • Air Condlllonlnt' •
Garbaflt DilfiOIIIIs . Dlsllwashtrl. Hill Lamps· Prlvtlt
Patios • SwiM!IIIIII PM! · CI-M.

SAVE $2000

Double wides on display - suggested
retail price
sale price to move
out
This price includes delivery
and set up . ready to be lived in.
years financing at bank rates.
Repossessed n arid
models,
and
and
wide with good
credit can be bought with no down
P&lt;!yment.
lndianr· Valley Factory Outlet . Mobile
Homes/ L,ucasville, Ohio.
sooo, miles north of Portsmouth, 0.1
on' US 23.

----'----

- -----..,....,-

-----=----:---

----:---

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

llfl BATHS

11MNHOUSE
APARTMEfllS
For l~formalion Call Shir'ley Adkins 267·72tt

r

�...

. ...

.

•
\

.i

30- The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 3, 1972

•

For Fast Results Use · The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.

r

'

Real Estate F.or Sale

In Memory

•

IN lOVING memory ·of our son
and brothei, Richard (Mi.ke)
· ·Slone who passed away two
yeers ago, Dece111ber 2, 1970.
We · will alway~ remember the
way he looked.
The Way he spoke and smiled,
The little things he said and dl&lt;t
Are with us all the while.
FOr down the lane of memories.

Lost
2 BEAGLES. One Male, one
female from Pea rl Kemper's
farm on Prospecl Church Rd .•
Ph . 446-4579.
283-4

Notice

1'

'

'''
''

GARAGE SALE

1
1

.

Wanted To Do

Furniture, antiques, dishes,

'JANITOR work night or day.
Ph·. 245-5687.
.284-6

Christrl,ls decorations and

=-:::---:---:---

other i'fms too numerous to
menlion . 2 miles out Mill
Creek Road from town .

~·

.'

FOR SALE BY OWNER
House, brand new. 3 BR, all .electric with air
cond., beautiful kitchen with dish wa.sher and
disp., family room opening to a large patio.
Electric garage door. Very nice neighborhood
near new hospital In Pleasant Valley. Priced
in low $30's. Phone 446-1854 or 446-1079 after 5
,.

TOOL
sharpening,
saws,
scissors, shears, home. and
garden tools. Sharp Shop,
Alley rear 147 Second .
216-lf

- - - -- - -

. REMODELING, building new
rooms, cement, roofing, '
siding, furnace Ins. J. H.
Queen &amp; Son, 446-9271.
·
68-11

JET CRUISE TOUR - Seven
countrles : Greece, Greek
Isle, Egypt, Cyprus, Israel.
Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, 16
days, escorted and ' all lnclusive --t only $999, departure HANDY man for odd jobs.
July 2, 1973. Space Is limited',
Phone 245-5008.
book nOw and save. Phone
260-tf
446-4313.
---------284·3

Wanted To Buy

------

REALTY

Wanted

•
'•
!

3
BEDROOM
F ULL .
BASEMENT . SUN PORCH,
FIREPLA CE,
FAMILY
' R:OOh. , FLAT LOT . CITY
SCHOOLS 524.900 . .,

EDGE OF
AT $24,900.
OFFER . 10
THIS ONE .

'

ON
LARGE
LOT
ON
CHILLICOTHE
RD .
5
ROOMS , FIREPLACE,
BASEMENT . $14 , 900 .
WE'Ll
HELP
YOU

FINA NCE IT .

low Down
Payment
'. NEW 3 B R. RANCH. ON
HUGE COUNTRY LOT IN
CITY SCHOOL DISTR !C T.
BUILT -I N KITCHEN AND
GAR}IGE . 521,900.

You're Missing Out
On A Real Buy
NEW &lt; BEDROOM HOME,
COMPLETELY
CAR ·
PETED, CENTRAL AIR,
FAM ILY ROOM, GARAGE
S25,900. 10 PCT . DOWN, 71h
· INT . Sl72 PAYMENT. CITY

WATER. SEWER. GAS ANO
· SC HOOL S.

Very Nice
3 Bedroom Home
CLOSE IN
CELLENT
VERY

In WUkesville
· -Priced Right
CLOSE TO NEW MINING
OPERATIONS. OLD TIME ;
2 STORY, 5 BEDROOM
HOME IN WONOERFUL
CONDITION . CENTRAL
HEAl , BATH, NICE KfT .
CHEN , LOTS OF CARPET .
ON 1 1'\CRE , COULD PARK
SEVE RAL
MOBILE
.HOMES .

Home And
. Four Lots
ONE STORY FRAME AT 41.
LIN.COLN
STREET,
CAR PET EO LIVING ROOM
AND ONE BEDROOM.
N ICE
KITCHEN
AND
DINING
A REA . FULL
BASEMENT,
CARPORT,
SEVERAL FRUIT TREES.

In Bidwell
l V~ STORY FRAME. HOME
ON 1 ACRE MORE OR
LESS . NICE SIZED LIV I NG
ROOM , FOUR BEDROOMS .
LARGE KITCHEN WITH
DINING AREA . QNE CAR
GA RAGE , LARGE BLOCK
ST ORA GE BUILDING . ON
·NEW
RURAL
WATER
LINE .

Two Houses
21!2 Acres
NEAR
THURMAN
ON
STATE ROU TE 279. HOUSE
NO .1 IS llh STORY FRAME
ABOUT 15 YEARS OLO .
LIVING ROOM , KI TCHEN
AND' DINING AREA AND
TWO ,. BEDROOMS,
DOWNSTAIRS ,
TWO
BEDROOMS
UPSTAIRS ~
BAR N 50 X 15. HOUSE NO .
2,
TWO
B·E DRODMS,
LIVIN G · ROOM
AND
' KITC HEN AND RENTS
FOR $30 PER MONTH .

AND IN EX ·
CONDITION.

NICE

Farm Near
Rio Grande

NEIGH .

BORHOOD ,
LOVELY
KITCHEN, CITY SCHOOLS .
GET POP BY THE HAND,
THIS GAL WANTS THIS
HOU SE SO LD .

Here's A Beautiful
Colonial In Country
iBRAND NEW , ABOUT TO

BE FINISHED, 4 OR 5
, BEDROOM S, BEAUTIFUL
.. I( 1 T CHEN ,
HUGE
FINISHED
FAMILY
GARAGE AND
. ROOM

103 ACRES, 35 ACRES
TILLABLE , BALANCE IN
PASTURE
AND
WOODLAND . EXTRA NICE
RANCH STYLE HOME ,
FOUR
BEDROOMS,
LIVING ROOM 15 X 18,
MODERN KITChiEN, BIG
DINING AREA , LARGE
UTILITY
ROOM, HOT
WATER, CENTRAL HEAT .
P.ANELING IN ALL BUT
TWO ROOMS . WALL TO

"~~~lf~tt~T;;,~~~· - ~~gP~9 ·• ·· ~~!o~ g~·'lls~T., L~ R"'d-~
PLETELY CAR PETED .

BARN ,

RANCHO REAL TORs·
HEADQUARTERS tor Gallia
County Real Estate. Listings .

TOBACCO

~ASE .

MASSIE
Realty1 32 State St

CHESHIRE J- Trailer Park, ·:. needed .
potential Income of $l7,000 1b4 ACRE Beef or Dairy Farm .
per yr .
· Large very good· barn. Pond.
MIDDLEPORT _ 12 rm. house
Land level to rolling. Tobacco RODNEY - 6 rm. home, 3 yr.
old, all carpel, all elec. and
n
N.
nd
Ave
.
Could
be
used
base
. Located on slate high2
O
way . ·
located on a
A. flat lot. it
as 1, ·2, 3, or 4 homes .
ha s a large garage. Price only
~11,500.
POMEROY - 2 family home, 44 ACRE~ f.ii).".rm in Vinton Co.
near tn.
-;ood
fences and
ci{!nplelely modern . .
pond. Re,, J\' two story ADAMSVILLE - Older home
LOTS OF LAND
farm ~ome . V ;r bedrms.
made new, 3 bd rms., huge
Wl!t AVE farms and vacant
Bath . ·llasement
liv.
rm . and the kitchen has
lo in all directions. Whether
plenty
cabinets . II has a 2 car,
building or buying a mobile
4 ACRES. near Hospital.
new, attached gar . and
home, call STROUT.
'Modern 3 bedroom home,
located on a large flat lot.
Ranny Blackburn
bath, rural water, new forced
Price 515,750.
Branch Manager
air furnace . Compare this buy

Tel 446-1998
'I•

~

OHIO RIVER
Reily

at $11,500.

BIDWELL - 6 big rms., ufillfy
and bath. Carpel In llv. rm .,
plenty cabinets in kitchen,
lots of paneling and II has new
storm drs. and windows. Barn
40' x 60' . Located on 2 big lots.
Pr ice $16,000.

Real Estate for Sale

.For Sale
WATKINS Products Christmas
Gift Selections. Phone 446·
4761.
261 -tf

;RUSSEU. -

r.ooD .

'I'

IREAI.lOR

1971 FORD
ton P.U. $2,300.
Phone 256-6546.
275-tf

.446-UJ66.
.
'.
FIVE room doll house com -

.10% ·Off

6 ROOM mod~rn home in city,

. .

LOWER river road, 7 room
home overlooking the 'Ohto
River. bath, gas1 heat and
large lot. Shown b.y ap pointment. Price~, 516,000.

t

Plumbing &amp;Hea~ing .

2'h ACRES with all electric
home·, . large kitchen. new
stove and refrigerat or , bath
and double car garage.
Pr iced $17,000.
2 BEDROOM home In Cheshire,
with city water, . bath, nice
kitchen and small lot. $14,900.
ON LAND CONTRACT
. $5,800 BUYS a two bedroom
home . Newly painted and
decorated, new 1250 stove
with fan . Located In City .
Office 446· 1066
Evenings Call Ron Canaday
446 -3636
Russell D, Wood, 4-M-4618
John I. Richards,.446-D280 ·.

ii BEAUTIFUL

acres,- prlvate
modern home, 3to 4 BR, great
. for children, nature lovers,
edge of city limits of small
community . Close to new
hospital and Rio Grande on
Slate
Route .
Owner
relocating. Dial 388-9901 .
281 -5

FOR SALE by owner - 2 story
brick house at 452 First Ave . 7
r ooms, 2 baths, gas hot air
furnace.
Present
arrangement 2 apartments.
Ea sily converted to one
tam ily dwelling . Asking
130,000 shown
by
appointment. 446·0'208.
2F4-1

For Sale

faculty
possible thing at every
chance to go wrong.
"I didn't have to pass tQ.
three no-trum~, You can see
•
•
•t
th t • 1
a SIX n e1 er mmor SUI
wheels in but I had no idea
what
partner might put
on the table so when he went
to three no-trump, I passed."
"You · made three no·
trump, didn't you?" asked

my

What do you do.now.?
A-Bid four hearto. Yollr
partner coniC have mucb, but
you stlll want to be In rome.
TODA'l('S QUESTION
Instead of bidding two notrump, your partner has jumped
to three no-trump over your
two spades. What do you do
now?

someone,

"' RUSQLL'S
PWMIINGI HIATIH
11 0.111• Avt. 446-4711
197.
•

I

'

..

soon, calf now.

oo.

New~Mc
..
Truck Head~uarlers
1966 •;, fon GMc'Pickup · ·
1969 Olds 88
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1971 3 ton . Chevrolet _lr!Jc.k
1970 •;, ton Ford XL T Pickup
1970 •;, ton Chevrolet pickup
1969 •;, tpn Chevrdlel pickup
1969 International 1600
1969 3 ton GMC
1967
T. Chev. PU
1968 v; T. GMC PU .
1966 •;, T. GMC PU
.

68 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Cuslof" 2 dr. hardtop, V-8, auto.
trans :,. p. steering, tac. ettr
cond., med. blue with white
vinyJ fop, ~harp.

$1195

69 MERCURY COUGAR
2 Dr . ha rdlop, 351 engine, V·B, auto.
tra ns., med .. green , ntt vinyl gold
Inter ior.

· q695

UW..lJ. ft.. ~~m_per

f. GMC PU
1966 1;, f. i=ordPU

T.

'I•

284-3

- - - - - -DUAL four bbl. carbs. and

v.s engine, auto .
lrans., p. steering, p. brakes, fac. a1r
c:ond ., w.s.w tires, wheel covers .
radio.
2 Dr. hMdtop.

$1995

'70 CHEVROLET CHEVELLE
2 Dr. hardtop, green with gree•
vi nyl bucket seals, 350 V-8 eng ine , 4
speed trans .. fac. tachometer. This
car is a real clean sharp car.

$J I 995

TWISTER
5

2195

TRUCKS ·
62 FORD FlOO

•395

6 Cyl. with nice sel of caltle racks .

67 FORD PICKUP

--::----::---::-

ALL THE NATURAL Beauty of
every diamond Is 'broiJ!jht to
lull brilliance In our lfne of
rings. Each has a setting of
exquisite style, designed by
foremost lewelry artisans.
Let us show them to you.
28.·2
WELL kept carpels show the
resvlts of regular Blue Lustre
spot clea~tng . Rent electric
shampooer $1 at Central
Supply -Co. - .
284-lf
LOST bright carpet colors ...
restore · them with Blue
Lustre.
Rent
electric
shampooer Sl at G. C. Murphy
Lowet Store.
284-tl

PUILIC
NOTICE·

.....

.... _...,••

I Olive. .

... 1111 .. 7

,.

I

KANAUGA, OHIO .

BEST USED
CAR BUYS
IN THE
VALLEY!

- ··'--"

Bil{Joe Johnson

!7Q. MAVERICK ............... ~1495. ~
Grabber , ·6 cy l., auiorriati c.

1695

'68 CHRYSLER ,............... ~1495
New Port 4 dr. Sed., P.S., P.B., one owner.

'70 FORD LTD ................. '2295

$1295

Brougham 2 dr. H. T. , P.S .. P. B.. air.

'68 CHEVROLET...............•1295

Be lAir 4 dr sed., P.S., P.B .. air .

'69 MUSTANG ................ •1295

70 FORD F-100

M ac h I

Short wheel base , flair side body , 4
wheel d,.. , 300 cu. in. 6 cyl. engine.
high floaliltlon, mud &amp; snow I ires .

$2295

'68 CHEVROLET ..............•1195
'68 BUICK ....................... •1195

'2295

Long wheel bnse, custom deluxe model. 6 cyl., engine,
custom topper in beautiful condltion.

ATTENTION:
NP.w car and truck owners. All makes. We have the ECP
rusl pro()hng method with a 5 yr . written warr~nty . Ma ke
your .lllPOIIltm ant today .
Shop-A- Rama Tickels Giv en on · Any New or
Truck

'70 OPEL......................... •1195
Kod ette 2 Door.
All Speedometer Mileage Certified.

1971 BUICK

--·------

THOMAS ·FA.IN
EXTERMINATING CO.
Termite &amp; Pest Control
Wheelersburg , Ohio
HAFFELT' S CAK~ETING
IF YOU are building a new
hom e or need new carpet,
phone Jerry Hallett, 446-1158
for free estimates.

'2995

'3395

1972 CHEVELLE

,

2 Dr. hdtp., auto., p. steering.
vinyl top . sharp.

·1970 BUICK

Skylark 2 Dr. hdtp., air cond.,
vinyl top, one owner: Extra
nice.

'2995

&amp; Healing
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio

ALBERT EHMAN
Water Delivery Service
Patriot Star Rt. , Gallipolis
Ph . 379-2133.

Skylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.1
white, black vinyl top. Worth
more.

\

-Central
- ---Air Conditioning

."HOT-SHOT" WASHMOBILE.
Wash, wax and degreaslng
~ with mobile l,mih... .t46~4441.•"~ tt)
210-tf

1971 BUICK

LeSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air cond., 17,233 miles, 73
leSabre trade . Like new.

.'2595

1971 FORD
Torino, GT, V-8, automatic
transmission , P.S., one owner:
2),260 m lies.

-1969· v.w.

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

•

-

~

n

,

.,. 1

St. Wagon, local owner, 73
Buick trade .

'2695

'1295

1970 MERCURY

1969 v.w.

Monterey 4 door sedan. power
steering, power brakes, air
cond., AM-FM, one ow:1er.

Tudor, extra nice, beige, sun
roof.

1639 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis

be

UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY

KANAUGA Conc ret e :::. u1Jply

Gallipolis Chrysler-Plymouth
446-3273

or Carl

4 Dr. hardtop, radio, auto . trans ., p. steering,

p. brakes, la c. air con d.. Expresso brown with
matching inferior. w-s-w tires . Excellent
cond .

.For Sale

Cnmpany . Ready mix Con cre te. 4·16·1142.

251-11
..BOB
LA
.:-N
::-E
: -,:S
:- c-om
.....,..
plel;
Bookkeeping and Tax Service, 424 112 Four1h Ave.,
Kanauga . Business by ap .
pointment . Ph . 446-1049 .
Please ca ll after 6 p.m .
278-tf
;G
· ;::1L-:L-;Ec;N:;:W
:;:A::T::E::R-::,S:--se-p-::
11-c -:-lank
cleaning and l'epalr, also
house wrecking . Ph. 446-9499 .
Established tn 1940.
169-tf
---::-----:--:--FURNISHED mobile home in
HANDY man for home mai nGallipolis, 446-0338.
, ;LEE PING room with use of
_
kitchen , hvlng room, garage, ,
lenance
(plumbi~
&amp; .
• 227-tf
private entrance. Call 675- .. 'd
heati ng ). Phone 245-5 8.
, BLUE L t
280-tf'
. us re no1 on 1y n s
3536.
• 278_11
---~-----· carpets of soi l but · te~ves pile ·
DRY WALL service 'by con soft an~ lofty. Rent electric
tract . Willard Bosley, 446·
shampooer St. Central Supply FROM wall to wall, no soil at
all. on ca rpets cleaned with
4954.
Co .
Blue Lustre. Rent electric
273-tf
282-lf
shampooer $1 at G. C. Mur phy , Lower Store.
TWO HOUSE TRAILERS. First
278-lf
- 1 BR. located on private lot.
all utilities -paid . Located 2
mi. fr om town. Second - 2 SAVE big! Oo r,our own rug and
GARAGE for boat storage. Call
upholstery c eaning wi1h Blue
BR, localedlon private lot, all
after 4 p.m. 245·5040 .
Lustre .
Rent
electric
uti lities paid. 2 m iles from
283-3
shampooer $1, Central Supply
town. Phone 379-2380.
co .
282·3
27.8-tf

For Rent

MOBILE HOMES
5 YR . OLD gai ted Palomino
FOR SALE
ridi ng horsa, gentle. 6 yr. ol d
RECONDITION ED
gaited riding mare. 388·8155.
MOBILE HOMES
280-6
Holly Cart 12'x60'.
Roycrafl 12 x 50
GOOLJ LLtAN LUMP and
Schull '12 x 50
Eastern Ave.
stoker coal. Carl Winters, Rio
Ga IIi polis, 0.
Elcona 12 x 50
Grande. Phone 245 5ll5.
960 Whitney 10 x '6
6 tf
069 &amp;talesman 12 x 60
----~--973
Pe erle"
12 x 60 SI NGER Sewing Machine Sales
BRACE yourself.for a thrill the
973 Kingswood 12 x 60
&amp; Service. All models in
SLEEPI NG rooms for rent.
first lime you use Blue Lustre .
967 Topper 12 x 60
.
stock . Free delivery. Service
Gallla Hotel, 446-9715.
DUNE Bugg y - Good shape.
to clean rugs . Rent eleclrlc
1967
FORD
excellen
t
condition
.
Atlonltc 12 x 60
Ca II 446-2861.
guaranteed. Models priced
181-tf
shampooer $1. G. C. Murphy,
Ph
one
446-3548.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
trom $69.95 . French City•
280-6
28 1·4
Lower Store,
Second &amp; VIand St .
.Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap.
267-tf
Pt. Pleasant
· - - - -- - - - 1971 FORD 'h ton P.U., $2,300. FURNISHED apartment.
proved dealer,· 58 Court St.
only
,
all
utilities
paid.
_
T
_
H_
E.L..
A
_
MA
_
Z
_I_
N
-:G-:::
B:Iu
_
e_Luslre
adults
(Next t o Heck 'sl
Ph. 446 9255.
Phone 245-5008 .
tf
446 -9523 or 446-1443.
260-ft
308-tf
280·
will leave your upholstery
27_
1.11
~:-7':'::'7::7=-:""'"i=:-=-:f.='-- beaulifully sot.! and clean •
~OCUST posts for sale~ne ·BRADBURY ' E/t ( clevncy
Rent electric shampooer $1,
NEW &amp; USED
245-5008.
Apartment
,
729
Second
Central
Supply Company.
1- BE11MS, Channel , angle ,
280· 11
Avenue
.
Adults
only,
no
pels.
267-lf
sheet and plate steel, rounds,
I
"'
~,..,.
Y"'
o
"
u
,-a
re
-:b
u"'
it"'
dt-,.
ng
a
new
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
261
-lf
flats, reinforcing ba'rs and
A 1 ROOM unfurnished house at '
mes,h, rail , pipe, culverts and
home or remodeling , see us.
129 3rd Ave . , Golllpolls.
We are builders. Distributor FUR NISH EO Apt . parking,
equipment. Prompt drilling,
Carpeted,
3 bedrooms, 2
for Ho.tpolnl Appllan~es ,
cen tral heat, two adults only,
Neiman Co., Nelsonville,
utility
room . Basement
baths,
$S,SOO,
Allison Electric.
446-0338.
Ohio; P. 0 . Box 298, Ph. 753·
and garage. Rent $175 per
154-lf
248-11
, 1554. ~all collect .
$6.500.
month. Phone 446-0111 .
181 ·11
278-ff
T
=
=
R
~
E-:
A~
T~r~
~g
s
_r
_
l~
g
h
-,-.,h-ey
'11bea
SI GNS &amp; POSTERS,. Custom
12
delight If cleaned with Blue
made, 1 copy or In quantity .,
MOBILE HOMES
Lllslre .
Rent
electric NEW 2 BR Mobile home. upper
FOR SALE
Hand painted. Silk Screen.
Route 7 by week or month.
shampoaer
$1
at
G,
C. Mur RECONDITIONED
Instant signs. Please phone
72
50-60
446-0008.
phy's.
MOBILE HOMES
Gallipolis H6 - 0706 .
266-tf
65 ft. 12
14
. 273-tf
209-tf
1968 Roycrafl 12xS1
1966 Shutt 12x50
SLEEPING rooms, weekly TWO BEDROOM 1roller In
Need Ano1her Bldg.?
1968 Etcona 12x50
Chesh ire. phone 367-7329.
rates, free garage parking ,
S.E'E our aluminum 'bldgs.
1968 Elcona 12x60
271 -tf
Libby
Hotel.
Heavy duly, with flooring,
1973 Peerless 12x60
wired
for
electric.
Also
West
241
-ff
1960 Whitney 10x46
SPACIOUS lots, Quail lree&lt;
Virginl&lt;t chunk coal, drain
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Ph. 614-259Mobile Community and Sales.
rRAILER
space
with
concrete
tile, bell tile, cement and
Second &amp; Viond St.
Contact Newt Jones 245-9374
pads,
located
on
Bulavllle
mortar.
Gallipolis
Block
&amp;
1.2
Pt. Pltasant
or 245-5021,
Road.
446
-3879
or
367-7436.
Coal
Co.,
1231;,
Pine
,
446-2783,
!Next to Heck's)
276·tf
271-tf
207 -tf
242-11

WOOD MOTOR SALES

For Sale

For Sale

'1.195

'1495

D. P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
Del i very Service
Your
patronaQe wi ll
ap.
precialed . Ph . 446-0463.
7-lf

I -:-:-:-::---::---::----

'69 PONTIAC CATALINA

For Sale '

-· ~~---

Station Wagon. P.S. , P.B., air.

LeSabr e 2 Dr. H.T., P.S., P.B.

70 CHEV. PICK-UP

~

-:T::-:E::-:R::-:M
-::1-:T:E - P-:E-:S-:T - C:0-N:::
T:::
RO L
FREE Inspection. Call 446-3245.
Merrill O'Dell, Operator by
Extermioal. Term ite Sevlce;
19 Bemont Dr .
267 -tf

6 Pa ss. Wagon, V-8, std. shift . .

108" wheel base. 6 cyl

ST tV• ART Electrical Service &amp;
Repair. house wiring, free
estimate . Phone 446-4561.
•
271- tf

&gt;t:PTIC TANKS ·Cleaned and Installed
Russell's Plumbing, 446-4782
297-fl

Custom cab, rvd!o , full whee l cover s.

69 CHEV. VAN

·.SAYS

,

'66 CHEVROLET................ '695

5

$5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
hofse and cows
Call Jackson 286-4531

.-

We take the Risk out of
buying a Used Car. All
Speedometer
Readings
Certified by Previous Onwer,

DOC
SMITH

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estimates, liability In surance. Prunrng , trimming
and cavity work, tree and
sl ump removal. Ph . 446-4953.

Heavy duty haH ton, l~rge narrow lli•d,, 6 cyl. engi ne,

Pick·up lru ck, 6 cyl eng ine, power
stpering: vinyl seals . Sharp,

DEAD STOCK.

)3.1(

-'-:-:--::-----:---

Delicious, Winesaps and
Romes. Wells Orchard, 1 1111.
S. Wilkesville, Stale Route
160. Open daily 8-5, Sundays
12-5.
28H

SMITH AUTO SALES

REDUCED
W·

'

GALLIPOLIS, ·OHIO

Services Offered

Own a18!!~! Original.

I

USED Estey Spinet plano .
Phone 446-3541.
284-3

-:--=-::-:-:-::-:-::-::---:---:
APPLES , . Red ' and yellow

lob more ... all stando11d equipment!
Test drive the new Datsun 610 2-Door Hardtop
at you r nearby Datsun dealer's and di scover why
we cal l it a Dat sun Or iginal. Drive a Datsun ...
th en decide.

72 PLY MOUTH DUSTER

Used

CARROLL .NORRIS DODGE INC.·
50 STATE STREET

; And

70 FORD TORINO

V 8 engine, standard sl1i lf, rad1o.
s-w tires, fancy wheels .

PRICES START FROM '3051.00

• Power-flow ven tilation

manifold for Chevy , $50. Ph.
245-5865.
284-2

AKC Brittany Spaniel, good
bird dog, $60. 446-2'114.
284-1

When yo u'&lt;re shopping (or a hardtop, the ob1ec t
is to be a sport ... nolthe last of th e b ig' spenders.
So lake a look at the new Dat sun 610 2-Door Hard·
top. It 's a luxury car w ith a Datsun price that in·
el ud es a lot of no·cusl exlras:
• 1800 cc overhead c am engi&lt;ie
• Power-as si st br akes ~ di scs in front

• Rear w indow d efroster
• Sporls console

$4395

1964 •;,,

1967 I T GMC Dump
1969 •;, T GMC PU
i966 v,
GM( PU
1960 1 Ton Ford flat .
1967 •;, T. GMC Pickup
1964 CO 1600 International
truck
1967.. 1h T. GMC PU
1966
T. GMC'PlJ
1967 v, T. GMC Pickup
1968 If• T. GMC Pickup
1967 lf2 T. GMC Pickup
SOMMERSG.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pint St.
446-2532
267-tf '
-. -. - - - - - : .. ----~
3 AKC reg. Dachshuno pupp ies.
Ph . 388-8875.
284-3

Sporting luxury.
Sporting price.

• ll i£lepend~nt rear suspension
• Sports interior

2 dr . hardtop. full power, air cond ..
speed control , and all the many
Continental extras.

'I•

---..,....,.---

Cti.;

3 IEDROOM home at 1109
ANY. HR. 446-1"'
O!ritnut Str~t . Just recently
~nled Inside and out. Carpet
in living room r i lhrN
NEW 3 bedroom ilome, ,...._:,1
bedrooms. Would Make •
gu,
city
water,
'f ull
gnod Investment.
basement, with garage, part
Birch front, S16,100, Ptanll
· Office PheM 446-16f.l
Signed j&gt;y
Sub-division, C1ll Delbert
Evenlnts
Gallla County Board
"11rl~ M. Nlll ·446·1546
Clark,-~ ·
of Revisions
~v . 211.22, 23, 24. 25, 26, 27, ~.
271-26
J. Michael Neal 446-1503
lt.
we. 1. .
----:-___:._

NEW : Serta and Bemco
mattress and box springs.
Large selection in stock twin , full , queen size. Save
up to $40 a set.
995 Second Avenue
446-1172
276-ff

A UNIQUE lfiiTRODUCTION In the pickup truck market Is this 1913
Dodge Club Cab. ldl!al for commerc.lal and recreational applications, the
new. enfry offers 34 cubic feet of secure, weather pro_tected Interior
storage space. Typical uses of the new Dodge Include tool and equipment
storage and space for certain types of camping equipment requiring
ready access. Two optional fold down .seats are available offering tem·
porary transportation lor 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-lnch wheelbase with a 61f.!-foot or a.
foot pickup body. Heavy slide-on campers can be accommodated by the
optional7500 lb. and 9000 lb. Camper Specials. A full range of sl;te and el!jht
cylinder powerplants are offered Including a 225 cu. ln. Slant Six and a
318/ 360, and 400 CID V-8's.

4 Dr. Station Wagon , 6 · cyl., auto.
trans.

69 LINCOLN MARK Ill

-------

.

66 CHEV. II

4 dr . .5edan, (tUto. trans., n1ce.

-------

Real~

.e inv1te YOIJ to compare lle qua 1 y
and the price of our automobiles. We
know that we have a better deal for
you and ·we, would like the op.
portunity to demonstrate this.

69 RENAULT

fumiture

ALL TYPES of building •
materials, block, brick, sewer
pipes, w:Jndow~, lintels, etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Phone 245-5121 after 5.
' 123-tf 1972 ZIG-ZAG Sew ing Machine
left in layaway. Beautiful
-----+--pastel color, full size model.
AKC toy poodle puppies, AKC.
All built-In to buttonhole, do
older poodles. 2 males. 3
stretch
sewing and fancy
females. One border Collie,
st
itching
.
Pay lust $48.75 cash
and 2 Reg. Rams. Ph. 446·
available.
Trade-Ins
or
terms
2947.
accepted.
Phone
446-4312.
283-3
284-6
----~-FARM Tractor, mini bike, 12.4·
28 tractor tired, '67 Ford VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
model. Complete with all
Standard changeover V-8, 388·
cleaning tools . Small paint
9906.
damage
In shipping. Will lake
283-3
$27
cash
or budget pian
--'-----available.
Phone
446-4312.
( R ISH seller puppies, AKC reg .
284-6
'Great with chil~ren. Will hold
till Christmas, Chesapeake,
FOR SALE
867-5535.
WELLSTON,
OHIO
283-2
FIRST class restaurant - D5
license and 12 lane bowling
HOUSE coal for' sale. We will
.
ailey. Call Derrill E. Wolfe,
ha ut. Ph. 256-6700.
Oscar
L. Thomas &amp; Co .,
283-2
Realtors , Columbus, Ohio,
228-2471.
.
'67 CHRYSLER "New Yorker,"
284-7
good condition, Pearl George,
446-0138 after 4 p.m .
1967 MUSTANG 1•&lt;1 hork 283-3
390 4 speed. Phone 446-1187 ..

.,-------

:~~~~~~~~~:~~:~~~~~~~~i~:~~;:::~~
•AK65 "AK65 t32 loKQ3

Cob'
r IQ &amp; Snyder

COLONIAL home 8 miles from .
town . Knotty plhe kitchen
with plenty of cabinets, new
bath , panel and carpel.
Several outbuildings on 2
acres of ground. Price $28,000.

Camping Equipment

~•

RICES

nice neighborhood. close to
school.
Bath 1'1•,_ part ,
basement, central atr, car· NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
85_4 SECOND, 446-9523
peted. fireplace . Owner
283-5
moved out of state. See this
--:--~-and make an offer.

~OTS

fieal

LIVING ROOM
SUIT SALES

pletely remodeled, .b eam
ceiling,
car pele.d,
full
basement, storll'\ doors and
windows. one car garage. · .
Priced at $15,000:
dN ALL new living room .sulles
,
. In stock when you take •I with
you.
9 ACRES of land 'on blacktop
road, two miles from town.
Price $3.500.

JUST Comr'•led. Custom built
new 3 .L,~oom
home
featuring_~~A 1 v
room ,
cen1ral heat a .U .r, sliding
glass
door to pa •• o and two
LUXURIOUS BARGAIN
car
getaQe
.
Beautiful one floor ho')1e with .
.
Gill!
EN
TOWNSHIP
MERCERVILLE Cheap
efK!rlc heal and central air,
NEIGHBORHOOD
ROAD. New
housing, nice 3 bet rm ., larg.e 1971 NOVA Coupe low mileage
hvit't kitchen with · buill-In
3 bedroom home, bath, nice
liv. rm. \ and kitchen. New
less than 6000 miles, 379.-2589.
ca81ne1s and range, ceramic '
lot,
city water and schools.
bath, fur . heal, copper
282·3
beth with shower, all rooms
Good terms . Immediate
plumbing , all tile ceiling;
except kitchen and bath are
occupancy.
large 2 car gar. Located on BUNDY TRUMPET, complete
carpeted. Only 10 minutes
near •;, A. shaded lot. Price
outfit. t:Jsed 3 mos. $125 446'
from City Park .
AND ACREAGJ for
$12.500.
31151 after 5 p. m .
residential or commercial on
262 -6
MONEY MAKER - Two story
--Rt
.
35and
Mitchell
Road
near
D.EER CREEK RD . - Near
house in town Is now two.
·
Hospital.
CONFIDENTIAL
SER
new. 4 rm . home with bath and
apartments. Each suitable for
ADDISON TOWNSHIP
VICE ... when you buy a
fur . heal, 2 rms. carpeted. 2
newlyweds or single person.
diamond from us, you're
A. rich land, gogd spring
Close to everylhfng. Needs 25 ACRES land . Some fenced .
Outbuilding. Make offer.
water, $10,000.
assured that your order will
some redecorating to be a
be treated with the utmost
first
c lass
apartment
l&lt;/, ACRES . Rural. Water. EWING TON - close new mine
confidence and care. Evening
bv~ld t ng .
.
Beautiful setting. Nice home
appointments, if desired .
opening. 8 big rms., bath and
or trailer site. Ask ing 55,000.
Tawney Jewelers .
plenty closet space. Pari of
TW~•.HOUSES IN THURMAN
Make
offer.
this
house
·
has
been
262-2
- l t ther house Is a good buy.
remodeled and is sound
· Large lots, both two story, ,
struclurally. it is loealed on 4 rr.:J PEWRITERS,
wltfl basement , room for 39 ACRES, 3 bedroom story and
Smith ;-\
half ~orne, garage, barn .
acres of land on Raccoon Cr.
expansion. Both are bargains
Corona, Royal , OtiiieftP.
Fenced . $15,000.
Asking 514.000.
at the low asking price.
Underwood , manual and
electric. Simmons Printing
Oscar Baird
NEAR NEW 4 bedroom home, EXCELLENT BLDG. LOTS, on
and Office Equipment.
Doug Woalherholl
bath and half. Patio. Large
St. Rl . 160 and St. Rt. 35 .
2354f
Brokers
tot . Price reduced.
FARMS
•
Sloven Betz, Salesman
CHEAP LAND - 163 A. S mi. PIPES. Pipes, Pipes, GBO,
LARGE RANCH HOME . 4
from Cheshire on Ward Rd .
Cheratan,
BBB. Jobey,
bedrootns . Lois · C!f closets,
No bldgs.. underlaid wllh
Hilson , and others. Tawney's
large living room, country
coal . l'h mi. from Gavin
Pipe and Trophy House, 422
kitchen, cozy family room
Convevor Bell. Price reduced
Second Ave .
.·with flreP.Iace. Garage. Extra
to
$16,000 .
Financing
199-11
land available. ·
•
available. ·
A~NM'·ffitfi'QO'Qiie;=-:p::u=m::p-::o::::rg:-::a::n,- at f
FOR
LEASE,
New
14x70
3
RtVER vtEw
original except new bellows. ·
BIDWELL - 30 A. atl tillable
bedroom Mobile Home.
WE; JUST listed a ·beaut iful 4
or develop,, 8 rm. modern Over 80 years old. Made by
Taylor and Fraley Organ
home, lJII carpet , much
- Healing &amp; Air---bedroom· River Road.
house Is
Wo(cesfer, Mass. One bellows
liomThis
e-on-tower
panelln~storm drs . and
300 Fourth Ave.
only 6 years old and was buill
type, . Phone
992-3904.'
windows, fur. heal. Price in
I!Y Ernest Brown . Special
_ Syracuse, 0 . 1
upper thirties.
· 48-11
lftlures are the beautiful :r
-~-------~
vltvi of the Ohio River, den :~
411 A. Good 7 rm . house, plenty
CAltTER'S PLUMBING
'VIth )Voodburnlng fireplace, ,~
storage rm., carpet and 1970 DUSTER 340. Ph. 446-0668.
.AND HEATING
formal dining room and
I
' 280·6
paneling. II hiS a big barn;
Cor. Fourth &amp; Pint .!l
partial basement. Lot 1$ 11 4• x
near
12
A.
rloh
bottom
land
Phor~!! 446-~ or 446..u,,.
2f01, Call today for an apand ~- lenly good water. Price
·.
· .
1fS-tf
!&gt;Oinltnent.
,
reduced
to $16,500, and In.•
etudes tractor and other farm
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
STANDARD
"'"
.
tools .
Denver K. Higley 4...0002
Plumbing&amp;Heatlng
L01"1'67' x 112' locale(j at 54
W.nda S. Ethenaur 446-0003
215 Third Ave., 446-3712
Gtflleld Avenue. $1,000.
wE HAVE a market lor good
hom•s. If you plan to . Mil
--"~,.___ _ _ _ _IV-II
·, NEW LISTING

*

+

SECLUDED

Older Home
In Town

DECEMBER , BARGAIN : 2
bedroom home. new bath, ~~ WAIT TO SEE THIS
! Due to job transfer, the
located on 100' lot. $6.800
Includes all furn iture .
has this one yr. old
brick priced to sell. A small
4 Bf:DROOM, two bath,
down payment will let you
beautiful deluxe kitchen,
en\oy this lovely 3 BR home
fireplace, family room. large
wi h WW carpel, . 1'1• baths,
workshop. 90 pel. financing .
cent . air and 2 car garage.
Price 519,500.
The wife approved kitchen
Includes gar . dlsp .. dish·
LOTS· ~ Prked from $1 ,600 to
washer, range, hood. and
$3.000. Ideal for building or
lovely cabinets .
mobile homes.
NO DOWN PAYMENT if you
FARMS - 96 acres, two barns,
qualify. This modern 6 rm .
tobacco base, all electric·
ho01e" in KC school disl. and
brick home. Located on MI. 7.
features brick. front, carport,
cent. air, utility rm. and
26 ACRES Located ' on
mOdern kitchen.
Hannan Trace Rd . All electric
home, paneled and carpeted, FOR tHE CITY FARMER basement . Large buildi!1g ,
We have a nice 4 rm. and bath
two car garage. Price $26·,500. ·· home next to the city limits
with 12 acres. $12,000.
TWO STORY HOME covered
wlfh aluminum siding, 4 BR, CITY - LARGE Double House
dining room, a dream kitchen
on Garfield Ave. for only
and laundry, large lot.
$12,000. See this one!
garage. Price $18,800.
INVESTMENTS
MIDDLE PORT Modern 6
1 MILE above the new shoppl ng
rm.. home which includes 3
center. A orre otory, 3 SR. 2
Bt, LR with WB fireplace,
bafh, family room, beaUtiful
blilil-ln kllchen&lt;~nd utility rm.
kitchen, carporf, gas forced
PLVS a separate 3 rm. and
air furnace . Price now
bath apt. PLUS 3 late model
reduced to 521,000.
mobile home's now being
rented . Live in the home and
NEW LISTING - Ran&lt;h style
collecl $555 per mo . rent.
redwood home with rail fence,
3 BR, large· living room with STATE ROUTE 160 - 2 1972 ,
fireplace, carpet throughout.
mobile homes on a 100x150
2 car carport, large lot. Quick
.llal lot. Co. water, patios,
possession. Can be seen
driveway, brand new, never
anytlme\
lived ln. Live in one and rent
.,.
MN other. S1!,900P 1 J l',hl!l' '
OWNER MOVED to Ftorlda.
Here Is a nice 3 BR home, 5 UN ITS IN CITY - 2 double
large carpeted LR , nice ea:ttn
and 1 single house on Garfield
kitchen, large garage. !'lice
Ay~ . 525,000 buys them all .
$13,000.
...:
VINTON empty
store
LARGE 2 STORY home o/1 a
building downstairs plus 2
corner lot in Middlep'ort .
apartments up. S15,000.
Plenty bedrooms, 2 ba1hs ,

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

2.

IN

' LOCATION AT
TOWN PRICED
OWNER WANTS
PCT . DOWN ON

25 Locust st.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off. 4..·2674
. Lucille Brannon
Evo. 446-1226or446·2674

Help Wanted

Jack ol Clubs---Ouch!

, Beautiful Bargain

KIT CHEN

ONE &amp; TWO bedroom apart- JUNK autos and scrap metaL
388-8776.
ments planning now for oc245-76
cupancy August 1973 located
in the village of Rio Grande. o.W
- :t;-:
N::-:
T::-:
E:,-0- t-o-:-ti:-u-y-,s-e-,.ll_o_r_trade,
Tnf one bedroom flats and
toy electric train , 446-4843.
two bedroom townhoUses
.
240-tf
feature all electric forced air
heal and air conditioning,
disposer, range, refrigerator,
dishwasher, wall to wall
carr,et, individual patio, SET YOUR own hours·.' High
cen ral T.V. system. Call
earnings first year . Operate
collect 368-8238.
lull or part time . Start wllh
284-3
absolute
Minimum
In vestment. Men or women ...
DAY CARE
AQe no barrier . Husband and
SUN VALLEY Nursery School,
wlte can work together.
licensed by State of Ohio, 1'/o
Leisurely, dignified work .
miles west of new hospital.
Early retirement. Income
577 Sun Valley .Dr. Ph. 446·
possible.
3657 .~ y care that says "we
284-6
car~., Madge Hauldren ; - --=-::::::::-:::-:::::r;::-:-:Own , Loredlth &amp; John
SUNOCO STATiON
Hauldi'en, Operators.
AVAILABLE SOON
114-lf in Gallipolis. For information
call Sun Oil Co. 304-453-1381 or
YW'OWAY ..Radios Sales · &amp;
w. A. Atk ins 304-429-1007.
Service. New and used CB's,
282-12
pollee monitors, antennas,
etc. Bob's Citizens Band
Radio Equip., Georges Creek
Rd ., Gallipolis. Ohio. •46-4517. COW HI DES 18.50 ; Deer Hides
vacant. The price is right and
'
212-tf
11.50: Wild Genslng $51 .00 lb.
the owner will help finance .
Highest prices for all wild raw
fur . Open dally at 4 p. m .
ROOF lNG and gutter work.
William Mitchell, 388-8507.
Saturday and Sunday 1 p . m.
Maran Fur House, 0. 0.
67-11
Wright and Sons, Mason, W.
WOMAN to cook evening-meals
Va.
RALPH'S Carpel &amp; Upholstery
and light housework, 2·6 p.m .
11 -30-Jic
Cleaning Service.
Free
5
day• wk . ·Ref . required.
estimates. Ph . 446·0294. Ralph
Write
· Box No . 243,: c-o
HOME
appliance
sales
A. Davis, owner.
Gallipolis
Tribune .
,
representative
experienced
In
9-tf
264-3
sales preferred , apply In
person at Sears in Gallipolis.
280-6 YOUNG man to work In Men's
clothing and furnishing and
WIN AT BRIDGE
shoe department. Major
medical and pension plan.
Excellent opportunity for
advancement. Apply through
Jim Kelly , Cox ' s Silver
"No 1 didn't,. was the
Bridge Plaza. Phone 446·1923.
NOR'l'H
'
'
·278-11
2
reply. "I ducked the first
.A84
heart but had to win the con· r• 2
tinuaiion. I could have gone
HEL-P WANTED ..
• Q98
right
over
to
dummy
and
MAlE
or ~tMALE
.Ql07654
taken the diamond finesse
hnllledialt Openings &gt;···
~T
EAST
but I didn't know where the Radiologic Technologist · J,
.J65
.Ql073
king was and I had an extra Registered Nurse
.,
\fKQ_Jl083
\f9654
chance to bring home my Nurse Anesthetist
•
t63
tK42
contract.
Bookkeeper with hospital
•'-93
loKJ
experience.
"I played my ace of clubs contact : Personnel OlflceSOlJTH (D)
lo see if I m1ght just drop O'Bieness
Memorial
.K92
the
king
from
East.
Sure
Hospital.
"A 7
enough, East did drop the
Hospital Drive
tAJl075
king
.
Now
the
rest
of
the
Athens,
Ollio 45701
loA82
clubs
appeared
to
be
good.
(6141
m
-5551
!loth vulner.able
I led a sec o11 d c lub and An
Equal Opportunity
West NoHh East South
played dummy's 10. East dis- L,::E;;_m;!:p;,:lo4ye:::r.:..
. _..;': - - - - - - '
lN.T.
carded
a
heart
and
W
e
s
t
Ex
pER
1
EN
c Et.
w~ttress
3 ,Y,
Pass
3
asked, 'No clubs, partner?'
wanted . Apply in person at
Pass 3 N .T. Pass Pass
"East · re plied that he
Christi Ann ~slauranl. ,
Pass
didn't
have
any,
whereupon
__
_ _ _ _ _ __ :z80.tf
Opening lead- \f K
West asked him to look care·
fully. Eventually East proBy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
duced the jack of c l u b s
The oldest expert was tell· which won the trick. He had
iog about SOflle of the things exposed a heart and had to
WINTER SALE on all Starcraff
that had happened to him lead it and I was down two."
trailer and foldouts. Wo have
durin~ his 40 years of play.
some
'72 model trailers in
(NEWSPAPER IHTIRPRIIE ASSH.I
He sa1d, "Most ·of the things
siO¢~. Priced to go. Wt ser·
were the fault of my part·
vice , what we sell. !;Imp
ners, but here is one where
Conte'y Starcratt Sal"'' Ill
North · of 'Point Pl.,...nt
I must take some share of
·
The
bidding
has
been:
behfnd Red CArpet ' tnn.ot·. '
the blame.
159-11
North
East
game was · rubber West
South
North and West were
East was one of

Business Opportunities

' ,Ph.--

WINTER CAN BE COZY with 2
WB fireplaces. This lovely 3
Need A
BR home also Includes formal
Large
dl~lng rin..
garage, full
Ranch?
basement with den finished In
knotty pine, and a large
landscaped lot in Gallipolis . 5 BEDROOMS LARGE
.CAR PETED LIVING AND
school dlst.
DINING ROOM . FANCY

Lost

ALL WEEK

Gallia Co.'s' Largest
Real Estate Sales A'gency
Office 446-3643
Evenings~ II
· E. M. "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E: to( Wiseman 446-4500

TH,
.. LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
SE VING THE NATIO!'I'S
· IU ERS I. 'SELLERS.
'

ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ..... NEAR Lincoln Ridge. Four
Let Weight Watchers I R I help
hounds, one Walker female,
you in our local classes. For
two Walker males, one blue
information ca ll Toll -free BOO·
lick male with red tick. legs,
582-7026 (No charge to caller).
Sl,OOO reward for recovery of
280-5
dog's information leading to
arrest and conviction of
persons that stole them, Asa
Halley. Jr .• 2525 Collis Ave.,
Huntington, W. Va.
261-6

'''

Real Estate For Sale

World's Largest

Datsun610.

'

...------........-..___......_ STROUT ,. THE WISEMAN
A'GENC¥1
REALTY

The lights never dim,
We will remember him.
Sadly missed by his
parents , Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Slone and brothers
and sisters, Nancie, Jerry,
Tony and Judy.
284-1

•

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·REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Untl1 fhe stars forget to shine

~

.

Wanled To Rent

for Rent

------

AT SPECIAL
. LOWER PRICES ------:-:-===

For Rent

For Rent
FURNISHED 4 room collage
and bath . Old age people or
elderly couple preferred.
Reas9~able rent. 446· 1~8:1- _

3

2 BED.ROOM trailer In city, all
utilities
paid,
adults
pref,erred. 446-0168.
283-lf
SLEE PING ROOMS, weekly
rates, Park Central Hotel.

'

308-11

APA~TMENT lor conolructtonl
' men . Ph. 446-0756.
.

267-lf

PAY -ONLY ONE UTILITY
ELECTRICITY
We furnish Wafer . Sewage . GariHige CollecHon ·Amp"
Parkl119 • TV Antenna • , Wall-to-Wall Carpeting •
Oroparles • Rantes • Rtlrlgtralors • Air Condlllonlnt' •
Garbaflt DilfiOIIIIs . Dlsllwashtrl. Hill Lamps· Prlvtlt
Patios • SwiM!IIIIII PM! · CI-M.

SAVE $2000

Double wides on display - suggested
retail price
sale price to move
out
This price includes delivery
and set up . ready to be lived in.
years financing at bank rates.
Repossessed n arid
models,
and
and
wide with good
credit can be bought with no down
P&lt;!yment.
lndianr· Valley Factory Outlet . Mobile
Homes/ L,ucasville, Ohio.
sooo, miles north of Portsmouth, 0.1
on' US 23.

----'----

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-----=----:---

----:---

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSES

llfl BATHS

11MNHOUSE
APARTMEfllS
For l~formalion Call Shir'ley Adkins 267·72tt

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32-;-~SundayTimes .Sentine1,Sunday,Dec. 3,1972

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IOrs

are

'tapJHNl. by .
.· IWruir so~iety ..

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,'•17 D ..ow fines

I,
letten of ~ are welcomed. 1)ey llloald be .leu
I lila 1M warda '""'• (or be sub"""·t to redudlGR by the editor) I

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1 IIIIIIBaiCbelf;;iwtththul~'•addlus.Namesmaybe I' 1'0MF:ROY - Seventeen .
1 wllblleld ' upoa publlcaUon, however, oa retj~~elt. Ltlten I dcfcndanls wcl'l' fined and nine
· ·I lboald be Ia &amp;ood lute, addre1sing lssuea, DOt penoa~Ues , 101 hc1·s forfeit~' bonds i~ the

£l .. . - L

I'
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td1th

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I ruurl of Meigs Counly Judge
I ~·rank W. Porler Friday.

Of lhc nine forfeiting bonds,
GALLIPOLIS· - Twenty·
•. • .
,.
:
I four were cited for hunting
three Gallia Academy High
I viola lions. These were $)59.50 ,
Schoolsenlorsweretapped for I
I by Lowell T. Kegley, Mid·
National Honor Society during
I
.
· . .
.
dleport, on each of two charges
Friday's National Honor
Master Plan • , . of a few
including taking illegal deer
Society and Carrer assembly.. . ·
·
N
and aiding in taking Illegal
29
1972
Tapped were:
Dear Sir:
ov. •
deer ; $29.;!5 by Estelle Meai~e.
Denise Aineel, David. Bur•
G 11· I' F
R· t 2 f
ram gla,d to .rea d abo
. uta school ·student thinking for himself. . a rpo 1s erry. ou e , or
nett.e, Linda · Carman, Connie
hunting without permission
11 sCh Is
CQ9nen, ,Don · Corbin, l'leqky ~ ·. 00 do progress better than larlle ones, due to the and $34.5$ for hunting witll a
Otlrhani, Dian~ Graham, John teachers be~g able to communicate with students. They do not white light.
•
Gray, Hubert Hardet, Jenn.ifer have so many assistants, then·It reduces cost of ass~ts to the
Others forfeiting bonds were
Kerns; James Kiskis, Arleri assistants which are not qualliied. ·Coosolidation will mean cost Sleven Wulfert, Marietta; Carl
Owens, Debra Russell, Larry of buses, bus drivers, not to mention the long transportation rides Johnston·, . Grayson, Ky., and
Saunders , Debbie Thomas, which is dangerous. Totaling tl\ls up, it will be no benefit to the Douglas Harmon, Cleveland,
Barbara Wallen, Ray Weiher, student.
$27.50 each for speeding;
Jayne Wiggle$worth, Sally
This is "themasterplan" of.suchafew,forconsolidation.
Randall Adkins, Po111eroy
. Winters, Lori Wiseman, Denise
I am against it. Thank ybu, Mrs. Vesta Ham, Cheshire, Ohio. Route 4, $22 .50, defective
Wright, Janet Yoho and Carla
exhaust; William M. Oldaker,
Young.
Now, be~'ore it's too late
Parkersburg, $:7.50, failure to
Malcolm Orebaugh, director
I'
display plates.
.
of the . GAHS guidance Dear Editor,
Fined were John R.
de)l&lt;!rtment, along with John
The Christmas season is here. Shopping, decorations, . Waybright, Bedford, Pa., $10
Longley and Keith Brown, specials on TV. Most children are discussing their Christmas and costs ; .l\ichard M. Lod·
counselors, were in charge of lis ts. Has anyone ever conm'd ered the sma 11 chi'ld who w1'II no1get wick, Pomeroy Route 3, $12
the career guidance program. a toy for Christmas?
and .costs; James L.
Maybe his parents are out of work, or there's been an illness, Wooldridge, Jr ., Vinton Route
or some other reason, but the magical, wondrous Santa he's just
McKelvey ill in
beginning to know ab('Ut won't be coming to his house this year.
Has anyone stoPPed to think of the heartbreak and disapAugusta, Georgia pointment these litUe ones go through at this time of the year•
PORTLAND ..,. Charles Sure, some organizations distribute foo~ and clothing, which of
McKelvey, former resident of course is important, but would you like to explain why this should
Portland, suffered a severe be the way it is to a !IIDall child?
Other io\Ws .~nd commWiities have special funds.strictly for
heart attack recently and is
COnfined to the intensive care · purchasing toys to distribute tO these little ones. Why can't we of
unit at University Hospital in Gallipolis get a fund like this going now while there's still time 1
Augusta, Ga.
for people to send in donations? Perhaps our merchants down·
Mr. McKelvey Is a brother to town would even dooate new toys ·to be given to our small
Robert McKelvey of Belpre children In the area. I'm sure all of us would gladly provide the
and Blll McKelvey of Portland. names of our neighbors with needy children to anyone or any
He was the last operator at organization who would uruiertake this' project. Let's keep the
old Lock and Darn 24 at Racine spirit of Christmas in our hearls where it belongs and due about
and the first to be employed at . (roviding happiness for a little child.
the new Belville Locks and
Toys dO this, not food baskets and clothin~. Others are
Dam. He is presently employed handling these, so can't someone voiWiteer to dd·lhe screening
u lilckmaster ¢ the U. S. necessary and the distributing of toys so we of Gallipolis could do
Ensineer Savannah Bluff Lock our part Jnr donating money or new toys?
and Dam at AUI\ISta.
I realize this letter Is rather long but I would appreciate it if
you published aU ofit, as Ueelit Is important. Maybe observing
' th~ real happiness this could bring to small children would
BilL APPROVED
SACRAMENTo (i.lPI) -The restore some of t\ie spirit of Christmas many of us have lost..
Mrs. Robert Grubb, 25 Smithers St., Gallipolis . ,
Auembly · voted
final
Ieslllatiw 'IJIIII'OVII FJ:iday to
.a biD suaranteeiDa the right of
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em :·x:~?~::ml~~~~::IM!~~StW:~Iol&gt;iil
· 'I:Q&gt;W:WI'If!W:i:IM!I:Q&gt;W~~IIAM::IM!~

I Voice .along B,r'Way

(

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2. $10 "nd
f&lt;.rry· G.
Bennl'll, M"incvillc, Ohio, $1~
By JACK O'BRIAN
· Gems .to turn his fl).me, fa~ and rep into TV
lind costs; ,John . A, Warfield,.
Uz Urged to Make Royal Decree
commercials, endorsements, souvenir books, t·
Grccnsboro,Pa.,$10andcosts;
NEW YORl{ (KFS) - The Duchess of . shirts, etc .... . .Remember when with just ·a
llelly Justis, Racine, $5 and · Windlor may move to London - if the Queen nickel you were welcomed into the Automat Oii
CHSis, all for speeding ; David offidally makes her tiUe "Ro)'al" as many Times Square? New sign there cities the
M. Pierce, Middleport, and memba s of Parliament want done for simple
flated-today: "Thursday, Friday and Saturda&amp;
Sian ley Bennett, Reedsville, $5 public relatioos purposes; the public adored
andcusL•each,un.safeveh,icle; 'lbe l'rince and thinks his meinory'Is muddied Night - minimum $1.00" ... Quo Vadls look$!
like the Met Opera -Maria cauas with M~
Jack D. Smith, Charleston, W. · up Jnr the relative snootiness in 1111 giving his great Giuseppe di Stefano, Licia Albanese· with
Va.. $100 and costs, tskiug
lllegal deer ; Charles H. Klein, widow the title royally ... Meanwhile the husband, a "civilian," Wall Streeter Jose]lli
Duchess is recuperating from surgery for a Gimma.
. ::
Sr. , Pomeroy Route 2. $5 and . N;unath Knee (ligament).
.
The
John
Gavin-Connie
Towers
romanqe
- 'I ·
·
cosls, permr tmg a mmor to
·. It was Melina Mercouri's second stra.lghl looks serious. Dined at the Leopard night befoJe
operate a vehicle; Lorraine
Aeiker, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, · Bdwy. flop, Her latest (..Lysistra~") destroyed John jetted to Cairo ... N.Y. dangerous? Out$
unsafe vehicle ; Sheryn 'J. ~e !ban $300,000 ... The cartoon Fihn FestiviJ.l Las Vegas, anotber alleged Fun City, deejay
.1 ""'Tl!n&lt;·e, Circleville Route 2, here has one judge who Is 13 - Erlci Bernhard ...
Phil Hutchins was kidnapped at gunpoint,
failure to give proper signal, ·Peter .Maas's uncoming boo)!: (alreidy peddled robbed of $215 VId abandoned by fleeing gw!·
"''"'s only ; Maurice E. Venoy, to Pictures for ·ffOO,OOO) Is "8erpico", not men - in the center of Vegas -at seven p.m..:.
Pomeroy, speeding, $1~ and "NI'Iico" as gremtlned herein : lt'a about the The record rain here was murder on everyone
cosl.s; Daniel Shane, Racine, cOntroversial N.Y. boo est cop who helped the but cabbies - they had their biggest month ,;,
$10 and costs, failure to current irobe into polit e bribery.
Complication for fleet owners on rainy days ..:.
register motor vehicle ;
Italian actresses lean toward young lads: too many hackies cheat their bosses by not
Patrick Mullen , Pomeroy, Elsa Martinelli has taken young Alex Onassis, using the meter, pocketing the whole guesswor~
cosl.s only, hunting without a Ari's boy,.under her pretty wing; she's 14 years fare; they know cops aren't on the streets io
license; Mitchell D. Allen, his senior ... Gina Lollobrlgida Is youth"'litting dowrlpours much.
,
Syracuse, possession of illegal with Renaud Verley, 20 years younger ... Maitre
. Shani Wallis says her ooe-year-old daughteii
deer paris, $100 and costs, $75 D' at Tommy's Old Coin has al! ey~H~pening Rebecca should be included in The Book of
suspended, and Carolyn · name: Look ... Actor Richard Roundtree, World Re~ords. The tyke's claim to fame? "S!Ji;
Charles, Pomeroy, $25 a·nd having passed Sidney Poitier and Harry traveled 55,000 before she was born," Sluini said·
costs, attempting to convey Belafonte as the relghning bla.ck superstar, now
on the "Terror in the Wax Museum" set, ad-:
concealed article to prisoner. is a cooglomerate: just signed with Screen · ding, "Of course, I was along as chaperone :•;

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pera, mapzines and .books.
'lbe Ill\!~ by Assembly.
IIIID Alan Sieroiy, ~&gt;'Beverly
HIIW, was 11e11t to Gov. Ronald
·T'J W •\ *beD tR Mienibly
calcwhed, U.li, .Jn Senate
lllltllblienta to It.

·
SYRACUSE - A local
v.:oman. was hospitalized
follow, in. g a spectacular single
car accid'ent Friday
l1 :50
a.m: on SR 124 here, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Mary ·Margaret Weave~, 46,
driving southeast went off the
highway to her right. Her car
weri t approximately 60 feet,
struck and broke off a power
pole,- another 10 feet into a
1
ollii.CJI. flipped an estimated 3()
feet in the air the vehicle
landing on its top with Mrs.
Weaver still in the car,
Mrs. Weaver was removed to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Syracuse ER squad. Her
condition Saturday was
rworted satisfactory. The car
was demolished. No citation
was issued.
.
,
At B
:•o p:m. Friday in
CALL FOR. TH.E BEST SaliJ;bury Township on SR 7
BUY ON YOUR INSURANCE just below Kings Arms Nite
·• ......,. " ~--d ·
Club, Eustace S. Pearce, 19,
,._.. n. o~t.lllll en
Indiana, Pa., was traveling
'PifltC:.hl Mottl Bldg.
north when an Wlldentified
au • A¥ttlut
.
.
O.lll.!!lh, Ol!lo..
· truck coming s~uth crowded
I'IIMM446 tiN Homt446.;4511 Pearce off the htghway. There
were no lnjur.ies and only light
A ......
dama]!e to hrs car.
- - · lloomlniiOt\1111At 10:30 p.m. Friday on
County Road 13, Rutland
,. 121010

at

TO

co-

-[!fJS TATE fARM

STATE RESORT PARKS •
OFFER

FALL·

SPRING

FAMilY VACATION PACKAGE PLAN

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IIi'. ,_I!OZJ Ml·llll -

Township, Edwin K. Cleland,
19, Langsville, lqst control, his
car skidding around and in\o a
fence. He was cited to county
court for failure to keep his car
on the right half of a roadway.
The Sheriff's Dept. is also
investigating a report by Betty
Theiss, Racine, Rt. 2, that her
mailbox and newspaper Lube
had been lhrown in a nearby ·
creek apparently Friday night.
The theft of a bettery from a
car parked at the Smith, Body
Shop, east of Rutland, is also
being investigated. The car
was parked outside the
building. The theft is believed
to have occurred between
Thursday night and Saturday
inorning.
The department . also
reported that a car was
destroyed by fire Friday
between 10 and 12 p.m. own·
ed by Shirley Sanders
Baker, Lucasville, Ohio .
The 196~ Chevrolet was
parked at Whispering Pines
Nile Club ; how it caught fire
was not known. The Pomeroy
Fire Department was called.

34 Perish in
theater fire
SEOUL (UP! ) - One of the
worst fires in South Jl:orea's
history ravaged a downtown
!heater today trapping and
killing young women and
children watching a weekend
musical special.
Police said 34 persons died
and 87 others were· injured in
the blaze that swept through
the Citizens Hall auditorium in
downtown Seoul in less than 20
minutes. Police said the toll
could have been much higher.
There were 3,000 persons in the
audiloriwn at the start of the
program but the audience had
dwindled to around 600 when
the fire broke out.

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DeVoted To The CreaiBr Middle 04iO Valtev· .·

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.,.,.

.:c::::~w~;=Auto
· 'dem·
oli·sh.-.
atlol'neyland rece1ve newspa·
·

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A LETT~ ··'
fROM' Mtl. ,~
,pu6LI~HER!".
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You'll enjoy Christmas gift shopping at Elbe;fe.lds and the wonderful selection of gills
you can buy - all over the store.
. The Furn!ture Departm~t · Third Floor. Big selection of Chairs. All cin sale - Living
. Room Su1tes · Desks · P1ctures · Grandfather Clocks - Gun Cabinets . Dinette Sels .
Lamps · all excellent quality .
the 2nd floor- Luggage · Bedspreads . Curtains . Couch and Chair Throws .
Blankets. See the line line ot Ready.fo.Wear tor women . for girls - includ ing Coats .
Dresses · Sk~rts · Slacks· Blouses · Sweaters. A complete selection of childrens wear.
too, on the 2nd f.'oor - plus the Music Department where you can buy RCA and
Panasontc TeleviSion · Record Players · Tape Players . Pianos . Guitars. There's a
bra~d new line of Christmas Albums and Tapes.
.
On

For Everyone On
Your List

""thor
These:"'...\ """" .. ,. . . . . .

L.J.

The .First Floor Is w~ere you'll find Houseware gifts and there are many, many items
awa1tmg your selechon. Clothes Hampers . Irons . Skillets . Percolators . Cookware .
Dinnerware and a host of fine gift merchandise. On the First Floor the;e·s a big
selection of Billfolds · Handbags · Womens Hosiery . Scarves . Costume Jewelry .
Table Covers · Towels· Sheets, plus the fine Lingerie Deparlment wi lh Slips . Panlies
· Radios· Gowns · Bras · Girdles · Slippers and Umbrellas. ·

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Select your gift wrappings · Bows . Ribbon . Hallmark Cards . Christmas Candy .
Typewriters in the lsi llpor Nollons Department.

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Elberfelds Toy Store is close by with fine toys and gifts for boys and girls of all ages.
We urge you to use our lay·Away plan to hold your sei ' ctions until Christmas.

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Elberfelds Main Store. Toy Store and Mechanic
Street Warehouse are open every day ·t rom 9:30
to 5 and on Friday and Saturday 9: 30 to 9 p.m.

,

Ciliii~'1T IC,,,.NMII'c;G

•KNIT DRESS SLACKS
•MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
eWEMBLY liES
eHANES UNDERWEAR

•LEE WORK AND WESTERN WEAR
• CARHARTT BROWN DUCK
WORK CLOTHES·
eMEN AND BOYS.PAJAMAS

, SGT. STRIPBS••• li'O;RBVBR
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• MEN'S ROBES ·
eSWEATERS FOR MEN AND BOYS.

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•FlANNEL WORK SHIRTS
eMEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS WITH ZIP-OUT UNING
eHANDKEROIIEFS
• BOYS .SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS
•MEN'S AND BOYS.HOSIERY .
eM EN'S AND BOYS .COATS AND JACKETS
•SWEATSHIRTS FOR MEN AND BOYS
•SUSPENDERS

0

llow:rll~~

by Bill

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•PARIS BELTS

MADE
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AND MANY, MANY MORE

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We urge you to stop in the
busy Mens and Boys
Department no.w. Look
around and buy early.

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11th I "Four for Fun" minf.vacation \n ,Jny of the above

' ...... ,our holiday during tho week ·or on e woekend . . .
- lflt plan more thin onct. Tho pion 11 ovallable ih the
~
. four pttlls only, November 15 throush March. 31.

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Is t~uly an excellent place to buy gifts for the men and boys on
your list. Tremendous selections - excellent values. Capable
salespeople to help you find what you want.

c:.w. .... · - hrti
IIIII, 11., - ( - %...4411

tllfDUah lunch tho third day, (Meals m1y be ordered from

I

The Men's and Boys' Department
On The lst Floor

Clrllr

the IIIIIIU.)

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~I LIKE FILliNG'
OUT
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l'ftllrl perkS. One low price coverw lodging f9r two nights
and Ill mahi 'from evening dinner on the day of arrival

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32-;-~SundayTimes .Sentine1,Sunday,Dec. 3,1972

.
. '

QV

Sen"•

.
'.. ,

-

IOrs

are

'tapJHNl. by .
.· IWruir so~iety ..

'

I

'

·

----~---------------------,

,'•17 D ..ow fines

I,
letten of ~ are welcomed. 1)ey llloald be .leu
I lila 1M warda '""'• (or be sub"""·t to redudlGR by the editor) I

.

• U

1 IIIIIIBaiCbelf;;iwtththul~'•addlus.Namesmaybe I' 1'0MF:ROY - Seventeen .
1 wllblleld ' upoa publlcaUon, however, oa retj~~elt. Ltlten I dcfcndanls wcl'l' fined and nine
· ·I lboald be Ia &amp;ood lute, addre1sing lssuea, DOt penoa~Ues , 101 hc1·s forfeit~' bonds i~ the

£l .. . - L

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I ruurl of Meigs Counly Judge
I ~·rank W. Porler Friday.

Of lhc nine forfeiting bonds,
GALLIPOLIS· - Twenty·
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I four were cited for hunting
three Gallia Academy High
I viola lions. These were $)59.50 ,
Schoolsenlorsweretapped for I
I by Lowell T. Kegley, Mid·
National Honor Society during
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dleport, on each of two charges
Friday's National Honor
Master Plan • , . of a few
including taking illegal deer
Society and Carrer assembly.. . ·
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and aiding in taking Illegal
29
1972
Tapped were:
Dear Sir:
ov. •
deer ; $29.;!5 by Estelle Meai~e.
Denise Aineel, David. Bur•
G 11· I' F
R· t 2 f
ram gla,d to .rea d abo
. uta school ·student thinking for himself. . a rpo 1s erry. ou e , or
nett.e, Linda · Carman, Connie
hunting without permission
11 sCh Is
CQ9nen, ,Don · Corbin, l'leqky ~ ·. 00 do progress better than larlle ones, due to the and $34.5$ for hunting witll a
Otlrhani, Dian~ Graham, John teachers be~g able to communicate with students. They do not white light.
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Gray, Hubert Hardet, Jenn.ifer have so many assistants, then·It reduces cost of ass~ts to the
Others forfeiting bonds were
Kerns; James Kiskis, Arleri assistants which are not qualliied. ·Coosolidation will mean cost Sleven Wulfert, Marietta; Carl
Owens, Debra Russell, Larry of buses, bus drivers, not to mention the long transportation rides Johnston·, . Grayson, Ky., and
Saunders , Debbie Thomas, which is dangerous. Totaling tl\ls up, it will be no benefit to the Douglas Harmon, Cleveland,
Barbara Wallen, Ray Weiher, student.
$27.50 each for speeding;
Jayne Wiggle$worth, Sally
This is "themasterplan" of.suchafew,forconsolidation.
Randall Adkins, Po111eroy
. Winters, Lori Wiseman, Denise
I am against it. Thank ybu, Mrs. Vesta Ham, Cheshire, Ohio. Route 4, $22 .50, defective
Wright, Janet Yoho and Carla
exhaust; William M. Oldaker,
Young.
Now, be~'ore it's too late
Parkersburg, $:7.50, failure to
Malcolm Orebaugh, director
I'
display plates.
.
of the . GAHS guidance Dear Editor,
Fined were John R.
de)l&lt;!rtment, along with John
The Christmas season is here. Shopping, decorations, . Waybright, Bedford, Pa., $10
Longley and Keith Brown, specials on TV. Most children are discussing their Christmas and costs ; .l\ichard M. Lod·
counselors, were in charge of lis ts. Has anyone ever conm'd ered the sma 11 chi'ld who w1'II no1get wick, Pomeroy Route 3, $12
the career guidance program. a toy for Christmas?
and .costs; James L.
Maybe his parents are out of work, or there's been an illness, Wooldridge, Jr ., Vinton Route
or some other reason, but the magical, wondrous Santa he's just
McKelvey ill in
beginning to know ab('Ut won't be coming to his house this year.
Has anyone stoPPed to think of the heartbreak and disapAugusta, Georgia pointment these litUe ones go through at this time of the year•
PORTLAND ..,. Charles Sure, some organizations distribute foo~ and clothing, which of
McKelvey, former resident of course is important, but would you like to explain why this should
Portland, suffered a severe be the way it is to a !IIDall child?
Other io\Ws .~nd commWiities have special funds.strictly for
heart attack recently and is
COnfined to the intensive care · purchasing toys to distribute tO these little ones. Why can't we of
unit at University Hospital in Gallipolis get a fund like this going now while there's still time 1
Augusta, Ga.
for people to send in donations? Perhaps our merchants down·
Mr. McKelvey Is a brother to town would even dooate new toys ·to be given to our small
Robert McKelvey of Belpre children In the area. I'm sure all of us would gladly provide the
and Blll McKelvey of Portland. names of our neighbors with needy children to anyone or any
He was the last operator at organization who would uruiertake this' project. Let's keep the
old Lock and Darn 24 at Racine spirit of Christmas in our hearls where it belongs and due about
and the first to be employed at . (roviding happiness for a little child.
the new Belville Locks and
Toys dO this, not food baskets and clothin~. Others are
Dam. He is presently employed handling these, so can't someone voiWiteer to dd·lhe screening
u lilckmaster ¢ the U. S. necessary and the distributing of toys so we of Gallipolis could do
Ensineer Savannah Bluff Lock our part Jnr donating money or new toys?
and Dam at AUI\ISta.
I realize this letter Is rather long but I would appreciate it if
you published aU ofit, as Ueelit Is important. Maybe observing
' th~ real happiness this could bring to small children would
BilL APPROVED
SACRAMENTo (i.lPI) -The restore some of t\ie spirit of Christmas many of us have lost..
Mrs. Robert Grubb, 25 Smithers St., Gallipolis . ,
Auembly · voted
final
Ieslllatiw 'IJIIII'OVII FJ:iday to
.a biD suaranteeiDa the right of
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2. $10 "nd
f&lt;.rry· G.
Bennl'll, M"incvillc, Ohio, $1~
By JACK O'BRIAN
· Gems .to turn his fl).me, fa~ and rep into TV
lind costs; ,John . A, Warfield,.
Uz Urged to Make Royal Decree
commercials, endorsements, souvenir books, t·
Grccnsboro,Pa.,$10andcosts;
NEW YORl{ (KFS) - The Duchess of . shirts, etc .... . .Remember when with just ·a
llelly Justis, Racine, $5 and · Windlor may move to London - if the Queen nickel you were welcomed into the Automat Oii
CHSis, all for speeding ; David offidally makes her tiUe "Ro)'al" as many Times Square? New sign there cities the
M. Pierce, Middleport, and memba s of Parliament want done for simple
flated-today: "Thursday, Friday and Saturda&amp;
Sian ley Bennett, Reedsville, $5 public relatioos purposes; the public adored
andcusL•each,un.safeveh,icle; 'lbe l'rince and thinks his meinory'Is muddied Night - minimum $1.00" ... Quo Vadls look$!
like the Met Opera -Maria cauas with M~
Jack D. Smith, Charleston, W. · up Jnr the relative snootiness in 1111 giving his great Giuseppe di Stefano, Licia Albanese· with
Va.. $100 and costs, tskiug
lllegal deer ; Charles H. Klein, widow the title royally ... Meanwhile the husband, a "civilian," Wall Streeter Jose]lli
Duchess is recuperating from surgery for a Gimma.
. ::
Sr. , Pomeroy Route 2. $5 and . N;unath Knee (ligament).
.
The
John
Gavin-Connie
Towers
romanqe
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cosls, permr tmg a mmor to
·. It was Melina Mercouri's second stra.lghl looks serious. Dined at the Leopard night befoJe
operate a vehicle; Lorraine
Aeiker, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, · Bdwy. flop, Her latest (..Lysistra~") destroyed John jetted to Cairo ... N.Y. dangerous? Out$
unsafe vehicle ; Sheryn 'J. ~e !ban $300,000 ... The cartoon Fihn FestiviJ.l Las Vegas, anotber alleged Fun City, deejay
.1 ""'Tl!n&lt;·e, Circleville Route 2, here has one judge who Is 13 - Erlci Bernhard ...
Phil Hutchins was kidnapped at gunpoint,
failure to give proper signal, ·Peter .Maas's uncoming boo)!: (alreidy peddled robbed of $215 VId abandoned by fleeing gw!·
"''"'s only ; Maurice E. Venoy, to Pictures for ·ffOO,OOO) Is "8erpico", not men - in the center of Vegas -at seven p.m..:.
Pomeroy, speeding, $1~ and "NI'Iico" as gremtlned herein : lt'a about the The record rain here was murder on everyone
cosl.s; Daniel Shane, Racine, cOntroversial N.Y. boo est cop who helped the but cabbies - they had their biggest month ,;,
$10 and costs, failure to current irobe into polit e bribery.
Complication for fleet owners on rainy days ..:.
register motor vehicle ;
Italian actresses lean toward young lads: too many hackies cheat their bosses by not
Patrick Mullen , Pomeroy, Elsa Martinelli has taken young Alex Onassis, using the meter, pocketing the whole guesswor~
cosl.s only, hunting without a Ari's boy,.under her pretty wing; she's 14 years fare; they know cops aren't on the streets io
license; Mitchell D. Allen, his senior ... Gina Lollobrlgida Is youth"'litting dowrlpours much.
,
Syracuse, possession of illegal with Renaud Verley, 20 years younger ... Maitre
. Shani Wallis says her ooe-year-old daughteii
deer paris, $100 and costs, $75 D' at Tommy's Old Coin has al! ey~H~pening Rebecca should be included in The Book of
suspended, and Carolyn · name: Look ... Actor Richard Roundtree, World Re~ords. The tyke's claim to fame? "S!Ji;
Charles, Pomeroy, $25 a·nd having passed Sidney Poitier and Harry traveled 55,000 before she was born," Sluini said·
costs, attempting to convey Belafonte as the relghning bla.ck superstar, now
on the "Terror in the Wax Museum" set, ad-:
concealed article to prisoner. is a cooglomerate: just signed with Screen · ding, "Of course, I was along as chaperone :•;

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pera, mapzines and .books.
'lbe Ill\!~ by Assembly.
IIIID Alan Sieroiy, ~&gt;'Beverly
HIIW, was 11e11t to Gov. Ronald
·T'J W •\ *beD tR Mienibly
calcwhed, U.li, .Jn Senate
lllltllblienta to It.

·
SYRACUSE - A local
v.:oman. was hospitalized
follow, in. g a spectacular single
car accid'ent Friday
l1 :50
a.m: on SR 124 here, the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Mary ·Margaret Weave~, 46,
driving southeast went off the
highway to her right. Her car
weri t approximately 60 feet,
struck and broke off a power
pole,- another 10 feet into a
1
ollii.CJI. flipped an estimated 3()
feet in the air the vehicle
landing on its top with Mrs.
Weaver still in the car,
Mrs. Weaver was removed to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Syracuse ER squad. Her
condition Saturday was
rworted satisfactory. The car
was demolished. No citation
was issued.
.
,
At B
:•o p:m. Friday in
CALL FOR. TH.E BEST SaliJ;bury Township on SR 7
BUY ON YOUR INSURANCE just below Kings Arms Nite
·• ......,. " ~--d ·
Club, Eustace S. Pearce, 19,
,._.. n. o~t.lllll en
Indiana, Pa., was traveling
'PifltC:.hl Mottl Bldg.
north when an Wlldentified
au • A¥ttlut
.
.
O.lll.!!lh, Ol!lo..
· truck coming s~uth crowded
I'IIMM446 tiN Homt446.;4511 Pearce off the htghway. There
were no lnjur.ies and only light
A ......
dama]!e to hrs car.
- - · lloomlniiOt\1111At 10:30 p.m. Friday on
County Road 13, Rutland
,. 121010

at

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-[!fJS TATE fARM

STATE RESORT PARKS •
OFFER

FALL·

SPRING

FAMilY VACATION PACKAGE PLAN

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Township, Edwin K. Cleland,
19, Langsville, lqst control, his
car skidding around and in\o a
fence. He was cited to county
court for failure to keep his car
on the right half of a roadway.
The Sheriff's Dept. is also
investigating a report by Betty
Theiss, Racine, Rt. 2, that her
mailbox and newspaper Lube
had been lhrown in a nearby ·
creek apparently Friday night.
The theft of a bettery from a
car parked at the Smith, Body
Shop, east of Rutland, is also
being investigated. The car
was parked outside the
building. The theft is believed
to have occurred between
Thursday night and Saturday
inorning.
The department . also
reported that a car was
destroyed by fire Friday
between 10 and 12 p.m. own·
ed by Shirley Sanders
Baker, Lucasville, Ohio .
The 196~ Chevrolet was
parked at Whispering Pines
Nile Club ; how it caught fire
was not known. The Pomeroy
Fire Department was called.

34 Perish in
theater fire
SEOUL (UP! ) - One of the
worst fires in South Jl:orea's
history ravaged a downtown
!heater today trapping and
killing young women and
children watching a weekend
musical special.
Police said 34 persons died
and 87 others were· injured in
the blaze that swept through
the Citizens Hall auditorium in
downtown Seoul in less than 20
minutes. Police said the toll
could have been much higher.
There were 3,000 persons in the
audiloriwn at the start of the
program but the audience had
dwindled to around 600 when
the fire broke out.

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DeVoted To The CreaiBr Middle 04iO Valtev· .·

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.,.,.

.:c::::~w~;=Auto
· 'dem·
oli·sh.-.
atlol'neyland rece1ve newspa·
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A LETT~ ··'
fROM' Mtl. ,~
,pu6LI~HER!".
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You'll enjoy Christmas gift shopping at Elbe;fe.lds and the wonderful selection of gills
you can buy - all over the store.
. The Furn!ture Departm~t · Third Floor. Big selection of Chairs. All cin sale - Living
. Room Su1tes · Desks · P1ctures · Grandfather Clocks - Gun Cabinets . Dinette Sels .
Lamps · all excellent quality .
the 2nd floor- Luggage · Bedspreads . Curtains . Couch and Chair Throws .
Blankets. See the line line ot Ready.fo.Wear tor women . for girls - includ ing Coats .
Dresses · Sk~rts · Slacks· Blouses · Sweaters. A complete selection of childrens wear.
too, on the 2nd f.'oor - plus the Music Department where you can buy RCA and
Panasontc TeleviSion · Record Players · Tape Players . Pianos . Guitars. There's a
bra~d new line of Christmas Albums and Tapes.
.
On

For Everyone On
Your List

""thor
These:"'...\ """" .. ,. . . . . .

L.J.

The .First Floor Is w~ere you'll find Houseware gifts and there are many, many items
awa1tmg your selechon. Clothes Hampers . Irons . Skillets . Percolators . Cookware .
Dinnerware and a host of fine gift merchandise. On the First Floor the;e·s a big
selection of Billfolds · Handbags · Womens Hosiery . Scarves . Costume Jewelry .
Table Covers · Towels· Sheets, plus the fine Lingerie Deparlment wi lh Slips . Panlies
· Radios· Gowns · Bras · Girdles · Slippers and Umbrellas. ·

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Select your gift wrappings · Bows . Ribbon . Hallmark Cards . Christmas Candy .
Typewriters in the lsi llpor Nollons Department.

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Elberfelds Toy Store is close by with fine toys and gifts for boys and girls of all ages.
We urge you to use our lay·Away plan to hold your sei ' ctions until Christmas.

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Elberfelds Main Store. Toy Store and Mechanic
Street Warehouse are open every day ·t rom 9:30
to 5 and on Friday and Saturday 9: 30 to 9 p.m.

,

Ciliii~'1T IC,,,.NMII'c;G

•KNIT DRESS SLACKS
•MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
eWEMBLY liES
eHANES UNDERWEAR

•LEE WORK AND WESTERN WEAR
• CARHARTT BROWN DUCK
WORK CLOTHES·
eMEN AND BOYS.PAJAMAS

, SGT. STRIPBS••• li'O;RBVBR
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• MEN'S ROBES ·
eSWEATERS FOR MEN AND BOYS.

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•FlANNEL WORK SHIRTS
eMEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS WITH ZIP-OUT UNING
eHANDKEROIIEFS
• BOYS .SPORT AND DRESS SHIRTS
•MEN'S AND BOYS.HOSIERY .
eM EN'S AND BOYS .COATS AND JACKETS
•SWEATSHIRTS FOR MEN AND BOYS
•SUSPENDERS

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•PARIS BELTS

MADE
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We urge you to stop in the
busy Mens and Boys
Department no.w. Look
around and buy early.

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11th I "Four for Fun" minf.vacation \n ,Jny of the above

' ...... ,our holiday during tho week ·or on e woekend . . .
- lflt plan more thin onct. Tho pion 11 ovallable ih the
~
. four pttlls only, November 15 throush March. 31.

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Is t~uly an excellent place to buy gifts for the men and boys on
your list. Tremendous selections - excellent values. Capable
salespeople to help you find what you want.

c:.w. .... · - hrti
IIIII, 11., - ( - %...4411

tllfDUah lunch tho third day, (Meals m1y be ordered from

I

The Men's and Boys' Department
On The lst Floor

Clrllr

the IIIIIIU.)

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OUT
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l'ftllrl perkS. One low price coverw lodging f9r two nights
and Ill mahi 'from evening dinner on the day of arrival

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AND Rt.INNINGI WA:I·ER. •• ~
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IT, M!iN.,.SHALLWE.
GO GET'EM'r

WEI-L,SURE...

WJ:U., BAFfO, · l FIGGERE.P I
IT I..OOKS LJJ:&lt;J;; \\OULD B&amp;!
WU'Rii INI

WHY NOTP

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A6TAINL£65 .
6TEEL.. FIRE

HYc:&gt;RANT.

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DU~ I NG I'T'f

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"YOU'RE MISSING OUT ON A LOT fll I~UTT CAaE. DEAl! \
PRODUctS ~£ CHOCK.flll.l, Qf lf.u,ID LOTIQNSf'

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1'1NY PI.AN1'6· 1'1N" MOL.!:'

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OF AIR. WHSN '!jlfY L.ANt:' ON
A J'liCf Of:= rJAMP 1=001' IN
YOUit KI1CI&lt;I&amp;N
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1'0 GI.OW, JUS'f' ItS CA~'T'6
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I-lAVlNG MARITAL. .

PROBL.EMS.

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O'Nf.A'-

.. · B~U,GS BUNNY

....------! CAN'r tAT WITH NOISE
LIKE. THAT. GOING ON ...

AND SOME'
GAMBL-ING

ALL 'THOSE
PRESSURES HAVE
. DRIVEN M£
. 10 !)RINK.

DE!n:S ..

AND OVE:R~

·DUE JA')&lt;ES.

IT15 BAD !=OR MY
Dl01;5TI(::t-i ' r - -.-.::;

·CONSIDER 1HE POSIBI!.ITY'OF.HAV(t'JG
YOV~S~LF 1"AKEN

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IF I HAVE..

lleiu1~_ahl 1

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'BARTENDER, TW . 'THIS
MMJ 10 ~10P ~T~RING
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fol\fi,

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·HOtl6'ST~~ ~~we
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'FROM 'DOOL.I~TL'E CO!..LE&lt;ii.E

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PARIS (UP!) -White House adviser
·H~nry A.IG~ger drove to a township 30
miles wes~ of Paris for his second f'lleeling
today With Hanoi . diplomats on ·an
agreement to end lhe Vietnam War. Even·
the reluctant Sotilh Vietnamese said the
talks were in the "final" stage
·
!Gssinger met for two and a
hours
thi~ morning with Hanoi Politburo
member le Due Tho at the North Viet. namese villa in suburban Oloisy le Roi and
drove this afternoon even further from

Paris for the second meeting of the day. A
third ineeting was rep\)l'ted • set for
Tuesday.
· ·
Paris diplomats were expressing optimism a bout peace prospects and there
was growing belief a cease.fire could be
initialed by the United States and North
Vielnam by Dec. 12 or 15, with American
prisoners of war to start coming home in
time for Christmas .
Newsmen who tailed the Presidential
envoy said the site of the second talks

hail

session - chQSen by the Americans -was
a small white house in Saini &lt;femmes, a
Village in the YveUnes area.
.
ltadio Luxembourg said the house
belooged to Group Capt. Peter Townserid,
a British World War D fighter pilot and
one-time suitor of Britain's Princess
Margaret.
Kissinger and his aide, Gen. Alexander
Haig, emerged smiling from the first
round of talk$ -the 22nd round of secret
talks -411\d French television and radio

networks reported an air of optimism armistice on Dec. 12.
surrounding the talks which were
The chief Saigon negotiator, Pham Dang
. suspended nine ·days ago for further Lam, used the expression "final" phase
consultations between Kissinger and for the first time today in a speech to a
President Nixon .
foreign press luncheon in Paris as
Diplomatic sources said it was possible . Kissinger was meeting Tho for the first
Kissinger would initial a draft peace ac- session.
cord, leaving a full-fledged signing
Asked if Saigon'sdemands had been met
ceremony for later in the month. The Paris he said he had been briefed by the
le Monde newspaper said the Saigon American side "but I cannot go into detaUs
government had instructed army and in this final stage."
administration officials to pre~e for an
"South Vietnam will sign this cease-fire

Now You Know

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

••:fHE.N I GLUf-D

Dev.oted To The In_tere$ls OfTMMeigs-Mason Area
MO~DAY, DECEMBER 4, 1972

1HEMGN

WASHINGTON (UP!) Contending "the very survival" of the American system
of government is at stake, Sen.
Olarles McC. Mathias Jr., RMd., today opened informal
hearings on the need for
congressional refonn.
Mathias, a long-time ad·
vocate of shaking up the
congressional system, said
Congress has becoine a
·"separate and thoroughly
unequal branch of our national
government," losing power to

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By United Press Intematlooal
.
.
C.LEVELAND - BUSINESSMEN SPOULD welcome laws
·W bldl, 1 lat PJ)UuUon~rlllan ftgllt lllem, anofflolal-of one
of the world's largest manufacturers of foods and detergents said
today.
K. H. Veldhuts, director of Unilever Ltd., of london, told the
first International Pollution Engineering C&lt;!ngress today
"enlightened legislation" puts all companies on an equal competitive basis and prevents unscrupulous companies from
gaining an uniair advantage. "Once standards have been set by
legislation, it is to the advantage of industry to use the environmental resources of air, water and space as efficiently and
economically as it uses other resources," Veldhuis said.
•1

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b)r Crooks &amp; Lawrence

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WHAT DO YOI.J Ml=AN--

•'60, NO 60"1!

.TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

the executive so it is now "lillie
more than a constitutional
relic.''
Joining him in the ad hoc
effort to spotlight the need for
reform was Sen. Adlai E.
Stevenson l!I, D-Ill. They
called 15 witnesses to testify
over the next three days.
Among those scheduled for
today were Lucy Wilson Benson, national president of the
League of Women Voters;
Russell Hemenway, national
BALLOT COUNT SET
Ballots In the Meigs
Agriculture Stabilization and
Conservation Community
Committee Election will be
counted at the local ASCS
office at 9 a. m. Wednesday.
The convention for election
of the county committee will
be held at the Masonic
Temple building in Pomeroy
at 10 a. m., Dec. 15. These
meetings are open to the
public without regard to
race, color, creed, sex or
national origin.

Damages asked

I

fuliri south portions and over
central sections a mixture of
rain, freezing rain and snow
through Tuesday. Over the
extreme south portion, lows ·
tonight in the mid 30s.

Survival hearings begun

UK'B -rn·rs!

CAPTAIN EASY

Weather

enttne

VOL XXIV NO. 162

SIZES:•.

treaty later it the key·points are resolved
in a manner acceptable to us," Lain said.
"Naturally, the accord· which concerns
us must limit the cease-fire."
Lam said he had no confirmation North
Vietnam agreed to pull out its troops.
Asked about published reports of a partial
withdrawal, he said: "That l have read
only in the press."
Asked If Saigon would accept verbal
assurances, Lam insisted: "It is essential
(Continued on Page 10)

•

The mast northerly poinl in
the British Isles is lhe Mucca
Flugga lighthouse located off
Unsl in Shetland.

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MDTIONLe#~l
I

CAPE KENNEDY- WITH THE THRF.AT of a crippling
strike removed, ground crewmen resumed the Apollo 17 countdown today and the relaxed astronauts had clear sailing toward
their launch to the moon Wednesday night.
The labor dispute was eliminated late Sunday night when 60
technical writers and graphic illustrators unanimously approved
an agreement with the Boeing Co. A union spokeSman said it will
come within "A few percentage points" of restoring pay cuts
they suffered 20 months ago.
PITrSBURGH - ATrENTION IN THE court.()rdered
United Mine Workers of America (m.IWA) election switched
today from the coal fielda to U. S. District Court where an in·
surgent vice presidential candidate was filing a $750,000 libel suit
against supporters of incumbent union President W. A. "Tony"
Boyle. Miners f.or Democracy (MFD) candidate Mike Trbovich
saldlhe suit would charge members of the Committee to Re-elect
w. A. ''Tony" Boyle with publishing an article which "falsely,
maliciously and wrongfully" accused him of supporting antiunion legislation.
• Emmett Speelman, one of the defendants, accused Trbovich
of ''using a ploytosetasldedamaglng evidence."
The legal action by'I'rbovich,ofClarksvllle, Pa., came on the
fourth day of the election pitting the MFD slate headed by Arnold ·
Miller, of Ohley, W. Va., against Boyle. The balloting is being
staggered over an eight-day period. to allow U. S. Labor
Department supervision. With about 205,000 UMWA members
from Alaska to West Virginia eligible·to vote, the turnout was
reported moderate at mast polling places in Pennsylvania and
west Virginia, key states where the candidates did most of their
campaigning. In southern Virginia, where 2,000 of about 10,000
union members are pensioners partial to Boyle, heavy voting
was reported over the weekend.

·A NURSERY Is provided at bi-monthly Family Planning
clinics in Meigs County for mothers who bring small c!illdren
along (left, above). Toys have been provided; Mrs. Becky
Teaford supervises play time for the children. Above, Family
Planning clinic physician is Dr. Roger Daniels, of Pomeroy,
a wjdely recognized ''family doctor", which Is a fastvanishing kind of practitioner in today's medical
specialization. Nearly 200 women have sought out the services of Family Planning, the federally funded program ·
designed to curb population excess. Family Planning is offered in bi-monthly clinics at Veterans Memorial Hospital. A
complete report on this service appeared in the SundayTimes Sentinel of Dec. 3written bY Charlene Hoeflich.

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Three traffic accidents investigated by the Meigs County
·Sheriff's Dept. over lhe
weekend caused heavy
properly losses but no personal
injuries. ·
Saturday at 7:35p.m. on SR
7 al Tuppers Plains, Theodore
D. Connolly, Reedsville, Rt. 1,
was driving north when a
second car driven by Leonard

.

I" '

. I

ST. LOUIS (UPI) -The summer as chairman of the
struggle for control of the party, and Struss, former
Democratic party shaped up national treasurer of the party,
today as a collision of "sym- claimed to have enough sup.
bois" -- Texan Robert Strauss port to win the chal!'manship
and the old line regulars va. battle at a showdown ml!j!ling
incumbent Jean Westwood and of the national committee in
the forces of the "new . Washington Saturday.
politics."
Both Mrs. Westwood,
Strauss scored an important
national committeewoman preliminary victory Sunday by
from Utah until Sen. GeorgeS. wimlng the endorsement of the
McGovern tapped her last National Democratic

chairman who would not be a
"symbol" of the Democratic
factions which have been at
war since McGovern and his
supporters took over party
control at Miami· Beach in
July.
But Strauss supporters
rammed the endorsement
through, first defeating an
effort by Gov. John Gilligan of
Ohio to make a blanket endorsement of a half-dozen
Democrats as acceptable for
'party chairman. A possible
factor in the result was word
relayed from McGovern that
Strauss was not unacceptable
to him as party chairman.
Strauss told newsmen after
the action that he had 92 votes
-ooly 13 short of victoryalready committed to him for
the Dec. 9 national committee
session. Mrs. Westwood would
give no numbers but said she
had enough support to beat an
ouster motion and expected to
get more with her offer to stand
aside for a compromise candidate. She said Strauss could
not be regarded as such a
candidate because "he's just
as much a symbol as I aln."
Strauss went to pains to deny
that he was opposed to the
party reforms adopted at the
Democratic National Conven·
lion or was a political creature
of Jolm Connally, the former

Governors Caucus to replace
Mrs. Westwood. The governors
officially asked Mrs. Westwood
to resign and.voted 111-8 with six
abstentions in favor of the S+
year.()ld Texas lawyer· to take
over the chairmanship.
Mrs. Westwood tried to block
the Strauss endorsement by
appearing before the 28 governors and governors-elect at the
meeting with an offer to resign
in favor of a "consensus"

Society in drug trouble
WASHINGTON (UP!) Abuse of potentially deadly
barbiturate drugs - taken by
adults to sleep or to calm their
nerves and by the young for
kicks - has reached epidemic
proportions in the United
States, a Senate subcommittee

reported today.
middle-aged adults who
"ll reaches into every area slarled using barbiturates
of American life, affecting under a physician's supersuch diverse groups as school vision ... "
the
juvenile
children, college students, delinquency subcommittee
industrial workers, middle- concluded after an 16-month
class party..goers, residents of study.
our ghettos and barrios, and
" Rapidly increasing barbiturate abuse presents a
growing threat to the health
and safety of all our citizens,"
the report ~ald.
The committee, chaired by
At 11 :28a. m. a car driven by Sen. Birch Bayh, D·lnd., is.sued
Myrtle Ables, 49, long Bottom, a lengthy two.parl report of ils
pulled from Butternut Ave. into findings , summarizing
a car driven on Main St. by hearings, research and InVIckie Couch, 21, Leewood, W. terviews conducted coast to
Va . There was medium coasl
including an
damage. Mrs. Ables was cited evaluation of the "downer"
for failing to yield right of way. scene in virtually every state.
There were no injuries in any
of the accidents.
Police also said Pauline
Bing, 45, Athens, Is being
charged with driving while
intoxicated after backing into
the yard of the C. E. Blakeslee
home, Uncoln Heights at 6:58
p.m. Saturday.

3 Drivers cited

Families plan holiday parly

i

conservative Texas governor
wbo founded Democrats for
Nixon in the 1972 campaign.
"He doesn't own me. and I
don't own him," Stral?lll told
newsmen, emphasizing that
while they were friends he had
opposed Connally on many
political questions. But Strauss
also said he did not believe the
"quota system" for choosing
Democratic convention delegates had worked well, a stand
taken by many In the party's
"new politics" faction to be a
code position for seeking
return of· the party to more
conservative controL
Strauss said, "! am not an
Idealogue" and added the
national committee chairman
was not the "philosophical
spokesman" for the party.
Mrs. Westwood said that
both she, a·s McGovern's
choice, and Strauss who has
the support of labor union
officials and others who lost
party influence in the 1972
reform movement, had
become " symbols of the
divisions within our party."
She said that if the governors,
congressional leaders, state
chairmen and other key ~ty
figures would agree "on another party chairman unscarred
by the differences of the past"
before Saturday, "! wiD resign ."

S. Erwin, Pomeroy, Rt. · 3,
pulled from SR 681 and turning
north in front of Connolly's car,
resulted in Connolly's striking
Erwin's car from · the rear.
There was heavy damage to
both vehicles. There was no
arrest.
Sunday on County Road 3~ In
Sutton Township, Bruce
Longworth, Springfield, Ohio,
wa~ traveling north when he
went off the road and over an
embankment. There was light
damage to his car and no
arrest. ·. •
,..
At 3:24 a. m. today on SR 7
David W. Brummage, 38,
Huntington, traveling east,
drove through the uncompleted
33-71ntersecUon separallng the
two four-lane roads and
smashed Into a concrete bridge
l!eadon. His car was
demolished: Brummage was
cited to court for not having an
operator's license.

JYew strangler
have taken
his 5th victim

may

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UP!)
- Police searched today for a
hitchhiking coed missing for
five days as fears mounted that
she may have been the fiflh
victim of a new Boston strang.
ler who preys on college girls.
Three of the ,four slain girls
were college students, two of
them at Boston University
(BUJ.

The original Boston Strangler is thought to have killed 13
women over a 19-month period
ending in January 1964, raping
and strangling mosl of the
victims.
The alleged strangler, Albert
DeSalvo, was sentenced lo life
imprisonment for ·sexual
assaults , although he was
never charged witll any of the
murders.

EXTENDED OULOOK
Cold wltb highs In the
upper 21s and 30s. Lows In
the %Gs and lows 30s Wed·-nesclay aDd Thursday aDd ill
lbe teena Friday. Achance of
snow Wednesday and mostly
nortbeut Thursday and
Friday.
• ·.·•••·.·. ::-:-: ••·:·:·:-:-: : ··:·:·:-:•' •/·:·:··

selections by the Rotary
Quartet · of Cash Bahr, Bob
Baumgarner, Vernon Weber .
and Chel Tannehill.
Rotarians with children may
bring a gift for them. .
Plans for the party were
completed at an open meellng
of lhe club Friday following
dinner at Heath United
Methodist Church · with II!: ""-~~., .J. l;. ,..: f?-1". tt. r
President
Gene
Riggs fll\t MlJ~' 1J ~ 1~1 1 iMA IAlS
presiding.

than an archaic echo, bearing
little resemblance to its
original form and little
relevance to contemporaary
needs," Mathias said In an
opening statement.
Mathias said the hearings
would focus not only on such
traditional targets for reform
such as the seniority system
and secrecy, but also on such
"acutely critical areas" as the
ability of Congress to cope with
the federal budget.

Losses heavy in
2 of 3 accidents

Democrat faction symbols in collision

Three drivers were cited to
Mayor's Court fo'ilowing as
many traffic accidents in
Pomeroy Saturday.
At 10 :55p.m.autosdriven by
Robert Rawlings, 25, Pomeroy,
and Denver Kapple, 28,
Pomeroy, collided on West
Main St., causing medium
damage to both vehicles .
fulwlings was cited for leaving
the scene of an accident and
reckless operation.
AI 10:30 p. m. on the riverfront parking lot, a car driven
by John Aslf, 18, Pomeroy,
SEATl'LE, WASH. - CHRISTMAS' TREE rustling has backed into one driven by
become such a problem in the Pacific Northwest that tbe FBI has William Hayes, 22, Pomeroy,
now stepped Into the picture. &amp;lpervisor Don R. Campbell of causing medium 1\amage. Ash ·
Snoqualmie National Forest called in t_he_federal government · was cited for leaving the scene
after range·rs and guards were unable to halt poaching of trees of the accident. . ·
from reforestation areas and private farms.
.
More than 500 trees have been stolen from the White River
U----~tllst?:ictof the national forest In the past two weeks. Other nearby
fir forests have been equally hard hit. TOO tree rustlers violate ·
both federal and state laws, wt so far no one has been arrested.
Campbell said the thieves appea.r to be highly organized.

· Members and their families
of lhe Middlepor-t-Pomeroy
Rotary Club will meet Friday
evening at 6:30 In the Mtd·
dleport Elementary School for
their annual Chrislmas dinner
and parly. Mr. and Mrs. Lee
McComas, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslej! and the Rev. and
Mra ..RObert Baumgarner are
making arrangements.
There wiD be entertainment,
Including Chrlatmaa season

A suit for $1,()94.75 damages
alleged suffered in an
automobile accident has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Courl by Harold T. Nice,
Pomeroy, Rl. 3, against Donald
C. Griffin, Rl. I, Little
Hocking.
The pet(ti.on says the accident occurred April B, 1972,
. on SR 7 when a truck driven by
William M. Douglas, owned by
Griffin, negligenlly damaged
plaintiff's car.

director of the National Committee for an Effective Congress, and Clareoce Mitchell,
director of the Washington
Bureau of the NAACP.
"What is at stake in lhe effort
to refonn Congress, to enable it
once more !&lt;; exercise its
responsibilities and assume lis
role under the Constitution and
under our system of separate
and equal powers, Is nothing
less lhan lhe very survival of
that system as anything more

• .&gt;;.:.

TWO ARRESTED
Two persons, unidentified
here, were apprehended by·the
Athens
County
Pollee
Department after breaking
and entering the Elmer
Althouse
property . in
Pagetown, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Depl. reported
Saturday. Entry to the ~ouse
was made by kicking in a
kitchen door.

'.

THE WINNERS - Three winners in the Mason County
Junior Miss Pageant 'Saturday night in the Wahama High
School au~torium were, I to r, Peggy Holllday, Point

Pleaaant; Dianna Harris, Wahama High, and Pam !lommer,

;

I

~

Point ·Pleasant High. Equal wimen, they will represent
Mason County In the statewide contest. -Photo·· by Sam
;Nicholslll.

,

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