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;

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport·l'omcroy. 0 .. Friday. Nov . 14, 1975

Weather

'

Tainted money
.

charge widens
WASHINGTON &lt;UP II - The 1970 Senate
campaigns of Sen. William Brock, R-Tenn. , and
former Rep. William Cramer, R-Fla., received
$7,000 in alleged illegal corporate contri butions
from the Gulf Oil Co .. according to federal court
records .
·The latest allegations raise to at least 18 the
number of cun·ent and former members of
Congress who allegedly received tainted con tributions from Gulf since 1960. Court records also
indicated Thursday that:
- Kuwait funneled a specified amount to former
contribution through Gulf to Gov. Francis Sargent of
Sen. Mark Hatfield, ROre. Massachusetts.
- Former Gulf orricial o
The information on Hatcontributed $2,000 to the 1970 field was developed by a
campaign of Boston Mayor special Gulf committee
Kevin White and an un- reviewing the corporation 's
fund, SEC investigators said.
·J·
The . investl~ators said
Kuwait was mterested m
telling the Arab oil viewpoint
in America . ·
The court records also
Veterans Memorial Hospital indicated that White and
ADMITTED - Darlene Sargent rece ived conSpangler, Rutland ; Maxine tributions from an illegal
Dugan , Pomeroy ; Charles Gulf fund .
Lemley, Middleport ; Carl
In a sworn statement filed
Gheen, Pomeroy; Ri chard in the U.S. District Court,
•'ord, Albany.
Bernard Markwell said be
DISCHARGED - Ted contributed $2,000 to White's
Patlerson and Agnes Isaacs. campaign for mayor against
l.ouise Day Hicks in 1971.
Markwell, who retired in
PLEASANT VALLEY
AugUBt, said he made the
DISCHARGES - Edna contribution to White when he
Doerfer, West Co lumbia ; was serving as Gulf's
Lawrence Roush, Mason : regional vice president for
Cheryle Beaver, Gallipolis; government relations In New
Bonqie Holly , Glenwood; England.
Malthew Eshenaur, Point
The court records also said
Pleasant ;
Mrs .
Paul Gulf's former vice president,
Raymond Fyffe, Willow; Claude Wild, made an unDaniel 'Jenks, Mason, and determined contribution to
Clift on Bowlers, Robe rts- Sargent in an unspecified
burg.
year.
The depositions were taken
to
develop the Securities and
Holzer Medical Center
Exchange Commission's case
(Discharges, Nov.l3) ·
against
Wild, who is charged
Caroline Black, Marshall
with
violating
securities law
Bland, Ruby Bond, Clarence
hy
aileged,ly
helping
to falsify
Boyer, Teresa Brown ,
corporate
financial
records.
Florence Bunch , Teresa
Brock
and
Cramer
gave up
~ok, Cora Denny, ·Herbert
East, . Nicholas Farrar , their HoUBe seats In 1970 to
Glenna Frey, Ronald Grimm, run for the Seriate. Brock
Mary Howell, Tony Johnson, defeated incumbent
Eva Kauff, Hazel Kinnard , Democrat Albert GOre in a
Carol Lambert, Mary Lip- close race. Cramer lost to
pencott, Mrs. Thomas Mayes Democrat Lawton Chiles.
A spokesman for Brock
and son, Billy McCully,
Rhonda McDaniel , Carrie said the senator does not
Munyan, Larry Poling, recall receiving money from
Leland Sisson, Flora Wess. a Gulf operative. However,
the spokesnian s&amp;jd, Brock's
(Births, Nov.l3)
campaign
files for t970 were
Mr. and Mrs. James Adhelng
reviewed.
dison , daughter, Grove City ;
Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Bradshaw, daughter, Pedro;
FIRE DOUSED
Mr . and Mrs . Richard
RUTLAND - There was
Manley, son, Vinton ; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Marcum, · minor damage to the Jerry
daughter, Vinton ; Mr . and Black residence here Friday
Mrs. Paul Mitchell, son, morni ng when a fire started
LangsvUie ; Mr . and Mrs. in the chimney area. The
Larry Powell. son, Racine. Rolland Fire Dept. answered
the call .

Hosp TAL

NEWS

We wear many hats

Mrs. Rose Moler dies Aid .plan

Hearings set
on Bell's bid
for rate hike
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio wiU begin hearings
Monday on an Ohio Bell
Telephone Co. request for the
highest rate increase in the
state's history.
Bell wants to hike its rates
to collect $216 million more a
year from its 2.3 miillon
customers. The utility also
has proposed a series of increases for services offered
to businesses.
Bell · has argued that it
needs more revenuue
becaUBe the cost of providing
service has increased since
its last rate hike.
"The rates we're now
charging our customers were
authorized in AugUBt, 1973,
and are based on what it cost
to provide phone service in
1970-71,"
a
company
spokesman said.
"This means we're
operating on what It cost to do
business four years agowhich might be possible were
it not for inflation."
Some observers beUeve the
hear.ing will last from six to
eight weeks.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, fair Sunday and
Monday and a chance of
showers Tuesday. Highs
will be In the 50s to the
lower 60s and lows will be
In the 30s to the lower 40s.
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

Weather
Chance of snow nurri~s ,
colder tonighl , lows in the
mid 20s. Cloudy, not as cold
Saturday, highs In the lower
lOs . Probability of preciplation 60 per cent today, 30
per ce nt tonight 20 per cent
Saturday.

We'll pol on lhe rigl11 hat

pome_roy

pomeroy

tuppers~~ =~~na
the bank or
the century

etlobll~

Member FDIC

1872

MEIGS MAN DIES
POINT PLEASANT
Dana R. Bradshaw, Point
Pieasant, died early today In
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He ·
was born in Meigs Gotinty
near Pomeroy, a son of the
hlte Park H. and U.ulsa Kom
Bradshaw. Funeral services
will be conducted Sunday at 2
p.m. from (.'hapman Funeral
Home here. Friends will be
received Saturday after 2
p.m . at the funeral home.

IN fron t line of the con'INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP! )
fr ontation between White
- Meadow Bright, winner of
House and Congress over . nine of her last 10 starts, is
investigation of U.S. in- expected to rule as a
lelligence activities, , House lukewarm choice tonight al
lnlelllgence Co mmit tee Hollywood Park 'in Western
chairman Olis Pike (ii.1ii. v.) Harness Racing's $50,000
demands release of classified Leland Stanford Stakes for
CIA documents.
trotters.
· The fiUy's opposition in the
onNnlle Stanford, which IS
Umited to 3-year-olds, will
Include Noble Rogue, vicTONIGHT
torioll8 in the prestlgioll8
THRU SUN.
Kentucky Futurity this year
and a heat winner In the
NOV. 14· 1•
Hambletonian.
, Also entered in the Stanford
SMILE
are Surefire Hanqver,
Glasgow,
Song !Iori, Cuba
ITechnicoior)
King and Saranac.
Joe O'Brien wiU handle
'Showstartsal7:00p.m. _ Meadow Bright for trainer
Del Miller.

MEIGS THEATRE

'' ·~·

Famitie.~_

.

SUNDAY.
NOVEMBER 16,
1975
.
-·· ·· -

VOL. 10 NO. 42

MIDDLEPORl -POM EROY

.

PRICE 25 CENTS ... _
'

~

••
•

.....?

••

'· 1'1·

•

.~
~

RACINE- Pllillip Fisher, Racine, was steersman from 1964 to 1967 on the 729 foot ore ~
boat Edmund Fitzgerald which .sank in Lake Superior Monday night with the loss of all 29 :
Cl'ewmen. Fisher, who knew most of the men on the ship, said he was always afraid of the -::;
vessell,on which he made 52trlpa, in 1966breaking the tonnage record.
:
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R SqUad
was called to 206 Condor St. at
3:45 p.m. Thursday for
Mamie Buchanan who was
Hi. She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 8:18
p.m., Thursday night the
squad went to the Sheriff's
residence where Richard
Ford, Albany, had gone after

allegedly being injured in a
. ht H 1
k
f1g
. e a so was ta en to .

lost coon

TWO

•

1 femal t

E ng lish , bla ck and whitt
spOtted with nam e plate ~

Veterans Memorial Hospital.

LODGE TO MEET
Middleport Masonic U.dge
363 will meet Tuesday, Nov.
18, at 7 p.m. for · the
fellowcrafl degree . All
master masons are invited.

dog s,

l~:~~ a ~i;,~ t~~e~~~~ol:~~1

black . ta,n , and white . Lost
in vi cinity of Horse cavt
and Eagle Ridge nea ~

Bashan . Reward ror an"'

information leading to iht
ret urn of the dog s, or thel,.

whereabouts . Pleue pt)on~
843-2701 or (6141 985-3961 . :
.

ll -14 -31&lt;

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

~

Elberfelds.ln Pomeroy
Open Friday and Saturday Nights Til 8

WURK IS PROGRESSING on the Flrlll National
. Bank's new full banldng faeWty In Vinton. According to John
E. Halliday, prealdent of the Flrll National Bank, the new
structure ihould be completed by the first of January. Carter

and,Evana Contractors of Gallipolis is doing the work. The
old bank buUdlng, a landmark in Vinton, will be tom down in
order to provide a drive in window and parking facilities at

OHIO EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, lair
Monday and a chance of showers
Tuesday or Wednesday. Highs will be iD
the tiGs to the low 70s and lows will be In
the mid 40s to the mid 50s.

Is now open qt our
• Elberfalds. Toyland
.
Warehouse on Mechanic Street.

:-

Elberfelds I" ·p~meroy

.

11

Famous 1mperial'.

MATTRESSES

and BOX
SPRINGS·
REGULAR s109.95.

EACH

Deadline is

''

• Spacial Sale of Mens and Boys Sweaters In
an excellent selection at Sale Prices.

Special Purchase and Sale!

PT. PLEASANT - · Miller Brewing
Co., the nation's fifth largest manufacturer of beer, haa apparently ruled out the
Mld.Ohlol Valley as a site for a multimillion dpllar brewery that the COIIIpllly
plans to construct somewhere in the MidAtlantic region.
Acc!l'dlnc to aourcea, the lllal'ch
cmunll- tram the wholly-owned subslduary of Pllillp'Mllrril, Inc., looted at
the FMC property In Parkersburg, and
sitea near Point Pleuant IDd Ravenswood
earlier thla year.
Those locations were apparently turned
down for a variety of reasons, one of which
was the hl«h railroad freight rate the
company would have to PlY to reach allits
markets in the Mld·Allantlc region
sources said.
....
'
Point Pleuant Mayor John c.
Mlll(!rove, who had been leading the effort
to attract Miller to a Muon County site
said he was told by officiab of the brewerr
that Maaon County had "one of the top

• Decorator Fabric Quilted Top

On Sale While. They l.ast

Iocations" of the over 200 Initially considered. ·
fl{usgrave said raU and truck freight
rates were cited as the reasons for the
Mason County site, loca!OO just north of
Point Pleasant, apparently falling out of
thole running.
M11111rave ssid saturday· morning,
however, that the brewery officials have
indicated to him there stU! li a "albn
chance" that the Mason COunty site would
come in for re~onslderatlon. liefore the
selection Is made. The · brewery search
committee told Mlll(!rave that they were
very Impressed wtth the Mason ~unty
location and if something would happen
that would cause them to change their
minds about a location where freight rates
are more attractive, they would reconaider the, site here.
Sources indicated, though , that West
Vitglnia Is still tn the running for the
project that Miller officials say wlil cost

'Heal-st trial may be
delayed 2 m9nths
J1:y DONALD B. '111ACDEY
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The judge
wbo will II')' Dewlllll*' htlrela Pltrida
Hearst will hold an informal meeting In his

Chambers Monday that may evenlullly

· result in a trill delay of nearly two
months.

, U.S. Oiltrlct Judge Ollver J. Carter Aid
he waa wllllna to tallllrtelly out of court
with the u. s. attomQ' and defense
' lawyera prior lo I ooUrl .-ion IC~
for Nov. 20.
.
The defe111e, wbicb hal COIIIIItelltly ·
liked far 1 trill date later than the Dec. I~
one 111 by ,Judge carter, will undoublediy
bring up a dec!Jian of the u. s. Court of
Applal8 far the Ninth Qrcult 11111111 this
-* In the cue of aceuaed pnlldentlal
lllllllnt Sara JIM Moon.
The appellate court turned down Mill
Moon'• attanpt lo halt her trial, allo
alated fc:Jr Dec. ~.but ruled thai a district

-

Program approved

in Meigs County
• Full Bed Size and Twin Size
• Extra Firm Orthopedic-Type ~upport

.ByRICHARDH.GROWALD
RAMBOUILLET, France (UP I)
Secluded with bodyguards and servants in
a medieval chateau, President Ford and
the leaders ol five industrial nations
opened a three-&lt;lay summit conference
Saturday on shared problems of recession,
Inflation and energy shortage.
This first postwar economic summit
lrought together Ford, FranCe's President
Valery Giseard d'Estaing, W~t Ger- .
many's Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, and
Prime Ministers Harold Wilson of Britain,
Takeo Mild of Japan and Aldo Moro of
Italy-men whose nations grind out II per
cent of all .nonCommunist industrial
production and now have more than 14
million persons unemployed.
One by one, they arrived in black
UmOilinea at the turreted Rambouillet
(bateau 30 miles southwest of Paris and

took a flashing saber salute from 12
French Republican Guard horsemen at the
gateway.
French police deployed some 3,000
security men in Paris and around the
walled Rambouillet eatate, )Yhere French
kings once played and where Napoleon
romanced Josephine.
The first formal summit session began
in a marble chateau ball at 12:30 p.m.
EST. Aides said the leaders made Opening
statements on the general economic
picture, with lllscusaion to focus later on
recessionary problems, inflation,
unemploymerit, world trade, currency
exhange and other problem areas.
The Europeans, especially Schmidt and
Glscard, may press Ford politely at the
summit to take action on such issues as
federal aid to New York City- whose
bankruptcy, they believe, could have

worldwide recesslonary impact.
But U.S. officials made cl~ they expe&lt;;l
no concessions or major declaions Oil
coordinated economic policy at Rambouillet.
_
The Aniericans see the sununit more aa
a kind of top level seminar and general
talkfest on economic ills, with each nuip ·
leading a session on his pet economl(i
topic. Ford, for example, will lead tile
energy talks and worked on his speech ilil
the subJect after he arrived In the chalet.
"They meet to give their peoples the
sense that they are masters of their
destiny, not subject to bllnd forces beyond
their control," said Secretary of !!tate
Henry A. K!Minger, wbo accompanied
Ford along with Treasury Secretary
William Simon and other econoinlc
speciallsts:
Mra. Ford remained ·in Washington .

the new bank .

e.Take advantag!B of the Spacial Clearance
of Ladles Fall Sportswear and Dresses At
% Price.
• Special Sale of Mens and Boys Winter
Jackets In a tremendous selection at
Sale Prices.·

·~

Rresident Ford in :.:
France
summit

..

ONLY 20 TO SELL

s
NOW

Than 12iJOO

"

Smith 's court Thursday
night,
Fined were Dwight Oliver,
Pomeroy, failure to yield
right of way ; Joseph McCarty, Cheshire, speeding;
Sammy Lewis, Racin e,
speeding; Ronald Arms,
Pomeroy, reckless operation
and Clarence Bing, Pomeroy,
disorderly conduct. Forfeiting a $250 bond posted for
driving while intoxicated was
Arnold Jividen of Gallipolis,
and Joe Keathley , Letart, W.
Va., forfei!OO an $18.70 for
speeding. .

\

ttdittt

Your Invited GueNt
Reachinl! More

Devuted Tu The (ireater Middle Ohio Valley

Chardon board Five are fined
Five defendants were fined
gives teachers
$10 and costs each and two
forfeited bonds in
$350 increase others
Pomeroy Mayor Dale E.
CHARDON, Ohio (UP!) A new $1.9 million contract
which will increase teachers'
starllng salarie~~ by $350 was
approved Thursday night by
ihe Chardon Board of
Education.
Board President Dale
Ernst said neither side was
happy with the contract, "but
we are willing to llve with it."
The pact, retroactive to
September and in effect
through August, increases
the starting salary for
teachers from $8,150 to $8,500
and will hike pay for teachers
with master's degrees from
$15,648 to $18,320.
"Most teachers were not
happy with the new con. tract," Chardoo Classrooll)
Teachers Association
President Albert Toth said.
"But they didn't feel slronger
action should be taken."
The teachers association
ratified the contract earlier
in the week.

tmts

.Fair tonight with IOjVS in
the upper 30s and low 40s.
Most)y sunny and warmer
Monday wHh highs SS to 80.

.•. &gt;

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ALUMS TO MEET
A meeting will be held at
Eastern High School Sunday
at 2 p.m. In regard to an
upcoming Southern-Eastern
Alumni Football Game. All
in teres ted Eastern football
alumni are urged to attend.
EARTH SHAKEN
EUREKA, Calif. (UP! ) A large earthquake centered
under the Pacific Ocean
shook re.siden ts ·out of their
beds at 1:30 a.m. today and
caused a tidal wave alarm.
No damage was reported.

We can lake care of all you r 1111anclo1needs.
From checking . saving and protecting your money.
to loaning you money Just ask

(Continued from page 1)
billion rescue plan - · ''the
last chance to avoid default
by New York City" - New
York Gov. Hugh Carey laid
before leaders of his state's
legislature Thursday.
Legislative sources said the
governor proposed massive
increaies in state and local
taxes, budget cuts, a freeze
on salaries for state workers
and a plan to delay
repayment of debts to city
bondholders. If the fiscal
measures are approved at an
emergency session of the
legislature - Carey reportedly told shocked legislative
leaders "everything is
negotiable" - the sales tax
could rise to 9 per cent in the
state and 10 per cent in New
York City.
Caref said he had not
gotten any promises from
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Washington, "But I assume
that they would not put us
FRANCO LIVES
through this exercise for
MADRID, Spain (UP!) nothing." Carey and state
- Doctors tesled the brain legislative leaders planned
of Generalissimo Fran- meetings with Ford adcisco Franco today to ministration officials here
determine whether he w•• today.
still alive.
Officially, the White House
They concluded his brain said only that it was waiting
was still active but said the for signed commitments
rest of his body was totally from all participants in the
dependent on machines.
Carey plan before it would
"The control of medical make any commitments.
sedation by way of elecAlbany and Congress read
troenc ephalogralc rethe signal as meaning Ford
cording shows his brain
had abandoned his insistence
waves nonnal for this type
that the city would receive
of therapy," a statement
nothing from Washington
from Franco's 32 doctors
except assistance in entering
said.
bankruptcy.

RUTLAND
Mrs. Hose sons, Dnn Goble, Colwltbus;
Denny Mol er. 99, a rcsidcn l or Earl Sansbury of Sl. Pelcrslh c Dexlc r Road in the hurg, ~· Ia . , and Hoy Sansbw·y
Langsville area, dietl Thurs- of Middl eporl ; a grandduy al the Syrafuse Nursing daughter, Ollie Goble of
Home foll owi ng a four month Colwitbus ; a brother, Narley
illness.
Hysell. Bradbw·y, and seven
Mrs . Moler was burn on greal-grandchildren.
Sepl. 29, 1876, in Meigs
Mrs. Moler was af£iliated
County, lhe daughlcr of the with the Midway Community
lal e Oscar a nd Caroline Church and the Langs~ille
Yeau~"r Hysell . She was Chrislian Church.
preceded In death also by two
Funeral services will be
husbands, Charles Denny and held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Hoy Moler; lwo sons, two Rutland Chapel of the Walker
daughlers. four brothers, and Funeral Home with Dr. R. D. ·
fi ve sisters.
Brown officiating. Burial will
A hom emaker all of her be in the Robinson Cemetery.
lire. Mrs. Moler is survived Friends may call at the
by lhree daughters, Mrs. funeral home anytime until
Jessie Sansbury, Middleport ; lime of Services. The family
Mrs . Bessie Showalter , will receive friends from 2 to
Langsville and Mrs. Dora 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . today.
Ellis , Albanv · th,e• . g'onrl-

+

Clllll'l judge couid aclude Ume spent on

paychlatrlc evaluation from the 80-day
federal requirement of the Speedy Trial
Act.
The Speedy Trial Act provides that a
prlloner held without bail must be
releued frup CUIIOdy if nol brooghl to
trial within .80 daya. Far Mill Hearst, aa
well u Mill Moore, that would mean trial
by Dec. 'II. However, defense attorneys in
11ch cue have been attempting to set
aboUt 110 days of court«dered peychlatrlc
enmlnatlona acluded from the 90 days.
On Nov. 10 CIIW ruled that the
enmlnationa lhowed Mil&amp; Hearst campetent to sland trial and set her trial date.
At the 111111e time he lilt Nov. 20 to hear
pretrial malten, including a defenae
motion far reconalderation ol her com-.
petency.
. Meanwhile delenae attorney Albert
Johnlon WI! ta1kln&amp; with Dr. William W.
Slrlent. London expert m brainwashing,
with a view to g~ him to join the
delenae llllm. Dr. Sarpnt, former chief of
the Oepartment of l'lydlolocltal Medicine
at St. Tbomaa Ho.Pitallrt Lilldm,
here FridaY for conftranc• wltll Johnlon.
Johnlon ulij the talb lnvo!?e whether or
oot the doctor would aam1ne Mila Hearst
and becCIIIie a defense expert wllnea.

new

POMEROY - The Gallia - Meigs
Community Action Agency received notice
of approval of a Senior Emergency
Medical Allistance Progl'llll for Meigs
County. The program Ia 1po111ored. by a New organization lo
Title m Grant under the Older Americans
Act adminlatered throu1h the Ohio ·hold meet on Nov. 19
Cgignleelon on Aglnc and the Buctt:r-Hilll Hocking Valley Re&amp;ionai DevelopGAWPOL!S - Tom Jones , Grown
ment Di.ltrlct.
C..,lf, chairman for the newly organized
The Senior Emer1ency Medical Gallia County Local School District PTO
Alalstpce Program wiD provide on~ has announced that a general meeUng for
aulltlnce to needy peraw age 80 or older all interea!OO parenll wtll be held Nov. 19.
In ~ to help meet medlell ar pharJD8Cellllcll CGIII w&amp;ich It aot covered hy A meeUnc alte will be ~nnounced later.
other hulth HI'Vice ralmblnemenll. 'lbja The IUiion beKIIll at 7:~ p.m.
aullfanlle Is in addiUCJII to the lrlllsThe PTO group wu oraanized to
porlllkln, referral, and aounselllng ser- provide input for bitter education to all
Yicetl llready being provided by the children in Gallia Count)'.
Comm..nJty AcUon ApnCy OUtreach ala!!. .
Area repreaentalivea to Ihe
ror further lnlor111atlon, contact orpnlaatlon are Tom Jones, Robin Hlle,
Letha Prollltt at tha &lt;:.A.A. omce in Delw'el CGffee, Jeanie Hively, Gene
Panleroy by caWng en-ea.
Layton llld Anne Hanter.

over $1110 million to construct, and employ
well over 500 persons.
Five other states are also courting
Miller Brewing officials Including
Virginia, North Carolina, Maryland, South
Carolins, and Pennsylvania, a company ·
spokesman said. ·
Competition is apparently so keen
among them for the operation that Gov.
Arch Moore maile a trljlto Miller's corporate headquarters In Milwaukee to talk
with company representatives.
A Miller spokesman indk:ated thaf a
decision is expected within 30 to 60 daya,
and that plans call for &lt;!llstruction of the
brewery on a 11110-acre sl~ somewhere
within 200 miles of Roanoke, Va.
He said the brewery will initially
produce around 3 mlillon barrels of beer
per year, but wlll probably expand its
capacity in 10 years to over six million
barrels.
The brewing company is one of only a
few national corporations to be planning
any major inveslrnent of capital In new
plan is and equipment, during these times
of recession and lnOation .
Besides the proposed Mid-Atlantic
brewery, Miller is expanding lis plan is in
Milwaukee and Fort Worth, Tex .,'and has
just built a brewery In Fulton, N. Y.
The company's Immediate goal, ac·
CCI'ding to financial analysis: Is to produte
over 15 million barrels of beer by the end of
1976 in an effort to up the 6.2 per cent share
of the market It had in 1974.
In addition tc distributing, "Miller
High Ufe" and "Ute," the company
recently entered Into a multi-phase
agreement with U.wenbrau of Munich,
Germany, to distribute Lowenbsrau beer
throughout the Uni!OO Sta~a .

Reunifi~tion

talks underway
SAIGON, South Vietnam (UP!) - Filly
deJecates from North and South Vietnam
opened detailed Ialka Saturday on
reunification of the two countries, officials
said.
The negcitiators--25 from eaeh of the two
Communist counlrles-met at the former
Independence Palace in Saigon. 'lbe Ialka,
· expected to Jut a week, would pave the
way lor general elections in both countries, a joint government, and a unified
national asaembly.
The streets of Saigon were decorated
with North and South Vietnamese flags for
the weeklong negotiations.
The delegation from the north was
headed by Cbalrman Truong Cblnh of the
Norlh Vietnam National Assembly
Standing Committee. Truong Cblnh alao
presides over the Saigon negotiations.
The South Vletn1111 deleptlon was
· headed by Pham HunR, a aenlot member
of the Polltburo of the Vietnllll Workers
(Communist) party.
Saigon offlciall said the two sides would
cllsc~ nlltiona.l relllification "in detaq."
They said among the topics on the
· negotiation agenda waa the calling of
general electkinl in both North and South
Vietnam to e..bllsh a unified NaUonal
Allembly fc:Jr a reunited VIUam.
Unolllclal aourcea 11111 the general
elections would be heki befcJre the summer
of 19'18 to Jllll'k the 11n1 annlvtl'lll')' of the
AprU 30 takeover of Saigon by tile Communlsts.
·

extended for

Gaqia SEOEMS
. GAWPOUS - Gallia COunty will
continue to be served by the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical Service.
'lbia wu re'fel!ed Sllturda:y br David
Frey. attorney for the Ohio Valley Health ·
Services Foundation.
.
Frey said a prevloUB cutoff date of
Saturday was extended after his
organization was assured that Gallia
leaders were making efforts to come up
with a plan to continue the service.
Tax levies for operation of SEOEMS
were defeated in Gallia and Jackson
Counties on Nov. 4, but similar levies were
approved in Athens and Lawrence
Counties.
·
Currently SEOEMS served a sevencounty area . Ita establiatunent was accompllshed largely with federal lunda but
these will be e1hausted at ihe end of the
current year.

FREE CLOTHING DAY
CHESHIRE - The GaWa - Meigs
Community Action Agency will condi!Ct a
free clothing day for low incMIC ~ons
Wednesday from 9a.m. to 2p.m: The event
will be held at the old high school building
in C..'heshire .

PLANS' MOSCOW VISIT
ROME ( UPI) - Italian Prealdent
Giovanni Leone will Oy to Moscow
Tuesday for a weelt-long visit in the Soviet
Union, officials uld Saturday.

Oil expert will
address
council
.
.
IRONTON - The Ironton t'hamber of
Commerce will host the ·November
meeUng of the Central Ohio Valley lndUBtrial ~Wlcil (COVIC ) at the South
Poin I Holiday Inn on Nov. 20.
Guest speaker for the 6:311 p.m. dinner
meeting wiD '· be Dr. George T. Patton,
director of poltcy analysis for the
American Petroleum Institute, which is
based in Washington, D. G.
One of the foremost experts in the
U~ited States on natural gas, Patton will
discuu gas supply and other pertinent

lS·year-old Vinton

girl reported missing

.

energy matters. He will be happy to answer questions from OOVIC members and
the news media after his talk.
Dr. Patton joined the American
Petroleum Institute in July, 1974, from the
Office of Management and Budget, where
he was the deputy branch chief for energr.
Prior to that, he held positions on the sta!!S ·
of the Assistant Secretary of Defense,
Stanford Research, Institute, and the .
General Electric COlllpany.
Dr. Patton earned his Ph .D. in
operations ._arch ( 1968) and his M.S. in
stallsllcs (1966) from Stanford Uriiversity,
and his B.S. in electrical engineering from
the Dllnola Institute of Technology (1955).
He is a native of-t'llicago, Dllnois, and now
llves in Arlington, Virginia.
COVIG consists of representatives of
civic organizations, buainesses and indUBtries In that area of the Ohio Valley
ranging from Portsmouth, Ohio, east tO
Parkersburg, W. Va. The group is active in
formulating and supplying industrial
development and economic information
about our region.

GAWPOLIS - A missing person's
report has been filed by Mr. and Mrs.
Collie Adkins of Vinton for their 15-yearold daughter, Kathleen Louise Ulapman.
According to the Gallia County
sheriff's department, the girl wu last
seen Friday night She iJ s-'1, weighs 163
pounda, has blue eyes and brown hair. She
' .
was last seen wearing blue jeans and a Woman hires lawyer
blue jean jacket.
The parents reported she 1JIBY be
enroute to Dayton . Anyone knowing her to light decision
••
whereabouts Is asked to contact the
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Allee Ma~
sheriff's department or Vinton Manbal of Cleveland haa hired a lawyer to protest
Bill Widger.
her eltminaUon from the finals of the Nov ..
6 Buckeye 1,000 lottery drawing.
,
Allllmey Oare Fahrer maintains Milll
Mathews, 4i, was ellminated from •the
finals through a methnd which was ' 'imSTABBED TO DEAn!
proper 1nd Wlfalr and oot in accortlanclt
FREMONT, Ohio (UPI) - An off- with the rulea and regulations of the Ohio
duty, unarmed, Ohio Highway Patrol Lottery Commission."
officer was stabbed to death late Friday by
AI laue will a prellminary drawing held
a man who followed the officer and his to reduce the 12 finalists to B, the.
family as they drove home from visiting mutmum nwnber of peraons which can
friends.
be accommodated on the lottery 's
SandUBky County Chief Deputy Frank ~lev~ drawing.
.::
Hush uid James Bradley. Turpin, 20,
Lottery Director Gerald J . Patronlte'
BettsvWe, was charged with murder In the said the loltery'B finallats fluctuate ·in:
death of Patrolman Michael D. Fulton, 27. nwnberfrom5to 14because aome
Turpin wu to be arraigned Monday in fall to ciatm their prizes in time for tha:
Sandusky County ~urt at Woodvtlle.
&lt;k'awing.
·

winnen

. ftllll PASSENGER c.r, decorated In a bicentennial
theme and pulled by a diesel engine, palled Into llobeon yards
Friday evening. The~ carried Penn C«ltral olflciala who
are inlpectlllc the linea. Amember of the group llid that the
peuenger car had left lndlllllpolls, Ind. "" Thursday and

.

would complete the ·Inspection trip at SwiM, w. Va. on
Saturday. 'lbe apok81111an uld the trip had nothing to 4o
with the prGposed abandonment of lines in the area. Middleport firemen were on hand to provide water from a tanker
for the diesel. I

�..

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"

~·

...

'

3- TheSunday Times - Senttnei,Sunday," Nov. I6,19-Js

2- The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. l6,1975

•

featuring
Annie Anybody
)

BY BETI'IE CLARK
Ellelllloa Aj(ent,
Home Eeoaomles
"ALMOST- AU. AHOtrr TURKEY"
GALLIPO!JS - If you're thinking of ThankllgiYing time,
you may also be followin g the nostalgic thoughts of roast
turkey, cranberries and pumpkin pie ... for many these are the
first thoughts of the holiday season. Choooing and taking care
of, as well as preparing, the "big bird" may be more important
than you think! Uke all else - it's easy if you know how '
it is important to think ahead in deciding what size turkey
to buy. Most people want a turkey large enough so that there
are generous servings, even second helpings, on the big day
ar\d aome left for second or third day meals. For such planning
POMEROY A'ITORNEY CHARLES KNIGHT was
one should allow 11'. pounds per person. Many homemakers
guest speaker on the subject "The Madison Contribution
like to have enough roast turkey to p.ut away in the freezer for
future meals and for this reason they buy an even larger bird. vs. Modern American Way of Ufe" at the Friday meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the
Since there is a high proportion of meat to bone weight oil
larger birds, if you can use a weight over 12 pounds, the larger· American Revolution. He is pictured here with Mrs. Paul
tUI'key is a better buy. Whatever site, be sure to look for the U. Eich, program leader , who presented him with a gift . ·
, S. De~artment of Agriculture's shield. This Federal inspection
: mark of wholesomeness means that the meat or poultry carne
: from healthy animals and was inspected throughout the
: pocking operation.
The turkey should come from a refrigerated area in tlte
; store. Once home, it should be refrigerated quickly. For long
: term freezing .It should be lightly wrapped in moisture
• resistant material such as aluminum loll, or freezer paper.
Grammers Restaurant.
Defrost lt in the refrigerator, or ln a container of cold water.
GALLIPO~lS ~ The The matinee performance
(If you thaw it in water, leave the turkey ln lts watertight . Fr~nch Art Colony IS span· of the Nutcracker Ballet will
wrapper ' and change the water often enough to keep it cold or sormg their second ann~al be at 2 p.m. at the Cincinnati
perhaps you can leave the water slowly running.)
·
h?hday excursiOn to Cin· Music Hall , and tickets are
Turkey, like other protein foods, will be moiiJter and more c1n~ah to attend .. the lor reserved seating in the
flavorful if cooketl at low temperatures - but' not TOO lol)'! l'hmtmas spectacular, T~~ balcony. The bus will be back
Very low oven temperatures provide Ideal con6itlons for the Nutcra cker
Ba 11 e t . • in Gallipolis at 9:30 Saturday
growth of bacteria which cause food poisoning . For safety's presented by the celebrated
evening .
sake roast turkey at an oven setting of 325-350 degrees F. ' · l1ncinnati Ballet ComJl!lny
Cost lor the ail-day trip
Overcooking today's young tender turkey causes dry, and the full Cincinnati
includin g tran sportation,
flavorless meat. To avoid overcooking, use a meat ther· Symphony Orchestra on
ticket for the performance
mometer Inserted in the thick part of· the thigh. The ther· Saturday afternoon, Dec . 27.
and lunch at Gram mers
mometer bulb must not touch bone. Roast the turkey at 325-350
The special chartered bus
Resta urant , is $24.50 per
degrees F . as doneness stage for turkey - this Is too high lor will leave Gallipolis at 8:15 person.· Members and non·
today's young birds. Other tests for doneness : the thick part of a.m . .on Saturday Dec. 27,
members
may
make
the drumstick will feel soft when pressed with thumb and arriving in Cincinnati in time
reservations. Children under
: forefinger; the drumstick and thigh will m~ve easily .
' for lunch . at the historic
;
Another safety rule is to always cook the ----------~-------­
! turkey completely once the cooking li8s begun. Don't interrupt remove the turkey when the temperature reaches 18().185
i the cooking process. Turkeys vary in shape llld variety, 50 degrees F. Turkey will carve and slice more easilY if allowed
cooking tbne ~an only be approximate. In general, use these at least a 10 minute rest after ro11sting.
Don't risk food polso~ing - use recortunended roasting
, guidelines : stuffed turkey ready-to-cook weight, 8 pounds _ 3
: hours; &amp;pounds _ 3"lo hours; 12 pounds _ 4"lo hours; 18 pounds procedures. Never cook turkey overnight at a low-oven setting.
l - S"lo hours; 20 pounds _ 8¥. hours. unstufled turkey will take Never stuff the turkey the day before. ·Add liquid to dry stul·
: about a half hour less roasting tbne. It's well to.allow an extra flng ingredients just before placing the stuffing In the body
•, half hour of roasting time 1n case the turkey needs extra cavities just prior to roasting. If you are using a frozen ready·
kin
stuffed turkey, follow the preparation instructions on the
J 000 Av~id
package uBctiy. Don't try to guplicate this product at.home ..

FA C sponsoring
trip to view ballet

i

'

SNOW MOBILE BOOTS

..'
•

FOR MEN AND BOYS

••
•'
I
I•

•

'•••
••
•

~

•

I

•

II
•

•••
•

•

••'

Extra Special
.

Miners Boot

FRONT ZIP
STRAP AND

BUCKLE

'10

FELT

..

•••.

•15.97

.BLACK
RUBBER

I

••

OUTDOO~

PACS FOR

100% ' 12.97
WATERPROOF

VULCANIZED
RUBBER UPPERS,

ClEATED CALENDER
SOLES

FQ~

SURE GRIP.

·
chapter .
. . .
The matenal
mcludes
the
p
.t
1Y hIS
01
ear
ory
omeroy
·
1•
Churches, Grace Ep1scopa
Trini ty •· Sacred Heart,
Trinity Lutheran , First
B . l Ch h
C'h .
Saphs • ;:c E. 0 1 U ~~s~

~~~:.nl) G · (Mnl~
~ St ISP 'w r~:n .' th.,

people in ·America today Mrs. Hennesy's musical ,
would rese nt being taxed to' con tribution to the com· ;
munity and her devotion to .
so1ve the c1't y,s problem.
Heaeo
t lk d f th enecess1y
·t her family and her church. ·
f b
.
Thereon Johnson
1 1 ed Mrs
.or ecommgt more knvo v
conducted the ceremony with
m communht Y dworl, co~· Mrs "Margaret Parsons
mented on t e 1e era momes
· . . .
'
a~ailable and the Jack of chaplam, taking part.
leadership in applying for
During .the business
them . The speaker also meeting, the , budget was
mentioned the grant"secured approved and a contribution
· '
Co 'l from Mts. Ullian Henderson
. by the Metgs County unci
k
1 d d ' 'hapter
on Aging and made the a c now e ge · " .
.
.
members -were asked to
suggeslton that perhaps more
.
ts
be
funds could be secured and contrtbute iiO cen a mem r
d b "ld"
for two years to the national
the propose
Ul mg
.
.
.·
enlarged ·to provide more b1centenmal proJeCt.
· The national defense report
services.
Pre ceding the meeting was given by Mts. McDaniel.
"ddl
A st'lent auction followed the
members went to M1 epor1
Hill Cemetery to place 3 meeting and a dessert course
bronze marker on the grave was served by Mts. Dale
of Mrs. Hennesy . Mrs. Dutton, Mrs. McDaniel and
C'harles McDaniel gave a Mrs. Robert Craig, con·
personal tribute speaking of tributing hostess.

:

aMn"ddl · at · hu erhan, . e
1
epor c urc es m·
eluding Church of Christ
• .
. •
Heath Um ted Methodist,
First Presbyterian and First
.
•
Baptist, as well as St. John
Lutheran of Chester Town·
.
.
.
ship, Umted Methodtst of
&lt;.:h t
s
1
~s er, ~- Pa~ Evangehc~l , Mmersvtlle, and
M hod" t 0 f F
R
et IS
orest un.
Also included are accounts
of the Church of l'hrist at
Rutla~d by Vtctor. Braley;
the Church of Chnsl at
Dexter and the Second Free
Will Baptist Church of
Rutland by Seth F .
Nicholson ; Temple l'hurch in
Columbia Township by
Elizabeth Rutherford Jordan,
and the Columbia Chapel
12 must be accompanied by Christian Church, Point
an adult.
Rock , by Nellie Radekin
Vale.
Reservations must be
The material was collected
made before Dec. 5 by calling as a result of programs on
Carolyn Hippensteel at 446· early ' church
history
4886, and mailing your remit· presented by Mrs . Mora at
lance by the deadline date to chapter meetings in 1973 and
Mrs. Donna Nibert, 281 State
1974. The information was
St., Gallipolis. Checks may be then assembled into a per·
made payable to the French manent record as a bicen·
Arl Colony. Only 39 resertennial project.
vations are available.
As indicated in the forward,
sources of material are noted
in the account of individual
churches. Mrs. Mora ex·
pressed appreciation to "all
those who shared historical
data on their respective
churches and to the many
who verified a date "or added
a fact of interest."
The acknowledgements
SUNDAY .
ED BOUSMAN, nationwide include the name of Regina
evangelist of "God is Just a Wrigh t who typed the
Prayer Away" will speak at 7 original draft fr om Mrs .
p.m. at Tuppers Plains Mora's handwritten copy
the
offi ce
of
CHURCH HISTORIES - Maye Crary Mora, left,
Church of Christ. Pastor in
Eugene Underwood the Meigs Co unty Cocollected and compiled a history of Meigs County chur·
operative Extension Serv·
ches as a bicentennial program of Return Jonathan Meigs
welcomes the public.
OLD FASHIONEI) Hymn ice. Mrs. • Mora also
Olapter of the Daughters of the American Ravolution,
Sing at United Faith Church, expressed appreciation to C.
presented the volwne to the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society Friday. Accepting It on behalf of the
Pomeroy, SR 7 on bypass·, 2 E. Blakeslee who was in·
slrumental
•
I
n
reproducing
Historical Society was Mrs. Patrick IAchary.
p.m. Local talent will be
additional
copies
with
typing
featured. Pastor Robert E.
Smith , Sr., invites the public by Dena Raymond under the
CETA program, to the Meigs
to attend.
JUNIOR American Legion County Commissioners, to
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Quality Prin t and to a
at
Ohio
Post 39, 2p.m. at the home of depar tment
University.
Mrs. Harry Davis .
Copies will be sent to both
MQNDAY
the
Ohio Chapter and the
RACINE ER Squad, 8 p.m.
National
D.A.R. The copy
at fire house. Nomination of
officers. All members urged presented by Mrs. Mora· is in
plastic protectors assembled
to attend.
in a ringed leather book, a
RACINE PTA monthly gilt of Mrs. Mora toward the
meeting, 7:30p.m. at·school preservation of the material .
with father's night to be
Mrs. Paul Eich, program
observed . and program by leader, in troduced the
Racine Emergency Squad. speaker, Charles Knight ,
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m. describing him a~ a
with Dr. G. WilBOn Bowers, descendant of a Meigs County
Holzer Medical Center pioneer family of Chester and
pediatrician, to be speaker; Rutland. In his talk, Knight
grandparents night wlll be discussed the early patriots
observed.
of America, Madison, Jef·
!I
M'EIGS · GALLIA OSl'EA !erson and Franklin . He
Chapter meeting, 8 p.m. at talked Of tbe tyranny imposed
See the h Seller In \he U.S.A.
0
the Middleport Volunteer by England and compered it
Wide
variety
to
nlec:t
from
r.
Fire Department building . with the revolutionary trends
includin1 5th wbHI Modela.
Refreshments will be served . of today. He pointed out that
",
SUNDAY
the Constitution w~s not
BIG BEND Emergency intended to solve every
Radio Team meeting, 2 p.m. problem, but to · serve as a
0
at Salisbury Township guide for government.
He
KANAUGA, O.p
UPPER RT. 7
garage on Rock Springs talked of the Constitution's
I
fairgrOWtds.
guarantee of education but
COUNTY· WIDE prayer denied that this meant mass
.. I
meeting 2 p.m. at Hobson busing operations such as
·'
l'llurch of Ghrist In Christian have taken place in an effort
"
lo
Union with Glenn Bissell, to achieve racial balance.
;1
class leader.
New York t1ty's financial
DEDICATION Service at plight was discussed by the
Mt. Moriah Church of God, 2 speaker who said he felt
H
p.m. with Rev. Ronnie Smith,
Hamilton,' as speak~; public
Invited.
TUESDAY
~J
' PRO!JRAM BY Mr, and
OPEN
DAILY
:..
]
Mrs. Darrell Taylor when
9 A.M.·8 P.M.
Salisbury PTA meets at 7:30
Sundays 12·5
p.m. at school; room
visitation to be held.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
dinner of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, 7:30 .
BREAKFA'ST SERVED DAILY
p.m. followed by '!&gt;uslness
9-11 A.M. Mond!'Y · Saturday
meeting; all members asked
to meet at home on following
THIS WEEK'S FEATURES
night, 6 p.m., to ·conduct
SUNDAY- Chicktn ond Noodlts
annual .bread delivery
MONDAY- Macaroni and Choose
program fur "Gifts lor Yanks
TUESDAY- Tuna and Noodlts
Who Gave''·
WEDNESDAY- Mini Ravioli
THURSDAY-Macaroni
and Ground BHI
SPEeiAL meeting, Racine
FRIDAY-Baked
!leans
and Fronks
Masonic Lodge 481, 7 p.m.
SATURDAYSpaghtHI
ond
MHtbolls
Work in third degree ; all
members welcome.

'129!G.

19.97

1

RUGGED
LONG WEARING
. BROWN
MEN'S SIZES
TO 12

MuRPHY'S

World~.

:

'"

BY RENE BROYLES ·
· GALLIPOLIS - Eight
members of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
viaited recenUy with Uara
Kraus, Charles Layne
Amanda Anderson, Harry
Neville and Tacy Stewart and
others of -the Twin Maples
Nursing Home in M~Arthur.
The RSVP van transported
Nelle Stanley, Bill Mens·
house, Goldie Rice, Mae
Lawrence, Henrietta Church
Annie Galloway, Elizabeth
Mcinturff and &amp;bby Cottrell
to . Ut~ home, Monday, Nov.
10. Maude Sellerds,t'heshire,
made comfort pillows for the
relidents there and they were
distributed by van driver
Rene aroyles.
The van will travel to

MII JDLEPORi'
A
Chri stmas lighting contest
was discussed and Mr s.
Arlhur Strauss , Mrs. Kennelh
Amsbary and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy were appointed to the
planning commitl ee at th e
Wednesday night meeting of
the Middl eport Amaleur
Gard eners.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, the club
members welcomed Mr s.
Jeff Weaver into member·ship
and heard reports on the
reg ional meeting held Nov. 1
at the Middleport Elemen·
tary School. Mrs.. Harold
Lohse , chairwoman lor the
regional meeting, thanked
!he committees for assisting
with table arr angements ,
favors and door prizes.
Plans for assisting with the
Meigs County Garden Club
Association's annual Christmas flower show, Dec . 7 and 8
were discussed, and it was
noted that Wilma Reece will

handl e hospilalrty on Dec. "/
wil l! Mrs. Edgar Reynolds,
Mrs. Guy Reynolds and.Mrs.
Edgar Pratt lo have charge
of regislralion .. Mrs. Lohse
and Mrs: Harry Davis will be
working with" the educational
classes.
Mrs. Everett Tay lor
presided in the absence of the
president. Areport was given
by Mrs. Lohse on the first
phase of the planting at the
Washingto n Monument at
Long Bottom and it was
reported that the geraniums
are still blooming . The
planling of daffoidils. fur·
nished by lhe members will
be completed this week and in
Ihe spring dogwood trees will
be planted. Mrs. Edgar Pratt no ted
that 400 red and white tulip
bulbs were purchased and
tha t Mrs. Guy Reynolds and
Miss Bernice Ann -Darst had
assisted her in planting them
at the new Middleport Fire

Department headquarters.
For devotions Mrs. Taylor
gave the story of the earliest
Thanksg iving, especially in
Canada from 1578 to the
present lim e. Childhood
impressions of Thanksgiving
were given for roll call.
The annual Christmas
party will be "held at the home
of Mrs. Reece. A dale lor a
December workshop will be

annow1ced later.

An arlicle on whal to do in
Nov ember in th e garden
prepared by Mrs. Reece was
presented by Mrs. Taylor.
Mrs. Ira Butcher and Mrs.
James Butcher were guests.
Mrs. Walter Crooks won the
door prize . Mrs. lllakeslee
served a sa lad course using a
centerpiece of straw fl owers
and a golden spice candle.
Mrs. Taylor presided at the
~~~i~???~~~~~~~~~{~!~~~~i~~~~~i~?if~~~tt~!~j;~~~~}j· coffee service. Favors were
Wed .dlng
and
engagement notices lor the
Sunday Tlmes·Senlinel
must be in our hands by 12
noon on the Thursday
· preceding pub}icalion.
TONITE
Information may be turned
5\)N ., NO\/ . 16
In or mailed to the.
" SMIL£
&lt;Technicolor)
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. or
Starring : Bruc e Oe r n,
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel.
Barbara Fe ldon.
Engagement and wedding
Stiow starts all : oo p.m.
forms are also available on
request.

COLO'\ ·
•

Tht •t~lr••

*

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

MEIGS THEATRE
10

CARTOON

USE OUR
CONVENIENT

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4 DAYS· SUN. thru WED.
THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

IANUMERIC.IRD
ORIIASTU CURGE

LAYAWAY
PLAN

NOVEMBER 16-17-18-19

SOLID ITATE-4 PIECE

0
4

Spealers
Sold

Separately

I•TIACK
CAR 'IAPI PLAYER

94

A utomatic or man ual

lrock switch . Pilot
indicolor light Tone,
bolo nee, volume con -

1
Wal'lut woodgrain finished unit
w/automatic BSR change'. 45
jock. 4 1-'a·· tw in delu xe speakers.

CHARGE IT!

dust cover . left/ right .~,~olume.

balcnce, tone controls. Ploys all

r
•

WIDGI ITIRIO
IPIAKIR KIT

Sheila Davis

·
Ii
!'

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs .
Oletller Davis, t15 Railroad St., Ironton, are Bllnounclng
~ 1be Bl!llgement of their daughter Sheila to Stephen
Xnotii,IOIIof Mr. and Mn. R. E. Knotts of Gallipolis. The
' CUllom ol open church will be observed for the wedding to
be held Salurday, Nov. 29 at 3 in the afternoon at the
l tti:: lllrrillonville Avenue Oturch of God, 1712 Harrisonville
Ave., Pwllmouth.

leods , 2
speaken;,
1-ad.o.o-e.
Eosy to
insloll.

$6~G.

size records.

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

7.94

1

4 IUISISTOI CRIZEI'S lAID

j1:

WALKIE TALKIE

!ivayside gardeners hold

WITH MORSE CODE KEY

ineet with. Cheshire club
the home of Mrs. Dale
Mulford. Refreshments of
: open meeting recently with cookies, sandwiches, coffee
the Cheshire Garden Uub as and punch were served.
guests. The meeting ~as
opened by the president,
~
Marilyn Reese. Devotions
•' were led by Mrs. Slanly
i Shaver with a song, "Count
'
Yoll' Bleu1•ns,"
MERCER IS FAIR
~
•
The meeting WBII turned
PASADENA, Qlllf. (UPI)
over to Mrs. Robert Jenkins - Johnny Mercer, Academy
' who preaented a program on Award winning composer of
"Travel." She dliiCussed her "Days of Wine and Roses"
trip to Ethiopia. She said they and "Moon River," was in
have a 25 hour day and use fair
condition
today,
two languages. Mrs. Jenldins recuperating from brain
• showed a display of crosseS ' surgery.
Aspokellll8ll at Huntington
·: from dlfferent.Jilaces she had
Memorial
Hospital said the
~ ~ted. She salil the people of
-mniopia are a cross between 66-year-old composer
Hebrew and African. She remained In the lnlenlive
jllllltlitued the program with care unit, but hu ~own
sJlght improvement, A benign
color sJides of her trip .
Plans were made for the t.'ain tumor was removed
UtrislmBII par,ty to be held at Oct. 2:1..

...

8 IRACK SIEREO
IAPEPLAYER
MEETS ALL
GOVT. SAFETY
REQUIREMENTS

SOLD

UNASSEMBLED

WHITE OR WALNUT CRIB
Drop side has
~''
safety locking
~
mechanism. White
plastic teething rails.
spring height
Both Meet All

$

Government Safety
Regulations

9.7

Stereo pre-omped set · with two speokers. Autotnotlc or monuol !rock sele ctor ,
lighted track Ind ica tor. Balonce, tone
and volume sl ide controls. Save todoyl

REG. 146.97

VINYL COVERED
CRIB MATTRESS

OUR OWN BRAND

WINDSHIILD
WASHIR SOLYINT

GALLON

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REG.

REG. •3.99 DOWGARD
ANTI•FRIIZI

77"
GALLON

Effec lille r~ody ­
mix cleans road
dusl ond dirt
build-up fosll
OPEN MON.
tllru SAT.
. IO'TIIt

PAIR ·

No license is required to operate these 2 sol id state transce ivers .
Has push to talk , on / aft and vol ume controls plu s a telescoping
rod antenna . Uses 9 volt battery , not included.

'j

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9~

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....

l, itt:
GALLIPOLIS The
=wayside Garden l1ub had an

1

0

RPM adaptor and headphone

trols. Hookup wires,
moun ting brocket s.

RESTAURANT

WantM

;

Chillicothe Friday .to the table service.
The dance, beginning at 8,
Veterans Administration
will
be open to the public.
Facilities for another work
There
will be no admission
session. Invitations are being
prepared by Maye Roush, charge but the RSVP will
all
Gallia County Coordinator of gratefully accept
the RSVP to be sent to the donations. These donations
supervisors of the many work will help the RSVP to con·
stations and to other special tinue servin g vari ous
guests so they might at(fnd organizations wilh th eir
the dinner dance that will he group of dedicated volun·
held at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5 leers . Wherever you see
volunteer workers in Gallia
at the VFW Hail.
Gray Tuecke, music County, you can be sure the
therapist of the VA facility , RSVP is there.
will bring approximately 30
veterans to join in the
festivities . The VA band will
furnish the music for the
evening.
RSVP members are being
reminded to bring their own

FAMILY

G£1' liJUR MAN W11111

992-2156

RSVP visits ·nursing home

'"

M·en's Harness. Boot

446-2342

orange and white spice bags
decorated with straw flowers .

Club to hold Christmas contest

i Sarah Carsey 1Charlene Hoeflich ~
i Ga/liiJolis-Point Pleasant l Pomeroy-Middleport :

SMITH HONDA SALES~

GENUINE LEATHER

$rREG.

POMEROY
The
r
esentation
of
"
Meigs
P
Count y's Ea rly Religious
Heritage," a compilation of
church histories by Maye
Crary Mora, to the, Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society was a ·
feature of the F1·idaX meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs
' 'hapter Daugher·s of th·e
"
'
American Revolution.
Olh er h"tg hi'lghts of the day
for the D.A.R. included the
marking of the grave of Clara
Crary Hennesy, a 50,year
member, at the Middleport
Hill Cemetery, and a talk by
Practicing Pomeroy attorney
C'harles Knight on the topic
"The Madison Contribution
vs. Modern American Way of
·ure."
Mrs. Patrick Lochary
accepted the 100..page volume
of church histories collected
and compiled by Mrs. Mora
for the Historical Society, a
bicentennial projkt of ·the

:

#I SELLER IN THE U.S.A•.

LINER.

STEEL TOE
SIZES 7 to· 12

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REMOVABLE

I

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READY FOR COLD WEATHER
100.%NYLON UPPERS
BLACK; NAVY
REG. '11.97

$888

•I

l. Woman's

Church histories presented
at Friday DAR· meeting

Homemakers'
Circle ·

,.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Year ' r:ound wi nter

anti -freeze / summer

coolo nt. Fights rust
ond corrosion.

li.MITED QUANTITIES · NO RAINCHI~ti

1.27

1

G.C. MURPHY CO. • TliE FRIENDLY STOR··
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE
•

•

..

�..

.

.

"

~·

...

'

3- TheSunday Times - Senttnei,Sunday," Nov. I6,19-Js

2- The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. l6,1975

•

featuring
Annie Anybody
)

BY BETI'IE CLARK
Ellelllloa Aj(ent,
Home Eeoaomles
"ALMOST- AU. AHOtrr TURKEY"
GALLIPO!JS - If you're thinking of ThankllgiYing time,
you may also be followin g the nostalgic thoughts of roast
turkey, cranberries and pumpkin pie ... for many these are the
first thoughts of the holiday season. Choooing and taking care
of, as well as preparing, the "big bird" may be more important
than you think! Uke all else - it's easy if you know how '
it is important to think ahead in deciding what size turkey
to buy. Most people want a turkey large enough so that there
are generous servings, even second helpings, on the big day
ar\d aome left for second or third day meals. For such planning
POMEROY A'ITORNEY CHARLES KNIGHT was
one should allow 11'. pounds per person. Many homemakers
guest speaker on the subject "The Madison Contribution
like to have enough roast turkey to p.ut away in the freezer for
future meals and for this reason they buy an even larger bird. vs. Modern American Way of Ufe" at the Friday meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the
Since there is a high proportion of meat to bone weight oil
larger birds, if you can use a weight over 12 pounds, the larger· American Revolution. He is pictured here with Mrs. Paul
tUI'key is a better buy. Whatever site, be sure to look for the U. Eich, program leader , who presented him with a gift . ·
, S. De~artment of Agriculture's shield. This Federal inspection
: mark of wholesomeness means that the meat or poultry carne
: from healthy animals and was inspected throughout the
: pocking operation.
The turkey should come from a refrigerated area in tlte
; store. Once home, it should be refrigerated quickly. For long
: term freezing .It should be lightly wrapped in moisture
• resistant material such as aluminum loll, or freezer paper.
Grammers Restaurant.
Defrost lt in the refrigerator, or ln a container of cold water.
GALLIPO~lS ~ The The matinee performance
(If you thaw it in water, leave the turkey ln lts watertight . Fr~nch Art Colony IS span· of the Nutcracker Ballet will
wrapper ' and change the water often enough to keep it cold or sormg their second ann~al be at 2 p.m. at the Cincinnati
perhaps you can leave the water slowly running.)
·
h?hday excursiOn to Cin· Music Hall , and tickets are
Turkey, like other protein foods, will be moiiJter and more c1n~ah to attend .. the lor reserved seating in the
flavorful if cooketl at low temperatures - but' not TOO lol)'! l'hmtmas spectacular, T~~ balcony. The bus will be back
Very low oven temperatures provide Ideal con6itlons for the Nutcra cker
Ba 11 e t . • in Gallipolis at 9:30 Saturday
growth of bacteria which cause food poisoning . For safety's presented by the celebrated
evening .
sake roast turkey at an oven setting of 325-350 degrees F. ' · l1ncinnati Ballet ComJl!lny
Cost lor the ail-day trip
Overcooking today's young tender turkey causes dry, and the full Cincinnati
includin g tran sportation,
flavorless meat. To avoid overcooking, use a meat ther· Symphony Orchestra on
ticket for the performance
mometer Inserted in the thick part of· the thigh. The ther· Saturday afternoon, Dec . 27.
and lunch at Gram mers
mometer bulb must not touch bone. Roast the turkey at 325-350
The special chartered bus
Resta urant , is $24.50 per
degrees F . as doneness stage for turkey - this Is too high lor will leave Gallipolis at 8:15 person.· Members and non·
today's young birds. Other tests for doneness : the thick part of a.m . .on Saturday Dec. 27,
members
may
make
the drumstick will feel soft when pressed with thumb and arriving in Cincinnati in time
reservations. Children under
: forefinger; the drumstick and thigh will m~ve easily .
' for lunch . at the historic
;
Another safety rule is to always cook the ----------~-------­
! turkey completely once the cooking li8s begun. Don't interrupt remove the turkey when the temperature reaches 18().185
i the cooking process. Turkeys vary in shape llld variety, 50 degrees F. Turkey will carve and slice more easilY if allowed
cooking tbne ~an only be approximate. In general, use these at least a 10 minute rest after ro11sting.
Don't risk food polso~ing - use recortunended roasting
, guidelines : stuffed turkey ready-to-cook weight, 8 pounds _ 3
: hours; &amp;pounds _ 3"lo hours; 12 pounds _ 4"lo hours; 18 pounds procedures. Never cook turkey overnight at a low-oven setting.
l - S"lo hours; 20 pounds _ 8¥. hours. unstufled turkey will take Never stuff the turkey the day before. ·Add liquid to dry stul·
: about a half hour less roasting tbne. It's well to.allow an extra flng ingredients just before placing the stuffing In the body
•, half hour of roasting time 1n case the turkey needs extra cavities just prior to roasting. If you are using a frozen ready·
kin
stuffed turkey, follow the preparation instructions on the
J 000 Av~id
package uBctiy. Don't try to guplicate this product at.home ..

FA C sponsoring
trip to view ballet

i

'

SNOW MOBILE BOOTS

..'
•

FOR MEN AND BOYS

••
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I
I•

•

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•

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Extra Special
.

Miners Boot

FRONT ZIP
STRAP AND

BUCKLE

'10

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•15.97

.BLACK
RUBBER

I

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OUTDOO~

PACS FOR

100% ' 12.97
WATERPROOF

VULCANIZED
RUBBER UPPERS,

ClEATED CALENDER
SOLES

FQ~

SURE GRIP.

·
chapter .
. . .
The matenal
mcludes
the
p
.t
1Y hIS
01
ear
ory
omeroy
·
1•
Churches, Grace Ep1scopa
Trini ty •· Sacred Heart,
Trinity Lutheran , First
B . l Ch h
C'h .
Saphs • ;:c E. 0 1 U ~~s~

~~~:.nl) G · (Mnl~
~ St ISP 'w r~:n .' th.,

people in ·America today Mrs. Hennesy's musical ,
would rese nt being taxed to' con tribution to the com· ;
munity and her devotion to .
so1ve the c1't y,s problem.
Heaeo
t lk d f th enecess1y
·t her family and her church. ·
f b
.
Thereon Johnson
1 1 ed Mrs
.or ecommgt more knvo v
conducted the ceremony with
m communht Y dworl, co~· Mrs "Margaret Parsons
mented on t e 1e era momes
· . . .
'
a~ailable and the Jack of chaplam, taking part.
leadership in applying for
During .the business
them . The speaker also meeting, the , budget was
mentioned the grant"secured approved and a contribution
· '
Co 'l from Mts. Ullian Henderson
. by the Metgs County unci
k
1 d d ' 'hapter
on Aging and made the a c now e ge · " .
.
.
members -were asked to
suggeslton that perhaps more
.
ts
be
funds could be secured and contrtbute iiO cen a mem r
d b "ld"
for two years to the national
the propose
Ul mg
.
.
.·
enlarged ·to provide more b1centenmal proJeCt.
· The national defense report
services.
Pre ceding the meeting was given by Mts. McDaniel.
"ddl
A st'lent auction followed the
members went to M1 epor1
Hill Cemetery to place 3 meeting and a dessert course
bronze marker on the grave was served by Mts. Dale
of Mrs. Hennesy . Mrs. Dutton, Mrs. McDaniel and
C'harles McDaniel gave a Mrs. Robert Craig, con·
personal tribute speaking of tributing hostess.

:

aMn"ddl · at · hu erhan, . e
1
epor c urc es m·
eluding Church of Christ
• .
. •
Heath Um ted Methodist,
First Presbyterian and First
.
•
Baptist, as well as St. John
Lutheran of Chester Town·
.
.
.
ship, Umted Methodtst of
&lt;.:h t
s
1
~s er, ~- Pa~ Evangehc~l , Mmersvtlle, and
M hod" t 0 f F
R
et IS
orest un.
Also included are accounts
of the Church of l'hrist at
Rutla~d by Vtctor. Braley;
the Church of Chnsl at
Dexter and the Second Free
Will Baptist Church of
Rutland by Seth F .
Nicholson ; Temple l'hurch in
Columbia Township by
Elizabeth Rutherford Jordan,
and the Columbia Chapel
12 must be accompanied by Christian Church, Point
an adult.
Rock , by Nellie Radekin
Vale.
Reservations must be
The material was collected
made before Dec. 5 by calling as a result of programs on
Carolyn Hippensteel at 446· early ' church
history
4886, and mailing your remit· presented by Mrs . Mora at
lance by the deadline date to chapter meetings in 1973 and
Mrs. Donna Nibert, 281 State
1974. The information was
St., Gallipolis. Checks may be then assembled into a per·
made payable to the French manent record as a bicen·
Arl Colony. Only 39 resertennial project.
vations are available.
As indicated in the forward,
sources of material are noted
in the account of individual
churches. Mrs. Mora ex·
pressed appreciation to "all
those who shared historical
data on their respective
churches and to the many
who verified a date "or added
a fact of interest."
The acknowledgements
SUNDAY .
ED BOUSMAN, nationwide include the name of Regina
evangelist of "God is Just a Wrigh t who typed the
Prayer Away" will speak at 7 original draft fr om Mrs .
p.m. at Tuppers Plains Mora's handwritten copy
the
offi ce
of
CHURCH HISTORIES - Maye Crary Mora, left,
Church of Christ. Pastor in
Eugene Underwood the Meigs Co unty Cocollected and compiled a history of Meigs County chur·
operative Extension Serv·
ches as a bicentennial program of Return Jonathan Meigs
welcomes the public.
OLD FASHIONEI) Hymn ice. Mrs. • Mora also
Olapter of the Daughters of the American Ravolution,
Sing at United Faith Church, expressed appreciation to C.
presented the volwne to the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society Friday. Accepting It on behalf of the
Pomeroy, SR 7 on bypass·, 2 E. Blakeslee who was in·
slrumental
•
I
n
reproducing
Historical Society was Mrs. Patrick IAchary.
p.m. Local talent will be
additional
copies
with
typing
featured. Pastor Robert E.
Smith , Sr., invites the public by Dena Raymond under the
CETA program, to the Meigs
to attend.
JUNIOR American Legion County Commissioners, to
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Quality Prin t and to a
at
Ohio
Post 39, 2p.m. at the home of depar tment
University.
Mrs. Harry Davis .
Copies will be sent to both
MQNDAY
the
Ohio Chapter and the
RACINE ER Squad, 8 p.m.
National
D.A.R. The copy
at fire house. Nomination of
officers. All members urged presented by Mrs. Mora· is in
plastic protectors assembled
to attend.
in a ringed leather book, a
RACINE PTA monthly gilt of Mrs. Mora toward the
meeting, 7:30p.m. at·school preservation of the material .
with father's night to be
Mrs. Paul Eich, program
observed . and program by leader, in troduced the
Racine Emergency Squad. speaker, Charles Knight ,
CHESTER PTA, 7:30 p.m. describing him a~ a
with Dr. G. WilBOn Bowers, descendant of a Meigs County
Holzer Medical Center pioneer family of Chester and
pediatrician, to be speaker; Rutland. In his talk, Knight
grandparents night wlll be discussed the early patriots
observed.
of America, Madison, Jef·
!I
M'EIGS · GALLIA OSl'EA !erson and Franklin . He
Chapter meeting, 8 p.m. at talked Of tbe tyranny imposed
See the h Seller In \he U.S.A.
0
the Middleport Volunteer by England and compered it
Wide
variety
to
nlec:t
from
r.
Fire Department building . with the revolutionary trends
includin1 5th wbHI Modela.
Refreshments will be served . of today. He pointed out that
",
SUNDAY
the Constitution w~s not
BIG BEND Emergency intended to solve every
Radio Team meeting, 2 p.m. problem, but to · serve as a
0
at Salisbury Township guide for government.
He
KANAUGA, O.p
UPPER RT. 7
garage on Rock Springs talked of the Constitution's
I
fairgrOWtds.
guarantee of education but
COUNTY· WIDE prayer denied that this meant mass
.. I
meeting 2 p.m. at Hobson busing operations such as
·'
l'llurch of Ghrist In Christian have taken place in an effort
"
lo
Union with Glenn Bissell, to achieve racial balance.
;1
class leader.
New York t1ty's financial
DEDICATION Service at plight was discussed by the
Mt. Moriah Church of God, 2 speaker who said he felt
H
p.m. with Rev. Ronnie Smith,
Hamilton,' as speak~; public
Invited.
TUESDAY
~J
' PRO!JRAM BY Mr, and
OPEN
DAILY
:..
]
Mrs. Darrell Taylor when
9 A.M.·8 P.M.
Salisbury PTA meets at 7:30
Sundays 12·5
p.m. at school; room
visitation to be held.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
dinner of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, 7:30 .
BREAKFA'ST SERVED DAILY
p.m. followed by '!&gt;uslness
9-11 A.M. Mond!'Y · Saturday
meeting; all members asked
to meet at home on following
THIS WEEK'S FEATURES
night, 6 p.m., to ·conduct
SUNDAY- Chicktn ond Noodlts
annual .bread delivery
MONDAY- Macaroni and Choose
program fur "Gifts lor Yanks
TUESDAY- Tuna and Noodlts
Who Gave''·
WEDNESDAY- Mini Ravioli
THURSDAY-Macaroni
and Ground BHI
SPEeiAL meeting, Racine
FRIDAY-Baked
!leans
and Fronks
Masonic Lodge 481, 7 p.m.
SATURDAYSpaghtHI
ond
MHtbolls
Work in third degree ; all
members welcome.

'129!G.

19.97

1

RUGGED
LONG WEARING
. BROWN
MEN'S SIZES
TO 12

MuRPHY'S

World~.

:

'"

BY RENE BROYLES ·
· GALLIPOLIS - Eight
members of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
viaited recenUy with Uara
Kraus, Charles Layne
Amanda Anderson, Harry
Neville and Tacy Stewart and
others of -the Twin Maples
Nursing Home in M~Arthur.
The RSVP van transported
Nelle Stanley, Bill Mens·
house, Goldie Rice, Mae
Lawrence, Henrietta Church
Annie Galloway, Elizabeth
Mcinturff and &amp;bby Cottrell
to . Ut~ home, Monday, Nov.
10. Maude Sellerds,t'heshire,
made comfort pillows for the
relidents there and they were
distributed by van driver
Rene aroyles.
The van will travel to

MII JDLEPORi'
A
Chri stmas lighting contest
was discussed and Mr s.
Arlhur Strauss , Mrs. Kennelh
Amsbary and Mrs. Errol!
Conroy were appointed to the
planning commitl ee at th e
Wednesday night meeting of
the Middl eport Amaleur
Gard eners.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, the club
members welcomed Mr s.
Jeff Weaver into member·ship
and heard reports on the
reg ional meeting held Nov. 1
at the Middleport Elemen·
tary School. Mrs.. Harold
Lohse , chairwoman lor the
regional meeting, thanked
!he committees for assisting
with table arr angements ,
favors and door prizes.
Plans for assisting with the
Meigs County Garden Club
Association's annual Christmas flower show, Dec . 7 and 8
were discussed, and it was
noted that Wilma Reece will

handl e hospilalrty on Dec. "/
wil l! Mrs. Edgar Reynolds,
Mrs. Guy Reynolds and.Mrs.
Edgar Pratt lo have charge
of regislralion .. Mrs. Lohse
and Mrs: Harry Davis will be
working with" the educational
classes.
Mrs. Everett Tay lor
presided in the absence of the
president. Areport was given
by Mrs. Lohse on the first
phase of the planting at the
Washingto n Monument at
Long Bottom and it was
reported that the geraniums
are still blooming . The
planling of daffoidils. fur·
nished by lhe members will
be completed this week and in
Ihe spring dogwood trees will
be planted. Mrs. Edgar Pratt no ted
that 400 red and white tulip
bulbs were purchased and
tha t Mrs. Guy Reynolds and
Miss Bernice Ann -Darst had
assisted her in planting them
at the new Middleport Fire

Department headquarters.
For devotions Mrs. Taylor
gave the story of the earliest
Thanksg iving, especially in
Canada from 1578 to the
present lim e. Childhood
impressions of Thanksgiving
were given for roll call.
The annual Christmas
party will be "held at the home
of Mrs. Reece. A dale lor a
December workshop will be

annow1ced later.

An arlicle on whal to do in
Nov ember in th e garden
prepared by Mrs. Reece was
presented by Mrs. Taylor.
Mrs. Ira Butcher and Mrs.
James Butcher were guests.
Mrs. Walter Crooks won the
door prize . Mrs. lllakeslee
served a sa lad course using a
centerpiece of straw fl owers
and a golden spice candle.
Mrs. Taylor presided at the
~~~i~???~~~~~~~~~{~!~~~~i~~~~~i~?if~~~tt~!~j;~~~~}j· coffee service. Favors were
Wed .dlng
and
engagement notices lor the
Sunday Tlmes·Senlinel
must be in our hands by 12
noon on the Thursday
· preceding pub}icalion.
TONITE
Information may be turned
5\)N ., NO\/ . 16
In or mailed to the.
" SMIL£
&lt;Technicolor)
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. or
Starring : Bruc e Oe r n,
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel.
Barbara Fe ldon.
Engagement and wedding
Stiow starts all : oo p.m.
forms are also available on
request.

COLO'\ ·
•

Tht •t~lr••

*

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

MEIGS THEATRE
10

CARTOON

USE OUR
CONVENIENT

I

•
'

4 DAYS· SUN. thru WED.
THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

IANUMERIC.IRD
ORIIASTU CURGE

LAYAWAY
PLAN

NOVEMBER 16-17-18-19

SOLID ITATE-4 PIECE

0
4

Spealers
Sold

Separately

I•TIACK
CAR 'IAPI PLAYER

94

A utomatic or man ual

lrock switch . Pilot
indicolor light Tone,
bolo nee, volume con -

1
Wal'lut woodgrain finished unit
w/automatic BSR change'. 45
jock. 4 1-'a·· tw in delu xe speakers.

CHARGE IT!

dust cover . left/ right .~,~olume.

balcnce, tone controls. Ploys all

r
•

WIDGI ITIRIO
IPIAKIR KIT

Sheila Davis

·
Ii
!'

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs .
Oletller Davis, t15 Railroad St., Ironton, are Bllnounclng
~ 1be Bl!llgement of their daughter Sheila to Stephen
Xnotii,IOIIof Mr. and Mn. R. E. Knotts of Gallipolis. The
' CUllom ol open church will be observed for the wedding to
be held Salurday, Nov. 29 at 3 in the afternoon at the
l tti:: lllrrillonville Avenue Oturch of God, 1712 Harrisonville
Ave., Pwllmouth.

leods , 2
speaken;,
1-ad.o.o-e.
Eosy to
insloll.

$6~G.

size records.

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

7.94

1

4 IUISISTOI CRIZEI'S lAID

j1:

WALKIE TALKIE

!ivayside gardeners hold

WITH MORSE CODE KEY

ineet with. Cheshire club
the home of Mrs. Dale
Mulford. Refreshments of
: open meeting recently with cookies, sandwiches, coffee
the Cheshire Garden Uub as and punch were served.
guests. The meeting ~as
opened by the president,
~
Marilyn Reese. Devotions
•' were led by Mrs. Slanly
i Shaver with a song, "Count
'
Yoll' Bleu1•ns,"
MERCER IS FAIR
~
•
The meeting WBII turned
PASADENA, Qlllf. (UPI)
over to Mrs. Robert Jenkins - Johnny Mercer, Academy
' who preaented a program on Award winning composer of
"Travel." She dliiCussed her "Days of Wine and Roses"
trip to Ethiopia. She said they and "Moon River," was in
have a 25 hour day and use fair
condition
today,
two languages. Mrs. Jenldins recuperating from brain
• showed a display of crosseS ' surgery.
Aspokellll8ll at Huntington
·: from dlfferent.Jilaces she had
Memorial
Hospital said the
~ ~ted. She salil the people of
-mniopia are a cross between 66-year-old composer
Hebrew and African. She remained In the lnlenlive
jllllltlitued the program with care unit, but hu ~own
sJlght improvement, A benign
color sJides of her trip .
Plans were made for the t.'ain tumor was removed
UtrislmBII par,ty to be held at Oct. 2:1..

...

8 IRACK SIEREO
IAPEPLAYER
MEETS ALL
GOVT. SAFETY
REQUIREMENTS

SOLD

UNASSEMBLED

WHITE OR WALNUT CRIB
Drop side has
~''
safety locking
~
mechanism. White
plastic teething rails.
spring height
Both Meet All

$

Government Safety
Regulations

9.7

Stereo pre-omped set · with two speokers. Autotnotlc or monuol !rock sele ctor ,
lighted track Ind ica tor. Balonce, tone
and volume sl ide controls. Save todoyl

REG. 146.97

VINYL COVERED
CRIB MATTRESS

OUR OWN BRAND

WINDSHIILD
WASHIR SOLYINT

GALLON

*lllo Y- MAmlll CHAIIOE c.d

· ltl Upper River Rood
Acrou from 511Yerlrlclge Pl111, Go Ill polls

REG.

REG. •3.99 DOWGARD
ANTI•FRIIZI

77"
GALLON

Effec lille r~ody ­
mix cleans road
dusl ond dirt
build-up fosll
OPEN MON.
tllru SAT.
. IO'TIIt

PAIR ·

No license is required to operate these 2 sol id state transce ivers .
Has push to talk , on / aft and vol ume controls plu s a telescoping
rod antenna . Uses 9 volt battery , not included.

'j

r---------------~

9~

\RiG·
....

l, itt:
GALLIPOLIS The
=wayside Garden l1ub had an

1

0

RPM adaptor and headphone

trols. Hookup wires,
moun ting brocket s.

RESTAURANT

WantM

;

Chillicothe Friday .to the table service.
The dance, beginning at 8,
Veterans Administration
will
be open to the public.
Facilities for another work
There
will be no admission
session. Invitations are being
prepared by Maye Roush, charge but the RSVP will
all
Gallia County Coordinator of gratefully accept
the RSVP to be sent to the donations. These donations
supervisors of the many work will help the RSVP to con·
stations and to other special tinue servin g vari ous
guests so they might at(fnd organizations wilh th eir
the dinner dance that will he group of dedicated volun·
held at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5 leers . Wherever you see
volunteer workers in Gallia
at the VFW Hail.
Gray Tuecke, music County, you can be sure the
therapist of the VA facility , RSVP is there.
will bring approximately 30
veterans to join in the
festivities . The VA band will
furnish the music for the
evening.
RSVP members are being
reminded to bring their own

FAMILY

G£1' liJUR MAN W11111

992-2156

RSVP visits ·nursing home

'"

M·en's Harness. Boot

446-2342

orange and white spice bags
decorated with straw flowers .

Club to hold Christmas contest

i Sarah Carsey 1Charlene Hoeflich ~
i Ga/liiJolis-Point Pleasant l Pomeroy-Middleport :

SMITH HONDA SALES~

GENUINE LEATHER

$rREG.

POMEROY
The
r
esentation
of
"
Meigs
P
Count y's Ea rly Religious
Heritage," a compilation of
church histories by Maye
Crary Mora, to the, Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society was a ·
feature of the F1·idaX meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs
' 'hapter Daugher·s of th·e
"
'
American Revolution.
Olh er h"tg hi'lghts of the day
for the D.A.R. included the
marking of the grave of Clara
Crary Hennesy, a 50,year
member, at the Middleport
Hill Cemetery, and a talk by
Practicing Pomeroy attorney
C'harles Knight on the topic
"The Madison Contribution
vs. Modern American Way of
·ure."
Mrs. Patrick Lochary
accepted the 100..page volume
of church histories collected
and compiled by Mrs. Mora
for the Historical Society, a
bicentennial projkt of ·the

:

#I SELLER IN THE U.S.A•.

LINER.

STEEL TOE
SIZES 7 to· 12

•
t
•'
•'•
••
I
'

·

REMOVABLE

I

I

('

READY FOR COLD WEATHER
100.%NYLON UPPERS
BLACK; NAVY
REG. '11.97

$888

•I

l. Woman's

Church histories presented
at Friday DAR· meeting

Homemakers'
Circle ·

,.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Year ' r:ound wi nter

anti -freeze / summer

coolo nt. Fights rust
ond corrosion.

li.MITED QUANTITIES · NO RAINCHI~ti

1.27

1

G.C. MURPHY CO. • TliE FRIENDLY STOR··
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS STORE
•

•

..

�~-The Sunday Times · Se~tlnel, sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

---;---1

4-.The Sunday Times . Sentinel, SIUiday, Nov. 16, 197$

rv;;;;»;;~,;;;;;;rl

Grange discusses
holiday activities
..

A MIU. AT PIDGEON FORGE, TENN. Is shown on
thla caaeln on canvas ciiTI!ntly exhibited at Rlverby. This
Md other worb of John L. Fryant are being displayed at
Rlwrby during the mooth of November. Gallery hours
.-e Saturdays and SUndays, 1 to 5 p.m. and Tuesdays and
ThursdaY.., IQa.m. to 3p.m. (Photo by Lanna Waugh).

Fabr~c

Shap
Pomeroy·

POMEROY - . Holiday
activities were planned
during the Thursday night
meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange at the hall.
Members were reminded to
take gifts for the patients at
the Athens Mental Health
Center to either Mrs. Fred
Goeglein or Mrs . Amos
Leonard. Plans were made
for the annual lbrlstmas
potluck dinner to be held
. Thursday, Dec. II at the hall.
Three applications for
membership were read and a
.thank-you note from the
Meigs County Council on
Aging for the senior citizens
program was read. The offleers conference to be held
Tuesday night at 0 p.m. at the
Rock Springs hall was announced.
A sympathy card was sent
to Mrs. Mildred Betzlng, and
the program prepared by the

Make_It
A Seiko
Christmas

FABRIC SPECIALS
Wide Selection On Sale

Save Up To~ OFF

-------------------------· ·· :

'40off! Stylist• stretch-stitch
.

miC\iine with 'free arm'

$239~~:95
ln·the·round 'free arm'
sewins versatility, and
flat-bed extension. Carrying case or cabinet extra.

The F,abric Shop
McC111'1, Kwlck·S.w, Simplicity P1tterns
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
liS W. Second .
m -m•
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Give them automation-age
accuracy, plus an instant·set

day I date calendar encased

in a smart Seiko design.
Both are self.wlnding, water
rested to 98,2 feet. Both have
fine. t 7 jewel movements.
No. ZS013M-her

stainless steal Lady Salko
with blue dial and red sweep
second hand. $105.00.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Lay·Away Your
'

Singer For Chri~bnas

54fcond Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

422

BUSINESS CLOSEOUT SAlE

HOMES AT
OUR
INVOICE

COSTII
Most All Homes
HM 5% Tu
CredH.

~

lecturer rarried out . a
Thanksgiving theme . The
group sang "A1nerica , The
Beautiful" and for roll call
named what they like best on
a Thanksgiving table. Mrs.
Goeglein
read "Complainlng "; Mrs . Louise
Radford , "Thanksgiving
Day," Mrs. Betty. Conkle, "A
Day to Remember"; Mrs.
.Ethel Grueser, " Thanksgiving USA, The Privilege";
James Conkle, "A Better
Way," and Lottie Leonard,
"Be Grateful." There was
dulcimer music by Amos
Leonard, and a quiz on Bible
characters by Mrs. Beuna
Grueser.
· Mrs . Ethel Grueser and
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit served
refreshrr\ents.

Day of Prayer
is observed
POMEROY - Baptist
Women's Day of Prayer was
observed at the Thursday
night meeting or the
American Baptist Women of

~~ur~:."eroy

First Baptist
Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
president, opened the
meetingwiththethemesong,
"Lord, Speak to Me" and a
Jove gift dedication by Mrs.
Ellen Couch. Mrs. Caddie
Wickham was leader for the
service with the theme, "One
World, One Lord". She gave
an explanation of the ob- ·
servance and noted that the
offering will go to help all
peoples of the world.
It was noted thst a box had
been sent to Puerto Rico
missionaries and that
another box has been
prepared for the Campbell
Chri.Stlan Center. Mrs.
Bur too Smith and Mrs. Couch
served refreshments to those
named and Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner, Mrs. Margaretta
Roush, Mrs. Margaret
Bailey, Mrs. Harriet Sterrett,
Mrs. Eula Price, Mrs. Caryl
Cook and Mrs. Bea Kuhn .

~

CROWN CITY - ASept. 27
· open church wedding at the
l'rown C1ty Methodist lburch
united In marriage Miss
Rebecca Lynn Rankin,
daughter of Rev. and Mrs.
Jack M. Rankin, l'rown l)ty,
and K. Leland Ours .. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E.
Ours, l'rown l)ty·.
The Rev , Richard Graham
perfor;ned the double ring
ceremony at 8 p.m. following
a half hour of prenuptial
music by Miss Robin
Williams.
The altar was decorated
with two seven-branch
candP.labra and a kneeling
bench. A table featuring an
open Bible was flanked on
either side with white candles. Candelabra also
marked the pews of the
parents and Immediate
families.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of organza laahioned with an
empire waistline which extended into a , bodice
enhanced by · chantilly lace
from the shouldus which
formed a V. Within the v was
scattered a motif of lace and
pearls. The gown held the

h
uoronty C edules
t011 and (}a
L. k
e J
('

·-·--·· ·M---

HERE THEY ARE:
24x52 Crestrid&amp;e
Furnished '14,995

, Unfurnished

14164 Cameron 3 Bedroom.............................. .!7,900
14164 Kirkwood 3 Bednxlm .............................. '8,995
12120 Vemco Add-A-Room ................................ 12,995
~

12x50 Used

Let's

'14,500

I BedRJOIII,.................... :. '3,995

'I

~

Qndrlch, who was acq~
l1lo weeki ago to replace an
Injured player, was releaaed
to mate room for the 11-foot-4,
236-po~md Frazier.

exanScedrla, Virgml8. Pamtmgs, Drawings and Models of

ver
nes and Boats, Riverby.
·
. GALLERY HOURs : Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m.
til'3 PJD.: Saturdays and Sundays, 1p.m. and.5p.m. .
Eve~y Thursday morning during the month, 9:3().11 :30
~.rn., Cllristmas Workshop, completing Christmas decorations
Elilr the tr~e and Riverby, Riverby.
.
.
~• . Nov. 18, Tuesday , 0 p.m., F.A.C. Interdepartmental
~eeting, R1verby,
..
~c:t· 23, SWJday, 2 p.m.-4 p.m., Parent :child Workshop, A
:;"
Olrlstmas project by Corinne Lund instructor
w wrby.
.
. , ,
'
-~ .N~•. 25, Tuesday, 8 p.m., F.A.C. Trustees Meeting,
H veru3 •
.
: Dec. 5, Friday, 7:30 p.m., Christmas Party lor members
!!Jd families, Riverby.
Dec. 'll, &amp;jturday, All day bus trip to Cinclrutati to see the
cinnaU Syrnpbnoy Orchestra and the Cinclrutati Ballet
Company present "The Nutcracker Suite." Depart 8:15a.m .
Attend 2 p.m. matlnt;e at the Cincinnati Music Hall. Return to
GaiUpolls at 9:30p.m. Cost: $24.50, includes transportation,
ticket, luncheon and tip. Reservations by Dec. 5 to Mrs, Donna
Nibert, 281 state Street, Gallipolis, Ohio. Open to members and
non-members.

,

no

I

So everything must go on sale, 12x20 awning. 6'x8' patio, locker,
steps. wooden walk-ways, picket fence.and all parts. So if you need 1
home or a good buy on accessories stop today.

Don't Mlu This One Time luy-

·f

OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAINI

CHOOSE A CAREER IN ••

eBUSINESS ADMIIUSTRAOON
eJR. ACCOUJmNG

.OECUTIVE
SECRETARIAL
'
eGENWL OFFICE
.sECRETARIAL

SPECIAL HOURS
OF THIS SALE
9to.

...,

Mon. Thru Sat.

Cl1. lODAY FOR FREE
C.TAI.OG 4...367

OnSunuv

(Nov. 23 &amp; 301

•

IIIINI D1C. lth.

- ..

•

'

EXCELLENT
DIAMOND
CLUSTER
VALUES

19 DIAMONDS

GET
AnENTION

'"
,)

Bv

·§

Before Chrlllfl\as.

... ,.

.' .

Once ina* .

THE EMPIRE'S

THE AREA'S LARGEST
SELEOION OF

-

LIVING ROOM

HIDE-A-BEDS

FURNITURE

kn.wnt

DINING ROOM

-Si.RATOLOONGER' ·

FURNITURE

RECLINERS

eBIG

SAVINGS
.EARLY AMERICAN,
FRENCH,
SPANISH,
CON:rEMPORARY

MONDAY
ONLY

'

'

•dBASSEIT
t
.
*

t

LAYAWAY
NOW

WHI
DRYER

FOR

GIFTS
'

TABLE OF
lHE AREA'S lARGEST SELECilON

OF

LAMPS &amp;OCCASIONAL TABLES

I

'

1

TO 16.99

SIZES 510 10

eGIGAN.TIC
SAVINGS
SILVER IRIDGE PLAZA

Model LDE 5700
• Special coot-down ca re for
Permanent Press and Knit
fa bri cs
• 3 drying temperature
seleclions
• TUMBLE PRESS• control
• Extra la rge lint screen
• Large 5.9 cu. ft . drying drum
• Push-to-start button
• Automatic door shut off
• Bak-Pak Laundry Info rmation Center ·
(Note: To feature gas model,
chang e mod~l number to
LDI 5701)

FOR THE · ·

HOME

LADIES PLATfORMS,

Mon. lllru Set.
IOtllt
I HIS

Model LOA 7600
• 2 washing ~nd 2 splnn ~~~d~1
• 4 cycles: NORMAL, n
PERMANENT PRESS and
KNIT
• 4 puahbullon wash/ rinse
energy-saving water temp
selector
• 3 load-size water-saving
selector
• Ag1tator-niounted fa bric
softener dispenser
• Bleach dispenser
• MAGIC CLEAN• filter
• Cool-down care for Permanent Press fabrics
• Super SURGILATOA 0
agitator
• Bac-Pak Laundry Information Center

FOR ALL YOUR
HOLIDAY
COMPANY

TO BRIGHTEN'
YOUR HOME!

Fellowship Church
l1arksburg where she servesl
as pianist and Ia emt~loyMII•~
United Hospital Center
Sout~ Division as a v -··..
technician.
The public Is also lnvli~
hear the Gospel Cru~ade~
from-l1arksburg, well
throughout the area lor
spirit-filled presentation
song .

WHIRlPOOL
AUTOMAnC WASHER

SIMMONS &amp; BASSETT

'.

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

. ,..7

SWITCHrvwtS

LAYAWAy NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
.
O!IIY 32 More Shopping Days

SUNDAY h

WEDGES, STRAPS &amp;
VAUJES
OXFORDS

'

100 Pet. Polyester double knit
Slacks with elastic waist band.
Chocolate Brown, Hunter Green &amp;
Patterns. Coordinating or Contrasting 100 Pet. Nylon Shells.

!~

GALLIPOLIS - Aweekend
revival meeting Is plannea at
Bulaville lbristian l1turch
Nov. 21-23 at 7 each evening
and Sooday morning at 10:30.
Rita
Robinson
of·
·uarkllhurg, w. Va. will be
the guest speaker. Miss
Robinson graduated from
Victory High School In
l1arkllhurg and Zion Bible
Institute of. Providence, R.I.
She Is a member of Faith

Secorid Ave ~

Ga IIi polis. Ohio ·

SLACKS &amp;
SHELLS.

Mr. and Mrs. K. Leland Ou~;,.

and

422

UNIFORM CENTER
.

basement. The bride's ~~le
featured a four-tier c~ke
decorated with apricot r~s
and yellow flowers , . o
smaller cakes edged . e
wedding cake and were
connected with stairways ~if'
each stairway a miniafure
bridesmaid and usher II'~
placed. The wedding CR~
also held the tradilional b~iile
and groom on top.
.
Sharon Petrie, Lorelta
Rankin, , . Betty Kllg~~ ·
Glenna Rankin and Sher;y
'Rankin presided at ·' 1e
refreshment table.
7~ .
The new Mr. and Mrs. Oiifs
reside on Rt. 1, l'roivn City.
The bride is a 1974 grad
of Hannan Trace High Sch
and a former employee '
Robbins
Myer
Gallipolis.
Mr. Ours Ia a 1972 gradua
of Hannan Trace and
employed at GaUipolls Par ·
Warehouse.
Out of town guests w ·
Mr. and Mrs . Meredl1~
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Terr(
Davis, Janice Davis, Mr. an
Mrs. William Friel, Terr(
Friel, Bever!~ Friel, Mr.
Mrs. Mike O'Brien, Patt
Eaton, Janet Bragg, Mr.
Mrs. Vinton Rankin, P
Berry, Mr. and Mrs. 1rv
Rankin, Mr, and Mrs. Dalla
Ramey and Mrs . Jl"t
Kilgore .

c;r. s250
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
I

r ...

Must Clear Our lot By Dec. 1,1975
NIW QUARTER

who are in te rested in - r-:--~.....- - - - creatin g and making attractive decorations for the
··
holiday season are in vited to
the workshop . It is open to
··
both members and non~·
· . ··- _
members. No charge is
made. The more who attend,
the more decorations can be
created lor a most attractive
children's exhi bit for all to
enjoy at Rlverby the lirst
weekend In December.

has-

To
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
·COu.EGE

HOLIDAY DI!:OORATIONS ESPECIALLY FOR CHILDREN will be the project for the
French Art Colooy Parent-Ollld Workshop next &amp;mday. Some of the children already
working on decorations are shown with the instructor, Corrine Lund. Pictured are, 1-r,
Tommy Byers, Mrs. Lund, Rachsel Lund (partially hidden) , Tina Barsotti and Clay
Calhoun.

Gt\LI.IPOLIS The
French Art Colony's ParentChild Workshop for thi s
month will be held on Sunday,
Nov . 23 !rom l p.m.-4 p.m . at
River by.
Mrs. Corinne Lund will be
the instructor for this preChristmas workshop. Holiday
decorations especially for
children will be the project
for the afternoon .
Children who participate
will be asked to leave their
decorations for a special
exhibit thst will be on display
in the first floor classroom
durin g Gallery hours at
Rlverby on Saturday and
Sunday, Dec. 6 and 7 from 1
p.m . until 5 p.m. each day.
They may then pick up
their decorations to enjoy in
their own homes the following
weekend, Dec. 13·14, or no
later than the next weekend,
Dec. 20-21.
All children and parents

..•

APllleal made
fior l/.

rawyer.
Backup llnebacker Ralph

.

~ Exhibit lor the _month o~ November: John L. Fryant of

Miss
Rankin,
Miss
and refreshments were
Stapleton
and
Miss
Ramey
served by Mrs. Ruth Riffie
and Mrs. Carolyn Grueser. A wore Ivory dresses edged in
do-your-own thing auction lace with a small apricot
was held following the flower adorning the high
neckline. The short puff
meeting.
sleeves and ruffle at the
bottom of the dress completed the style.
Miss Rankin and Miss
'J:'.
Stapleton carried a solitary
candle in apricot while Miss
J
Ramey
carried
the
U0 $
traditional lace basket filled
with apricot rose petals.
Mrs. Clifford Stapleton
GALUPOLIS - Rev. Blll
Beagle,
chairman
of registered guests at the door.
Terry Shaffer served
Operation Santa Claus in
as
best
man
for
Gallla County, has made a
the
groom.
Ushe~were
special appeal for dolls in
order that the senior citizens David Shaffer , Rodney
in the county can repair and l!i,;,kin and Tony Ours. The
dress them before Chrisbnas. groom and his attendants
Anyone with dolls or toys were attired in white dinner
that they would like to donate jackets with dark pants and
io the needy children · in bow ties. Scott Rankin served
Gallla County for Uu-lstmas as ringbearer and wore the
should contact Rev. Beagle at same as the ushers.
For her daughter's wed·
367-7814 or take them to
ding
, Mrs. Rankin chose a
Operation Santa Claus
two-piece
brown and white
headquarters in the. upstairs
dress
of
jersey knit and
of the Ohio River Realty
Building between 10 a.m. and carried white accessories.
2 p.m. Nov. 21, 22, 28 and 29. Mrs. Ours wore a coral
In December ; the head- colored dress of polyester
quarters wlll be open crepe and featured navy
Monday through Friday, 10 accessories . Each mother
a.m. to 2p.m. and Saturdays, and grandmother wore
corsages of white carnations.
9 to 5.
A reception honoring the
Monetary donations should
couple
was held in the church
be mailed to Marie Foster, co GalUpolls Dally Tribune,
825 Third Ave., GaUlpolls.
Make checks payable to
Operation Santa (,'Jaus.

HOUSTON (UPI) - Wlllle
Frazier, who had spent the
past two aeasons with the
World Football League, was
llcneci by the HoUlton Oilers
Friday as a relti'Ve tight end
becaule of an Injury to John

.. u

~

Sa~te

J

I
'
I

~ae.,

Calendar

::

_s
l.

MIDDLEPORT
A
holiday toy and·bake sale was
planned for Dec. 6 when the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
Thursday night at the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Mrs. Janet Pickens, ways
and means chairwoman,
reminded memb\lrs of a toy
workshop to be held on Nov .
18 at the home of Mrs, Karen
Sian ley.
.
Mrs. Becky Anderson read .
a letter from the Senior
mizens Council thanking the
chspter for a contribution to
the program. A trip to Fenton
was announced by Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning. Mrs.
Susan Baer gave a cultural
report on house and home,

•

~

•

PRIMA CRrriCAL
WS ANGELES (UPI) Band leader and linger Louts
Prima, · 62, was in critical
conditioo today and remained
in a mild cmJa followinc
brain Sll'gery for a t11nor.
Prima en\el'ed Cedars of·
Lebanon-MI. Sinai Medical
Center Oct. 15 and was
operated oo. HYI!ral days
later.
A hoapltal spokesman said
Prima's wife, the former Gls
"'
Ml!ee, who IIBIIg witb Prima's
}-'..... '
band
forl3years,ltaysather
"You're inviting me to your bu.lband's bedside alnlOII ~
birthday party next Saturday? holll'!l a day
J111t a minute and I'll ut my The ~ married Iince
mother ill bave to 10."
tll63,fhavetwo'chlldren,Loull .
Jr., 10, and Lena Ann, 12.

3 Bedroom
Sectional

traditional wedding rmg
neckline , Long sleeves
adorned with chantilly lace
and small ruffies at the wrist
acce~ted the gown . A chapel
length train also enhanced
the gown.
For her headpiece, the
bride chose a chapel length
veil of illusion edged in
chantilly
lace
which .
corresponded to that of her
gown. She carried a colonial
bouquet of white ahd apricot
roses adorned with baby's
breath and lace. Her only
jewelry was a pair of pearl
earrings belonging to her
mother.
Mrs. Beverly Rose was
matron of honor with Miss
Judy Houck, Lisa Rankin and
Diana L. Stapleton as bridesmaids and Miss Angela
Ramey as flo\Ver girl. Mrs.
Rose and Miss Houck wore
identical apricot gowns
fashioned ol organza over
taffeta styled with a scoop
neckline featuring a flounce,
long aheer sleeves and a
gathered tiered skirt edged in
ivory lace. They carried a
single white long stemmed
rose with ivory lace gathered
.around.

0

PAC workshop announced ·

.aJRIO
CABINETS
.GUN
CAII.NDS

•BOOK
·CASES
.sTEREO

SHRVING

.

eROOM DIVIDERS

LAYAWAY
. FOR
CHRISTMAS

·-,'

�~-The Sunday Times · Se~tlnel, sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

---;---1

4-.The Sunday Times . Sentinel, SIUiday, Nov. 16, 197$

rv;;;;»;;~,;;;;;;rl

Grange discusses
holiday activities
..

A MIU. AT PIDGEON FORGE, TENN. Is shown on
thla caaeln on canvas ciiTI!ntly exhibited at Rlverby. This
Md other worb of John L. Fryant are being displayed at
Rlwrby during the mooth of November. Gallery hours
.-e Saturdays and SUndays, 1 to 5 p.m. and Tuesdays and
ThursdaY.., IQa.m. to 3p.m. (Photo by Lanna Waugh).

Fabr~c

Shap
Pomeroy·

POMEROY - . Holiday
activities were planned
during the Thursday night
meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange at the hall.
Members were reminded to
take gifts for the patients at
the Athens Mental Health
Center to either Mrs. Fred
Goeglein or Mrs . Amos
Leonard. Plans were made
for the annual lbrlstmas
potluck dinner to be held
. Thursday, Dec. II at the hall.
Three applications for
membership were read and a
.thank-you note from the
Meigs County Council on
Aging for the senior citizens
program was read. The offleers conference to be held
Tuesday night at 0 p.m. at the
Rock Springs hall was announced.
A sympathy card was sent
to Mrs. Mildred Betzlng, and
the program prepared by the

Make_It
A Seiko
Christmas

FABRIC SPECIALS
Wide Selection On Sale

Save Up To~ OFF

-------------------------· ·· :

'40off! Stylist• stretch-stitch
.

miC\iine with 'free arm'

$239~~:95
ln·the·round 'free arm'
sewins versatility, and
flat-bed extension. Carrying case or cabinet extra.

The F,abric Shop
McC111'1, Kwlck·S.w, Simplicity P1tterns
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
liS W. Second .
m -m•
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Give them automation-age
accuracy, plus an instant·set

day I date calendar encased

in a smart Seiko design.
Both are self.wlnding, water
rested to 98,2 feet. Both have
fine. t 7 jewel movements.
No. ZS013M-her

stainless steal Lady Salko
with blue dial and red sweep
second hand. $105.00.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Lay·Away Your
'

Singer For Chri~bnas

54fcond Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

422

BUSINESS CLOSEOUT SAlE

HOMES AT
OUR
INVOICE

COSTII
Most All Homes
HM 5% Tu
CredH.

~

lecturer rarried out . a
Thanksgiving theme . The
group sang "A1nerica , The
Beautiful" and for roll call
named what they like best on
a Thanksgiving table. Mrs.
Goeglein
read "Complainlng "; Mrs . Louise
Radford , "Thanksgiving
Day," Mrs. Betty. Conkle, "A
Day to Remember"; Mrs.
.Ethel Grueser, " Thanksgiving USA, The Privilege";
James Conkle, "A Better
Way," and Lottie Leonard,
"Be Grateful." There was
dulcimer music by Amos
Leonard, and a quiz on Bible
characters by Mrs. Beuna
Grueser.
· Mrs . Ethel Grueser and
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit served
refreshrr\ents.

Day of Prayer
is observed
POMEROY - Baptist
Women's Day of Prayer was
observed at the Thursday
night meeting or the
American Baptist Women of

~~ur~:."eroy

First Baptist
Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
president, opened the
meetingwiththethemesong,
"Lord, Speak to Me" and a
Jove gift dedication by Mrs.
Ellen Couch. Mrs. Caddie
Wickham was leader for the
service with the theme, "One
World, One Lord". She gave
an explanation of the ob- ·
servance and noted that the
offering will go to help all
peoples of the world.
It was noted thst a box had
been sent to Puerto Rico
missionaries and that
another box has been
prepared for the Campbell
Chri.Stlan Center. Mrs.
Bur too Smith and Mrs. Couch
served refreshments to those
named and Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner, Mrs. Margaretta
Roush, Mrs. Margaret
Bailey, Mrs. Harriet Sterrett,
Mrs. Eula Price, Mrs. Caryl
Cook and Mrs. Bea Kuhn .

~

CROWN CITY - ASept. 27
· open church wedding at the
l'rown C1ty Methodist lburch
united In marriage Miss
Rebecca Lynn Rankin,
daughter of Rev. and Mrs.
Jack M. Rankin, l'rown l)ty,
and K. Leland Ours .. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E.
Ours, l'rown l)ty·.
The Rev , Richard Graham
perfor;ned the double ring
ceremony at 8 p.m. following
a half hour of prenuptial
music by Miss Robin
Williams.
The altar was decorated
with two seven-branch
candP.labra and a kneeling
bench. A table featuring an
open Bible was flanked on
either side with white candles. Candelabra also
marked the pews of the
parents and Immediate
families.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of organza laahioned with an
empire waistline which extended into a , bodice
enhanced by · chantilly lace
from the shouldus which
formed a V. Within the v was
scattered a motif of lace and
pearls. The gown held the

h
uoronty C edules
t011 and (}a
L. k
e J
('

·-·--·· ·M---

HERE THEY ARE:
24x52 Crestrid&amp;e
Furnished '14,995

, Unfurnished

14164 Cameron 3 Bedroom.............................. .!7,900
14164 Kirkwood 3 Bednxlm .............................. '8,995
12120 Vemco Add-A-Room ................................ 12,995
~

12x50 Used

Let's

'14,500

I BedRJOIII,.................... :. '3,995

'I

~

Qndrlch, who was acq~
l1lo weeki ago to replace an
Injured player, was releaaed
to mate room for the 11-foot-4,
236-po~md Frazier.

exanScedrla, Virgml8. Pamtmgs, Drawings and Models of

ver
nes and Boats, Riverby.
·
. GALLERY HOURs : Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m.
til'3 PJD.: Saturdays and Sundays, 1p.m. and.5p.m. .
Eve~y Thursday morning during the month, 9:3().11 :30
~.rn., Cllristmas Workshop, completing Christmas decorations
Elilr the tr~e and Riverby, Riverby.
.
.
~• . Nov. 18, Tuesday , 0 p.m., F.A.C. Interdepartmental
~eeting, R1verby,
..
~c:t· 23, SWJday, 2 p.m.-4 p.m., Parent :child Workshop, A
:;"
Olrlstmas project by Corinne Lund instructor
w wrby.
.
. , ,
'
-~ .N~•. 25, Tuesday, 8 p.m., F.A.C. Trustees Meeting,
H veru3 •
.
: Dec. 5, Friday, 7:30 p.m., Christmas Party lor members
!!Jd families, Riverby.
Dec. 'll, &amp;jturday, All day bus trip to Cinclrutati to see the
cinnaU Syrnpbnoy Orchestra and the Cinclrutati Ballet
Company present "The Nutcracker Suite." Depart 8:15a.m .
Attend 2 p.m. matlnt;e at the Cincinnati Music Hall. Return to
GaiUpolls at 9:30p.m. Cost: $24.50, includes transportation,
ticket, luncheon and tip. Reservations by Dec. 5 to Mrs, Donna
Nibert, 281 state Street, Gallipolis, Ohio. Open to members and
non-members.

,

no

I

So everything must go on sale, 12x20 awning. 6'x8' patio, locker,
steps. wooden walk-ways, picket fence.and all parts. So if you need 1
home or a good buy on accessories stop today.

Don't Mlu This One Time luy-

·f

OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAINI

CHOOSE A CAREER IN ••

eBUSINESS ADMIIUSTRAOON
eJR. ACCOUJmNG

.OECUTIVE
SECRETARIAL
'
eGENWL OFFICE
.sECRETARIAL

SPECIAL HOURS
OF THIS SALE
9to.

...,

Mon. Thru Sat.

Cl1. lODAY FOR FREE
C.TAI.OG 4...367

OnSunuv

(Nov. 23 &amp; 301

•

IIIINI D1C. lth.

- ..

•

'

EXCELLENT
DIAMOND
CLUSTER
VALUES

19 DIAMONDS

GET
AnENTION

'"
,)

Bv

·§

Before Chrlllfl\as.

... ,.

.' .

Once ina* .

THE EMPIRE'S

THE AREA'S LARGEST
SELEOION OF

-

LIVING ROOM

HIDE-A-BEDS

FURNITURE

kn.wnt

DINING ROOM

-Si.RATOLOONGER' ·

FURNITURE

RECLINERS

eBIG

SAVINGS
.EARLY AMERICAN,
FRENCH,
SPANISH,
CON:rEMPORARY

MONDAY
ONLY

'

'

•dBASSEIT
t
.
*

t

LAYAWAY
NOW

WHI
DRYER

FOR

GIFTS
'

TABLE OF
lHE AREA'S lARGEST SELECilON

OF

LAMPS &amp;OCCASIONAL TABLES

I

'

1

TO 16.99

SIZES 510 10

eGIGAN.TIC
SAVINGS
SILVER IRIDGE PLAZA

Model LDE 5700
• Special coot-down ca re for
Permanent Press and Knit
fa bri cs
• 3 drying temperature
seleclions
• TUMBLE PRESS• control
• Extra la rge lint screen
• Large 5.9 cu. ft . drying drum
• Push-to-start button
• Automatic door shut off
• Bak-Pak Laundry Info rmation Center ·
(Note: To feature gas model,
chang e mod~l number to
LDI 5701)

FOR THE · ·

HOME

LADIES PLATfORMS,

Mon. lllru Set.
IOtllt
I HIS

Model LOA 7600
• 2 washing ~nd 2 splnn ~~~d~1
• 4 cycles: NORMAL, n
PERMANENT PRESS and
KNIT
• 4 puahbullon wash/ rinse
energy-saving water temp
selector
• 3 load-size water-saving
selector
• Ag1tator-niounted fa bric
softener dispenser
• Bleach dispenser
• MAGIC CLEAN• filter
• Cool-down care for Permanent Press fabrics
• Super SURGILATOA 0
agitator
• Bac-Pak Laundry Information Center

FOR ALL YOUR
HOLIDAY
COMPANY

TO BRIGHTEN'
YOUR HOME!

Fellowship Church
l1arksburg where she servesl
as pianist and Ia emt~loyMII•~
United Hospital Center
Sout~ Division as a v -··..
technician.
The public Is also lnvli~
hear the Gospel Cru~ade~
from-l1arksburg, well
throughout the area lor
spirit-filled presentation
song .

WHIRlPOOL
AUTOMAnC WASHER

SIMMONS &amp; BASSETT

'.

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

. ,..7

SWITCHrvwtS

LAYAWAy NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
.
O!IIY 32 More Shopping Days

SUNDAY h

WEDGES, STRAPS &amp;
VAUJES
OXFORDS

'

100 Pet. Polyester double knit
Slacks with elastic waist band.
Chocolate Brown, Hunter Green &amp;
Patterns. Coordinating or Contrasting 100 Pet. Nylon Shells.

!~

GALLIPOLIS - Aweekend
revival meeting Is plannea at
Bulaville lbristian l1turch
Nov. 21-23 at 7 each evening
and Sooday morning at 10:30.
Rita
Robinson
of·
·uarkllhurg, w. Va. will be
the guest speaker. Miss
Robinson graduated from
Victory High School In
l1arkllhurg and Zion Bible
Institute of. Providence, R.I.
She Is a member of Faith

Secorid Ave ~

Ga IIi polis. Ohio ·

SLACKS &amp;
SHELLS.

Mr. and Mrs. K. Leland Ou~;,.

and

422

UNIFORM CENTER
.

basement. The bride's ~~le
featured a four-tier c~ke
decorated with apricot r~s
and yellow flowers , . o
smaller cakes edged . e
wedding cake and were
connected with stairways ~if'
each stairway a miniafure
bridesmaid and usher II'~
placed. The wedding CR~
also held the tradilional b~iile
and groom on top.
.
Sharon Petrie, Lorelta
Rankin, , . Betty Kllg~~ ·
Glenna Rankin and Sher;y
'Rankin presided at ·' 1e
refreshment table.
7~ .
The new Mr. and Mrs. Oiifs
reside on Rt. 1, l'roivn City.
The bride is a 1974 grad
of Hannan Trace High Sch
and a former employee '
Robbins
Myer
Gallipolis.
Mr. Ours Ia a 1972 gradua
of Hannan Trace and
employed at GaUipolls Par ·
Warehouse.
Out of town guests w ·
Mr. and Mrs . Meredl1~
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Terr(
Davis, Janice Davis, Mr. an
Mrs. William Friel, Terr(
Friel, Bever!~ Friel, Mr.
Mrs. Mike O'Brien, Patt
Eaton, Janet Bragg, Mr.
Mrs. Vinton Rankin, P
Berry, Mr. and Mrs. 1rv
Rankin, Mr, and Mrs. Dalla
Ramey and Mrs . Jl"t
Kilgore .

c;r. s250
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
I

r ...

Must Clear Our lot By Dec. 1,1975
NIW QUARTER

who are in te rested in - r-:--~.....- - - - creatin g and making attractive decorations for the
··
holiday season are in vited to
the workshop . It is open to
··
both members and non~·
· . ··- _
members. No charge is
made. The more who attend,
the more decorations can be
created lor a most attractive
children's exhi bit for all to
enjoy at Rlverby the lirst
weekend In December.

has-

To
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
·COu.EGE

HOLIDAY DI!:OORATIONS ESPECIALLY FOR CHILDREN will be the project for the
French Art Colooy Parent-Ollld Workshop next &amp;mday. Some of the children already
working on decorations are shown with the instructor, Corrine Lund. Pictured are, 1-r,
Tommy Byers, Mrs. Lund, Rachsel Lund (partially hidden) , Tina Barsotti and Clay
Calhoun.

Gt\LI.IPOLIS The
French Art Colony's ParentChild Workshop for thi s
month will be held on Sunday,
Nov . 23 !rom l p.m.-4 p.m . at
River by.
Mrs. Corinne Lund will be
the instructor for this preChristmas workshop. Holiday
decorations especially for
children will be the project
for the afternoon .
Children who participate
will be asked to leave their
decorations for a special
exhibit thst will be on display
in the first floor classroom
durin g Gallery hours at
Rlverby on Saturday and
Sunday, Dec. 6 and 7 from 1
p.m . until 5 p.m. each day.
They may then pick up
their decorations to enjoy in
their own homes the following
weekend, Dec. 13·14, or no
later than the next weekend,
Dec. 20-21.
All children and parents

..•

APllleal made
fior l/.

rawyer.
Backup llnebacker Ralph

.

~ Exhibit lor the _month o~ November: John L. Fryant of

Miss
Rankin,
Miss
and refreshments were
Stapleton
and
Miss
Ramey
served by Mrs. Ruth Riffie
and Mrs. Carolyn Grueser. A wore Ivory dresses edged in
do-your-own thing auction lace with a small apricot
was held following the flower adorning the high
neckline. The short puff
meeting.
sleeves and ruffle at the
bottom of the dress completed the style.
Miss Rankin and Miss
'J:'.
Stapleton carried a solitary
candle in apricot while Miss
J
Ramey
carried
the
U0 $
traditional lace basket filled
with apricot rose petals.
Mrs. Clifford Stapleton
GALUPOLIS - Rev. Blll
Beagle,
chairman
of registered guests at the door.
Terry Shaffer served
Operation Santa Claus in
as
best
man
for
Gallla County, has made a
the
groom.
Ushe~were
special appeal for dolls in
order that the senior citizens David Shaffer , Rodney
in the county can repair and l!i,;,kin and Tony Ours. The
dress them before Chrisbnas. groom and his attendants
Anyone with dolls or toys were attired in white dinner
that they would like to donate jackets with dark pants and
io the needy children · in bow ties. Scott Rankin served
Gallla County for Uu-lstmas as ringbearer and wore the
should contact Rev. Beagle at same as the ushers.
For her daughter's wed·
367-7814 or take them to
ding
, Mrs. Rankin chose a
Operation Santa Claus
two-piece
brown and white
headquarters in the. upstairs
dress
of
jersey knit and
of the Ohio River Realty
Building between 10 a.m. and carried white accessories.
2 p.m. Nov. 21, 22, 28 and 29. Mrs. Ours wore a coral
In December ; the head- colored dress of polyester
quarters wlll be open crepe and featured navy
Monday through Friday, 10 accessories . Each mother
a.m. to 2p.m. and Saturdays, and grandmother wore
corsages of white carnations.
9 to 5.
A reception honoring the
Monetary donations should
couple
was held in the church
be mailed to Marie Foster, co GalUpolls Dally Tribune,
825 Third Ave., GaUlpolls.
Make checks payable to
Operation Santa (,'Jaus.

HOUSTON (UPI) - Wlllle
Frazier, who had spent the
past two aeasons with the
World Football League, was
llcneci by the HoUlton Oilers
Friday as a relti'Ve tight end
becaule of an Injury to John

.. u

~

Sa~te

J

I
'
I

~ae.,

Calendar

::

_s
l.

MIDDLEPORT
A
holiday toy and·bake sale was
planned for Dec. 6 when the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
Thursday night at the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Mrs. Janet Pickens, ways
and means chairwoman,
reminded memb\lrs of a toy
workshop to be held on Nov .
18 at the home of Mrs, Karen
Sian ley.
.
Mrs. Becky Anderson read .
a letter from the Senior
mizens Council thanking the
chspter for a contribution to
the program. A trip to Fenton
was announced by Mrs.
Charlotte Hanning. Mrs.
Susan Baer gave a cultural
report on house and home,

•

~

•

PRIMA CRrriCAL
WS ANGELES (UPI) Band leader and linger Louts
Prima, · 62, was in critical
conditioo today and remained
in a mild cmJa followinc
brain Sll'gery for a t11nor.
Prima en\el'ed Cedars of·
Lebanon-MI. Sinai Medical
Center Oct. 15 and was
operated oo. HYI!ral days
later.
A hoapltal spokesman said
Prima's wife, the former Gls
"'
Ml!ee, who IIBIIg witb Prima's
}-'..... '
band
forl3years,ltaysather
"You're inviting me to your bu.lband's bedside alnlOII ~
birthday party next Saturday? holll'!l a day
J111t a minute and I'll ut my The ~ married Iince
mother ill bave to 10."
tll63,fhavetwo'chlldren,Loull .
Jr., 10, and Lena Ann, 12.

3 Bedroom
Sectional

traditional wedding rmg
neckline , Long sleeves
adorned with chantilly lace
and small ruffies at the wrist
acce~ted the gown . A chapel
length train also enhanced
the gown.
For her headpiece, the
bride chose a chapel length
veil of illusion edged in
chantilly
lace
which .
corresponded to that of her
gown. She carried a colonial
bouquet of white ahd apricot
roses adorned with baby's
breath and lace. Her only
jewelry was a pair of pearl
earrings belonging to her
mother.
Mrs. Beverly Rose was
matron of honor with Miss
Judy Houck, Lisa Rankin and
Diana L. Stapleton as bridesmaids and Miss Angela
Ramey as flo\Ver girl. Mrs.
Rose and Miss Houck wore
identical apricot gowns
fashioned ol organza over
taffeta styled with a scoop
neckline featuring a flounce,
long aheer sleeves and a
gathered tiered skirt edged in
ivory lace. They carried a
single white long stemmed
rose with ivory lace gathered
.around.

0

PAC workshop announced ·

.aJRIO
CABINETS
.GUN
CAII.NDS

•BOOK
·CASES
.sTEREO

SHRVING

.

eROOM DIVIDERS

LAYAWAY
. FOR
CHRISTMAS

·-,'

�7
:;; - - The Sund~y !lmes,-~n~inel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975
8- TheSundaffimes -Sentinei,Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

'1776 ' coming
to l;iuntington

Riverside Study Club
gathers at Webb home
CEI';TENARY - Mrs.
W.Jter Webb entertained the
Riv erside Study t:;lub
Tuesday at her home here.
Twelve members en joyed a
dessert course served during
the social hour.
Mrs. John Allel!, president,
c.Jled the club to order and
the chaplain, Mrs. King, led
the club collect. Mrs. Uara
Gtlrdweil read ~ portion of the
United States Conslilulio11. It
was announced ·the Ohio
Federation of Womens Uub's
supports five scholarships
including the Ethel Swan beck
Nursing Scholarship and an
art . scholarship.
The
Memorial Forest in Ashland
County near- LOudenville is
al!!Q an O.F.W.C. project.
Mrs. Wlclcllne chose as her
program, ''America Spreads
Her Wing a, " tracing the
airborn travel from earliest
limes when men pasted
feathers to their arms
lbroU&amp;h Leonardo do Vinci in
1505 who wrote and drew
designs for a lighter than air
vehicle up to the present. The
first real flight was made by
OrvUle and Wilbur Wright at
Kitty Hawk, N.C. on Dec. 17,
1903. The first try W811 120 feel
airborne. Three more tries
followed and the last stayed
in the air 59 seconds and flew
100 feet
' ·, th e beg1nn in g, lh e
From

growth of the airplane was
and conlinftes to be
phenomenal.
Mrs. Wicklin e had her
material well-prepared and
pre5ented it to the group in an
interesting and exciting
manner. Her listeners were
at Kitty Hawk with the two
yoUng men dressed in their
best with collar and lie plus
hats set at a jaunty angle;
The story of the development
of aircraft is an inspiration. ;
Following the program; the
club adjourned IQ meet again
with Mrs. t1ara Cardwell on
Dec. 16. A while elephant gin
exchange will be enjoyed at
that time.

LAFF-A- DAY
•

&gt;'J\;tVqi~·

1

_

Stanton-JrJOemaker
Plan Februar1JJ ntes·
(' 1~

1---....:J

·

•

""'.ill._.._ _._.,

PUKA BEADS,
CORAL&amp;

.JADE

from Hawaii

Nashville.
Mr. Shoemaker is a 1966
graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and received his
degree at David Lipscomb
College ·in Nashville, Tenn .
He received his Masters of
Science of Social Work
degree at the University of
Tennessee in Nashville. He
was President of the
Photographic Society at
David Lipscomb College and
is a member of Tennessee
Scenic Rivers Association .
Mr. Shoemaker is employed
as a Psychiatric Social
Worker at L1over Bottom
Development Center in Nashville, Tenn.
. A February wedding is
planned.

Veterans
enjoy party

POMEROY - A party for
veterans a·t the Athens
Mental Health Center was
held Thursday by the juniors
of the American Legion
• Auxiliary, Eighth District,
under 'the direction of Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, district
chairwoman
Games were played and
refreshments served at the
party which carried out a
Halloween theme. Attending
from here were Mrs .. Albert
Roush, Mrs. Mary Hoover,
Mrs. Bonnie Dailey, FeeneyBennett Post 128 unit; Mrs.
Harry Davis, Drew Webster
Post 39; Mrs. Arnold
· · Richards and Mrs. Allen
Hampton,Lewis Manley Post
263; and Mrs. Walker and
Mrs. Dean Brinker, Racine
Post 602.
Mrs. Helen Billings and
Mrs. Nellie Colley, hospital
., representatives for the
Athens unit, assisted with the
party.

·--- &amp;f:C.

Join
The
First

National ·
Bank's
Christmas
Club!!

· MAIN OFFICE· SECOND AVE.
" ~ AUTO BANK • lHIRD AVE.'

I

VINTON
BRANat • VINlONr
I

New iloots Released
FICTION
The Raider, tiy Jesse Ford;
· The Doom of Glendour, by
Kate Ostrander; Curtain, by
Agatha t'hrislie ; Terms bl
Endearmen 1., by Larry
McMurtry; Death sentence,
by Brian Gar:leld; Madam
Ambassador, by Ned Calmer
and Curtain &amp; the Mysterious
Affair at Styles.
NON-FICTION .
Olga Korblit, by Michael
Suponev; The• Doubleday
Cookbook, by Jean Anderson;
Vermont Heritage, by JWle
Mussey; Nader and the
Power of Every Man, by
Hays Gorey; !Ave's Aspects
· selected, by Jean GBlTigue;
Auld Acquaintance, by Guy
JAmbardo; The Riding Instructor's Manual, by Gordon
Wright; Science Past,
Science Future, . by Isaac
Aslmov · The Season for
Singing,' by John Langstaff;
Best Ways to Catch More ·
Fish in Fresh &amp; Salt Water,
by Evanoff ; SchmockSchmock! by Steve Allen;
Self-taught Chess for
Beginners &amp; Intel'medlates
by Milton Flnkelatein; At ~
Top, by Marylin Bender;
Trails of the Iron Horse, by
Western Writers of America;
Best . Loved Songs of the
American People, by Denes
Agay.
.
Sunset Books: Quilting &amp;

-i

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The Phllpdelphla Eagles,
Jreparlng to face the New
York Gianll, Friday released
veteran defensive end Joe
Jones and reinstated
Rooaevelt Manning, a
defensive tackle they had
released two days ago.
Jones, 71, was acquired.by
the Eaglee fmn aeveland
before the start of the 1974
season In a trade for wide
receiver Ben Hawkins. ;I'he
25-year-old Manning was.
signed by the Eagles 811 a free
agent earner thi.l season.

CHRISTMAS
WONDERLAND ..

.,.,.

Wreaths and Swag1, Garlands
and Noveltle1. All the material
needed to make your own
decorations. Beautiful fruit
picks, Greenery, Poln18ttlas,
'
flocked ancl _g littered material,
pine cones, madonnas and

DIISIMAS
SIIJPPifiG
EARLY IN

GAlliPOliS
OHIO

4 MillS Wm OF GMJ.IPOI.IS ON US 35

APPLE GROVE ~ "Go meeting was Mrs. Donna Hill .
Tell' Everyon e' ' was th e Mrs. Bess Parsons gave the
. theme of the Apple Grove secretary-treasurer's report
United Methodist Church and read a thank-you note
Wo~e n 's pledge service from the Floyd Norris family
conduc ted by Mrs: Herschel , for flowers. Plans were made
Norris at the Tuesday night to help on repairs of the
meeting at the church.
church and a girt of money
Mrs. Florence Smith read was given to the Ministerial
scripture from Col. I and Association. Acheck wasalso
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe , h~d the sent to the Grace United
prayer. Pledge mission boxes Melhudist Church to be sent
were turned in with Mrs. to Bangledesh lor polio
Norris presenting each vaccine and arrangements
member a penny to start the were mage to make pads for
new year.' The missionary a bedfast patient in the
prayer was given by Mrs. community. ..
Be tty Shiveley.
A Christmas pa~ty wiU be
Presiding at the business held at the home of.Mrs. Hill

on Dec . 9 and ip lieu of a gift
exchange,.an offering will be
taken to buy new tloprs for the
church.
Norris was hostess
anct:·yresented Mrs. Bertha
Robins9n wjth a birthday
caMe..
Mrs. Robinson
celebrated her 80th birthday
on Nov . tl . t:ake. mints ""d

Mra.

punch were served, and a
money tree was. presen ted to
Mrs. Robinson who recited
"My Get Up and Go Has Got
Up and Went." ln. tribute lo
her, Mrs. Smith read a poem
entitled "Our Friend."
Others attending were
Mrs. Cecil Roseberry, Mrs.
J ac~ Abl es, Mrs . Al ice

Balser, Mrs. Stella Jarrell,

Mrs. Joe Manuel, Mrs . Arno ld Hu pp, Mrs. Jack
Sa rge nt , Mrs. Herbert
Shields, Mrs. Eileen Buck
and Mrs. Lucille Rhodes.

.._r~330

Second Aft:.lllli

~

has-

;.
' I

The Mood Stone Ring
lt changes cotor wtth your
changing moods.

HOME FRoM TRIP
LONG BOTl'OM - Mr. and
MrS; .Joe . 81~11 . lAng Bottom; have returned home
after.
. . visiting with Mr. and

.

$5.00

Mrs. Ted Hayman and family
of Westerville, Mr . and Mrs,
Tom Groeneveld of Worthington and Mr . and Mrs. Mike
Bissell of Colwnbus.

--- &amp;tC.

.,
..

.Pvt. and Mrs. john L. Mollohan

Open Today-Sunday
1 to 6·P.M.
IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

t

'

Coup~e

married in
candlelight rites

GALUPOLJS - A double
ring candlelight ceremony
united
Miss
Tammy
Brumfield and Pvt. John
Leonard
Mollohan
in
marriage Aug. 20.
Parents of the bride and
groom are Mr. and Mrs.
t 1yne Brumfield, Gallipolis,
and M~ . and Mrs. t'harles
Mollohan, Addison .
The Rev. Everett Delaney
per.formed the 6:30 p.m.
ceremony at Bell Chapel
Church before an altar
decorated with a 16-branch
candelabra and two vases of
summer flowers .
Organist Jan Duncan
played "!Ave Story," "Let It
Be Me," "A Time For Us,"
Qh Promise Me," "I Love
You Trul y," " Wedding
March"
and
" Bridal
11

'f''''''''"""««&gt;.•&gt;W..,.,:~

Patchwork; Attracting Birds
to Your Garden; SWimming
Pools;
Patio
Book;
Needlepoint ; Stitchery ;
Ceramics; Weaving.
. ClRCULATION
REPORT
There were 6,975 books
circulated in the Main
Library and 5,883 bookll'
circulated on the Bookmobile
making a grand toial of 12,1158
books circulated during the
month of October.
Therre were also 5!i films
shown 971imes to an audience
of 3,380 during the month of
October.

~FliT Of TOMORROW ~

·BY FRED J. DEEL ·
Gallla County
f-H Extension Agent

~

District Library News

Gallia

"..... .

..........-,·.r.·.·····o:.o'_.;_.:-.····· ....

WE INVITE YOU TO

3 LO_CATIONS TO:
'SERVE YOU!

Gallia County

·Mrs. Norris crJnducts pledge service

---·-.· County
-=-=
e

Melinda Stanton David Shoemaker

NASHVILLE, TENN. ....._, __, ... ..
· ·
Mr. and Mrs. James W.
"Which one of you sold my wife
Stanton,
Nashville, Tell!l. are
ail those vitamins~"
announcing the engagement
daughter, Melinda
330 seCond Afttlut ofJeantheir
, to David Daryl
Shoemaker, son of Mrs.
James (Esther ) Blain of
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. and
Daryl
Shoemaker
of
hasGallipolis.
The grandparents of the
Sekcteq Especially
bride-elect are Mr. W. R.
Mellon and the late Mrs.
for you.
Melton and the late Mr. and
Mrs. D. T. Stanton. The
grandparents
of . the
brldegroom-to..tle
are
Mr. and
Fine Quality
Mrs. Okey E: Saunders of
Henderson, and the late Mr.
and llfrs. Luther Shoemaker
of Gallipolis.
Miss Slan\9~ Is a graduate
' of John Overton High School
in Nashville, Tenn. and an
alumnus of David Lipscomb
College in Nashville, Tenn.
and a graduate of Harding
College in Arkansas where
she received her B.A. degree
•
in Psychology. She was a
member of Gamma Lambda
Think Christmas
Soclal c;.1ub at Upscomb and
Ju Go Ju Social L1ub at
Harding. She is presently
employed as a Claims
Representative at Fireman's
Fund Insurance Company in

!

HuNTJNGTON, W. Va. - 1970: He also directed that
A man from Boston and a producton . Perkins has
man from Philadelphia wiD played 22 Shakespearean
meet in Huntington Nov. 17 to roles during his professional
declare independence. The career, in addition to 13 roles
occasion is the ftllly staged in contemporary musicals for
production of the prize · a total of 146 stage atwinning Broadway musical tractions.
"1776."
Sam Kressen has every
The Marshall Artists series reason to · portray Ben
· will observe the nation's Franklin . He lives on
bicentennial with its Mount Franklin
Street
in
series pr,esentalion of "1776'' Philadelphia, attended the
at the Keith-Albee Theater. University of Pennsylvania
Curtain time is 8 p.m. The which Franklin founded, and
two main characters of the has been the city's official
play are John Adams..of impersonator of Franklin
Boston and Ben Franklin of since 1956 when the founding
Philadelphia. They will be father 's 2501h birthday was
portrayed respectivel Y, by observed.·
Don Perkins of Boston and
Robert Ousley (John
Sam Kressen of fhiladelphia . Dickenson) is a versatile
General admission tickets actor and musician from
for this event will be on sale Texas. He has won eight
at the Keith-Albee Theater, trophies and more than 50
Monday from 10 a.m. to • medals in music including the
p.m. and an hour before Paderewski Gold Medal in
curtain. Tickets are $6.20 Piano. He is an accomplished
each . Marshall University performer on the trombone
students may obtain free and cello , a published
tickets upon presentation of composer, magician, ven valid activity cards during triloquist, and rodeo clown.
box office hours.
David Vosburgh (Edward
The play by Peter Stone , Rqtledge )
made
his
with mUsic and lyrics by Broadway debut in "Maggie
Sherman Edwards captures Flynn" and has been in
the wit as well as the serious- "Smith" and "A Little Night
ness of the founding fathers . Music." He is also active in
The action centers on John opera and concert and made
Adams and his efforts to his Town Hall debut with a
persuade the congressional program of English chamber
delegates to declare America music.
free from British rule.
John Almberg (Thomas
"1776" won the coveted Jefferson ) was most recently
Tony and the New York seen on Broadway as Big
Drama Critics' Circle Award John in "Mack and Mabel."
as best musical of the year. His stock credits include the
Don Perkins portrayed title role in "Li'i Abner,"
John Adams in the original '!The Fantaslicks," "Three
national company of "1776" Penny
Opera,"
and
when it appeared on the "Oklahoma."
Marshall Artists Ser!•" in

-·.....

::
::.
....

...

.

~·

1College i

I

News

I

MARILYN SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS - Marilyn
SaWlders, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Merrill Saunders,
Gallipolis, received an
M.A.T. degree recenUy from
,Winthrop College tn Rock
Hill, s. c.
Miss SaWlders, a graduate
of Galli a Academy High
School
and
Marshall
University, is presently living
in Gaffney, S. G. where she
has been teaching the past
four years.
Mr. and Mrs. Saunders
attepded their daughter's
graduation.

..

....;rr

(,'horus." Soloist Lynn
sang "We've Only
Begun" and "The
Prayer" while the bride
groom were kneeling .
Given in marriage by
. father • the brid~ was
in a formal gown of
crepe with Venise lace
on the empire
neck and long filii slee,ves . l
The dress had an A-line
also trimmed in venise
and a detachable cn11pet1
length train. A fingertip
of illusion was attached to a
Juliet cap trimmed in venise
lace daisies. The bride
carried a bouquet .of yellow
and white daisies with flhlte
baby's breath and yeUO'J' and
white streamers.
I '
Maid of honor C,tndy
Brumfield, sister of the bride,
wore a yellow polyester ~own
trimmed in yellow lace
sleeves. Bridesmaids )¥"ere
Kim Carroll, in a y' Uow
polyester gown, and ,Mts.
Eugene Burd, sister of the
bride, in a yellow poly,ster
gown trimmed in seed ~rls.
Flower girl Michelle dnroe
wore a pink gown . ~She
carried a baaket of sunimer
flowers .
·
All attendants cafried
bouquets of summer flo)Vers
and wore yellow hata.
James Mollohan , brollll!r of
the groom, served as ,best
man. Ushers were t om
Brumfield, brother of-' the
bride, and E~~&amp;ene Burcf.
The mother of the bride
chose a mlllti-flowered gpwn
and wore a pink carnation
corsage.
The mother of the groom
chose a green polyester
street-length dress and wore
a white carnation corsage.
A reception followed the
ceremony on the lawn al the
home of the bride's parerikts.
A layer wedding ca e
decorated with yellow ~~}ul
white icing and lopped wj!Jl
the traditional minial'![e
bride and groom was seJ".'id.
· Pvt. Mollohan is statfop~
at Parris Island, S. C. II( U.e
United States Marine C!Gflls.
Mrs. MoUohan resides
Garfield Ave., Galllpolls\'i •

II\...,,

(1 . .. . . ... . . . ... . . . . . . . . ..,.
•

•

.•

I

:

'i

CORNINGWARE

·SAUCE PAN
TRIO

~I!IIW

·y~!

·.~1···
,_
· ~"'•"'
1-:'- 1.,

Ti:'
' "I"' I.

'(11 ~

Laru:~ r

, ·~
f.Jnv

GALUPOUS - AGallia County 4-H'er, Kim Henderson,
1"" 16, Gallipolis has been named to the 1976 Ohio 4-H Fashion
'i; l'~ Board. Announcement of Fashion Board appointments was
'~'~'1nade recenUy by Mrs. Alice Miskell, Assistant State Leader,
·~·.:-..H, The Ohlo State University.
.
:·.~~.: Eleven members of the 4-H Fashion Board are selected from
~·"~ ·.t:ouniY candidates at the Ohio State Fair Style Rewe. seJec-h lion is based on fashion know-llow , modeling skill and
. . leadership ability. Another teenager, the Ohio 4-H Clothing
1tt'HJI '
· jli'Oject winner, will also serve on the board. The 12 Fashion
~'' ... lloard members represent more than 40,000 4-H'ers who
' 1~".'1larlicipate in Ohio 4-H Clothing projects.
~~.~· Kim is a junior at Gallia Academy High School. She is an
','~,;)!clive member of the 4-H La811ies and Junior Leadership 4-H
'!V,'plube and is a member of F.N.A., F.T.A.,and Tri-Hi-Y. Kim is
D ;•1Jie daU&amp;hter of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Hendersqn.
·:.. . · Each 4-H Fashion Board develops special projects to
··;l:jromote 4-H clothing projecta and activities. The 1976 Fashion
::,1,1loard mel Nov. 8allhe Ohio State University to plan activities
·~?; Yor the Clllling year. The theme selected for 1976 is "4-H
"/~'! Fashion is A Really Big !Jtow ... Starring YOU!" Program
~' l''emphaais will be given to t.he lmportance of clothing to. the
·wearer
and apresslng oneseU through clothing. In addition,
... , 1"" the board plans to develop a comic strip, "Cliff Clover and the
:7{;:Seven Fashnlks."
(. ,.
The 4-H Fashion Board is supervised by Mrs. Miskell and
" ' 'ttxtenslon Clothing Specialists, Mrs. Orena Haynes and Mrs.
').~~orma Deyo. Ohio 4-H club work .is a youth program of The
T;;.tlhio State University's Cooperative Extension Service. The
";!' ~ogram is supported by the Ohio State Fair.
&gt;1' ·: This is a special honor for Kim 811 she is the first girl from
' "' 6allia County to be selected as a member of the Ohio 4-H
:;~
Board.
. . ..:.ashton
,.

NOW

1

EMBLEM

·•
••
~.

••

"

100 COUNT BOX
FOR USE IN AU.
MR. COFFEE BREWERS

42 Court Street ·

Glllipolls

••••••••••••••••••

Mr. Co flee makes good
coffee faster thin any other
coffee maker. ~ lull ten cup
decanter in lest than f1ve
minutes.
It's drip mldti. restaurant "yle coffu . Never
!liner because it's never
boiled. Never ·a mes~y clean
up because !ht filters are
diSPOSable .

WHILE SUPPLY lASTS.
Anorfll!t M1 Colle

Wl /t'l I/1Jfl l'tt/f

Perteel for llo t
Ill, I"!U . fll SOOD!.

2g99

oAdjustable Triple Header
•Floating Heads
•Popup Trimmer
•9 Adjustable Settings
.

MEN'S

WINTER
COATS
MANY STYlES TO CHOOSE FROM
REGULAR '35.00 to '45.00

ercll"''"• A hor
t'OU tna.lle r~o r

'4'1 /e r IUIIfll//flll
Jtrt

•

or ge/1/lra ' - --

-'

MR.CGFFEE..

SIZES: S. M, L, XL
AND 36 to 46

$2999

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

SPORTSWEAR

,.,

20%

"'"""'

OFF
Great selection
oflo116

dresses,

Lace into

3

II

OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF

COATS

Mon . &amp; Fri. 9:301118 p.m.
Tues . Wed . S1t. 9:301115 p.m.
Thur. 9:3011112 noon

Reg . $2.99 Each
Heavyweight
Long Sleeve Shirt
or
Ankle Length Drawer

•SKIRTS
•BLOUSES
•JACKETS ·

LARGE GROUP MEN'S

5

REGU~!!!l! ~AKI

LA ROE SELECTION

1DO% POLYISTER
72190 FULL SIZE
REG. '6.00

Machine Washable
·
Pink, Blue, Gold &amp; Green •

SALE

•SLACKS
ePANTSUITS

CHATHAM
.
THERMAL
BLANKATS

20%
OFF

Includes All
Sale CGats Also I

PLAYTEX
ALL-IN.ONE
(OPEN IOnOM)

NOW t
tnt • In•• a T.,e. ·

NOW

Modo!

NORELCO ROTARY
RAZOR
$

'

Stock of

. ONE GROUP OF

·Monday&amp; Frlday9:30-8:00p.m.
Tues .. We,d., Thur., Sat. 9:30-S:OOp.m.

Reg. 39.95

fAMOUS IRAND

Our Entire

"

II

NEW

CIRCULAR KNIT

'1

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,whO.want .
: · coffee good.
And fast..

'2818

MR. COFFEE
FILTERS

,,

'

For people .

GENUINE

-'i·"ii. ...

And lace into fashion
that 's good for you.
While real leather
coddles your feet,
crepe soles keep you
sure-footed. What
nicer support for a
fabulous, blisy fall?

SUNDAY,
MONDAY
AND
TUESDAY
ONLYI

MC· 1

~

fun.

MR.C~FEE

$gsa

CORNFLOWER .

'
:e
.

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•••
•

·,.-., .
GALUA WUNTY 4-H MEMBER Kim Henderson talks
.~~ , .. with·Mrs. Norma Deyo of the College of Home Economics of
, ,1, the Ohio State University at the recent meeting of the Ohio 4-H
1 ,, , Fashion Board held at the Center for Tomorrow at the
" ;· university.

SALE

••
••

I

. ..,. "''

. $22.99 ·

'

••

'i' ..,r
,,,_
--

00 OFF

NOW
SAVE UP
10

65%-·UA'CRONPOLYESTER,

35%CODON ,··
SOLIDS AND FANCY PATIERNS
SIZES Wh to 17
ARM LENGTHS 32 to 34

fhOFF

PLENTY OF FREE
PARKING AT
THE PLAZA

SPECIAL
SALE '.
OF

LADIES'
QUILTED
ROBES
LONG AND SHORT
STYLES.
PASTEL COLORS OF
BLUE. PINK, MINT &amp; YELLOW
SIZES: Small, Med. &amp;..Large
REGULAR •8.00 to '16.00

$599

SALE
OUR ENTJRE
STOCK OF

SPORT
COATS
Reg . $55.00 and
$60.00

30YS

WINTER

JAC:K·
E
TS
SIZES 8 to''l8

h'

SEVERAL STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM
REGULAR '15.00 TO '25.00
99
NOW 99 TO

$9

'15

�7
:;; - - The Sund~y !lmes,-~n~inel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975
8- TheSundaffimes -Sentinei,Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

'1776 ' coming
to l;iuntington

Riverside Study Club
gathers at Webb home
CEI';TENARY - Mrs.
W.Jter Webb entertained the
Riv erside Study t:;lub
Tuesday at her home here.
Twelve members en joyed a
dessert course served during
the social hour.
Mrs. John Allel!, president,
c.Jled the club to order and
the chaplain, Mrs. King, led
the club collect. Mrs. Uara
Gtlrdweil read ~ portion of the
United States Conslilulio11. It
was announced ·the Ohio
Federation of Womens Uub's
supports five scholarships
including the Ethel Swan beck
Nursing Scholarship and an
art . scholarship.
The
Memorial Forest in Ashland
County near- LOudenville is
al!!Q an O.F.W.C. project.
Mrs. Wlclcllne chose as her
program, ''America Spreads
Her Wing a, " tracing the
airborn travel from earliest
limes when men pasted
feathers to their arms
lbroU&amp;h Leonardo do Vinci in
1505 who wrote and drew
designs for a lighter than air
vehicle up to the present. The
first real flight was made by
OrvUle and Wilbur Wright at
Kitty Hawk, N.C. on Dec. 17,
1903. The first try W811 120 feel
airborne. Three more tries
followed and the last stayed
in the air 59 seconds and flew
100 feet
' ·, th e beg1nn in g, lh e
From

growth of the airplane was
and conlinftes to be
phenomenal.
Mrs. Wicklin e had her
material well-prepared and
pre5ented it to the group in an
interesting and exciting
manner. Her listeners were
at Kitty Hawk with the two
yoUng men dressed in their
best with collar and lie plus
hats set at a jaunty angle;
The story of the development
of aircraft is an inspiration. ;
Following the program; the
club adjourned IQ meet again
with Mrs. t1ara Cardwell on
Dec. 16. A while elephant gin
exchange will be enjoyed at
that time.

LAFF-A- DAY
•

&gt;'J\;tVqi~·

1

_

Stanton-JrJOemaker
Plan Februar1JJ ntes·
(' 1~

1---....:J

·

•

""'.ill._.._ _._.,

PUKA BEADS,
CORAL&amp;

.JADE

from Hawaii

Nashville.
Mr. Shoemaker is a 1966
graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and received his
degree at David Lipscomb
College ·in Nashville, Tenn .
He received his Masters of
Science of Social Work
degree at the University of
Tennessee in Nashville. He
was President of the
Photographic Society at
David Lipscomb College and
is a member of Tennessee
Scenic Rivers Association .
Mr. Shoemaker is employed
as a Psychiatric Social
Worker at L1over Bottom
Development Center in Nashville, Tenn.
. A February wedding is
planned.

Veterans
enjoy party

POMEROY - A party for
veterans a·t the Athens
Mental Health Center was
held Thursday by the juniors
of the American Legion
• Auxiliary, Eighth District,
under 'the direction of Mrs.
Myrtle Walker, district
chairwoman
Games were played and
refreshments served at the
party which carried out a
Halloween theme. Attending
from here were Mrs .. Albert
Roush, Mrs. Mary Hoover,
Mrs. Bonnie Dailey, FeeneyBennett Post 128 unit; Mrs.
Harry Davis, Drew Webster
Post 39; Mrs. Arnold
· · Richards and Mrs. Allen
Hampton,Lewis Manley Post
263; and Mrs. Walker and
Mrs. Dean Brinker, Racine
Post 602.
Mrs. Helen Billings and
Mrs. Nellie Colley, hospital
., representatives for the
Athens unit, assisted with the
party.

·--- &amp;f:C.

Join
The
First

National ·
Bank's
Christmas
Club!!

· MAIN OFFICE· SECOND AVE.
" ~ AUTO BANK • lHIRD AVE.'

I

VINTON
BRANat • VINlONr
I

New iloots Released
FICTION
The Raider, tiy Jesse Ford;
· The Doom of Glendour, by
Kate Ostrander; Curtain, by
Agatha t'hrislie ; Terms bl
Endearmen 1., by Larry
McMurtry; Death sentence,
by Brian Gar:leld; Madam
Ambassador, by Ned Calmer
and Curtain &amp; the Mysterious
Affair at Styles.
NON-FICTION .
Olga Korblit, by Michael
Suponev; The• Doubleday
Cookbook, by Jean Anderson;
Vermont Heritage, by JWle
Mussey; Nader and the
Power of Every Man, by
Hays Gorey; !Ave's Aspects
· selected, by Jean GBlTigue;
Auld Acquaintance, by Guy
JAmbardo; The Riding Instructor's Manual, by Gordon
Wright; Science Past,
Science Future, . by Isaac
Aslmov · The Season for
Singing,' by John Langstaff;
Best Ways to Catch More ·
Fish in Fresh &amp; Salt Water,
by Evanoff ; SchmockSchmock! by Steve Allen;
Self-taught Chess for
Beginners &amp; Intel'medlates
by Milton Flnkelatein; At ~
Top, by Marylin Bender;
Trails of the Iron Horse, by
Western Writers of America;
Best . Loved Songs of the
American People, by Denes
Agay.
.
Sunset Books: Quilting &amp;

-i

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The Phllpdelphla Eagles,
Jreparlng to face the New
York Gianll, Friday released
veteran defensive end Joe
Jones and reinstated
Rooaevelt Manning, a
defensive tackle they had
released two days ago.
Jones, 71, was acquired.by
the Eaglee fmn aeveland
before the start of the 1974
season In a trade for wide
receiver Ben Hawkins. ;I'he
25-year-old Manning was.
signed by the Eagles 811 a free
agent earner thi.l season.

CHRISTMAS
WONDERLAND ..

.,.,.

Wreaths and Swag1, Garlands
and Noveltle1. All the material
needed to make your own
decorations. Beautiful fruit
picks, Greenery, Poln18ttlas,
'
flocked ancl _g littered material,
pine cones, madonnas and

DIISIMAS
SIIJPPifiG
EARLY IN

GAlliPOliS
OHIO

4 MillS Wm OF GMJ.IPOI.IS ON US 35

APPLE GROVE ~ "Go meeting was Mrs. Donna Hill .
Tell' Everyon e' ' was th e Mrs. Bess Parsons gave the
. theme of the Apple Grove secretary-treasurer's report
United Methodist Church and read a thank-you note
Wo~e n 's pledge service from the Floyd Norris family
conduc ted by Mrs: Herschel , for flowers. Plans were made
Norris at the Tuesday night to help on repairs of the
meeting at the church.
church and a girt of money
Mrs. Florence Smith read was given to the Ministerial
scripture from Col. I and Association. Acheck wasalso
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe , h~d the sent to the Grace United
prayer. Pledge mission boxes Melhudist Church to be sent
were turned in with Mrs. to Bangledesh lor polio
Norris presenting each vaccine and arrangements
member a penny to start the were mage to make pads for
new year.' The missionary a bedfast patient in the
prayer was given by Mrs. community. ..
Be tty Shiveley.
A Christmas pa~ty wiU be
Presiding at the business held at the home of.Mrs. Hill

on Dec . 9 and ip lieu of a gift
exchange,.an offering will be
taken to buy new tloprs for the
church.
Norris was hostess
anct:·yresented Mrs. Bertha
Robins9n wjth a birthday
caMe..
Mrs. Robinson
celebrated her 80th birthday
on Nov . tl . t:ake. mints ""d

Mra.

punch were served, and a
money tree was. presen ted to
Mrs. Robinson who recited
"My Get Up and Go Has Got
Up and Went." ln. tribute lo
her, Mrs. Smith read a poem
entitled "Our Friend."
Others attending were
Mrs. Cecil Roseberry, Mrs.
J ac~ Abl es, Mrs . Al ice

Balser, Mrs. Stella Jarrell,

Mrs. Joe Manuel, Mrs . Arno ld Hu pp, Mrs. Jack
Sa rge nt , Mrs. Herbert
Shields, Mrs. Eileen Buck
and Mrs. Lucille Rhodes.

.._r~330

Second Aft:.lllli

~

has-

;.
' I

The Mood Stone Ring
lt changes cotor wtth your
changing moods.

HOME FRoM TRIP
LONG BOTl'OM - Mr. and
MrS; .Joe . 81~11 . lAng Bottom; have returned home
after.
. . visiting with Mr. and

.

$5.00

Mrs. Ted Hayman and family
of Westerville, Mr . and Mrs,
Tom Groeneveld of Worthington and Mr . and Mrs. Mike
Bissell of Colwnbus.

--- &amp;tC.

.,
..

.Pvt. and Mrs. john L. Mollohan

Open Today-Sunday
1 to 6·P.M.
IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

t

'

Coup~e

married in
candlelight rites

GALUPOLJS - A double
ring candlelight ceremony
united
Miss
Tammy
Brumfield and Pvt. John
Leonard
Mollohan
in
marriage Aug. 20.
Parents of the bride and
groom are Mr. and Mrs.
t 1yne Brumfield, Gallipolis,
and M~ . and Mrs. t'harles
Mollohan, Addison .
The Rev. Everett Delaney
per.formed the 6:30 p.m.
ceremony at Bell Chapel
Church before an altar
decorated with a 16-branch
candelabra and two vases of
summer flowers .
Organist Jan Duncan
played "!Ave Story," "Let It
Be Me," "A Time For Us,"
Qh Promise Me," "I Love
You Trul y," " Wedding
March"
and
" Bridal
11

'f''''''''"""««&gt;.•&gt;W..,.,:~

Patchwork; Attracting Birds
to Your Garden; SWimming
Pools;
Patio
Book;
Needlepoint ; Stitchery ;
Ceramics; Weaving.
. ClRCULATION
REPORT
There were 6,975 books
circulated in the Main
Library and 5,883 bookll'
circulated on the Bookmobile
making a grand toial of 12,1158
books circulated during the
month of October.
Therre were also 5!i films
shown 971imes to an audience
of 3,380 during the month of
October.

~FliT Of TOMORROW ~

·BY FRED J. DEEL ·
Gallla County
f-H Extension Agent

~

District Library News

Gallia

"..... .

..........-,·.r.·.·····o:.o'_.;_.:-.····· ....

WE INVITE YOU TO

3 LO_CATIONS TO:
'SERVE YOU!

Gallia County

·Mrs. Norris crJnducts pledge service

---·-.· County
-=-=
e

Melinda Stanton David Shoemaker

NASHVILLE, TENN. ....._, __, ... ..
· ·
Mr. and Mrs. James W.
"Which one of you sold my wife
Stanton,
Nashville, Tell!l. are
ail those vitamins~"
announcing the engagement
daughter, Melinda
330 seCond Afttlut ofJeantheir
, to David Daryl
Shoemaker, son of Mrs.
James (Esther ) Blain of
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. and
Daryl
Shoemaker
of
hasGallipolis.
The grandparents of the
Sekcteq Especially
bride-elect are Mr. W. R.
Mellon and the late Mrs.
for you.
Melton and the late Mr. and
Mrs. D. T. Stanton. The
grandparents
of . the
brldegroom-to..tle
are
Mr. and
Fine Quality
Mrs. Okey E: Saunders of
Henderson, and the late Mr.
and llfrs. Luther Shoemaker
of Gallipolis.
Miss Slan\9~ Is a graduate
' of John Overton High School
in Nashville, Tenn. and an
alumnus of David Lipscomb
College in Nashville, Tenn.
and a graduate of Harding
College in Arkansas where
she received her B.A. degree
•
in Psychology. She was a
member of Gamma Lambda
Think Christmas
Soclal c;.1ub at Upscomb and
Ju Go Ju Social L1ub at
Harding. She is presently
employed as a Claims
Representative at Fireman's
Fund Insurance Company in

!

HuNTJNGTON, W. Va. - 1970: He also directed that
A man from Boston and a producton . Perkins has
man from Philadelphia wiD played 22 Shakespearean
meet in Huntington Nov. 17 to roles during his professional
declare independence. The career, in addition to 13 roles
occasion is the ftllly staged in contemporary musicals for
production of the prize · a total of 146 stage atwinning Broadway musical tractions.
"1776."
Sam Kressen has every
The Marshall Artists series reason to · portray Ben
· will observe the nation's Franklin . He lives on
bicentennial with its Mount Franklin
Street
in
series pr,esentalion of "1776'' Philadelphia, attended the
at the Keith-Albee Theater. University of Pennsylvania
Curtain time is 8 p.m. The which Franklin founded, and
two main characters of the has been the city's official
play are John Adams..of impersonator of Franklin
Boston and Ben Franklin of since 1956 when the founding
Philadelphia. They will be father 's 2501h birthday was
portrayed respectivel Y, by observed.·
Don Perkins of Boston and
Robert Ousley (John
Sam Kressen of fhiladelphia . Dickenson) is a versatile
General admission tickets actor and musician from
for this event will be on sale Texas. He has won eight
at the Keith-Albee Theater, trophies and more than 50
Monday from 10 a.m. to • medals in music including the
p.m. and an hour before Paderewski Gold Medal in
curtain. Tickets are $6.20 Piano. He is an accomplished
each . Marshall University performer on the trombone
students may obtain free and cello , a published
tickets upon presentation of composer, magician, ven valid activity cards during triloquist, and rodeo clown.
box office hours.
David Vosburgh (Edward
The play by Peter Stone , Rqtledge )
made
his
with mUsic and lyrics by Broadway debut in "Maggie
Sherman Edwards captures Flynn" and has been in
the wit as well as the serious- "Smith" and "A Little Night
ness of the founding fathers . Music." He is also active in
The action centers on John opera and concert and made
Adams and his efforts to his Town Hall debut with a
persuade the congressional program of English chamber
delegates to declare America music.
free from British rule.
John Almberg (Thomas
"1776" won the coveted Jefferson ) was most recently
Tony and the New York seen on Broadway as Big
Drama Critics' Circle Award John in "Mack and Mabel."
as best musical of the year. His stock credits include the
Don Perkins portrayed title role in "Li'i Abner,"
John Adams in the original '!The Fantaslicks," "Three
national company of "1776" Penny
Opera,"
and
when it appeared on the "Oklahoma."
Marshall Artists Ser!•" in

-·.....

::
::.
....

...

.

~·

1College i

I

News

I

MARILYN SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS - Marilyn
SaWlders, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Merrill Saunders,
Gallipolis, received an
M.A.T. degree recenUy from
,Winthrop College tn Rock
Hill, s. c.
Miss SaWlders, a graduate
of Galli a Academy High
School
and
Marshall
University, is presently living
in Gaffney, S. G. where she
has been teaching the past
four years.
Mr. and Mrs. Saunders
attepded their daughter's
graduation.

..

....;rr

(,'horus." Soloist Lynn
sang "We've Only
Begun" and "The
Prayer" while the bride
groom were kneeling .
Given in marriage by
. father • the brid~ was
in a formal gown of
crepe with Venise lace
on the empire
neck and long filii slee,ves . l
The dress had an A-line
also trimmed in venise
and a detachable cn11pet1
length train. A fingertip
of illusion was attached to a
Juliet cap trimmed in venise
lace daisies. The bride
carried a bouquet .of yellow
and white daisies with flhlte
baby's breath and yeUO'J' and
white streamers.
I '
Maid of honor C,tndy
Brumfield, sister of the bride,
wore a yellow polyester ~own
trimmed in yellow lace
sleeves. Bridesmaids )¥"ere
Kim Carroll, in a y' Uow
polyester gown, and ,Mts.
Eugene Burd, sister of the
bride, in a yellow poly,ster
gown trimmed in seed ~rls.
Flower girl Michelle dnroe
wore a pink gown . ~She
carried a baaket of sunimer
flowers .
·
All attendants cafried
bouquets of summer flo)Vers
and wore yellow hata.
James Mollohan , brollll!r of
the groom, served as ,best
man. Ushers were t om
Brumfield, brother of-' the
bride, and E~~&amp;ene Burcf.
The mother of the bride
chose a mlllti-flowered gpwn
and wore a pink carnation
corsage.
The mother of the groom
chose a green polyester
street-length dress and wore
a white carnation corsage.
A reception followed the
ceremony on the lawn al the
home of the bride's parerikts.
A layer wedding ca e
decorated with yellow ~~}ul
white icing and lopped wj!Jl
the traditional minial'![e
bride and groom was seJ".'id.
· Pvt. Mollohan is statfop~
at Parris Island, S. C. II( U.e
United States Marine C!Gflls.
Mrs. MoUohan resides
Garfield Ave., Galllpolls\'i •

II\...,,

(1 . .. . . ... . . . ... . . . . . . . . ..,.
•

•

.•

I

:

'i

CORNINGWARE

·SAUCE PAN
TRIO

~I!IIW

·y~!

·.~1···
,_
· ~"'•"'
1-:'- 1.,

Ti:'
' "I"' I.

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Laru:~ r

, ·~
f.Jnv

GALUPOUS - AGallia County 4-H'er, Kim Henderson,
1"" 16, Gallipolis has been named to the 1976 Ohio 4-H Fashion
'i; l'~ Board. Announcement of Fashion Board appointments was
'~'~'1nade recenUy by Mrs. Alice Miskell, Assistant State Leader,
·~·.:-..H, The Ohlo State University.
.
:·.~~.: Eleven members of the 4-H Fashion Board are selected from
~·"~ ·.t:ouniY candidates at the Ohio State Fair Style Rewe. seJec-h lion is based on fashion know-llow , modeling skill and
. . leadership ability. Another teenager, the Ohio 4-H Clothing
1tt'HJI '
· jli'Oject winner, will also serve on the board. The 12 Fashion
~'' ... lloard members represent more than 40,000 4-H'ers who
' 1~".'1larlicipate in Ohio 4-H Clothing projects.
~~.~· Kim is a junior at Gallia Academy High School. She is an
','~,;)!clive member of the 4-H La811ies and Junior Leadership 4-H
'!V,'plube and is a member of F.N.A., F.T.A.,and Tri-Hi-Y. Kim is
D ;•1Jie daU&amp;hter of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Hendersqn.
·:.. . · Each 4-H Fashion Board develops special projects to
··;l:jromote 4-H clothing projecta and activities. The 1976 Fashion
::,1,1loard mel Nov. 8allhe Ohio State University to plan activities
·~?; Yor the Clllling year. The theme selected for 1976 is "4-H
"/~'! Fashion is A Really Big !Jtow ... Starring YOU!" Program
~' l''emphaais will be given to t.he lmportance of clothing to. the
·wearer
and apresslng oneseU through clothing. In addition,
... , 1"" the board plans to develop a comic strip, "Cliff Clover and the
:7{;:Seven Fashnlks."
(. ,.
The 4-H Fashion Board is supervised by Mrs. Miskell and
" ' 'ttxtenslon Clothing Specialists, Mrs. Orena Haynes and Mrs.
').~~orma Deyo. Ohio 4-H club work .is a youth program of The
T;;.tlhio State University's Cooperative Extension Service. The
";!' ~ogram is supported by the Ohio State Fair.
&gt;1' ·: This is a special honor for Kim 811 she is the first girl from
' "' 6allia County to be selected as a member of the Ohio 4-H
:;~
Board.
. . ..:.ashton
,.

NOW

1

EMBLEM

·•
••
~.

••

"

100 COUNT BOX
FOR USE IN AU.
MR. COFFEE BREWERS

42 Court Street ·

Glllipolls

••••••••••••••••••

Mr. Co flee makes good
coffee faster thin any other
coffee maker. ~ lull ten cup
decanter in lest than f1ve
minutes.
It's drip mldti. restaurant "yle coffu . Never
!liner because it's never
boiled. Never ·a mes~y clean
up because !ht filters are
diSPOSable .

WHILE SUPPLY lASTS.
Anorfll!t M1 Colle

Wl /t'l I/1Jfl l'tt/f

Perteel for llo t
Ill, I"!U . fll SOOD!.

2g99

oAdjustable Triple Header
•Floating Heads
•Popup Trimmer
•9 Adjustable Settings
.

MEN'S

WINTER
COATS
MANY STYlES TO CHOOSE FROM
REGULAR '35.00 to '45.00

ercll"''"• A hor
t'OU tna.lle r~o r

'4'1 /e r IUIIfll//flll
Jtrt

•

or ge/1/lra ' - --

-'

MR.CGFFEE..

SIZES: S. M, L, XL
AND 36 to 46

$2999

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

SPORTSWEAR

,.,

20%

"'"""'

OFF
Great selection
oflo116

dresses,

Lace into

3

II

OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF

COATS

Mon . &amp; Fri. 9:301118 p.m.
Tues . Wed . S1t. 9:301115 p.m.
Thur. 9:3011112 noon

Reg . $2.99 Each
Heavyweight
Long Sleeve Shirt
or
Ankle Length Drawer

•SKIRTS
•BLOUSES
•JACKETS ·

LARGE GROUP MEN'S

5

REGU~!!!l! ~AKI

LA ROE SELECTION

1DO% POLYISTER
72190 FULL SIZE
REG. '6.00

Machine Washable
·
Pink, Blue, Gold &amp; Green •

SALE

•SLACKS
ePANTSUITS

CHATHAM
.
THERMAL
BLANKATS

20%
OFF

Includes All
Sale CGats Also I

PLAYTEX
ALL-IN.ONE
(OPEN IOnOM)

NOW t
tnt • In•• a T.,e. ·

NOW

Modo!

NORELCO ROTARY
RAZOR
$

'

Stock of

. ONE GROUP OF

·Monday&amp; Frlday9:30-8:00p.m.
Tues .. We,d., Thur., Sat. 9:30-S:OOp.m.

Reg. 39.95

fAMOUS IRAND

Our Entire

"

II

NEW

CIRCULAR KNIT

'1

.•'

,whO.want .
: · coffee good.
And fast..

'2818

MR. COFFEE
FILTERS

,,

'

For people .

GENUINE

-'i·"ii. ...

And lace into fashion
that 's good for you.
While real leather
coddles your feet,
crepe soles keep you
sure-footed. What
nicer support for a
fabulous, blisy fall?

SUNDAY,
MONDAY
AND
TUESDAY
ONLYI

MC· 1

~

fun.

MR.C~FEE

$gsa

CORNFLOWER .

'
:e
.

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••
•••
•

·,.-., .
GALUA WUNTY 4-H MEMBER Kim Henderson talks
.~~ , .. with·Mrs. Norma Deyo of the College of Home Economics of
, ,1, the Ohio State University at the recent meeting of the Ohio 4-H
1 ,, , Fashion Board held at the Center for Tomorrow at the
" ;· university.

SALE

••
••

I

. ..,. "''

. $22.99 ·

'

••

'i' ..,r
,,,_
--

00 OFF

NOW
SAVE UP
10

65%-·UA'CRONPOLYESTER,

35%CODON ,··
SOLIDS AND FANCY PATIERNS
SIZES Wh to 17
ARM LENGTHS 32 to 34

fhOFF

PLENTY OF FREE
PARKING AT
THE PLAZA

SPECIAL
SALE '.
OF

LADIES'
QUILTED
ROBES
LONG AND SHORT
STYLES.
PASTEL COLORS OF
BLUE. PINK, MINT &amp; YELLOW
SIZES: Small, Med. &amp;..Large
REGULAR •8.00 to '16.00

$599

SALE
OUR ENTJRE
STOCK OF

SPORT
COATS
Reg . $55.00 and
$60.00

30YS

WINTER

JAC:K·
E
TS
SIZES 8 to''l8

h'

SEVERAL STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM
REGULAR '15.00 TO '25.00
99
NOW 99 TO

$9

'15

�...
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SUNDAY

1 PM til 7 PM
Dai~

..

Prices •
Effective
Sunday &amp;
Monday
Nov. 16 &amp; 17

OPEN

10 til 9
13

.

..

SUNDAY

.

1 PM til 7 PM

.....

Dai~

,

..

'

PROTEIN 21
HAIR SPlAY

40Z.

BARBA SOL

AQUA VELVA

. SHAVE CREAM
IIKIUIOI_I_

rr.tlulor "hard To Hold" - Su·
por Hold- Unscented Hord To
Hold.

Effective
Sunday &amp;
Monday
Nov.l6 &amp; 17

10 til 9.

11 oz.

oz.

Prices

OPEN

J \"

~ii.

·WINE RACK

Thil handsome woo dgrain lini1Med wine roc~ will looK

7-PC. COOKWARE SET

greet in a ny decor.

.

.' ..

Heck's Reg.
1
57.88

,If '

'16''

•••••
CHAIN SAW .

72&lt;

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SHOE RACK

99c

HECK'S

REG •
$1.88

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32 OUNCI

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DETERGENT

'

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HICK'S

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RIG •
$49.96

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$27.99 .

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1020,1

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-

5163

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HICK'S RIG.
. $14.96 .

JIWB.IYIB'T.

COLEMAIHEA

·WARMING TRAY

••
••

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HECK'S REG. 9.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

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VINYL

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$48.88

w•n•r

GLOVES
$J22

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33.96

j.go~:~e~~~i~nJ':;~i~b~~~
rugged, la.t operoting

HICK'S RIG.
$1.99

SIWTS,T.

carbine is populor ttlroughout
the Wut os o ~die gun ond
in the Eoil o' itle ideal timber

I,

JEWELRY DEPT.

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World's most popula r lantern ...
holds two pints of fuel ...
enouoh_for 10 to 12 ho urs •..
two Col eman Silk· lite mantles
produce tWice the light, lost up to
four times as long as ordil'lary
mantles. ·

SJ7''

WINCHESTER
Sold ro
SINGLE SHOT w. v':&gt;NLY

Heck's
R~~o

'9.88

SHOTGUN
HECK'S REG. .

'59.99

•

HICK'S IIG. $20.99

S/IMTS,.T.

· 221

44

••

· SPORTS DEPT.

HIPWELL

$299

'3''

HECK 'S·REG, '5.99
~~Wn,.r. .

2 99

JEWELRY DEPT.

I

$

699

Heck's Reg.
1
9.99

6

n.

$2''n.

AUTOMATIC

9xl2

HEAT TAPE

ARMSTRONG
RUGS

12

$1199 ......

$]22

11n.

Heck's Reg.
il2.66

$]99

Heck's Reg •
1
16.99

HICIC'S lEG.

To $6.20

ELECTRIC CAN
OPENER

LAMPS
•3.99

'2'9

Hardware Dept.
RIVAL

KEROSENE
Heck's Reg.

Auto Dept•

Heck's Reg.
•10.96

·sa••

JEWELRY DEPT•

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

WOOD TOY CHEST

'1144 ·

Heck's Reg.

'14.99

TOY DEPT.

HICK'S
RIG.
$5.99

Ptlln

STEP LADDERS
.

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$399

2 foot .
Heck's Reg. '4.44

"

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$1099

Hardware Dept. ·

$299
. each
Heck's Reg.
1
3.99

KLEENEX
lOG's

AUTOMOBILE

INIERTUBES
•

Heck's Reg.

SIII5

33'

ASSORTm

5 f~

INDOOR

IASKOIAU GAMI

;.ill.::t::.:~.';:
........._.11M
"""' ... 111ft.

~· toft

$ 328
HICIC 'SIIG.

' " , . ,,

~.99

•!..

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CAMP LAMP

$699

Houseware Dept.

Heck's Reg. 99•

..',.

I. • ..

TROOPER
HAT
.... .

$

.

HUNTING PAN.TS \ ,

1.•' .

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ELECTRIC
GLUE GUN

Heck's Reg. 71&lt;

·~

HECK'S REG.

$109.88

Heck's Reg.
•3.77

j •l , ..,

.. 1

$8918

SIWTS

HOT
POTS

"

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TRAIL BLAZER
.

Sporting Goods

AUTO DEPT.

;~.~~

W.Va. Residents
Only

,;u..

aa~

'1.49

I' '

SIWTS

WINCHESTER 94 .
30-30 RIFLE
dli~;

Houseware Dept.

Heck's Reg.

...,.-

HECK'S REG.

.

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Houseware
Dept.
.
.

PRESTONE
ENGINE SCOUR

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p
SoldTo

.......

Heclc's Reg. 61 '

•

HICK'S
RIG.
$34.99

HECK'S REG •

DEPT.

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MUNSEY

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MR. COFFEE I
DEWXE
DRIPOOTOR

9

,•

.

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Coleman cataly1ic heaters are the modern, eHicient

.

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... ,...

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way to worm up any outdoor ituation.

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$9!! . $28

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$3.19

$4.99

HECK'S

·sOUNDESIGN

ALARM CLOCK
$244

HICIC'S IIG.
$139.96

II

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SUNBEAM

Reg .

'7''

HICK'S REG .

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RISLONE
OIL
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SNOW BRUSH
WITH SCRAPER

99~.
Heck's Reg. 11.38
Auto Dept.

HICK'SIEG. 49'

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Nov. 16 &amp; 17

OPEN

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.

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BARBA SOL

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IIKIUIOI_I_

rr.tlulor "hard To Hold" - Su·
por Hold- Unscented Hord To
Hold.

Effective
Sunday &amp;
Monday
Nov.l6 &amp; 17

10 til 9.

11 oz.

oz.

Prices

OPEN

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Thil handsome woo dgrain lini1Med wine roc~ will looK

7-PC. COOKWARE SET

greet in a ny decor.

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$1.99

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carbine is populor ttlroughout
the Wut os o ~die gun ond
in the Eoil o' itle ideal timber

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holds two pints of fuel ...
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two Col eman Silk· lite mantles
produce tWice the light, lost up to
four times as long as ordil'lary
mantles. ·

SJ7''

WINCHESTER
Sold ro
SINGLE SHOT w. v':&gt;NLY

Heck's
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'9.88

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HECK'S REG. .

'59.99

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HIPWELL

$299

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RIVAL

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Heck's Reg.

Auto Dept•

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•10.96

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HOUSEWARE DEPT.

WOOD TOY CHEST

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$109.88

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•3.77

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AUTO DEPT.

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MUNSEY

·:

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...••

MR. COFFEE I
DEWXE
DRIPOOTOR

9

,•

.

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Coleman cataly1ic heaters are the modern, eHicient

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....

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... ,...

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way to worm up any outdoor ituation.

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$3.19

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$244

HICIC'S IIG.
$139.96

II

JEWELRY DEPT.

SUNBEAM

Reg .

'7''

HICK'S REG .

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Auto. Dept.

RISLONE
OIL
.TREATMENT

SNOW BRUSH
WITH SCRAPER

99~.
Heck's Reg. 11.38
Auto Dept.

HICK'SIEG. 49'

Am•r.

BUBBLE GUM

BAlk

�.n ~The Stmdav Times· Sentinel, &amp;mday,

Nov. 16, 1975

Auxiliary busy
making plans

Katie's Korner

'

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SJORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

.JO

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

,.,.
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MON.-SA'r.

A.M.· 10 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices
.Effective
'
Thru
,. . . Nov. 22, 1975
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POMEROY - Caroling for Veterans Memorial Hospital.
AChristmas dinner was set
UNICEF, visiting shut·ins
for
Dec. 10at6:30p.m. at the
and making toys for
Meigs
Inn with a $2 gilt ex·
hospital~d lola were among
change.
A bake sale was
the holiday projects planned
planned
for
Dec. 6 at 10 a.m.
by the Auxiliary of the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio at Krogers, and Dec. 20 was
announced as the date for the
C.1ub Thursday night.
. Meeting at the Salisbury club's holiday dinner at the
township garag~, the American Legion hall in
members set Dea. 18 as the MiddlepOrt. The women are
qate to go caroling for to meet at the hall at 10 a.m.
UNICEF. They also planned that day.
A layette shower was held
visits to the Syracuse Nursing
for
Mrs . Patsy Warner
Home
and · Veterans
following
the meeting . A
Memorial Hospital, and
stork,
baby
and buggy cen·
arranged to meet at the home
·
terpiece
was
used on the
·of Mrs. Rose Hysell to make
sluffed animals for the table . Pink, blue and white
Piano studenla of Kathleen Greene held a recital Nov. 2. Participating were, in front,
hospitalized children at streamers were Included in
the decorations, and the cake
Kathleen Greene; second row, lefl to right, Judy Hively, Stephanie l.tiaac, !Wbln Harder;
was decorated with booties.
third row, Kim Hash, Kendra Ward, Delores Spencer; fourth row, '!'rhonda Calllhan, Penny
Mulholand, Delores Wooldridge, CQ.nnie Spencer.
Games · were played with
HOSPITALIZEEl
'
prizes
going to Mrs. Ellen
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs .
· Virginia Scott is a patient at Johnson, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
the flolzer Medical Center; Katie White and Mrs. Wilma
Room 419. She expect8 to be Blake. Hostesses were Mrs.
confined there for treatment Ella Roush, Mrs. Sharon
Roush and Mrs. Mary 'Bacon.
VINTON - Piano students Legato, 11 11 Mustfe" and Nan Harder registered the another week or 10 days.
of Kathleen Greene held their "What A Friend," Judy guests. .
annual recitafNov. 2 at 2 p.m. Hively ; "Spirit of U.S.A.,"
in the Vinton . Fellowship "At School" and ''Moonlight
Chapel.
Reveries,". dutes by Kendra
The program was openl!\1 Ward and ·Kimberly Hash ;
by the audience singing "If That hn 't Love,"
"Battle Hymn of the "Hallelujah Square" and
: I
II.
Republic," led by Phyllis "Rock . of Ages," Delores
Mulholand and accompanied Wooldritlge; "C.'hapel In The
by Penny Mulholand.
·Moonlight" and "Valse E
Selections presented 1\'ere F1at by Durand," Trhonda
"The Long Trail" and · Callihan. "Morning Has
"Coming
'Round
the ' Broken"
by
Penqy
Moun lain," Stephanie Isaac; Mulholand .
Phyllis
"Stepping Stones," "Dutch Mulholand led the audience in
Dance" and "The Knight and singing the closing song,
· the Lady," Delores Spencer; "America" accompanied by
''Chimes' I I uswans on the Penny Mulholand.
Lake" and "Air From
Refreshments of cookies,
Mozart," Connie Spencer; punch, mints and nuts were
"Starlight Waltz," " A served by Jane Ann Denney.
Journey In the Arctic," Robin
Harder; ' 1 Ben," 11 Theme
PRESCRIPTION
From Liebestraum" and
"The Tempest is Rading,"
. Gwen
Blair;
" Finger AND SIJRCiiCAL.

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ONIONS............ ......... . .

YELLQW ·

MENU OF THE DAY

APPETIZER ~- FRENCH TOAST
SHOES BY SANDLER
.

Support Center

CB radio club
elects officers

'

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CRISPY

lb.

BA CON....... ~.........m., .•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County C. B. Radio Club
elected officers at Its regular
meeting Thursday night at
the K of P Hall.
The meeting was called to
order by the president,
Robert C.:ox, with all standing
and repeating "The Lord's
Prayer."
Election of officers for
1976 was the main business
for the evening. Elected were
president, Mike Null; vice
president, Robert Cox;
secretary, Karen Snyder;
treasurer, Brenda Null; •
trustees, Tom Beckner,
Charles Camden and Uoyd
Baker. In other business, a
let.ter was read from the Big
Bend C. B. Radio C.1ub In·
vltlng the Gallia County Club
to a dinner Thursday, Nov.
20.
.
Plans for the Christmas
dinner to be held Dec. 18 at
6:30p.m. at the Holiday Inn
were made.

'

NEW HOURS
S: JOfo8:30 Dally
11:00io4 :00Sunday

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•
•

NOW IS THE TIME TO Af:r -In regard to shortening the
length of time the Pomeroy·Maaon Bridge wl11 be cloeed nelt
year. ·
.
The Pomeroy Olamber of Commerce at Ita recent meeting
agreed that acUonlhoUJd be taken now In regard to the length
of time the bridge should be closed for needed repair .
One member of the chamber qgelled Instead of the
lrldge c)oaing·ln March that closing date be held off until after

'
:

It ill the hope of the chamber to have Glenn Smith, Dilltrlct
10 Engineer, Marietta Dlvilllon of OhiO Transportation, at a
meet~ of the chamber in December. Contact Ia to be made
with Smith and date eel. When the chamber ill firm on the date

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·Loura faye Theiss
BETHIUYI'HED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Theiss,
Rt. 3, Racine, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Loura Jaye, to Steven Ray Hupp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald R•. Hupp, Rt. 2, Racine. Miss Theiss iB a
senior at Southern High Sc~l. Her fiance is a 1975
graduate of Southern and Is employed at Forest Run
mock Co. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Certificate awarded club
POMEROY - On behalf of
the Athens County Sheriff's
Department, a certificate
was presented to the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club at Its Tuesday night
meeting for assistance in a
drowning incident last May.
Guy Hysell presided with
Gilbert Spencer leading in the
oled~e and orover . .Johnnie

.I

by

VANITY FAIR

Opu lent panels of Champagne Lace are
arranged at e•actly· right angles on our gown
and boudoir coat. You can have them both
in Sta r White, Heaven Blue or Dawn Pink,
all with Champagne Lace. The set, $40.
The sleeveless gown alone, with lace
straps ove r three inches wide to maich
the coat, is only $18. Both siz es
PIS/MIL in lustrous Antron°111 nylon.
Also available short (not shown):
Set, $35. Gown alone, $14.

Bee of the Golden Wings Club
in Athens County was
present to award the
certificate. Mrs. Etta Will
was elected treasurer and
several money ·raising
projects were discussed.
Next meeting will be on Nov:· .
29 at 7:30 p,m. at the grange
halL

Eno Grange entertained
ENO - The Senior C.'ilizens
of Gallla County visited Eno
Grange and entertained Nov .
II at a regular meeting of the
grange.
Grange Master Ernest
Greenlee was in charge of the
program which Included
opening of Bible by Donald
and Ruth Palmer, a prayer
by Rosetta Jones. a oiano solo

by Elizabeth Mcinturf, "I'll
Walk with God" . The Master
welcomed Mrs.
Hoke
Robinson, who introduced her
group of entertainers. The
first part consisted. of many
old songs follo)Ved by more
serious tunes and religious
songs.
Apotluck, meal was served
to 44 members and guests.

says-

Shop Early For Christmas

DOWN '

I

ENTREE
- FRENCH TOAST BOOTS
.

We Accept
BankAmericard '

,.

•
: It will be announced.
•
Thill meeting with Smith Ia not a cl.-1 meeting, it ill open
: · to all interested peraona. The chamber meell at the Meigs Inn · ~
: for a noon luncheon every other Monday.
:
Scbeduled date for closing of the lrldge next year Ia March ,
: 15 thro\lllh Oct. 10. It Ia the hope of the chamber to have !hill
: time drastically redueed and at the llllli! time the bridge
: rePair made safe for travel.
~~

BUCKLE ONE
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IMAGINE VIRGIL LEWIS, Racine, ill grateful to
elght.year-old 01ad sayre, 100 of Mr. and Mrs. Loyd SaY,fe,
Racine.
It seems as though Olad was raking leaves at hill parents' ·
home when he found a leather pouch containing ~.
After ewnlning the contents Mrs. Sayre dlacovered who
the owner was and he was notified. Mr. ·Lewta had laid the
depolitofmoney on top of Roy Proffitt's car and when Proffitt
drove off the _pouch fell off In front of the Sayre home which Is
located across from Eber's Gulf.
,
&lt;ll yes, Lewis gave young Olad a $10 bill - it pays to be
honest.
THERE'S A SAYING '1lme changes things." And let me
add, "AND HOW."
Almost 25 years ago when shows of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association started, I foiDid myself cut as a somewhat
glamorous ''high brow" in bright colored satin costumes. What
a role! Well- time marches on and my roles changed. I fo!Dld
myself cast as Mammy YOkum of U1 Abner fame, an af!(ng
Southern belle, and in the last presentation as an Inebriated
character.
However, I feel that my "comeback" ill underway !l!owly but surely ... In the UPCOming Fall Follies I'm cast In a
takeoff on "Minnie Pearl," complete with the price tag on the
hat. Incidentally the fo!Ues ill to be held on Saturday, Nov. 29,
at 8:10pm. at the Meigs High School.
And as always under the capable direction of the master of
them all, Bob Hoeflich. Sponsoring the follies will be the Meigs
Athletic Boosters and it ill their hope that you take your
Thanksgiving guests out to the school to see the show on
. Saturday night.
Alter all, they may as well see how the other half lives!!
SEE YOU THERE?

I

Why is it easier to Christmas shop at Bernadines?
Because we have more for you. More exciting fashion ,
gifts than any other store. Come see how pleasant
Christmas shopping can be! ·

CONGENIAl., AARON ZAHL, Pomeroy, who suffered a
heart attack a year ago, Just has iD keep busy dojrig aometblng.
Rec.;ntly he hand ca!"tid a crane out oi walnut-not a nail
!nil and ills just beautiful. Mr. ?Jlhl said such Items are made
In India out of buffalo horns.
Keep up the rilce work - we are glad to see you active
again.

~

.

Gallipolis, Ohio
300 Second Avenue
"Located in the Beautiful
Lafayette Mall"
..

tatderwent open heart surgery at University Hospital, illlffi.
He has been moved from the intensive care unit to room
815. eardsmay be sent to him In care of the hoapltal.
Eighteen pinta of replacement blood are needed and may
be donated at the next blOOdrnobUe.
,

~
., Easter.

TIE ONE ON

The best place to look
for it Is at DUTTON$,
where you always
feel at home with low
prices.

Katie Crow

JX'Oved.

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POME~OY - Happy to report that Thomas D. Crow, who .

Piano students give recital

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UKE TO SEND belated birthday greeUnp to my aunt,
: Dorothy Roller, Middleport, who celebrated her lm'thday last
• &amp;mday.
:
So aorry lforgot. May'you have many more.

.......

Jse Our Layaway
!

Galipolis, Ohio

_ _..,.. ._ . . . .llto..,j.

'· '
&lt;ll'n.oorn.es-

RIDING BOOTS

-

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lncl~td with each entree are,.,... choice of

shoe strings, buck ..s or boot lOops.
.
' .LAFAhTTE MALL

Moll. &amp;

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Tue~., Wed,, Tllu~.

f:JOtltSp.m.

lilt, ..

Newshutz
wins contest

KRAFT

' :X·t]49
Velveeta- Cheese............
Enter Our Bean Contest This Week ·

W~ner Wil

.

.

Yoo M111-t¥in 100 lb. Buns.

Be Announced Nov. 25 at 4 p.m.

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

GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Longley, counselor at Gallia ·
Academy High School, has
announced the resulta of the
recent 29th annual Ohio
University American History
Contest. Robert Newshutz
from Gallia Academy scored
the highest In Gallla County
with six others, from Galila
Academy High School
.Coring in the top 10 In the
county.
·
Scoring In the top ten are
Ernest Kemp, , .third; Jay
Jarvis, fifth; Jane Hannon,
sixth; Kurt Rutz, seventh ;
Rebecca Rupe, eighth, and
Michael Vallee, ninth.
, With more than 1,500
studenta participating In the
~llmlnary contest, some
346 students scored above the
95 percenllle, Newshutz will
go to Ohio University Nov. 14
and 15 to take part in the final
examination.

MEETING MONDAY

POMERO'l - ~ Melp

Area Holllleu AaOCiation
-~ llltlldnl wl11 be beld
tt thll
0)' U1urcll or the

Pill••
Nazarene Monday, NO\'. 17 at

7:30 p.m. All ministers and
delegates are urged to attend.

BI-CENTENNIAL
Best in Live Entertainment
APPEARING NIGHTLY .

,

TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY

8:30 PM • 1 AM.Tues. · thurs.

·Geo. Hall &amp;The Hallmarks ·

Party dressing. . . out or at• home

SILVER
DOlLARS

Take a holiday from the humdrum. '
Get into this dress, and let DINNY
cater. to your-romantic longings.

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Long mylar dress · scoop neck ·
sleeveless · matching cropped
jacket . Mandarin collar. Colors:
white, peach .
Sizes : 7·15
s44

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; DfiLDREN'S
not indude rubber boats, house shoes or sale merchandise)

Layaway

-.... .
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PH. 992·U29

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OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 5 PM
ONLY

MON. &amp; FRI. 9:30 tO 8 pm
TUES., WED., THURS., &amp; SAT. 9:30 to 5 pm

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SILVI!R IIIDGI PLAZA

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OF SHOES PURCHASED YOU WIU. GET (I)

(Does

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.Washable Gtoup

THArS RIGHT - WITH EVERY PAIR
81-CENTtNNIM. SILVER DOllAR FREEl

Restrvation•
Friday end
Sature!ay
Only

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�.n ~The Stmdav Times· Sentinel, &amp;mday,

Nov. 16, 1975

Auxiliary busy
making plans

Katie's Korner

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SJORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

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POMEROY, OHIO

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A.M.· 10 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices
.Effective
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,. . . Nov. 22, 1975
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POMEROY - Caroling for Veterans Memorial Hospital.
AChristmas dinner was set
UNICEF, visiting shut·ins
for
Dec. 10at6:30p.m. at the
and making toys for
Meigs
Inn with a $2 gilt ex·
hospital~d lola were among
change.
A bake sale was
the holiday projects planned
planned
for
Dec. 6 at 10 a.m.
by the Auxiliary of the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio at Krogers, and Dec. 20 was
announced as the date for the
C.1ub Thursday night.
. Meeting at the Salisbury club's holiday dinner at the
township garag~, the American Legion hall in
members set Dea. 18 as the MiddlepOrt. The women are
qate to go caroling for to meet at the hall at 10 a.m.
UNICEF. They also planned that day.
A layette shower was held
visits to the Syracuse Nursing
for
Mrs . Patsy Warner
Home
and · Veterans
following
the meeting . A
Memorial Hospital, and
stork,
baby
and buggy cen·
arranged to meet at the home
·
terpiece
was
used on the
·of Mrs. Rose Hysell to make
sluffed animals for the table . Pink, blue and white
Piano studenla of Kathleen Greene held a recital Nov. 2. Participating were, in front,
hospitalized children at streamers were Included in
the decorations, and the cake
Kathleen Greene; second row, lefl to right, Judy Hively, Stephanie l.tiaac, !Wbln Harder;
was decorated with booties.
third row, Kim Hash, Kendra Ward, Delores Spencer; fourth row, '!'rhonda Calllhan, Penny
Mulholand, Delores Wooldridge, CQ.nnie Spencer.
Games · were played with
HOSPITALIZEEl
'
prizes
going to Mrs. Ellen
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs .
· Virginia Scott is a patient at Johnson, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs.
the flolzer Medical Center; Katie White and Mrs. Wilma
Room 419. She expect8 to be Blake. Hostesses were Mrs.
confined there for treatment Ella Roush, Mrs. Sharon
Roush and Mrs. Mary 'Bacon.
VINTON - Piano students Legato, 11 11 Mustfe" and Nan Harder registered the another week or 10 days.
of Kathleen Greene held their "What A Friend," Judy guests. .
annual recitafNov. 2 at 2 p.m. Hively ; "Spirit of U.S.A.,"
in the Vinton . Fellowship "At School" and ''Moonlight
Chapel.
Reveries,". dutes by Kendra
The program was openl!\1 Ward and ·Kimberly Hash ;
by the audience singing "If That hn 't Love,"
"Battle Hymn of the "Hallelujah Square" and
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Republic," led by Phyllis "Rock . of Ages," Delores
Mulholand and accompanied Wooldritlge; "C.'hapel In The
by Penny Mulholand.
·Moonlight" and "Valse E
Selections presented 1\'ere F1at by Durand," Trhonda
"The Long Trail" and · Callihan. "Morning Has
"Coming
'Round
the ' Broken"
by
Penqy
Moun lain," Stephanie Isaac; Mulholand .
Phyllis
"Stepping Stones," "Dutch Mulholand led the audience in
Dance" and "The Knight and singing the closing song,
· the Lady," Delores Spencer; "America" accompanied by
''Chimes' I I uswans on the Penny Mulholand.
Lake" and "Air From
Refreshments of cookies,
Mozart," Connie Spencer; punch, mints and nuts were
"Starlight Waltz," " A served by Jane Ann Denney.
Journey In the Arctic," Robin
Harder; ' 1 Ben," 11 Theme
PRESCRIPTION
From Liebestraum" and
"The Tempest is Rading,"
. Gwen
Blair;
" Finger AND SIJRCiiCAL.

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ONIONS............ ......... . .

YELLQW ·

MENU OF THE DAY

APPETIZER ~- FRENCH TOAST
SHOES BY SANDLER
.

Support Center

CB radio club
elects officers

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CRISPY

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BA CON....... ~.........m., .•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County C. B. Radio Club
elected officers at Its regular
meeting Thursday night at
the K of P Hall.
The meeting was called to
order by the president,
Robert C.:ox, with all standing
and repeating "The Lord's
Prayer."
Election of officers for
1976 was the main business
for the evening. Elected were
president, Mike Null; vice
president, Robert Cox;
secretary, Karen Snyder;
treasurer, Brenda Null; •
trustees, Tom Beckner,
Charles Camden and Uoyd
Baker. In other business, a
let.ter was read from the Big
Bend C. B. Radio C.1ub In·
vltlng the Gallia County Club
to a dinner Thursday, Nov.
20.
.
Plans for the Christmas
dinner to be held Dec. 18 at
6:30p.m. at the Holiday Inn
were made.

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NEW HOURS
S: JOfo8:30 Dally
11:00io4 :00Sunday

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NOW IS THE TIME TO Af:r -In regard to shortening the
length of time the Pomeroy·Maaon Bridge wl11 be cloeed nelt
year. ·
.
The Pomeroy Olamber of Commerce at Ita recent meeting
agreed that acUonlhoUJd be taken now In regard to the length
of time the bridge should be closed for needed repair .
One member of the chamber qgelled Instead of the
lrldge c)oaing·ln March that closing date be held off until after

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It ill the hope of the chamber to have Glenn Smith, Dilltrlct
10 Engineer, Marietta Dlvilllon of OhiO Transportation, at a
meet~ of the chamber in December. Contact Ia to be made
with Smith and date eel. When the chamber ill firm on the date

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·Loura faye Theiss
BETHIUYI'HED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Theiss,
Rt. 3, Racine, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Loura Jaye, to Steven Ray Hupp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald R•. Hupp, Rt. 2, Racine. Miss Theiss iB a
senior at Southern High Sc~l. Her fiance is a 1975
graduate of Southern and Is employed at Forest Run
mock Co. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Certificate awarded club
POMEROY - On behalf of
the Athens County Sheriff's
Department, a certificate
was presented to the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club at Its Tuesday night
meeting for assistance in a
drowning incident last May.
Guy Hysell presided with
Gilbert Spencer leading in the
oled~e and orover . .Johnnie

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VANITY FAIR

Opu lent panels of Champagne Lace are
arranged at e•actly· right angles on our gown
and boudoir coat. You can have them both
in Sta r White, Heaven Blue or Dawn Pink,
all with Champagne Lace. The set, $40.
The sleeveless gown alone, with lace
straps ove r three inches wide to maich
the coat, is only $18. Both siz es
PIS/MIL in lustrous Antron°111 nylon.
Also available short (not shown):
Set, $35. Gown alone, $14.

Bee of the Golden Wings Club
in Athens County was
present to award the
certificate. Mrs. Etta Will
was elected treasurer and
several money ·raising
projects were discussed.
Next meeting will be on Nov:· .
29 at 7:30 p,m. at the grange
halL

Eno Grange entertained
ENO - The Senior C.'ilizens
of Gallla County visited Eno
Grange and entertained Nov .
II at a regular meeting of the
grange.
Grange Master Ernest
Greenlee was in charge of the
program which Included
opening of Bible by Donald
and Ruth Palmer, a prayer
by Rosetta Jones. a oiano solo

by Elizabeth Mcinturf, "I'll
Walk with God" . The Master
welcomed Mrs.
Hoke
Robinson, who introduced her
group of entertainers. The
first part consisted. of many
old songs follo)Ved by more
serious tunes and religious
songs.
Apotluck, meal was served
to 44 members and guests.

says-

Shop Early For Christmas

DOWN '

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ENTREE
- FRENCH TOAST BOOTS
.

We Accept
BankAmericard '

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: It will be announced.
•
Thill meeting with Smith Ia not a cl.-1 meeting, it ill open
: · to all interested peraona. The chamber meell at the Meigs Inn · ~
: for a noon luncheon every other Monday.
:
Scbeduled date for closing of the lrldge next year Ia March ,
: 15 thro\lllh Oct. 10. It Ia the hope of the chamber to have !hill
: time drastically redueed and at the llllli! time the bridge
: rePair made safe for travel.
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BUCKLE ONE
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IMAGINE VIRGIL LEWIS, Racine, ill grateful to
elght.year-old 01ad sayre, 100 of Mr. and Mrs. Loyd SaY,fe,
Racine.
It seems as though Olad was raking leaves at hill parents' ·
home when he found a leather pouch containing ~.
After ewnlning the contents Mrs. Sayre dlacovered who
the owner was and he was notified. Mr. ·Lewta had laid the
depolitofmoney on top of Roy Proffitt's car and when Proffitt
drove off the _pouch fell off In front of the Sayre home which Is
located across from Eber's Gulf.
,
&lt;ll yes, Lewis gave young Olad a $10 bill - it pays to be
honest.
THERE'S A SAYING '1lme changes things." And let me
add, "AND HOW."
Almost 25 years ago when shows of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association started, I foiDid myself cut as a somewhat
glamorous ''high brow" in bright colored satin costumes. What
a role! Well- time marches on and my roles changed. I fo!Dld
myself cast as Mammy YOkum of U1 Abner fame, an af!(ng
Southern belle, and in the last presentation as an Inebriated
character.
However, I feel that my "comeback" ill underway !l!owly but surely ... In the UPCOming Fall Follies I'm cast In a
takeoff on "Minnie Pearl," complete with the price tag on the
hat. Incidentally the fo!Ues ill to be held on Saturday, Nov. 29,
at 8:10pm. at the Meigs High School.
And as always under the capable direction of the master of
them all, Bob Hoeflich. Sponsoring the follies will be the Meigs
Athletic Boosters and it ill their hope that you take your
Thanksgiving guests out to the school to see the show on
. Saturday night.
Alter all, they may as well see how the other half lives!!
SEE YOU THERE?

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Why is it easier to Christmas shop at Bernadines?
Because we have more for you. More exciting fashion ,
gifts than any other store. Come see how pleasant
Christmas shopping can be! ·

CONGENIAl., AARON ZAHL, Pomeroy, who suffered a
heart attack a year ago, Just has iD keep busy dojrig aometblng.
Rec.;ntly he hand ca!"tid a crane out oi walnut-not a nail
!nil and ills just beautiful. Mr. ?Jlhl said such Items are made
In India out of buffalo horns.
Keep up the rilce work - we are glad to see you active
again.

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Gallipolis, Ohio
300 Second Avenue
"Located in the Beautiful
Lafayette Mall"
..

tatderwent open heart surgery at University Hospital, illlffi.
He has been moved from the intensive care unit to room
815. eardsmay be sent to him In care of the hoapltal.
Eighteen pinta of replacement blood are needed and may
be donated at the next blOOdrnobUe.
,

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TIE ONE ON

The best place to look
for it Is at DUTTON$,
where you always
feel at home with low
prices.

Katie Crow

JX'Oved.

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POME~OY - Happy to report that Thomas D. Crow, who .

Piano students give recital

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UKE TO SEND belated birthday greeUnp to my aunt,
: Dorothy Roller, Middleport, who celebrated her lm'thday last
• &amp;mday.
:
So aorry lforgot. May'you have many more.

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Jse Our Layaway
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Galipolis, Ohio

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&lt;ll'n.oorn.es-

RIDING BOOTS

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lncl~td with each entree are,.,... choice of

shoe strings, buck ..s or boot lOops.
.
' .LAFAhTTE MALL

Moll. &amp;

~ri. •••lila~

Tue~., Wed,, Tllu~.

f:JOtltSp.m.

lilt, ..

Newshutz
wins contest

KRAFT

' :X·t]49
Velveeta- Cheese............
Enter Our Bean Contest This Week ·

W~ner Wil

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Yoo M111-t¥in 100 lb. Buns.

Be Announced Nov. 25 at 4 p.m.

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

GALLIPOLIS - John R.
Longley, counselor at Gallia ·
Academy High School, has
announced the resulta of the
recent 29th annual Ohio
University American History
Contest. Robert Newshutz
from Gallia Academy scored
the highest In Gallla County
with six others, from Galila
Academy High School
.Coring in the top 10 In the
county.
·
Scoring In the top ten are
Ernest Kemp, , .third; Jay
Jarvis, fifth; Jane Hannon,
sixth; Kurt Rutz, seventh ;
Rebecca Rupe, eighth, and
Michael Vallee, ninth.
, With more than 1,500
studenta participating In the
~llmlnary contest, some
346 students scored above the
95 percenllle, Newshutz will
go to Ohio University Nov. 14
and 15 to take part in the final
examination.

MEETING MONDAY

POMERO'l - ~ Melp

Area Holllleu AaOCiation
-~ llltlldnl wl11 be beld
tt thll
0)' U1urcll or the

Pill••
Nazarene Monday, NO\'. 17 at

7:30 p.m. All ministers and
delegates are urged to attend.

BI-CENTENNIAL
Best in Live Entertainment
APPEARING NIGHTLY .

,

TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY

8:30 PM • 1 AM.Tues. · thurs.

·Geo. Hall &amp;The Hallmarks ·

Party dressing. . . out or at• home

SILVER
DOlLARS

Take a holiday from the humdrum. '
Get into this dress, and let DINNY
cater. to your-romantic longings.

-.
•

..

·'
:

.. -· ' "h.\
'

--·'

'/

,'

Long mylar dress · scoop neck ·
sleeveless · matching cropped
jacket . Mandarin collar. Colors:
white, peach .
Sizes : 7·15
s44

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; DfiLDREN'S
not indude rubber boats, house shoes or sale merchandise)

Layaway

-.... .
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PH. 992·U29

•
OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 5 PM
ONLY

MON. &amp; FRI. 9:30 tO 8 pm
TUES., WED., THURS., &amp; SAT. 9:30 to 5 pm

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SILVI!R IIIDGI PLAZA

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OF SHOES PURCHASED YOU WIU. GET (I)

(Does

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.Washable Gtoup

THArS RIGHT - WITH EVERY PAIR
81-CENTtNNIM. SILVER DOllAR FREEl

Restrvation•
Friday end
Sature!ay
Only

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�12- The SWlday :fimes -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, !97S

13 - The SWlday Times Se tine
• n l,SW1day,Nov. 16,1975

;Council enjoys turkey dinner
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GALLIPOLIS- The Oallta

to tell something she was

t Cnunty Homemakers' Ex· thankful for. She also read a
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tension Council enjoyed a
potluck lunch when it met at
Gra ce United Me th odist
Church Nov. 12 for its
monthly meeting. ·
Ro b e rt a · Fis her,
president, was in charge of
the meeting. Ell zahel h
Mcinturf played the piano
while the group sang, "Come,
Ye Thankful People, Come,"
~ and "We Gather Together,"
: Dawn Walker had devotions
; by asking each lady present

•

poem on the Th~nksgiv ing
theme. Maude, Persinger led
the group in the pledge to the
flag . Elaine George read the
secretary's report and Dawn
Walker, treasurer's report.
It was announced that a
llazaar will be held at the
December meeting Dec . 10
and the Senior Citizens choir
will sing.
Jerry Barnes, Soc ial
Service Supervisor, talked on
his work iri Gallia County and

; Mrs. Sanders is surprised
, MERCERVILLE. - Mrs.
: Bertha Sanders was sur·
; prlsed at her home here
• Thursday when her sisters
! and brothers caine to help her
; celebrate her birthday. · ,
: A dinner \vas served J.St
: noon and she was presentea a·
; birthday cake. The afternoOtl
: was spent taking plcture111nd
• talking. over old Urnes. •
: There are io living chiidlen
of the ~te John and 00118
, Shaw and they were ;,~u
; present lor th• occasion,

!

said everyon e should be
concerned about c ~ild
. welfare.
A potluck lunch was en.
joyed at noon with turkey and
all th e trimmings in
celebratio~ of Thanksgiving.
The afternoon was spent by
the women braiding rugs with
Edna Borden teaching the
class.
Hos tesses were the Gage.
Northup group with Bernice
Wood and Dora Adkins, co.
chairwomen and . Jackie
Graham roasting the turkey.
The tables were decorated
al ong the Thanksgiving
theme.

THIRTY·NINE SENIOR CITIZENS enjoyed a fall trip to the nation's
capital recenUy. Making the trip to Washington, D. C. and shown here in
front of the Capitol building were bo\tom row, left to right, Florence
Willis, John Morgan, Violet Smith, Walter Bartrwn, Edna . Cook,
Margaret Johnson, Edith Bischoff, Ethel Robinson, Clara .Fisher,
Raymond Fisher, Evalee Cook, Bertis ~lley, Ada Caufman, · Reva
Evans, Mae Lawrence. Second row, Oiarles Mcinturff, Elizabeth
SHANE FACEMIRE

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Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Oakey Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Porter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Houck, Mrs. Myrtle
.Holcomb, ~II of Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Good
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Greene, Mrs. Goldie Sanders,
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Sheets,
Mr. and Mrs. Merida Shaw
Crown City.
•'
Calljng In the afternoon
were Mrs. Terry Neal and
children, Randy, Patty an.d
Peggy of Crown, City.

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IAPJINI

FALL DECORATIONS
DOOR WRQllfS. MATS
PlAIN OR!DECORATED
INDIAN CORN

Observes
birthday

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Calendar

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POMERqY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center ac·
tivities are located at
Pomeroy Junior High School,
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
GALLIPOLIS _ Shane through Friday.
David Facemire celebrated
Monday, Nov. 17, Chronic
his second birthday Nov. 3 Lung Treatment Program, 12
with a Halloween birthday noon ; Square Dancing, 12:JO.
party Oct. 28. Shane is the son 3 p.m.
of Mr . and Mrs. David
Tuesady, Nov. 18, Home
Facemire, Portsmouth Rd. Nursing Course cancelled,
Helping him celebrate, Chorus, 12:31).2 p.m .
besides his parents, were his
Wednesday, Nov. 19, Blood
)'OUr
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Pressure Testing 12: IS..I :30
Orvllle Facemire and Mrs . . p.m.; Games, 12:31).2 p.m.
Edna Mlller. Mrs. Lucian
Thursday, Nov. 20, Crafts,
Barcus and children, Mat· Quitting, Cards and Games.
thew and Sarah Jo and Mr.
Friday, Nov. 21 , Art
and,Mrs. Allen Wheeler. Also· Lessons, 11).11 a.m.; Bowling
sllaring his birthday cake 1·3 p.m.
was hls aunt, Denise Miller
The Ohio ·commission on
whose birthday was Nov . 6. Aging "On Aging" television
Shane also recently · programfeaturingtheMeigs
returned from a vacation trip CoWlty Senior Utizens Center
to Gatlinburg, Tenn. and the will be shown on PoinTView
Great Smoky Mts. with his Cable tv, channelS, Monday
parents and grandparents, and Tuesday at I p.m. and
35
Mr. and Mrs. Facemire.
Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
program , II : 30-1 2 : 30,
Monday through Friday.
MENU
MONDAY, Nov. 17 - Meat ·
loaf with gravy, mashed
potatoes, waldorf salad,
chocolate cake w-white icing,
bread, butter, milk, coffee,
With "the. arrival of the Christmas
tea and buttermilk daily.
TUESDAY , Nov . 18 Shopping Season the Haskins-Tanner
Sliced
turkey, candied sweet
Co. Is offering a special Discount for
potato, buttered green beans,
you to shop early In Gallipolis on
sliced banana in strawberry
Men's Suits; Sport Coats &amp; Winter
gelatin, roll, butter milk ;
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
' Jackets.
daily.
'·
WEDNESDAY, Nov. 19
Sausage patties (2), au gratin
potatoes (cheese topping) ,
buttered heels, peanut butter
cookies. (2), bread, butter,
milk; Coffee, tea and buttermilk daily.
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THURSDAY, Nov. 20 SHOPPING IARLY IN GALLIPOLIJ
Salisbury steak w-tomato ·
gravy, buttered diced
potatoes, buttered peas,
peach cobbler, bread, butter,
milk;
Coffee,_ tea and but·
REG. 180. .......
N~
termilk daily.
FRIDAY, Nov . 21 REG. '120 .. ............... NOW
'
Macaroni and cheese w-hwn
chunks, stewed tomatoes,
REG. '140 ....~ ......... NOW
•
gelatin salad, gingerbread W·

lHANKSGIVING NOVELTIES

and Sanclstaoes
We DerMir

MULQIES MCIS. Bart Nuaets,
Varble Olips fli winter care of

• u.s.

SHOP EARLY
IN GALLIPOLIS!

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SAVE

OFF

BY

Meris Suits
L ........

'64
'96
'112

SPOil COATS

Mcinturff, Ruby Saunde111, Hoke Robinson, Ruth Miller, Edith GUkey,
F1orence McDaniel, Nina Darton, Margretta Wlllls. Back row, Sara Jane
Morgan, Elsie Lakin, Bessie Sheets, Torla Comer, Minnie Caldwell,
Dorothy Shaw, Bill Jenkins, Mildred Hardway, Amy Wedemeyer, Edna
Montgomery, Ruby Long, Dennis POwell (bus driver), Jean Niday
(director) and Ann Bradbury.

Senior citizens tour Washington
,

·

By Mrs. Ruth Miller
. GALLIPOLIS - On Oct. 13
at 7 a.m., a group of Senior
tltizens left lor Washington,
D.C. by way of Charleston
and Rts. 60 and 64. These
seniors worked and saved
their money for some time .
Some saved part of their
Social Security each month
and some have children who
helped them. Otherwise some
of us would not have been
able to go to see some of our
beautiful country.
As you know these trips are
planned and scheduled by our
director. The reservations,
bus fare and tickets are
purchased at the best rates
-

.

available to senior citizens.
We pay half when the
reservations are made and
pay the balance before the
time to go on the trip.
There are a few people who
do not have to COWl! pennies
but most of us do.
Some people have the
wrong Impression about
these trips. If people would
come to the center and see
·what ali we do I think they
would understand better.
Now about our trip, on our
first day we visited Hawks
Nest, W. Ya. on our way to
Williamsburg, Va. Some had
seen the river gorge before

.'Pe·n h0 use.
0
h0 n0 r.• {" 5 t h
0
J

KYGER - An open house
washeldonSunday,Oct.:!6in
observance 1lf the SOth
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife (Garnet
Rupe ) at their home near
Kyger. The couple was
married on Oct. 31, t92S at
Gallipolis.
The surprise cei~brallon
was hosted by their children,
Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Rife,
Davisville, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Young, Tuppers
Plains: Cake, jello salad, and
punchwere'served to Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Young and
Tonya and Mary Winans,
Parkersburg, W. • Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Rife,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Rife, daughter, Jackaon ; Mr.
and Mrs . Glenn Young,
Michelle and Glenn, Jr.,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Rupe, t1air Athey, Mrs. Kay
liockman and son Billie, Mrs.
Trev~ Denney and daughter
Sarah Jane, Mr. and Mrs.
whipped topping, bread,
butter, milk; Coffee, tell and
buttermilk daily.
The Senior Nutrition Lunch
is on a donation basis only for
Senior Citizens. Fee for
guests of senior Citizens is $1.

· ALMA PIGMAN of Proctorvllle Ia shown looking at one of her favorite wood carvings, a
horse and buggy. Mrs. Pigman worked approxima!A!Iy six months, off and on, lA&gt; finish this
IJ'Oject. The wheel spokesare·made from matches and the top of the buggy is leather. She
used walnut for the carving, This and other works of Mrs. Pigman are featured at the
Country Fare In the Sprmg Valley Shopping Plaza.

.

Bob Conkle, Mrs. and Mrs.
Hortie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Conkle and daughter
Michelle, Mrs. Louise Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wells,
Tina and Harold, Jr. , Mr. and
Mrs. Bub Fife, all of the
Kyger area; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Tellers, Mary Kay and
Jodi, Stockport.
Mr . and Mrs. Marion Rupe,
Emie, Wilmington ; Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Rife, Mr. and Mrs.
Shirley Wolfe, Mrs. Bertha
Rice and daughter, Bonnie,.
Mrs. Eva Milliron and Joe,
Steve Rife and Rhonda Jones,
Leading Creek; Dr. and Mrs.
R. R. Pickens , Pomeroy ; Mr.
and Mrs. Hurley Rife, Joe,
Jimmie and Shirley, Davl,..
ville; Mr. and Mrs. t'harles
Young, Steve, Brenda,
Roberta, ·Larry . Keith and
Darrell,
and
Cheryl
Benedum, Tuppers Plains.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Worley Rife and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs ~
William Frazier, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Kauff, Mr. and
Mrs. James Conkle, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Rupe and
daughter Trudy. Carda and
telephone
calls
of
congra tulatlons were also
received tiy the couple.

but il is always a beautiful
sight especially in the fail.
Next stop was lunch. Then on
to Monticello and the
beautiful home of Thomas
Jefferson in Charlottesville,
Va. Much of the mansion and
Its furnishings are the
original pieces. The house
was designed by Mr. Jeflerson as was part of the
furniture and drapes.
W~ ar~lved at our motel in
Williamsburg around 8 p.m.
Maybe we were a little tired
· but we had an exciting day
and beautiful weather.
We spent the second day
sightseeing in the historic
village of Williamsburg. '!'he
restoration of the village
started in 1926. The streets
and greens are among the
most historic parts of the U.S.
More than 100 major
buildings and homes stand in
·the district ~&lt;Down as the
historic area which is ap·
proximately one mile long
ahd one-half mile wide.
Many are open to the
public, some are occupied by
lennants and employes, most
dress in lh4told colonial style.
It was very impr~lve.
The next morning we went
on to see Mt. Vemon, the
original home of George
Washington. His home was
also very interesting and has
quite a his!Qric background.
We also visited the Masonic
Shrine. Washington was a
Mason . We w~nt on lo
ArllnglA&gt;n National Cemetery
to see the grave of President
Kennedy where the flame
burns contllluolialy. We also
saw · the graye of Robert
l{enned~. .
__
We saw the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier and the
changing of the guarda. They
change every half hour. Thla
is a beautiful and touching
scene. After a long day we
arrived at the motel to rest
and get ready for a tour of

Washington D.C.
Our bus driver really knew
his way around Washington
and a guide showed us the
historic points of interest, the
churches attended ' ·bY
presidents, some of their
homes, the famous colleges,
and even the Watergate
building. We visited the White
House but we didn't see the
president or any of his
fwnily ..We visited the Capitol
building Including the House
of Representatives and the
Senate. They weren't in
session, but a representative
from Congressman Miller's
office escorted' us around
explaining the Interesting
points.
We missed the Bureau of
Printing and Engraving as
they closed early and we
wereshortontimebutwedld
vlait part of the Smithsonian
Institute (a historical
museum). It wqu}d "ke the
better part of two days lA&gt; see
everything there, maybe
longer. After a delicious
dinner at Holloway Houae we
toured Washington by night.
The buildings are outstanding
by day, but at night they are
hard todeacribe. They can be
seen for miles. The lights
around Washington are
unbelievable. That ended our
tour ao we returned lA&gt; the
motel and home on Friday by
way of the Shenandoah
Valley. The moWltalns were
ali decked out · In bright
yellows and brown and you
would have to see them for
yourself to appreciate them.
Of all the places we vlaited, 1
couldn't pick out anyone
place as the most interesting
or the most beautiful:
Touring by bus with the
Senior (.~tizens Ia the best
way to see parts of our
country.
Thanks to everyone who
had a part in making this 'a
memorable trip.

Sr~':'~c;;;;;:?'' ' 'l

:~

r~

Calendar

*52

RACINE - Tri M I Modern
··: Music Masters) at Southern
High School members and
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior invited guests enjoyed a two.
c.mzens Center, located at 221! hour hayride and party
Jackson Pike in the County recently at the cabin of
Home Building, ls open Rhonda West's parents.
Monday through Friday from
Denise Hendri~, program
9a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule chairman for Trl M is
of activities for this week Is planning a Thanksgiving
as follows:
assembly. The choir will also
Monday, Nov. 17, Olde
Tyme &lt;-'horus Practice, !..J
p.m.
Tuesday,
Nov.
18,
Columbus Shopping Trip (bus
leaves at 8:30 a.m.), 8:30
a.m.; Visiting, 9 a.m..,'l p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 19, BlOod
Pressure &lt;-'heck, 1·2 p.m. .
Thursday, Nov. 20, Birih·
day Party, 1:30 p.m. CoWl
Meeting, 2 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 21, Art Uass,
l.,'l p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at
11:30a .m. daily. The Seniors'
Coop is open daily from ti:30
till 1:30 p.m.
EARL MAYO, JR.

ell

*68

NOW
Reg. S95
NOW

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
BOYS ·.

'15.90
..... I'fOW '24.00

Reg . S20 ....... NOW
R'eg, 53L

.

~

MENS

Reg. 540...... . .. NOW 132.00
Re(,. S7S ......... NOW

'60.00

, • Open ~nday Til 8 P.M.

LAYAWAYS
INVITED

Mon.&amp; Fri.
9:3otiUp.m.

Tues. Wed. sat.

9:30til5
Thur. 9:30til 12

POMEROY - The Meigs
Human Resources CoWlcil
wlU meet Tuesday at noon at
the Meigs Inn for the regular
monthly session . By-laws,
drawn up at a recent meeting
of a committee wlll be
presented, discussed and
changes suggested .
, Making up the committee
are Hank Ueland, Bureau of
Vocational Rehabilitation
Vernon Neue, Red Cr~
blood program; Mrs. Barbara Leadlnsham, community Action Program,
1\W"Ia Gullkey; Meigs CoWlty
Extension Service agent,
Robert Bowen , superin·
tendent of th~ Meigs County
Schools.
Mrs. Leafy Chasteen ,
council chairperson, wlll
preside. All organizations of
the county are Invited lA&gt; send
a representative.

Clark's Jewelry Store
·

she finds those or artist
Norman Rockwell are ex·
cellent.
After she has chosen a
subj ect, she "jigsa ws"
(outlines) the pattern in the
wood
and then ca refully
foot."
whittles
the wood into the
· She recently began working
wi th buckeye which has finished product she desires.
produced some iAteresting When the product is com.
piete, it is sandpapered and
pieces, she says.
Mrs. Pigman rece ives most lacquered befor e it is ready to .
of her ideas from drawings go.
The result is an exqulsi te
and she usually carves from
carving which would be an
pictures.
She doesn't believe ail attractive addition lA&gt; any
pictures are good models, but home.

expensive and hard to get,"
according to Mrs. Pigman.
Prices for wood have risen
from $2 a footto $5·a foot and
Mrs. Pigman says "almost
everything has to have a

·

The singers are lOth, 11th
and 12th grade students and
are a top notch group in·
corporating choreography,
personality and fresh original
talent. There will be 35
singers, stage band and in·
strumentallsts and crew
members under the direction
of Larry Weaver. Mrs. Lee
Lee is sponaor of the Tri M.

GALLIPOLIS - Earl
Mayo, Jr. was honored on his
eighth birthday recently with
. a party attended by several of
hla frlenda. The evenmg was
spent playing games, contest. and music.
Refreshmenta of popcorn,
punch, lee cream and birth·
day cake were a.m"ed to
Mark Fnqum, Ghirlea and
Keith Lewis, Brldset Henry,
Kirk and Kelley Jackson, '
Ricky Welch, Carman and
Lusher Mayo. Mrs. June
Morrison asslated Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Mayo.
Sending a gift was Mrs.
Mildred Evans.
Earl
received many gifta and the
group sang "Happy Btrthday." Each child present
received a favor.

FAMOUS FASHION DESIGNER

POLYESTER ANGORA·
(Polyester, Wool &amp; Rabbit Hair Blend)

60 INatES
WIDE

$395
. YARD

with handsome hand stenciling
depicting historical Independence
Hall, The Liberty Bell and

Gl

· Ohio ·

Old North Church
•

FREE

Thest tnchlntlng lellets

will btllll \hi

wonder ol Stnlt DIIU! hl l~ 11\1 t llllya
llld eirls in 10111lit~. lii~Y VIlli ~~W \nt

feller is froffl Sante !Wt~1l~t

The Proof is in the II ltmarkt
~~ ~ Claus Poat Olflee~J~Ir=lllli %
1W tiJJ
- ... 1e11m ... envtloptl, ft~t£1.
"·
_, it ilf u specill ma111111r1. W
ei!tll i~ \1 Mt~

rr. ,_, CJM. tndin, Tlllt "
clillhn of Ill .....

1111t WiY

iN
at
ll)fill

Cl(
.."

Leflers ,.,.1'-lllt et til Otiiiii!JIII ltttll
Mlr~nt Mlmlltn1 !lllllt ~t ill lllat
CIMa Loc1ttd
c..
. In .fNftt lit Hil~il\l&gt;Ttt\Mf

'

WITH COORDINATED
SWEATER KNITS
TO MATOi

11IE GOP WAY

KNIT MIU STORE

LINCOLNSHIRE, Ill .
(UPI ) - llfp. Robert Me·
Clory, R-m., Ia the kind of
congressman who symbolizes
the Republican philosophy of
governn1ent, said Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller
Friday.

SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA

ROUTE 35 WEST

handcrafted of rugged New England
Hardwood. You choose from rich Pine or
lustrous Maple llnlsh . All protected with a
special burn and alcohol resistant finish.
Your limited edition number will be
documented with Standard of Gardner
making your Liberty Bench an authentic
heirloom of the future.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 11110
,.

16 to 18 lb.
· ~-

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT
D1ocle from

Suits and Sport Coats by Leather Jocket• by Cre&lt;co ·
Curloe, Merit, Hubbard, and and Cooper .
Warren Sewell.
Leisure Suits by Hubbard, Mr.
Pants by HAggar, Hubbard,
I one! HAggar.
Levi.
Denims by Levi
Shirts by Arrow, Career Underwear b"y Arrow, Jockey ,
Clubs.
BYD, and flanes
Wesrern Shirts by Roncb.
·So~ks by Interwoven
Hats by Stetson and Adams. Luggage by Airway and
Wool Shirts, Jackets and Caps Samsonite
by Pendleton.
Wallets, Key Cases, Travel
Swelters by PUritan, Jockey
Kits by Meeker
lnternation~l, Arrow and
Pendleton.
Toiletries by Brut and
Robes. and P1j1mos by · Romane.
Fltttway and BYD.

USE OUR LAY-AWAY OR
YOUR BANKAMERICARD
Pant Suits by
Catalina ,'
Jantzen,
Coddington,
Lori' Lynn.

POTATOES
Ohio Grown
White

r

Slacks
Catalina,
Jantzen,

Coats: Suburban,
All-Weather
and Long Dress
Coats by Betty
Rose and Great
Six .

by

Blouses by Lady
Manhattan,
Jantzen,
Catalina
and
Lori Lynn .

Coddington, and
Douglas Marc.

A unique accent bench for your home dec;or,

, Armour's Star Grade A

SOUDS, PLAIDS AND STRIPES

.·

LIBERTY BENCH

R IGHT RES ERV ED TO LI MI T QUANTITI ES

REG. 14.95

Honoring our Bicentennial

1.01 POI~T AWHT. GOLD 6 PRONG..................~1175"
.97 ·POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG:................. 121oo»
.79 POINT M VEL Gold 6 PRONG ............ :........1 14~
•49 POINT AM WHT. GOLD _6 PRONG .............. ..'142S'
.49 POINT M W~T. GOLD 4 PRONG ........... ,........ '77fl
..47 POINT AA VEL. GOLD 6 PRONG ...... ,.. ............ '77fl
.38 POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG ...:: ................'57fl
.29 POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG ................... ..'45QD
.28 POINT AA VEL GOLD 4 PRONG .. ~ .................. 'W
1.00 POINT TOTAL WEIGHT WHT. GOLD
WEDDING BAND ..........J. ...................... , ...... : ...... ..'77'JI
342 Second Ave.

23.

'

IJ .\.

.'75

present two selections.
The new apprentices being
initiated iniAl Tri M have
successfully passed the
requirements and formal
initiation will be held at the
high school on Nov. 24. Lee
Ord, president, is in charge of
arrangements. Parents and
f~iends are Invited.
Since the one group from
Columbus Tri M sponsored
was so successful they are
having the Grandview
Singers from Colwnbus to
present a concert at the high
schoolfor all students on Jan.

weekend when the Galleries
used an arrangement of wOOd
carvect flowers and two of her
eagles for a dance.
Her creations are featured
locally at the Country Fare in
the Spring Hill Shopping
Plaza here.
"It's a nice hobby and has
given me a lot of pleasure,"
said Mrs. Pigman. ''!love to
do II."
She reports, however, that
it Is becoming more and more
expensive to buy the wOOd
and the types of wood she
prefers are becoming scarce.
These include mahogany,
butternut and pine. "Wood is

Council
Birthday
to meet
observed

ONDS

sas

By SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS
Jn.
spiration is the key to Alma
Pigman's success as a
WOodcarver.
Mrs. Pigman, a re~ide nt of
Proctorville, believes "you
have to be inspired to do good
work in woodcarving. " She
feels that Inspiration adds a
special quality to her car.
vings.
She began carving wOod in
1950 following a trip in the
Smoky Mountains. While
traveling there, she became
in IA!rested in toe wOodcarvers
and when she returned home,
she decided to . try the art
herself, never dreaming she
would become successful.
• Now, she has more orders
than she can get filled for
Christmas and some of her
work is exhibited in almost
every state and overseas.
The HWltington Galleries ·
often feature her wood

Tri M holds ha11ride
~~~tur;~g~~~ hi~~~ght~!~~
'J

Reg. $45
NOW
Reg.

Woodcarver sees inspiration
as. key to ·successful career

Sweaters
Catalina
Jantzen .

by
and

20 lb.

Hand
Bags,
Billfolds and
Key. Cases by
Meeker .

Knit Tops by
Switchmates
Denim Jeans by
and Fairchild.
Turtle Bax
Ladies Hosiery by
Mojud.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio

Store Ho'fs :' 9: 15 to 5: 00 ~n . thru Sat.
~: 15 to 8:00

•.

Frt.

•

�12- The SWlday :fimes -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, !97S

13 - The SWlday Times Se tine
• n l,SW1day,Nov. 16,1975

;Council enjoys turkey dinner
•

.:

GALLIPOLIS- The Oallta

to tell something she was

t Cnunty Homemakers' Ex· thankful for. She also read a
·:
;
:
:
;
•
.
'
:
;
;

tension Council enjoyed a
potluck lunch when it met at
Gra ce United Me th odist
Church Nov. 12 for its
monthly meeting. ·
Ro b e rt a · Fis her,
president, was in charge of
the meeting. Ell zahel h
Mcinturf played the piano
while the group sang, "Come,
Ye Thankful People, Come,"
~ and "We Gather Together,"
: Dawn Walker had devotions
; by asking each lady present

•

poem on the Th~nksgiv ing
theme. Maude, Persinger led
the group in the pledge to the
flag . Elaine George read the
secretary's report and Dawn
Walker, treasurer's report.
It was announced that a
llazaar will be held at the
December meeting Dec . 10
and the Senior Citizens choir
will sing.
Jerry Barnes, Soc ial
Service Supervisor, talked on
his work iri Gallia County and

; Mrs. Sanders is surprised
, MERCERVILLE. - Mrs.
: Bertha Sanders was sur·
; prlsed at her home here
• Thursday when her sisters
! and brothers caine to help her
; celebrate her birthday. · ,
: A dinner \vas served J.St
: noon and she was presentea a·
; birthday cake. The afternoOtl
: was spent taking plcture111nd
• talking. over old Urnes. •
: There are io living chiidlen
of the ~te John and 00118
, Shaw and they were ;,~u
; present lor th• occasion,

!

said everyon e should be
concerned about c ~ild
. welfare.
A potluck lunch was en.
joyed at noon with turkey and
all th e trimmings in
celebratio~ of Thanksgiving.
The afternoon was spent by
the women braiding rugs with
Edna Borden teaching the
class.
Hos tesses were the Gage.
Northup group with Bernice
Wood and Dora Adkins, co.
chairwomen and . Jackie
Graham roasting the turkey.
The tables were decorated
al ong the Thanksgiving
theme.

THIRTY·NINE SENIOR CITIZENS enjoyed a fall trip to the nation's
capital recenUy. Making the trip to Washington, D. C. and shown here in
front of the Capitol building were bo\tom row, left to right, Florence
Willis, John Morgan, Violet Smith, Walter Bartrwn, Edna . Cook,
Margaret Johnson, Edith Bischoff, Ethel Robinson, Clara .Fisher,
Raymond Fisher, Evalee Cook, Bertis ~lley, Ada Caufman, · Reva
Evans, Mae Lawrence. Second row, Oiarles Mcinturff, Elizabeth
SHANE FACEMIRE

j

'

/

Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Oakey Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Porter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Houck, Mrs. Myrtle
.Holcomb, ~II of Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Good
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
Greene, Mrs. Goldie Sanders,
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Sheets,
Mr. and Mrs. Merida Shaw
Crown City.
•'
Calljng In the afternoon
were Mrs. Terry Neal and
children, Randy, Patty an.d
Peggy of Crown, City.

l l-4~~........,'........"'............~....~
•

I !rOll

IAPJINI

FALL DECORATIONS
DOOR WRQllfS. MATS
PlAIN OR!DECORATED
INDIAN CORN

Observes
birthday

.

l

·-,s;~':'~ci~;;;:;,,,:;\1
Calendar

:~:'·'•

''
..
POMERqY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center ac·
tivities are located at
Pomeroy Junior High School,
open 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
GALLIPOLIS _ Shane through Friday.
David Facemire celebrated
Monday, Nov. 17, Chronic
his second birthday Nov. 3 Lung Treatment Program, 12
with a Halloween birthday noon ; Square Dancing, 12:JO.
party Oct. 28. Shane is the son 3 p.m.
of Mr . and Mrs. David
Tuesady, Nov. 18, Home
Facemire, Portsmouth Rd. Nursing Course cancelled,
Helping him celebrate, Chorus, 12:31).2 p.m .
besides his parents, were his
Wednesday, Nov. 19, Blood
)'OUr
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Pressure Testing 12: IS..I :30
Orvllle Facemire and Mrs . . p.m.; Games, 12:31).2 p.m.
Edna Mlller. Mrs. Lucian
Thursday, Nov. 20, Crafts,
Barcus and children, Mat· Quitting, Cards and Games.
thew and Sarah Jo and Mr.
Friday, Nov. 21 , Art
and,Mrs. Allen Wheeler. Also· Lessons, 11).11 a.m.; Bowling
sllaring his birthday cake 1·3 p.m.
was hls aunt, Denise Miller
The Ohio ·commission on
whose birthday was Nov . 6. Aging "On Aging" television
Shane also recently · programfeaturingtheMeigs
returned from a vacation trip CoWlty Senior Utizens Center
to Gatlinburg, Tenn. and the will be shown on PoinTView
Great Smoky Mts. with his Cable tv, channelS, Monday
parents and grandparents, and Tuesday at I p.m. and
35
Mr. and Mrs. Facemire.
Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
program , II : 30-1 2 : 30,
Monday through Friday.
MENU
MONDAY, Nov. 17 - Meat ·
loaf with gravy, mashed
potatoes, waldorf salad,
chocolate cake w-white icing,
bread, butter, milk, coffee,
With "the. arrival of the Christmas
tea and buttermilk daily.
TUESDAY , Nov . 18 Shopping Season the Haskins-Tanner
Sliced
turkey, candied sweet
Co. Is offering a special Discount for
potato, buttered green beans,
you to shop early In Gallipolis on
sliced banana in strawberry
Men's Suits; Sport Coats &amp; Winter
gelatin, roll, butter milk ;
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
' Jackets.
daily.
'·
WEDNESDAY, Nov. 19
Sausage patties (2), au gratin
potatoes (cheese topping) ,
buttered heels, peanut butter
cookies. (2), bread, butter,
milk; Coffee, tea and buttermilk daily.
,, ' .
THURSDAY, Nov. 20 SHOPPING IARLY IN GALLIPOLIJ
Salisbury steak w-tomato ·
gravy, buttered diced
potatoes, buttered peas,
peach cobbler, bread, butter,
milk;
Coffee,_ tea and but·
REG. 180. .......
N~
termilk daily.
FRIDAY, Nov . 21 REG. '120 .. ............... NOW
'
Macaroni and cheese w-hwn
chunks, stewed tomatoes,
REG. '140 ....~ ......... NOW
•
gelatin salad, gingerbread W·

lHANKSGIVING NOVELTIES

and Sanclstaoes
We DerMir

MULQIES MCIS. Bart Nuaets,
Varble Olips fli winter care of

• u.s.

SHOP EARLY
IN GALLIPOLIS!

...

SAVE

OFF

BY

Meris Suits
L ........

'64
'96
'112

SPOil COATS

Mcinturff, Ruby Saunde111, Hoke Robinson, Ruth Miller, Edith GUkey,
F1orence McDaniel, Nina Darton, Margretta Wlllls. Back row, Sara Jane
Morgan, Elsie Lakin, Bessie Sheets, Torla Comer, Minnie Caldwell,
Dorothy Shaw, Bill Jenkins, Mildred Hardway, Amy Wedemeyer, Edna
Montgomery, Ruby Long, Dennis POwell (bus driver), Jean Niday
(director) and Ann Bradbury.

Senior citizens tour Washington
,

·

By Mrs. Ruth Miller
. GALLIPOLIS - On Oct. 13
at 7 a.m., a group of Senior
tltizens left lor Washington,
D.C. by way of Charleston
and Rts. 60 and 64. These
seniors worked and saved
their money for some time .
Some saved part of their
Social Security each month
and some have children who
helped them. Otherwise some
of us would not have been
able to go to see some of our
beautiful country.
As you know these trips are
planned and scheduled by our
director. The reservations,
bus fare and tickets are
purchased at the best rates
-

.

available to senior citizens.
We pay half when the
reservations are made and
pay the balance before the
time to go on the trip.
There are a few people who
do not have to COWl! pennies
but most of us do.
Some people have the
wrong Impression about
these trips. If people would
come to the center and see
·what ali we do I think they
would understand better.
Now about our trip, on our
first day we visited Hawks
Nest, W. Ya. on our way to
Williamsburg, Va. Some had
seen the river gorge before

.'Pe·n h0 use.
0
h0 n0 r.• {" 5 t h
0
J

KYGER - An open house
washeldonSunday,Oct.:!6in
observance 1lf the SOth
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin Rife (Garnet
Rupe ) at their home near
Kyger. The couple was
married on Oct. 31, t92S at
Gallipolis.
The surprise cei~brallon
was hosted by their children,
Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Rife,
Davisville, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Young, Tuppers
Plains: Cake, jello salad, and
punchwere'served to Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Young and
Tonya and Mary Winans,
Parkersburg, W. • Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Rife,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Rife, daughter, Jackaon ; Mr.
and Mrs . Glenn Young,
Michelle and Glenn, Jr.,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Rupe, t1air Athey, Mrs. Kay
liockman and son Billie, Mrs.
Trev~ Denney and daughter
Sarah Jane, Mr. and Mrs.
whipped topping, bread,
butter, milk; Coffee, tell and
buttermilk daily.
The Senior Nutrition Lunch
is on a donation basis only for
Senior Citizens. Fee for
guests of senior Citizens is $1.

· ALMA PIGMAN of Proctorvllle Ia shown looking at one of her favorite wood carvings, a
horse and buggy. Mrs. Pigman worked approxima!A!Iy six months, off and on, lA&gt; finish this
IJ'Oject. The wheel spokesare·made from matches and the top of the buggy is leather. She
used walnut for the carving, This and other works of Mrs. Pigman are featured at the
Country Fare In the Sprmg Valley Shopping Plaza.

.

Bob Conkle, Mrs. and Mrs.
Hortie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Conkle and daughter
Michelle, Mrs. Louise Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wells,
Tina and Harold, Jr. , Mr. and
Mrs. Bub Fife, all of the
Kyger area; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Tellers, Mary Kay and
Jodi, Stockport.
Mr . and Mrs. Marion Rupe,
Emie, Wilmington ; Mr. and
Mrs. Alva Rife, Mr. and Mrs.
Shirley Wolfe, Mrs. Bertha
Rice and daughter, Bonnie,.
Mrs. Eva Milliron and Joe,
Steve Rife and Rhonda Jones,
Leading Creek; Dr. and Mrs.
R. R. Pickens , Pomeroy ; Mr.
and Mrs. Hurley Rife, Joe,
Jimmie and Shirley, Davl,..
ville; Mr. and Mrs. t'harles
Young, Steve, Brenda,
Roberta, ·Larry . Keith and
Darrell,
and
Cheryl
Benedum, Tuppers Plains.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Worley Rife and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs ~
William Frazier, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Kauff, Mr. and
Mrs. James Conkle, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Rupe and
daughter Trudy. Carda and
telephone
calls
of
congra tulatlons were also
received tiy the couple.

but il is always a beautiful
sight especially in the fail.
Next stop was lunch. Then on
to Monticello and the
beautiful home of Thomas
Jefferson in Charlottesville,
Va. Much of the mansion and
Its furnishings are the
original pieces. The house
was designed by Mr. Jeflerson as was part of the
furniture and drapes.
W~ ar~lved at our motel in
Williamsburg around 8 p.m.
Maybe we were a little tired
· but we had an exciting day
and beautiful weather.
We spent the second day
sightseeing in the historic
village of Williamsburg. '!'he
restoration of the village
started in 1926. The streets
and greens are among the
most historic parts of the U.S.
More than 100 major
buildings and homes stand in
·the district ~&lt;Down as the
historic area which is ap·
proximately one mile long
ahd one-half mile wide.
Many are open to the
public, some are occupied by
lennants and employes, most
dress in lh4told colonial style.
It was very impr~lve.
The next morning we went
on to see Mt. Vemon, the
original home of George
Washington. His home was
also very interesting and has
quite a his!Qric background.
We also visited the Masonic
Shrine. Washington was a
Mason . We w~nt on lo
ArllnglA&gt;n National Cemetery
to see the grave of President
Kennedy where the flame
burns contllluolialy. We also
saw · the graye of Robert
l{enned~. .
__
We saw the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier and the
changing of the guarda. They
change every half hour. Thla
is a beautiful and touching
scene. After a long day we
arrived at the motel to rest
and get ready for a tour of

Washington D.C.
Our bus driver really knew
his way around Washington
and a guide showed us the
historic points of interest, the
churches attended ' ·bY
presidents, some of their
homes, the famous colleges,
and even the Watergate
building. We visited the White
House but we didn't see the
president or any of his
fwnily ..We visited the Capitol
building Including the House
of Representatives and the
Senate. They weren't in
session, but a representative
from Congressman Miller's
office escorted' us around
explaining the Interesting
points.
We missed the Bureau of
Printing and Engraving as
they closed early and we
wereshortontimebutwedld
vlait part of the Smithsonian
Institute (a historical
museum). It wqu}d "ke the
better part of two days lA&gt; see
everything there, maybe
longer. After a delicious
dinner at Holloway Houae we
toured Washington by night.
The buildings are outstanding
by day, but at night they are
hard todeacribe. They can be
seen for miles. The lights
around Washington are
unbelievable. That ended our
tour ao we returned lA&gt; the
motel and home on Friday by
way of the Shenandoah
Valley. The moWltalns were
ali decked out · In bright
yellows and brown and you
would have to see them for
yourself to appreciate them.
Of all the places we vlaited, 1
couldn't pick out anyone
place as the most interesting
or the most beautiful:
Touring by bus with the
Senior (.~tizens Ia the best
way to see parts of our
country.
Thanks to everyone who
had a part in making this 'a
memorable trip.

Sr~':'~c;;;;;:?'' ' 'l

:~

r~

Calendar

*52

RACINE - Tri M I Modern
··: Music Masters) at Southern
High School members and
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior invited guests enjoyed a two.
c.mzens Center, located at 221! hour hayride and party
Jackson Pike in the County recently at the cabin of
Home Building, ls open Rhonda West's parents.
Monday through Friday from
Denise Hendri~, program
9a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule chairman for Trl M is
of activities for this week Is planning a Thanksgiving
as follows:
assembly. The choir will also
Monday, Nov. 17, Olde
Tyme &lt;-'horus Practice, !..J
p.m.
Tuesday,
Nov.
18,
Columbus Shopping Trip (bus
leaves at 8:30 a.m.), 8:30
a.m.; Visiting, 9 a.m..,'l p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 19, BlOod
Pressure &lt;-'heck, 1·2 p.m. .
Thursday, Nov. 20, Birih·
day Party, 1:30 p.m. CoWl
Meeting, 2 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 21, Art Uass,
l.,'l p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program serves meals at
11:30a .m. daily. The Seniors'
Coop is open daily from ti:30
till 1:30 p.m.
EARL MAYO, JR.

ell

*68

NOW
Reg. S95
NOW

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
BOYS ·.

'15.90
..... I'fOW '24.00

Reg . S20 ....... NOW
R'eg, 53L

.

~

MENS

Reg. 540...... . .. NOW 132.00
Re(,. S7S ......... NOW

'60.00

, • Open ~nday Til 8 P.M.

LAYAWAYS
INVITED

Mon.&amp; Fri.
9:3otiUp.m.

Tues. Wed. sat.

9:30til5
Thur. 9:30til 12

POMEROY - The Meigs
Human Resources CoWlcil
wlU meet Tuesday at noon at
the Meigs Inn for the regular
monthly session . By-laws,
drawn up at a recent meeting
of a committee wlll be
presented, discussed and
changes suggested .
, Making up the committee
are Hank Ueland, Bureau of
Vocational Rehabilitation
Vernon Neue, Red Cr~
blood program; Mrs. Barbara Leadlnsham, community Action Program,
1\W"Ia Gullkey; Meigs CoWlty
Extension Service agent,
Robert Bowen , superin·
tendent of th~ Meigs County
Schools.
Mrs. Leafy Chasteen ,
council chairperson, wlll
preside. All organizations of
the county are Invited lA&gt; send
a representative.

Clark's Jewelry Store
·

she finds those or artist
Norman Rockwell are ex·
cellent.
After she has chosen a
subj ect, she "jigsa ws"
(outlines) the pattern in the
wood
and then ca refully
foot."
whittles
the wood into the
· She recently began working
wi th buckeye which has finished product she desires.
produced some iAteresting When the product is com.
piete, it is sandpapered and
pieces, she says.
Mrs. Pigman rece ives most lacquered befor e it is ready to .
of her ideas from drawings go.
The result is an exqulsi te
and she usually carves from
carving which would be an
pictures.
She doesn't believe ail attractive addition lA&gt; any
pictures are good models, but home.

expensive and hard to get,"
according to Mrs. Pigman.
Prices for wood have risen
from $2 a footto $5·a foot and
Mrs. Pigman says "almost
everything has to have a

·

The singers are lOth, 11th
and 12th grade students and
are a top notch group in·
corporating choreography,
personality and fresh original
talent. There will be 35
singers, stage band and in·
strumentallsts and crew
members under the direction
of Larry Weaver. Mrs. Lee
Lee is sponaor of the Tri M.

GALLIPOLIS - Earl
Mayo, Jr. was honored on his
eighth birthday recently with
. a party attended by several of
hla frlenda. The evenmg was
spent playing games, contest. and music.
Refreshmenta of popcorn,
punch, lee cream and birth·
day cake were a.m"ed to
Mark Fnqum, Ghirlea and
Keith Lewis, Brldset Henry,
Kirk and Kelley Jackson, '
Ricky Welch, Carman and
Lusher Mayo. Mrs. June
Morrison asslated Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Mayo.
Sending a gift was Mrs.
Mildred Evans.
Earl
received many gifta and the
group sang "Happy Btrthday." Each child present
received a favor.

FAMOUS FASHION DESIGNER

POLYESTER ANGORA·
(Polyester, Wool &amp; Rabbit Hair Blend)

60 INatES
WIDE

$395
. YARD

with handsome hand stenciling
depicting historical Independence
Hall, The Liberty Bell and

Gl

· Ohio ·

Old North Church
•

FREE

Thest tnchlntlng lellets

will btllll \hi

wonder ol Stnlt DIIU! hl l~ 11\1 t llllya
llld eirls in 10111lit~. lii~Y VIlli ~~W \nt

feller is froffl Sante !Wt~1l~t

The Proof is in the II ltmarkt
~~ ~ Claus Poat Olflee~J~Ir=lllli %
1W tiJJ
- ... 1e11m ... envtloptl, ft~t£1.
"·
_, it ilf u specill ma111111r1. W
ei!tll i~ \1 Mt~

rr. ,_, CJM. tndin, Tlllt "
clillhn of Ill .....

1111t WiY

iN
at
ll)fill

Cl(
.."

Leflers ,.,.1'-lllt et til Otiiiii!JIII ltttll
Mlr~nt Mlmlltn1 !lllllt ~t ill lllat
CIMa Loc1ttd
c..
. In .fNftt lit Hil~il\l&gt;Ttt\Mf

'

WITH COORDINATED
SWEATER KNITS
TO MATOi

11IE GOP WAY

KNIT MIU STORE

LINCOLNSHIRE, Ill .
(UPI ) - llfp. Robert Me·
Clory, R-m., Ia the kind of
congressman who symbolizes
the Republican philosophy of
governn1ent, said Vice
President Nelson Rockefeller
Friday.

SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA

ROUTE 35 WEST

handcrafted of rugged New England
Hardwood. You choose from rich Pine or
lustrous Maple llnlsh . All protected with a
special burn and alcohol resistant finish.
Your limited edition number will be
documented with Standard of Gardner
making your Liberty Bench an authentic
heirloom of the future.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 11110
,.

16 to 18 lb.
· ~-

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT
D1ocle from

Suits and Sport Coats by Leather Jocket• by Cre&lt;co ·
Curloe, Merit, Hubbard, and and Cooper .
Warren Sewell.
Leisure Suits by Hubbard, Mr.
Pants by HAggar, Hubbard,
I one! HAggar.
Levi.
Denims by Levi
Shirts by Arrow, Career Underwear b"y Arrow, Jockey ,
Clubs.
BYD, and flanes
Wesrern Shirts by Roncb.
·So~ks by Interwoven
Hats by Stetson and Adams. Luggage by Airway and
Wool Shirts, Jackets and Caps Samsonite
by Pendleton.
Wallets, Key Cases, Travel
Swelters by PUritan, Jockey
Kits by Meeker
lnternation~l, Arrow and
Pendleton.
Toiletries by Brut and
Robes. and P1j1mos by · Romane.
Fltttway and BYD.

USE OUR LAY-AWAY OR
YOUR BANKAMERICARD
Pant Suits by
Catalina ,'
Jantzen,
Coddington,
Lori' Lynn.

POTATOES
Ohio Grown
White

r

Slacks
Catalina,
Jantzen,

Coats: Suburban,
All-Weather
and Long Dress
Coats by Betty
Rose and Great
Six .

by

Blouses by Lady
Manhattan,
Jantzen,
Catalina
and
Lori Lynn .

Coddington, and
Douglas Marc.

A unique accent bench for your home dec;or,

, Armour's Star Grade A

SOUDS, PLAIDS AND STRIPES

.·

LIBERTY BENCH

R IGHT RES ERV ED TO LI MI T QUANTITI ES

REG. 14.95

Honoring our Bicentennial

1.01 POI~T AWHT. GOLD 6 PRONG..................~1175"
.97 ·POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG:................. 121oo»
.79 POINT M VEL Gold 6 PRONG ............ :........1 14~
•49 POINT AM WHT. GOLD _6 PRONG .............. ..'142S'
.49 POINT M W~T. GOLD 4 PRONG ........... ,........ '77fl
..47 POINT AA VEL. GOLD 6 PRONG ...... ,.. ............ '77fl
.38 POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG ...:: ................'57fl
.29 POINT AA WHT. GOLD 6 PRONG ................... ..'45QD
.28 POINT AA VEL GOLD 4 PRONG .. ~ .................. 'W
1.00 POINT TOTAL WEIGHT WHT. GOLD
WEDDING BAND ..........J. ...................... , ...... : ...... ..'77'JI
342 Second Ave.

23.

'

IJ .\.

.'75

present two selections.
The new apprentices being
initiated iniAl Tri M have
successfully passed the
requirements and formal
initiation will be held at the
high school on Nov. 24. Lee
Ord, president, is in charge of
arrangements. Parents and
f~iends are Invited.
Since the one group from
Columbus Tri M sponsored
was so successful they are
having the Grandview
Singers from Colwnbus to
present a concert at the high
schoolfor all students on Jan.

weekend when the Galleries
used an arrangement of wOOd
carvect flowers and two of her
eagles for a dance.
Her creations are featured
locally at the Country Fare in
the Spring Hill Shopping
Plaza here.
"It's a nice hobby and has
given me a lot of pleasure,"
said Mrs. Pigman. ''!love to
do II."
She reports, however, that
it Is becoming more and more
expensive to buy the wOOd
and the types of wood she
prefers are becoming scarce.
These include mahogany,
butternut and pine. "Wood is

Council
Birthday
to meet
observed

ONDS

sas

By SARAH CARSEY
GALLIPOLIS
Jn.
spiration is the key to Alma
Pigman's success as a
WOodcarver.
Mrs. Pigman, a re~ide nt of
Proctorville, believes "you
have to be inspired to do good
work in woodcarving. " She
feels that Inspiration adds a
special quality to her car.
vings.
She began carving wOod in
1950 following a trip in the
Smoky Mountains. While
traveling there, she became
in IA!rested in toe wOodcarvers
and when she returned home,
she decided to . try the art
herself, never dreaming she
would become successful.
• Now, she has more orders
than she can get filled for
Christmas and some of her
work is exhibited in almost
every state and overseas.
The HWltington Galleries ·
often feature her wood

Tri M holds ha11ride
~~~tur;~g~~~ hi~~~ght~!~~
'J

Reg. $45
NOW
Reg.

Woodcarver sees inspiration
as. key to ·successful career

Sweaters
Catalina
Jantzen .

by
and

20 lb.

Hand
Bags,
Billfolds and
Key. Cases by
Meeker .

Knit Tops by
Switchmates
Denim Jeans by
and Fairchild.
Turtle Bax
Ladies Hosiery by
Mojud.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio

Store Ho'fs :' 9: 15 to 5: 00 ~n . thru Sat.
~: 15 to 8:00

•.

Frt.

•

�,

. ..

'

14 - The Swulay Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16. 1975

Simms, Jayne
Si mpkins, · Mari~ Singer,
Colleen Turner, . Laura
Brunicardi, Kelly · Zembry,
Leigh Anna Mayes and Kim
Vinson . Guest was Mrs. Jane
Simms: Reporter - Marty
Selyer .
Temperature's Rising met
Nov. 3 at the Production
L'redit Assoc. building. David
Smith presided and had
charge of the program. David.
Smith drew pictures of
specimens such as Anleobas,
parameciwn, etc. and explained each one. Club
members then looked at
examples of these under
Smith 's and the club's
microscope.
Members
discussed attendance policies
and how to, in general, improve the club; members
looked at various slides under
a microscope ; a discussion
was held about Parent's
E lit~beth

Gallia
4-H
Ouh
·
N
ews
..f
•

•"'

.
-..

-..
•

.,3.

."
.....
~

~

"~

3
""

•"
•

.."•.
..."'
..." .

The 4-H Lassies met Nov. 4
at Elizabeth Simms' home.
Diane Kessel presided,
led devotions and had charge
of the program . We elected
officers for our club. They
were : preside nt, Anida
campbell ; vice-president,
Kim Henderson ; secretary,
Joy Henderson; pledge
leaders, Laura Brunicardi
and Kim Vins,on; news
reporter , MaJ'ty Salyer; song
leaders, Bet~ Thomas and
~bin Henderson ; devotions,
Vollen Turner ; recreation,
Tonya Adkins and Debbie
Dillon ; health and safety,
Jeri Lynn McMannis and
Elizabeth Simms. Polly
Walker and the club were
given five dollars each for

Polly's secretarial work. Kim
Henderson, Anida Campbell
and Diane Kessel gave
reports on thei r clothing
pro jecls they look to the state
fair. Mrs. Persinger gave a
report on the advisors
banquet.-Th_e club decided to
have a &lt;;hrlstmas party at the
home of Jayne Simpkins Dec.
16. A gift exchan ge will take
place. Kelly Zembry and
Lei gh Anna Mayes were
received into our club. Club
Advi sor is Mrs. Maude
Persinger. Club members
present were Tonya Adkins,
Becky Call, An ida Campbell,
Joy Henderson , Kim , Teri,
.Hobin Henderson , Diane
Kessel, Serilyn McMannis,
Karla Pa\llsen, Marty Salyer,

•

'I

Enjoy

You~

Carpet For The Holidays

....
..,.

BUY NOWI.
INSTALL NOWI

..... .

'

'?

'

...."'.."

-.........

BARWICK 501 NYLON
wnh

....
s:::
..
,..,..

.....-•

'8

"';."'

Brown, blue, green, rust, red and several
other colors. Let us Install yours now!

...
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~ BARWICK

E.

/
1

...•~ •

HI-LO SHAG

""

Installed
Nth.Pacl

1:

:) '

~
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..~

"•

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~·...
...

Have Your New Carpet For
Tho Holidays! No long
waiting periods for In ·
stallatlonl Talk to Wendell
Grate, Carpet Con•ultant.

."
•.
..••

.95
SQUARE
YARD
Gold. rust and green
tweed. Let us Install
yours now!

15 ..:. The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

uppers ·Plains boosters .
hold recent open house

@
Weekly departure from
' davs 7 nights-Air
·columbus-&amp;
transfen, tips, sightseeing.
Call 446.0699.

Events

'l1IE SlMPSON CHAPEL SUNBEAMS made their debat atiJie church Oct. II. Mlllll·
bera of the choir are, left to right, first row, Kristen Allen, Gary FUnt, Jenney Louden; left
to right, 118CQ1d row, Stephanie Smith, Patrick Vest, Brian Oliver, Mart Oliver, Jason Call,
Olrl.sty Vest, Will Louden; third row, Anly Louden, Brenda Thompeon, Kriatle Coot, Cora
Wolfe, Jerry Call, Matthew Withee, Stev.e Wolfe.

Sunbeams make singing debut
HIO GRANDE - The
newly formed Sunbeams of
Simpson {,'hapel, Lake
Rio Grande, made Its debut
Oct. 19.
The choir, made up of
children ranging from grades
kindergarten through sixth,
sings in the regular morning

nr.,

worship service the second
and fourth Sundays of the
month. Their next ap·
pearance will consist of songs
with a Thanksgiving theme
and will be on Nov. 23.
Other activities have included a Halloween party on
Oct. 29, village residents will

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Emmert, Somerset, visited her
uncles and aunts, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed Jeffers, Mr. and
Mrs. William {,'beadle and
Mella Fisher. ,
Mr. and Mrs. S. Belcher
and children, formerly from
Logan, W. Va. have purchased the Bradford Massey .
house and have moved bere .
Mr. Belcher is employed 'at
the mine.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ross,
Gallipoiis, caiied on Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Jordan and
Joshua. Other guests of the
Jordans were her brother and

AT THE

MEIGS BRANCH
OF THE
A1HENSCOUNTY
.

sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Tad Gilkey, Albany.
Those from Columbia
Grange who attended Meigs
County Pomona Grange
included Earl Starkey, Carl
Greenlees, Mr. and Mrs .
Mendal Jordan, Mrs. Walter
Jordan and Joshua.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Woodrwn, Tracie, Timmy
and Mathew, McArthur ;
called on his grandmother,
Mrs. Murl Galaway on
Sunday afternoon.
Don Mundy, Nelsonville,
was a weekend guest of Sieve
Gillogly.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
visited their son-in.Jaw and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Jones In NeisonvUie
on Sunday, then journeyed on
to Colwnbus where they were
guests at the National Grange ·
annual get acquainted
banquet for officers of the
National Grange, Masters of
the state Granges, Ohio State
Grange officers and other
high officials of the National

be pleased to know that the
Swnbeans ~ plan to be
caroling during the Christmas season.
The . choir is under the
direction of Peggy Call,
assisted by Barbara Allen
and accompanied by Janet'
Jones.
Grange, on Sunday evening .
They stayed In COiwnbus on
Sooday night and viaited his
sister, Mrs. Jessie JeweU,
before returning home on
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Klmeaj
children and niece, and Mrs.
Anly Caldwell, Columbus,
along with Mr. and Mrs. All
Jordan, Middleport, were
guests of Mrs. Lucy Thomaa
during the weekend. Mrs.
Hazel &lt;-'Illwell and Mrs. Ruby.,
Jordan and Sarah were,,'
callers at the Thomas}
home.
'~
Mrs. Noble Hamon hutreturned
home
from ~
O'Bleness Memoria ~
Hospital, Athens, and iS:
convalescing satlsfactorUy ~
Mr. and · Mrs. Fred;'
Uleadle, Lockbourne, called;'
on h!J brother ani! llilter-lnt'i
law, Mr. and Mrs. Willlanf.
Uleadle and nephew, ~
{,'beadle and famUy.
•
Vlna Rutherford 7
Volumb111,' waa an overnlghl
gueat of her aWII, Ida Den.~
11iaon, and oUter ..Iauvet
here.
;.

;:,

SAVINGS ·&amp; LOAN

..•"'
~

Join The

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1.......:.
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12'x9'-10"
8'-9"x9'-6"
12'x7'-2"
12'x4'-6"
15'x16'

These Experienced Carpet Men WiN Help You
Wendell Grate, Herb Grate &amp; Gene Smith

Ph. 446-3353

Silver Bridge Plaza

ONE PRICE
ON .OUR
PERMANENT
WAVES
'

· Reg. S15 to $35

SPECIAL

•991

Dry, Oily or Norma.
Regardless of type or condition we will
select the proper wave for your hair.
'Yilt response has been great! Wt will .
&amp;lllnflnue our special Mon., Tues., W~.,
'fhur' only $9.98 .
S3.69
'SU9

I!Mipe &amp; Style
Hair Cut
.All Cllndltloners
Reg. Prices Fri. &amp; Sat.

Christmas Club

.a..:

1/2

Price

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR
HOME WITH THE

WITH THE CHRISTMAS

BONUS
There's an extra Christmas gift tucked into your 1976
Christmas Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loan.

'

Krog r
POM!'ROY - Tbe Rev. Henry Key, pastor of the Mount
Moriah Baptist Olurch in Middleport, has been listed in the
first. edition of "Who's .Who in Religion."
The book contains the names of top ministers in the United
States; gives a resllll)e of their background and education and
a listing of their contributions .in the field of religion.

Store Hours
OPEN
24 HOURS

00 THAT SHUr-INS will have Thanksgiving dinners
completed with turkey and the trinunings, tbe Center again
this year will be delivering dinners oil tbe day before.
The dinner will be prepared at the Center and then wUI be
delivered by a corps of senl6r citizens who have volunteered to
do this. If you have a friend who lives alone or is il shut-In and
would like one of tbe dinners, just telephone the Center some
time before Nov. 19.

A BELATED honeymoon perhaps Tom and Heidi Ewing who live in the Flat woods Road area
have just returned from a week of fun in the sun at Naples,
Fla. They flew down foc a week, toured the East Coast of
F1orlda and visited Mr. and Mrs. Oluck Grlrrun .

Fire Department Building. "Women to Home We Are
Refreshments will be served. Indebted"; Darla Hawley,
CUB SCOUT PACK 204 Unda King, hostesses.
organizational meeting, 7:30 PORTER UMW, 7 p.m. at the
p.m. at the Presbyterian church. '
Church. Any boy or adult LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44
interested in cub scoutin~ ceremonial, 7:30 p.m. Ofurged to attend .
ficers wear formals and
KYGER CREEK Band members bring covered dish
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. in the for refreshments.
band room.
VINTON Friendship Garden
-··---·-{,1ub,
12:30 p.m. at Vinton
MEIGS AREA Holiness
Town
Hall with hostesses
Association at Pomeroy
Esta
Downard
and Eleanor
Church of the Nazarene, 7:30
p.m. All ministers and White. All members urged to
attend .
delegates urged to attend.
THEODORUS Council 17. PATRIOT Grange, regular
Daughters of America, 6:30 meeting, 7:30p.m . Potluck to
p.m. at the IOOF hall. Meat follow.
RIO GRANDE Mothers .
and rolls to be furnished.
League,
7: 39 at the home of
MGM {,~RVETTE CLUB
Barbara
Allen.
at Meigs Inn at 7:30p.m. All Mrs .
members and owners of Dem'onstration . on cake
Corvettes urged to attend. decorating by Mrs. Betty
Plans lor economy run will be carpenter.
CHHISTIAN WOMEN 'S
discussed .
TUESDAY
CLUB luncheon, Holiday Inn,
MIDDLEPORT Masonic 12:15 p.m, Speaker is Mrs.
Locjge 363, 7 p.m. for Kathy O'Conner, a widow as
fellowcraft degree . All a result of the Marshall plane
crash, a special feature
master masons invited.
HARRISONVILLE Senior Lady Baseman of Country
"&lt;;hristmas
in
Citizens, 7 p.m. at Fare,
Harrlsonvi1le' School. Williamsburg." Babysitting
Refreshments. All members provided. call Mrs. Esther
Bechtel, 446-1713. •
ur~ed to attend .
GRANGE OFFICERS ADDAVILLE SCHOOL PTO,
meeting, 8 p.m. at the Rock 7:30p.m. Guest speaker, Dr .
Springs Grange Hall .
David Carman. His topic will
LADIES AUXILIARY, be " The Care and ImVeterans Memorial Hospital, portance o£ Children's
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Teeth." Refreshments will be
cafeteria .
served.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
WEDNESDAY
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
PAST PRESIDENTS of
p.m., Columbus and Southern Drew Webster Post 39,
Ohio Electric Co. Pledge Anlerlcan Legion Auxlllary,
training, 6:30; cultural 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs .
report, Sandi Sargent on Harry Davis .

Cub scouts
tour WMPO

ELECTRIC/GAS
nNG_UNIT.
HEATS WITH GASI
'

Where Quality and Low
Price .Are a Trailltlon

·WITH CHRISTMAS only five weeks off, many holiday
baz.aars are being planned and the latest announced is the one
by the Senior C!Uzeri sotne time the first week in December . .
All items for the bazaar are to be at the Center by Nov. 28
so that personnel will: have time to mark and display them.
Several things are being made at the center to be sure that the
bazaar will o(fer something for everyone.
Quite a disadvantage this year, however, Is the fact that
capable craft director Jeanne Morgan Is ill and not able to
make her us!Jai fine contribution when it comes to teaching
others to make attractive gift items.

A,.,•.

REVOLUTIONARY

i
I

ELECl'RICin I

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
NOV. 16 thru NOV. 22th

It's a Free- 5oth payment. No gimmicks! Nothing to
buy I To qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is
make all. the first 49 of the scheduled payments in
your Christmas Club coupon book. We will then add
the 50th payment as a "bonus". It's our way of
saying "thank you" for completing the first 49
payments.
·
·

·CHICKEN.
SNACK BOX

SYRACUSE - A tour of
WMPO, Radio was taken by
members of Cub Scout Pack
~42 Thursday .
In the group were Randy
Armes, Charles Chancey,
Richard Davis, David Ebersbach, Gary Foley, Robbie
Gibbs, Eugene Jeffers, Corey
McPhail, Greg Michael, Earl
Pickens, Eric Philson,
Robert Spires, Jerry Wolfe,
Malcolm Ginther, and John
Frank .
Parents who accompanied
the boys were Mrs. Sally
. Ebersbach and Chris, Mrs .
Judy Gibbs, Mrs. Donna
Wolfe and Amy, John and Pat
Philson and Sarah, and Hugh
McPhail and Scott.
·

U.S. Govt.

~

Cho1c•
P1aple's Choice First 5 Ribs .

Rill Roast
.

,....,

78

Ill.$

L_, n;{tty

Sirloin
Steak
lb . • • • •

Kroger fresh

Grade A
Large· Eggs
u.s............

Cllolct ,....... Qolct
....~.C..... Cot

...a.'racfe
' ••••,AA..,..

t

Chuck
Steak

Larce

Eci•

Doz.

73;

Juicy

Golden Ripe

lb. • • • •

I

Tagerlnes
or Tangelos

Ill.

Ea.

or

Kroger Flour
Top Value Stamps
·

With Coupon

c

5·I•.

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(hcldlll II••• Plllli•lttlll lilr L1w)

VII. After Wtl ,, Mh. 21 1 1115•

Delicious

·-·

Gunnoe's Sausage

SAFE

No
CHICKEN
Substitutt$

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOM£
NO RAM{ IN TOuR HOM£

e2

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Athens .CauntJ Sain&amp;s &amp;Loan Co.

296 w : ind s't. ·- --Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER

.- '

BEAUTY
SALON

OPEN AT 9 A.M.

SALE OF REMNANTS
BROWN SHAG
GOLD SHAG
GOLDSOl NYLON
GREEN SHAG
501 NYLON, REO
BLUE RUBBER BACK

TUPPERS PLAINS - The paren ts to visit classrooms in
Tuppers Plains boosters held observance of American
their open house Monday with Education Week. Mrs . Judy
par.ents visiting their Sarna made an anchildren's classrooms . no.unc ement concerning
Refreshments were served immunizations.
by tlie homeroom mothers in
each class, .
~~:.;:;:;:;:,.
Jim Caldwell presided at
the business meeting opening :~.~.•;,
witH the pledge to the flag. He .•..
gave congratulations to Mrs. · ~:~:
Dorothy Calaway and Doug -~
.· ..
'~':
!Jissll on being elected to the ·'
Board or'Education. He also. :::: · .
thanked 'rOQm mothers and
teachers -on their help with SUNOl\ Y
open house·. The secretary 'THE GOSPEL ROAD, a film
and. treasurer reports were featuring Johnny &lt;:ash, at
read by. Pat Shrivers and Fellowship Chapel, Vinton, 7
J,an'et Chichester. Room p.m. Public invited. Pastor Is
count was taken with fourth Elmer Geiser .
~rade winning . Doro thy THE MASTERMEN of
Calaway reported on the Columbus will provide
recent fall carnival and speoial singing at Crown City
thanked everyone who helped United Methodist Church .
with it.
Services begin at 10 a.m.
~ With new business Judy Everyone· welcome..
.
Samsmade a motion to select . REVIVAL begins at Old
a committee of parents and Kyger Freewill Baptist
t.eachers to check on Church, 7 p.m . Rev. Ronnie
materials 'needed for the Perry , evangelist. Special
school and report at the next singing nightly. Everyone
meeting. The motion carried welcome,
and the committee consists of LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44
Tom Gump, chairman : Mrs. rehearsal for officers, 2 p.m.
~rothy Calaway, Mrs. Bea COMMUNION and Foot
Douglas, Mrs. Judy Sams, washing services, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Jonas, Mrs . Pat at the Addison Free ,Will
Shrivers, Mrs . Gay Ann Baptist Church. Rev. Pyrus
Burke and Mrs . Nancy Fields, Columbus, will assist
Roush.
the pastor, Rev . Walter
• It was noted that with Patterson. Public invited.
several gifts remaining from MONDAY
1
the fall carnival, a supper PAHENT Teachers Club,
could be held using the gifts 7:30 p.m. at Vinton
lor games. A committee will Elementary School. Speaker
be appointed at the next will be Jim Harris, child
meeting and the date w!ll be psy cholo gist.
Nurser~
decided oh some time after provided.
the first of the year.
MElGS-GALLIA OSCEA
; Announcements wer_e made , Chapter meeting, a p.m. 'at
by Mrs. Bea Douglas mvitmg the Middleport Volunteer

c0mmg

Carpenter Personals

TOTAL PRICE •44967

1/''

,..... . .

~~

later. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Patrick are advisors. Club
members present were
Teresa Sheline, Randy
Patrick, Doug Briggs, Jeff'
Patrick, Jim Johnson,
Matthew O'Donnell, Jan
Johnson, Richie Steele,
Kelley Jolley, Darla Boggs,
Tammy Patrick and Jeff
Rathburn. Parents and
guests: Sherry Conklin, Paul
Lasseter, Tim Lasseter, Kim
Rathburn, {,'hris Rathburn,
Darrel Patrick, Tommy
Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Sheline, Kenny Patrick, Mr.
and . Mrs. Bernard Boggs,
Leigha11:na Patrick, Kitty
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Patrick, Mendy Boggs, Kent
Jolley, Kevin Jolley and Mrs.
Jackie Graham. Reporter Jim Johnson.
Patriot Merry Makers met
Oct. 'l1 at Salem BaptiSt
Church
basement.
A
Halloween party was held.
Prizes went to: prettiest,
Jamie. Dennis and Robin
Massey; ugliest, Sandy
Lakin; funniest, Lorle
Carpenter; most original,
Beth Salisbury. {,1ub advisors are Ruth Wood and Sue
Smith. Club members
preserlt were Robin Massey,
Sandy Lakin, Jud~ Davies,
Janie Hill, Mary Clagg, Beth
Salisbury, . Lorie Carpenter,
Angela Elkins, Kay Smith,
Robin Hudson, Erica Elkins .
Parents and guests were
Jamie Dennis, Toby Hudson,
Bernice Wood and Anna
Davis . Reporter - Sandy
Lakin.

WAIKIKI FESTIVAL

.....
:t..
:-:
....

•••

'!are Yard

BARWICK HEAVY DUPONT 501 NYlDN
Installed
95 Square Yard
WHh Pad

§..

.I

•4

Rubber Back

Night Dec. I; assignments
were made as to what dish to
bring; a membership drive
will be conducted over the
radio station; anyone eight
year~ old or through the third
grade and ooder 19 as of Jan.
I can. join the club by contacting Mrs. Louis Miller or
the extension office. The next
meeting will be Dec. I at the
P.C.A. building, Parent's
Night. Uub Advisor is Mrs.
Jane Ann Miller . Guests were
Mrs. Polly Elliot and Louis
Miller. He porter - Terri
Sbort.
Yellowtown Buckeyes met
Oct. 27 at the Gallla .County
Junior Fairgrounds. teresa
Sheline presided and Paul
Lasseter led devotions. Mrs.
Kenneth Patrick had charge
of the program. Jan Johnson
led the 4-H Pledge. The
following officers were
elected : president, Doug
Briggs; vice president ,
Teresa Sheline ; secretary,
Jeff Patrick; treasurer ,
Matthew O ' Donnell;
recreation leader, Richie
Steele.
Jan
Johnson
denwnstrated "You and Your
Money" and Jim Johnson
demonstrated "My Personal
Account Book". Kelly Jolley
and Jeff Rathburn are to give
demonstrations at the next
meeting . Prior to the
business meeting the
members and their guestS
enjoyed
a
delightful
masquarade party with
several games and a wiener
roast. Date of the next
meelinR will be announced

-INSTALLED OUTDOQRS .....

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDUPORT, OHIO
PH. ,_,-5121

PIECES CHICKEN
eMASHED POTATOES

e ROLL

~~W i~nppr
2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.

GIIIIPOUS, OHIO

PICK -UP SERVICE PHONE 44(,.2682

JULIE'S NEW GIRL
• LOS ANGELES (UPI)
!Inger Julie Andrews and ber
husband, movie producer
Blake Edwarda, have a new
daughter - a 17-month-old
VIetnamese IJirl.
A famlly spokesman said
the oo..,le'sadopUon of Amy
Lelah was final11ed In
aq,erlor Court Friday. She
came to tbe United Stiles Jut
11pring In
"Operation
Bebylift," the airlift of orphans out of Vietnam .

lrtter Wtlce•es
Ye•r

f••r..

hod StaMpS

�,

. ..

'

14 - The Swulay Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16. 1975

Simms, Jayne
Si mpkins, · Mari~ Singer,
Colleen Turner, . Laura
Brunicardi, Kelly · Zembry,
Leigh Anna Mayes and Kim
Vinson . Guest was Mrs. Jane
Simms: Reporter - Marty
Selyer .
Temperature's Rising met
Nov. 3 at the Production
L'redit Assoc. building. David
Smith presided and had
charge of the program. David.
Smith drew pictures of
specimens such as Anleobas,
parameciwn, etc. and explained each one. Club
members then looked at
examples of these under
Smith 's and the club's
microscope.
Members
discussed attendance policies
and how to, in general, improve the club; members
looked at various slides under
a microscope ; a discussion
was held about Parent's
E lit~beth

Gallia
4-H
Ouh
·
N
ews
..f
•

•"'

.
-..

-..
•

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."
.....
~

~

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""

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•

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..." .

The 4-H Lassies met Nov. 4
at Elizabeth Simms' home.
Diane Kessel presided,
led devotions and had charge
of the program . We elected
officers for our club. They
were : preside nt, Anida
campbell ; vice-president,
Kim Henderson ; secretary,
Joy Henderson; pledge
leaders, Laura Brunicardi
and Kim Vins,on; news
reporter , MaJ'ty Salyer; song
leaders, Bet~ Thomas and
~bin Henderson ; devotions,
Vollen Turner ; recreation,
Tonya Adkins and Debbie
Dillon ; health and safety,
Jeri Lynn McMannis and
Elizabeth Simms. Polly
Walker and the club were
given five dollars each for

Polly's secretarial work. Kim
Henderson, Anida Campbell
and Diane Kessel gave
reports on thei r clothing
pro jecls they look to the state
fair. Mrs. Persinger gave a
report on the advisors
banquet.-Th_e club decided to
have a &lt;;hrlstmas party at the
home of Jayne Simpkins Dec.
16. A gift exchan ge will take
place. Kelly Zembry and
Lei gh Anna Mayes were
received into our club. Club
Advi sor is Mrs. Maude
Persinger. Club members
present were Tonya Adkins,
Becky Call, An ida Campbell,
Joy Henderson , Kim , Teri,
.Hobin Henderson , Diane
Kessel, Serilyn McMannis,
Karla Pa\llsen, Marty Salyer,

•

'I

Enjoy

You~

Carpet For The Holidays

....
..,.

BUY NOWI.
INSTALL NOWI

..... .

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'

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-.........

BARWICK 501 NYLON
wnh

....
s:::
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Brown, blue, green, rust, red and several
other colors. Let us Install yours now!

...
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~ BARWICK

E.

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1

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HI-LO SHAG

""

Installed
Nth.Pacl

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Have Your New Carpet For
Tho Holidays! No long
waiting periods for In ·
stallatlonl Talk to Wendell
Grate, Carpet Con•ultant.

."
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.95
SQUARE
YARD
Gold. rust and green
tweed. Let us Install
yours now!

15 ..:. The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

uppers ·Plains boosters .
hold recent open house

@
Weekly departure from
' davs 7 nights-Air
·columbus-&amp;
transfen, tips, sightseeing.
Call 446.0699.

Events

'l1IE SlMPSON CHAPEL SUNBEAMS made their debat atiJie church Oct. II. Mlllll·
bera of the choir are, left to right, first row, Kristen Allen, Gary FUnt, Jenney Louden; left
to right, 118CQ1d row, Stephanie Smith, Patrick Vest, Brian Oliver, Mart Oliver, Jason Call,
Olrl.sty Vest, Will Louden; third row, Anly Louden, Brenda Thompeon, Kriatle Coot, Cora
Wolfe, Jerry Call, Matthew Withee, Stev.e Wolfe.

Sunbeams make singing debut
HIO GRANDE - The
newly formed Sunbeams of
Simpson {,'hapel, Lake
Rio Grande, made Its debut
Oct. 19.
The choir, made up of
children ranging from grades
kindergarten through sixth,
sings in the regular morning

nr.,

worship service the second
and fourth Sundays of the
month. Their next ap·
pearance will consist of songs
with a Thanksgiving theme
and will be on Nov. 23.
Other activities have included a Halloween party on
Oct. 29, village residents will

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Emmert, Somerset, visited her
uncles and aunts, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed Jeffers, Mr. and
Mrs. William {,'beadle and
Mella Fisher. ,
Mr. and Mrs. S. Belcher
and children, formerly from
Logan, W. Va. have purchased the Bradford Massey .
house and have moved bere .
Mr. Belcher is employed 'at
the mine.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ross,
Gallipoiis, caiied on Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Jordan and
Joshua. Other guests of the
Jordans were her brother and

AT THE

MEIGS BRANCH
OF THE
A1HENSCOUNTY
.

sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Tad Gilkey, Albany.
Those from Columbia
Grange who attended Meigs
County Pomona Grange
included Earl Starkey, Carl
Greenlees, Mr. and Mrs .
Mendal Jordan, Mrs. Walter
Jordan and Joshua.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Woodrwn, Tracie, Timmy
and Mathew, McArthur ;
called on his grandmother,
Mrs. Murl Galaway on
Sunday afternoon.
Don Mundy, Nelsonville,
was a weekend guest of Sieve
Gillogly.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
visited their son-in.Jaw and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Jones In NeisonvUie
on Sunday, then journeyed on
to Colwnbus where they were
guests at the National Grange ·
annual get acquainted
banquet for officers of the
National Grange, Masters of
the state Granges, Ohio State
Grange officers and other
high officials of the National

be pleased to know that the
Swnbeans ~ plan to be
caroling during the Christmas season.
The . choir is under the
direction of Peggy Call,
assisted by Barbara Allen
and accompanied by Janet'
Jones.
Grange, on Sunday evening .
They stayed In COiwnbus on
Sooday night and viaited his
sister, Mrs. Jessie JeweU,
before returning home on
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Klmeaj
children and niece, and Mrs.
Anly Caldwell, Columbus,
along with Mr. and Mrs. All
Jordan, Middleport, were
guests of Mrs. Lucy Thomaa
during the weekend. Mrs.
Hazel &lt;-'Illwell and Mrs. Ruby.,
Jordan and Sarah were,,'
callers at the Thomas}
home.
'~
Mrs. Noble Hamon hutreturned
home
from ~
O'Bleness Memoria ~
Hospital, Athens, and iS:
convalescing satlsfactorUy ~
Mr. and · Mrs. Fred;'
Uleadle, Lockbourne, called;'
on h!J brother ani! llilter-lnt'i
law, Mr. and Mrs. Willlanf.
Uleadle and nephew, ~
{,'beadle and famUy.
•
Vlna Rutherford 7
Volumb111,' waa an overnlghl
gueat of her aWII, Ida Den.~
11iaon, and oUter ..Iauvet
here.
;.

;:,

SAVINGS ·&amp; LOAN

..•"'
~

Join The

..:
z:

SPECIAL/

.•••

..

••
•

t .;

2 ROLLS
501 NYLON lWEED

..

With Pad, Installed

...
••

~

•••

'9'5

Square Yard

~

~

Red and Rust

!•

HEAVY
'
· KITQIEN CARPET

~

••

."

-••••
'

With Pad, Installed

"...
t:

·..
·..

~

·9~~re yard

·.; ...
••

Printed Pattern

1.......:.
.:r..

.. ..
••
••

..,. ..
jll •

·-

12'x14'
12'x9'-10"
8'-9"x9'-6"
12'x7'-2"
12'x4'-6"
15'x16'

These Experienced Carpet Men WiN Help You
Wendell Grate, Herb Grate &amp; Gene Smith

Ph. 446-3353

Silver Bridge Plaza

ONE PRICE
ON .OUR
PERMANENT
WAVES
'

· Reg. S15 to $35

SPECIAL

•991

Dry, Oily or Norma.
Regardless of type or condition we will
select the proper wave for your hair.
'Yilt response has been great! Wt will .
&amp;lllnflnue our special Mon., Tues., W~.,
'fhur' only $9.98 .
S3.69
'SU9

I!Mipe &amp; Style
Hair Cut
.All Cllndltloners
Reg. Prices Fri. &amp; Sat.

Christmas Club

.a..:

1/2

Price

COOL &amp; HEAT YOUR
HOME WITH THE

WITH THE CHRISTMAS

BONUS
There's an extra Christmas gift tucked into your 1976
Christmas Club at the Meigs Branch of the Athens
County Savings and Loan.

'

Krog r
POM!'ROY - Tbe Rev. Henry Key, pastor of the Mount
Moriah Baptist Olurch in Middleport, has been listed in the
first. edition of "Who's .Who in Religion."
The book contains the names of top ministers in the United
States; gives a resllll)e of their background and education and
a listing of their contributions .in the field of religion.

Store Hours
OPEN
24 HOURS

00 THAT SHUr-INS will have Thanksgiving dinners
completed with turkey and the trinunings, tbe Center again
this year will be delivering dinners oil tbe day before.
The dinner will be prepared at the Center and then wUI be
delivered by a corps of senl6r citizens who have volunteered to
do this. If you have a friend who lives alone or is il shut-In and
would like one of tbe dinners, just telephone the Center some
time before Nov. 19.

A BELATED honeymoon perhaps Tom and Heidi Ewing who live in the Flat woods Road area
have just returned from a week of fun in the sun at Naples,
Fla. They flew down foc a week, toured the East Coast of
F1orlda and visited Mr. and Mrs. Oluck Grlrrun .

Fire Department Building. "Women to Home We Are
Refreshments will be served. Indebted"; Darla Hawley,
CUB SCOUT PACK 204 Unda King, hostesses.
organizational meeting, 7:30 PORTER UMW, 7 p.m. at the
p.m. at the Presbyterian church. '
Church. Any boy or adult LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44
interested in cub scoutin~ ceremonial, 7:30 p.m. Ofurged to attend .
ficers wear formals and
KYGER CREEK Band members bring covered dish
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. in the for refreshments.
band room.
VINTON Friendship Garden
-··---·-{,1ub,
12:30 p.m. at Vinton
MEIGS AREA Holiness
Town
Hall with hostesses
Association at Pomeroy
Esta
Downard
and Eleanor
Church of the Nazarene, 7:30
p.m. All ministers and White. All members urged to
attend .
delegates urged to attend.
THEODORUS Council 17. PATRIOT Grange, regular
Daughters of America, 6:30 meeting, 7:30p.m . Potluck to
p.m. at the IOOF hall. Meat follow.
RIO GRANDE Mothers .
and rolls to be furnished.
League,
7: 39 at the home of
MGM {,~RVETTE CLUB
Barbara
Allen.
at Meigs Inn at 7:30p.m. All Mrs .
members and owners of Dem'onstration . on cake
Corvettes urged to attend. decorating by Mrs. Betty
Plans lor economy run will be carpenter.
CHHISTIAN WOMEN 'S
discussed .
TUESDAY
CLUB luncheon, Holiday Inn,
MIDDLEPORT Masonic 12:15 p.m, Speaker is Mrs.
Locjge 363, 7 p.m. for Kathy O'Conner, a widow as
fellowcraft degree . All a result of the Marshall plane
crash, a special feature
master masons invited.
HARRISONVILLE Senior Lady Baseman of Country
"&lt;;hristmas
in
Citizens, 7 p.m. at Fare,
Harrlsonvi1le' School. Williamsburg." Babysitting
Refreshments. All members provided. call Mrs. Esther
Bechtel, 446-1713. •
ur~ed to attend .
GRANGE OFFICERS ADDAVILLE SCHOOL PTO,
meeting, 8 p.m. at the Rock 7:30p.m. Guest speaker, Dr .
Springs Grange Hall .
David Carman. His topic will
LADIES AUXILIARY, be " The Care and ImVeterans Memorial Hospital, portance o£ Children's
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Teeth." Refreshments will be
cafeteria .
served.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
WEDNESDAY
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
PAST PRESIDENTS of
p.m., Columbus and Southern Drew Webster Post 39,
Ohio Electric Co. Pledge Anlerlcan Legion Auxlllary,
training, 6:30; cultural 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs .
report, Sandi Sargent on Harry Davis .

Cub scouts
tour WMPO

ELECTRIC/GAS
nNG_UNIT.
HEATS WITH GASI
'

Where Quality and Low
Price .Are a Trailltlon

·WITH CHRISTMAS only five weeks off, many holiday
baz.aars are being planned and the latest announced is the one
by the Senior C!Uzeri sotne time the first week in December . .
All items for the bazaar are to be at the Center by Nov. 28
so that personnel will: have time to mark and display them.
Several things are being made at the center to be sure that the
bazaar will o(fer something for everyone.
Quite a disadvantage this year, however, Is the fact that
capable craft director Jeanne Morgan Is ill and not able to
make her us!Jai fine contribution when it comes to teaching
others to make attractive gift items.

A,.,•.

REVOLUTIONARY

i
I

ELECl'RICin I

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
NOV. 16 thru NOV. 22th

It's a Free- 5oth payment. No gimmicks! Nothing to
buy I To qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do is
make all. the first 49 of the scheduled payments in
your Christmas Club coupon book. We will then add
the 50th payment as a "bonus". It's our way of
saying "thank you" for completing the first 49
payments.
·
·

·CHICKEN.
SNACK BOX

SYRACUSE - A tour of
WMPO, Radio was taken by
members of Cub Scout Pack
~42 Thursday .
In the group were Randy
Armes, Charles Chancey,
Richard Davis, David Ebersbach, Gary Foley, Robbie
Gibbs, Eugene Jeffers, Corey
McPhail, Greg Michael, Earl
Pickens, Eric Philson,
Robert Spires, Jerry Wolfe,
Malcolm Ginther, and John
Frank .
Parents who accompanied
the boys were Mrs. Sally
. Ebersbach and Chris, Mrs .
Judy Gibbs, Mrs. Donna
Wolfe and Amy, John and Pat
Philson and Sarah, and Hugh
McPhail and Scott.
·

U.S. Govt.

~

Cho1c•
P1aple's Choice First 5 Ribs .

Rill Roast
.

,....,

78

Ill.$

L_, n;{tty

Sirloin
Steak
lb . • • • •

Kroger fresh

Grade A
Large· Eggs
u.s............

Cllolct ,....... Qolct
....~.C..... Cot

...a.'racfe
' ••••,AA..,..

t

Chuck
Steak

Larce

Eci•

Doz.

73;

Juicy

Golden Ripe

lb. • • • •

I

Tagerlnes
or Tangelos

Ill.

Ea.

or

Kroger Flour
Top Value Stamps
·

With Coupon

c

5·I•.

..,

·

Ll11olt 1 Ct11'011 With $10 tr Moro Por..oao
(hcldlll II••• Plllli•lttlll lilr L1w)

VII. After Wtl ,, Mh. 21 1 1115•

Delicious

·-·

Gunnoe's Sausage

SAFE

No
CHICKEN
Substitutt$

NO FUMES IN YOUR HOM£
NO RAM{ IN TOuR HOM£

e2

·MEIGS BRANCH
Athens .CauntJ Sain&amp;s &amp;Loan Co.

296 w : ind s't. ·- --Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER

.- '

BEAUTY
SALON

OPEN AT 9 A.M.

SALE OF REMNANTS
BROWN SHAG
GOLD SHAG
GOLDSOl NYLON
GREEN SHAG
501 NYLON, REO
BLUE RUBBER BACK

TUPPERS PLAINS - The paren ts to visit classrooms in
Tuppers Plains boosters held observance of American
their open house Monday with Education Week. Mrs . Judy
par.ents visiting their Sarna made an anchildren's classrooms . no.unc ement concerning
Refreshments were served immunizations.
by tlie homeroom mothers in
each class, .
~~:.;:;:;:;:,.
Jim Caldwell presided at
the business meeting opening :~.~.•;,
witH the pledge to the flag. He .•..
gave congratulations to Mrs. · ~:~:
Dorothy Calaway and Doug -~
.· ..
'~':
!Jissll on being elected to the ·'
Board or'Education. He also. :::: · .
thanked 'rOQm mothers and
teachers -on their help with SUNOl\ Y
open house·. The secretary 'THE GOSPEL ROAD, a film
and. treasurer reports were featuring Johnny &lt;:ash, at
read by. Pat Shrivers and Fellowship Chapel, Vinton, 7
J,an'et Chichester. Room p.m. Public invited. Pastor Is
count was taken with fourth Elmer Geiser .
~rade winning . Doro thy THE MASTERMEN of
Calaway reported on the Columbus will provide
recent fall carnival and speoial singing at Crown City
thanked everyone who helped United Methodist Church .
with it.
Services begin at 10 a.m.
~ With new business Judy Everyone· welcome..
.
Samsmade a motion to select . REVIVAL begins at Old
a committee of parents and Kyger Freewill Baptist
t.eachers to check on Church, 7 p.m . Rev. Ronnie
materials 'needed for the Perry , evangelist. Special
school and report at the next singing nightly. Everyone
meeting. The motion carried welcome,
and the committee consists of LAFAYETTE Shrine No. 44
Tom Gump, chairman : Mrs. rehearsal for officers, 2 p.m.
~rothy Calaway, Mrs. Bea COMMUNION and Foot
Douglas, Mrs. Judy Sams, washing services, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Jonas, Mrs . Pat at the Addison Free ,Will
Shrivers, Mrs . Gay Ann Baptist Church. Rev. Pyrus
Burke and Mrs . Nancy Fields, Columbus, will assist
Roush.
the pastor, Rev . Walter
• It was noted that with Patterson. Public invited.
several gifts remaining from MONDAY
1
the fall carnival, a supper PAHENT Teachers Club,
could be held using the gifts 7:30 p.m. at Vinton
lor games. A committee will Elementary School. Speaker
be appointed at the next will be Jim Harris, child
meeting and the date w!ll be psy cholo gist.
Nurser~
decided oh some time after provided.
the first of the year.
MElGS-GALLIA OSCEA
; Announcements wer_e made , Chapter meeting, a p.m. 'at
by Mrs. Bea Douglas mvitmg the Middleport Volunteer

c0mmg

Carpenter Personals

TOTAL PRICE •44967

1/''

,..... . .

~~

later. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Patrick are advisors. Club
members present were
Teresa Sheline, Randy
Patrick, Doug Briggs, Jeff'
Patrick, Jim Johnson,
Matthew O'Donnell, Jan
Johnson, Richie Steele,
Kelley Jolley, Darla Boggs,
Tammy Patrick and Jeff
Rathburn. Parents and
guests: Sherry Conklin, Paul
Lasseter, Tim Lasseter, Kim
Rathburn, {,'hris Rathburn,
Darrel Patrick, Tommy
Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Sheline, Kenny Patrick, Mr.
and . Mrs. Bernard Boggs,
Leigha11:na Patrick, Kitty
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Patrick, Mendy Boggs, Kent
Jolley, Kevin Jolley and Mrs.
Jackie Graham. Reporter Jim Johnson.
Patriot Merry Makers met
Oct. 'l1 at Salem BaptiSt
Church
basement.
A
Halloween party was held.
Prizes went to: prettiest,
Jamie. Dennis and Robin
Massey; ugliest, Sandy
Lakin; funniest, Lorle
Carpenter; most original,
Beth Salisbury. {,1ub advisors are Ruth Wood and Sue
Smith. Club members
preserlt were Robin Massey,
Sandy Lakin, Jud~ Davies,
Janie Hill, Mary Clagg, Beth
Salisbury, . Lorie Carpenter,
Angela Elkins, Kay Smith,
Robin Hudson, Erica Elkins .
Parents and guests were
Jamie Dennis, Toby Hudson,
Bernice Wood and Anna
Davis . Reporter - Sandy
Lakin.

WAIKIKI FESTIVAL

.....
:t..
:-:
....

•••

'!are Yard

BARWICK HEAVY DUPONT 501 NYlDN
Installed
95 Square Yard
WHh Pad

§..

.I

•4

Rubber Back

Night Dec. I; assignments
were made as to what dish to
bring; a membership drive
will be conducted over the
radio station; anyone eight
year~ old or through the third
grade and ooder 19 as of Jan.
I can. join the club by contacting Mrs. Louis Miller or
the extension office. The next
meeting will be Dec. I at the
P.C.A. building, Parent's
Night. Uub Advisor is Mrs.
Jane Ann Miller . Guests were
Mrs. Polly Elliot and Louis
Miller. He porter - Terri
Sbort.
Yellowtown Buckeyes met
Oct. 27 at the Gallla .County
Junior Fairgrounds. teresa
Sheline presided and Paul
Lasseter led devotions. Mrs.
Kenneth Patrick had charge
of the program. Jan Johnson
led the 4-H Pledge. The
following officers were
elected : president, Doug
Briggs; vice president ,
Teresa Sheline ; secretary,
Jeff Patrick; treasurer ,
Matthew O ' Donnell;
recreation leader, Richie
Steele.
Jan
Johnson
denwnstrated "You and Your
Money" and Jim Johnson
demonstrated "My Personal
Account Book". Kelly Jolley
and Jeff Rathburn are to give
demonstrations at the next
meeting . Prior to the
business meeting the
members and their guestS
enjoyed
a
delightful
masquarade party with
several games and a wiener
roast. Date of the next
meelinR will be announced

-INSTALLED OUTDOQRS .....

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDUPORT, OHIO
PH. ,_,-5121

PIECES CHICKEN
eMASHED POTATOES

e ROLL

~~W i~nppr
2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.

GIIIIPOUS, OHIO

PICK -UP SERVICE PHONE 44(,.2682

JULIE'S NEW GIRL
• LOS ANGELES (UPI)
!Inger Julie Andrews and ber
husband, movie producer
Blake Edwarda, have a new
daughter - a 17-month-old
VIetnamese IJirl.
A famlly spokesman said
the oo..,le'sadopUon of Amy
Lelah was final11ed In
aq,erlor Court Friday. She
came to tbe United Stiles Jut
11pring In
"Operation
Bebylift," the airlift of orphans out of Vietnam .

lrtter Wtlce•es
Ye•r

f••r..

hod StaMpS

�.••
~

'
h"
t
fi
Ch
•
t
.
.. ·ower s ow se or . .ns mas.
16 .:.. The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 16,1975

F~

.
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p

t

f'·
i

~.

I

:r.
••
'~

..'

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... .
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•••

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••
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:·

!
I

GALLIPOLIS The planting of the fla g pole at
t'hristmas Flower Show was Ga llia Academy and sale of
dl~ussed when theGallipolis geraniums, ' Mrs. Rusk and
Carden L1ub held its regular Mrs. Wyman Sheets are in
monthly meeting recently at charge of the urn s on
the ·home of Mrs. Joseph Chickamauga Bridge and are
Brady with Mrs . Robert planning on replacement of
Fanning, co-hos tess.
the present urns. They will
Devotions given by Mrs. also be In charge of flower
Wilson nusk were on the bOxes at the Post Office. Mrs.
Thanksgiving theme. .
David Johnson and Mrs.
The business meeting was Gerald Valley will be (n
condqcted by the presldent 1 charge Of the plantings at the
Mrs.· Bernard · Niehm with Chamber of Commerce
reports of variou s com- . Building, Mrs. John' Allison
miltees and U1eir plans fot those at the Junior
the coming year. One priority Fairgrounds, Mrs. Donald
project was stressed by Mrs. Robinson , planters on Second
D. E. O'Rourke, t'hairperson Avenue; Mrs. O'Rourke also
ol the Civic Beautification announ ced that the club
I
Committee. The club had would again sponsor the sale
earlier planted a dogwood of dogwood trees and anyone
'
and erec ted a plaque In interested may call their
memory of a former mem- order to her. Mrs. Mel Simon
ber, Mrs. Helen Galloway. and Mrs. Brice Smith will be
Continuing efforts of various in charge of the Herb Carden
plantings at "the ci.rcle" at at Our House.
the entrance of the Holzer
11 was announced that six
Medical Center Emergency ' members attended the recent
en trance have been un- Callia county Carden Club
successful . Soil samples meeting and four members
have been sent to Columbus attended the regional
and in the spring recom- meeting.
mendations following . Mrs. O'Rourke gave the
analysis of the sample will be garden hint for the month,
carried out. Presently bringing a branch of cotton
a~leas purchased lor this which she had grown In her
spot wiU be "holed In" for garden this summer. She
later plal)tlng. She indicated stated she had four rows
oth er members of her which grew shoulder high, It
comml~tee who would be in
had pink and while blossoms
charge of the other Gallipolis and grew shoulder high. She
·, Garden Club projects; Mrs. said It must be planted early,
Fanning will continue the and It was stiU blooming at

ware, a red and white
checkered napkin, with an

Prayer services ~
··continue in area

~~~~~~m·~:n~r. h~~~in~~a1

class, could ha ve fitted dif- berries and fruit in a round .
the time of the first frost.
The program of the eveni ng re·rent classes with slight pew ter container.
"The Now"· a free style
was in charge of Mrs. Ed-·. variations. It fea tured an all
while
Madonna
on
graduated
mode~n
arrangement by Mrs.
ward Berkich wh(\,. helped
white
bases.
She
used
holly
Fanmng
had three var1ed
members with suggestions
•
branches
and
pink
·
height
chrome
cylindrical
and instructions ~hich might
chrysanthemums,
with
the
containers.
She
used large
be utilized in the forthcoming
Christmas Flower Show. The holly curved to give the white spider mums and long
show will be ~eld Dec. 6 an'd 7 illusion of a halo over the needle~ pme. It was noted
at the homes of Mrs. Bernard . Madonna . To curve branches, lew , flowers are used in
Niehm and Mrs. Mel Simon. it was suggested they be mode.rn arrangemen ts,
Mrs. Berkich reviewed tlie Wired in an exagge rated somebmes only one, lhal lme
scale of points lor judging curve, and · placed in water was stressed · and most
arrangements as taken from for several days. This har- arrangemen ts. use height,
the OAGC Jud~es' Manual, dening makes the branches .with at least twice th,e height
stating color combination, more piable also. A lighted of the container as a guide·
design, suitability and ex- altar candle completed the line.
Mrs. Paul Haskins and
pressiveness, originality and arrangement.
"By
the
Fireside"
Mrs.
Alonzo had the
dist.inclion and condition of
arranged
by
Mrs.
Niehm
for
arrangements
for the month.
the material were all given
mantel . · was
an Mrs. Alonzo used a straw
consideration in determining· a
the grade gfven an assymetrical triangle design wreath about ~hioh she
of long needled pine, clusters wound brown rtbbon wtth
arrangement.
dogs ;
wheat,
The flower show theme will of magnolia leaves;. some, of whtte
which.
had
been
sprayed
eucalyptus,
mother
and
child
be "Good :ridings We Bring
gold,
·
with
gold
balls
for
ftgurmes
of
~traw
were
used
You" and a compl et.e
schedule of classes will be glitter and white candles. It at the base of the. wreath
published later. For the was poin te d out that which was completed with a
meeting members had taken ~ ag no!ia leaves may be large bow of ":'bile with
made arrangements suitable trimmed with scissors to any brown dotted rtbbon for
for several of the classes and size desired; also a large contrast. This arrangement
they were presented · for white candle with matching for a door would he suitable
comment, suggestion and small· arrangement could be for the present Thanksgiving
used to provide good balance season.
criticism .
Also in season was Mrs.
Mrs. Brice Smith had for a small mantel, while
right
and
left-sided
triangle
Haskins'
arrangement for a
"Noel,
Noel",
an
matchin
g
arrangements
tea
table
from which the
arrangement for a door,
would
be
suitable
for
a.
large
hos
lesses
later- served
using a straw mat with
mantel.
,
refreshments
: Her
magnolia leaves, cones and
"The Joy of Christmas", an arrangement of a mound of
artificial fruit with a large
bow to complete the circular informal Christmas break· lavendar mtims was in a
fast table composition, was hand-made gold leaf ceramic
design.
shown
by Mrs . Berkich. She bowl. Tall white candles in ·
Mrs. Rusk's arrangement,
used
a
red mat, while dish- low white ceramic containers
· entered in the "I Believe"

. . BY RENE BROYLES ·
ADDISON - The Addison
Free Will Baptist Church il
cont·inuing their Cottage
Prayer SerVices at varlouj
homes thro~hout the area.
Approximately 25 person$
attended the services at the
home of Mrs. Nora t'reme~ri '
of Fifth Ave. The evening wa!
spent in testimony and hymn'
singing. Mr"s. Cremeans, wh!
will be' 00 years old lit
February, san~ her favorili
hymn to show her ap1
predation to her friends an¢
relatives for sharing thei(
evening w'ith her.
Joe Cox, bus driver for the
church, is in charge o~
arranging these home visitS
THE ORDER OF TilE ROSE for 15 years mem·
The pastor of the church
bership was conferred upon Jqne VanVranken , left, when
Rev. Walter Patterson,
the Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Otapter
reminds the congregatiorl:
Sorority met for a tea Thursday night at the home of
and the public . that foot~
RDberta O'Brien, Pomeroy. Conferring the clegree upon
wa shing and co mmunio!J
Mrs. Van Vranken was Norma Amsbary, vice president,
services will be held thi
on the right.
evening at 7:30. Rev. Pyru.\
Fields, of · Columbus, wlq:
assist Rev. Patterson at tht&lt;
completed the setting.
LIFE OUT THERE ·
service. If you wish trans~
The next meeting will he . I.DS ANGELES (UP! )
the Ch ri stmas dinner which is Dr. William H. Pickering, portation to any of the churc~
scheduled for Dec. ll at the director of the Jet Propulsion services, please call Mr. Co
home of Mrs. Niehm.
Laboratory in Pasadena, at 446-1175.
••
Calif., told a news conference
"Consider another plane{
Friday that l.ife forms exist
elsewhere In the universe, but that Is ... lOlight years away
the problem is finding them. that means that If you ask
"When .. . we realire how question, it will take 20 year'
many opportunities there are b,ifore you get the answer''!'
lor other planets like earth, It's rather difficult to carry.,
it's hard to visualize .this is on much of a conversatiort
the only planet that bas life on when you have to wait 2t
years lor an answer ."
it," he said.
.

~

SECOND BIG WEEK OF SUPER SAVINGS

.

II

'
I

All

!·

Bedroom Suites

~

1

1

2

Reduced Now For
Quick Sale
Up To s100 OFF

QFF

Do Not Purchase A Living Room

Suite Anywhere Before You Check
Our Pric•

Good Selection

We Have ABeiutitul 2 Piece Plaid

LIVING ROOM SU

20% OFF
ON ALL

With MMdting Love Seat
All 3 Pieces

Going At On~

1499

VeJY Umited Quantity At This Low Price

LAMPS
Lay Away For Christmas

WOOD DINElTES

WE HAVE A NICE
SELECTION OF LOVE SEATS.
YOU CAN NOW OWN
A LOVE SEAT FOR
THE PRICE OF A CHAIR

CARPET SALE
9x12

TABLE 2 LEAVES
and 6. NICE CHAIRS
ONLY .1

95
239

REGULAR '299.95
SALE ON

END TABLES
AND

Silt

12x12 SIZE
REG. '99.95
1ZX15 SIZE

SAVE
'20.00

COFFEE TABLES

~Low

•3995 EACH

"EXTRA NICE"

Make ADeposit, We'll
Hold Your Dloice

oo
oFF
50

$

Friday
8:30 to 8:00
saturday
8:30 to 5:00

Buy for auisbnas

All Chairs

At

Marked Down!

Reduced Prices!

7 PIECE

DINETTE SETS
ONLY
Some Selling As High As '169.95

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRINGS
•

9'5

· Save '70.00

SAVE 140.00 ON THE SET

HIDE-A-BEDS

3 BASSm

· (2 To Sell)
Regular •2M.95

NOW ONLY

•24995

SAVE '50.00

BEAN BAGS

•a

95

Choice Gf Colors

·

EACH

DINING ROOM
SUITE
REGULAR

'599.95

"

'100.00 NOWI

One 5 Piece Round Table

AND 4 CHAIRS
Solid Oak
SALE PRICE

Replar

$239.95

.

'

.

·juttbl)J ·~hnts .., jmtintl
.

VOL 10

.NO. . 42

'," '

PAGE 17

SUNDAY. NOVEMRER 16. 1975

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

ByJANE D~ISON

pe~;le_c:~~g~: di~h~~~ !?;~,p~::~:rw:~~ :~::·~:t~g ~~~~

WASfUNGTON (UP!) - A
, private researcher said .name-to "go head to head"
: Saturday that evidence pried
· loose from · a reluctant with hbn under oath so that
government proves Investigators botched the ·
• inquiry Into President John
Jlen. RichardS. Schwelker,
F. Kemedy's assassination R-Pa ., who is taking a new
and then conspired to cover lo'ok at the Kennedy
up their mishandling of the assassination, told UP! it
case . .
may be decided within a
The researcher, Harold rrionth whether to hold public
Weisberg, offered to go hearinga but it Is too soon to
before a congressional say whether Weisberg would
· committee to establish that testify.
"a long list of people" · "The government never
committed perjury In an reaUy Intended io investigate
. effort to make people believe the
•ssassination
of
. Lee .Hai'Vey Oswald acted President JOhn F. Kennedy,
alone when he Shot Kennedy and It never did," Weisberg
In Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
said In IJis sixth book on the

whatieuonablemencancall was ignored, suppressed or
an inquiry, a decent pretense destroyed.

:~~t~~t =~ ~: tQev1~aelaborate
!:s~;~~~eo:;;;led
wi~~~i a~ hfs" : : : : .
on · the book, Md., home, Weisberg said, '.'1
0

Weisberg said the entire
investigation
from
moments after Kennedy was
killed WJW publication of the
Warren Conunisaion report
nearly a year later- was
"tainted by corruption and
perjury."·
He said the Warren
Commission, appointed by
President Lyndon B. Johnson, merely rubber-etampeq
the ·preconceived notion of
FBI Director J . Edgar
Hoover that Oswald was the

have no idea who killed him
(Kennedy) . But I know
Oswald could not bave."
Weisberg has spent the last
11 years investigating the
assassination, amassing a
large volwne of documents
and pictures - often after
bitter court battles with
federal agencies. Many of
them are re)JI'inted In his new
liook, "Post Mortem," which
Weisberg had printed
privately after conunercial
publishers rejected lt. .

merzcans e up wzt .
R. ed. fJ1
R
k
ll
~ arne...
oc e e er.'
~

.

·..

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
AUSTIN , Tex. (UP!) "One message is coming
through loud and clear," Vice
President
Nelson
A.
R,ockefeller said. "The
American people are fed up
with federal bureaucracy and
red tape."
Rockefeller was telling the
audience of about 700what he

Rockefeller's comment
has learned so far at ''town
was
inspired by statements
meetings" he had held in
Denver, Tampa, and here in from Indian chiefs, welfare
the Teus state capital. Along recipients, public officials
. with Uree or four cabinet and the mayor of a smaU
town
who
members, the vice president Colorado
Is holding the six meetings to established a "bureau of red
find out for the Ford Ad- tape cutting" in his municipal
ministration what the public government.
"One reason we buy Arab
wants in terms of domestic
policy.

More bombings cause
Twod~rdie • •
iHigh·ranking
emissary
:
.
on MeigS roads ffiJ ury at marketplace
tries to soften rule
~~:n~ill~ ~e:ar~~u:~
POMEROY - Two deer

·

, By PETER UEBERSAX
MADRID, Spain (UP!) ~ b)laln sent a higiH'anldng
emissary to Algeria Saturday
to try to &amp;Often President
Houari Boumedleme's op' position to a Spanish. Moroccan deal for ending 91
. years of Sp&amp;nlsh rule In the
western Sahara.
Under an agreement
• worked out in Madrid Ibis
week among Spain, Morocco
and Mauritania, Spain will
withdraw frmn the disputed
norlhwe.t African · territory
bY the end of February and
hand over to a provilional
adminlltrationlbared by the
three countries.
The deal, Madrid sources
llid, will pave the way for a
likely tabover ri the Spanilh
Sahara by Mcroccu In 'lhe
north and Mauritania In the

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William Roth, R·Del.,
IBld Saturday the sovernment is spending more than
$41,000 to study the travel
habits of wUd burroe and
H4,GOO to provide shelter for
electric golf carts.
Roth revealed theae and
other government projects In

condemn
govemment
M~W

(UP!) - Thirty
!IeVen prominent Soviet dissidents condemned the sovarnment today for denying
lityalclsl Andrei D. Sakharov
permiaslon to receive the
Nobel Peace Prize In Norway
next month.
The dlsaldents ssld in a
joint atatement that the
decision to refuse Sakharov
an elllt visa showed the
Krelnlln •s "fear before the
unwavering movement of
civil tlloul!ht and morallty" In

\he .natloa.

YOU'LL SAVE

·

south.
Spain was expected to
retain a meaiUI'e of control
over the territory's desert
treasure-the w·e stern
world'uecond plggeat known
phoaphate deposits which
annuaUy produce t280 million
worth of the basic ingredient
for fertilizer.
Algeria, which backs the
Marxilt-orlented Pollaario
Saharan independence movement, announced Friday It
will oppose any deal which It
baa not helped to shape.
Spain's minister of·
economic Piannbw. Joaquin
Gutierrez Cano, flew to
Alglens to hand Boumediene
a meNa8e from the government and np~ the
qNelllellt to hbn .
Algtrla u.ilts 1111 an internationally supervised

~M~nouncing

the four finalists
competing for his Federal
Frill of the Year award as
''the least vital govemnent
grant of 19'15."
RDth Slid there were "110
many grants deserving this
distinction that' It's not easy
to narrow the field."
RDth 'sloiD' flnaliJts were :

Dissidents Opening given

REGULAR SS91i

NOW ONLY

Evidence shows

referendum In which the
Sahara's 80,000 Inhabitants
should decide the futqre of
their land, as called for in
United Nations resolutions.
A Spanish government
source said there will be
"consultation" of the
population . Other Spanish
sources have said the vote
cciuld be easily swung in
Morocco's favor by allowing
45,000' Saharans living in
Morocco to take part.
Tli!s is the region where
more than 7Al0,000 Moroccan
clvlliarul staged a march last
week to stake King Hassan's
claim to the desert land.
When the Spanish army
threatened to use force,
Hauan called the marchers
beck and the two coWttries
began seriOUJ negotiation.

.G ovemment ~aste projects.
make finalists award list

Item ,For Christmas!

Save Up To

Thursday
8: 30 Till Noon

Tell City Many Others

'

CHAIRS

Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
Open 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM

Bassett, American Drew, Kemp,

You Can
'Lay Away Any

Sale I

New Store
II
" · • Houts

...

.

They described the Nobel
award to Sakharov as
recognition that ''the lllru81de
to turn the U.S.S.R. from a
closed totalitarian syatem
. into an open democratic
IIOCiety .. .terves the lntereata
cl peace and international
security."
Saltharov was refused per·
minion to go to Norway on
Wednelday.
Ofllctals of tile Soviet visa
agency based lhe relunl on
national security, saying
Sakharov acquired state
aecreta durlnl hll work on the
&amp;~viet hydrolen bomb.
'lbe atpera of the cooclemnatlon included
Aleundar Ginzburg, who

Congress for
intenention
OOLUMBUS (UP]) - The
(Jtlo Alloclatlon of Public
School Employes said Friday
the failure by the Ohio
General Assembly to
override the sovernor's veto
of a public employes
bargaining bill opens the door
for the federal government to
intervene.
Larry lleO'eace, executive
director of the OAPSE, said
there is a ,growing awareneu
amona public employees of
the failure of some elected
offlciala to recosnt&amp;e and deal
with their prol!lema.
"B)' failing to override the
veto, the leglalature has
opened the · door for the
federal govenunent to step In
to solve Ohio's labor
problems," said DeCresce.
"Bargaining bills are
In
currenUy pending
Congren to establish
procedarea which are not
apeclflcll17 designed to meet
Cftio 'a needl."

· nJNDS DISTRIBuTED
COLUMBUS State
Auditor
Tbomaa
E.
Fersuson'a office report the
November distribution of
local government money with
t4,488,039.46 going to Ohio's
to live yearaln 88 counlles •nd 311 eitiee 111d
t. labor CIIIIP In 1888 on villagee levying local Income
dw'sll of anti-Soviet ac• lazes. Meigr County's share
Wll f12,5IJO.
,~
uv~~yr

,..llllold

- A $41,055 grant by the
Bureau of Land Management
to ArizOna Slllte University to
study the travel haltta and
behavior of wild burros In the
Colorado River Valley.
- A ~.447 grant by the
Corps of Engineers to Hollis
Construction Co., Baxley,
Ga., to exp&amp;nd the goH club
how at Fort Stewart for
electric goH carts.
- A $30,000 grant by the
Corps of Engineers to an
Alexandria, Va., historian for
a study of the corps' activities
during the Civll War.
- An ..,,000 grant by the
Goddard ~ce Flight Center
to Herschenohn Motion
Picture Productions of
Wllhington, D.C., for a film
on astronomy.
Roth said every one "Is
responsive to a clear public
non-demand, is addressed 1o
a wholly non111'euing need,
and from aU appearances is
100 per cent nonessential."

Saturday according to a
report by the department of
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach.
At 8:15 a.m., on Route 689
in Columbia Townahlp, a car
driven by MWTay Aiken, 24,
Athens, struck a large buck
deer which ran onto the highway. Damages to the car
were heavy but Allten waa not
injured. The deer Wllll killed.
At 10:15 a.m., oo Route 7,
one half mlle west of Rollte
33, a deer ran into the front of
a car driven by Dewey
Horton, Jr., of Middleport,
kllllng the deer. Damages io
the Horlon vehicle were
minor. Horton was not in·
jured.
At 2 p.m. Saturday on
Massar Hlll, located on Route
7 near the Eastern High
School, a van driven by Mark
D. J{awtliofne, 17, Pm,.n.
burl. headed aouth, went off
the right of the road, croued
the highway to the leit and hit
an embankment turning over
and coming io rest on its
wheela. Damages were heaVy
and Hawthrone received
minor lnjwies. Hawthorne
told investigating officers
tllat his vehicle went out of
control when it was
sideswiped by a green truck
which was traveling south
and passed the Hawthorne

van.
At 3:30 p.m. the sheriff's
department received a caU
from Sue Smith, Route 1,
Vinton, that a hive of bees
had been stolen fnm the
Smith property. According to
the report, two pert10ns In a
jeep drove up to the hive and
put it In the vehicle. The
depariment Is investigating.

PROBE ACCIDENT
POMEROY
The
department of Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach investigated a·
single car accident Friday at
6:30 p.m. in which no personal injuries were reporte!l.
Marlon Woods, 20, Rt. I,
Rutland , was traveling north
on township roa\i 1179 when '
he lost control in loose gravel
and went over a culvert.

United Press lnterua\ional
Two bombs exploded in a
marketplace on the Iaraeli·
occupied West Bank of
Jordan Saturday, injuring
two persons. Pope Paul VI
condemned the Arab born·
ling in Jerusalem earlier this
week as "outrageous."
The Israeli military com·
IIUil1d said two improvised
ezplosive charges went off in
the Elbirah marketplace In
RamaUah, 10 mlles north of
Jerusalem. In addition to
Bllghtly wounding two per·
sons, the blasts damaged two.
cars.
High sd!ool students in the
West Bank have been demon·
stratlng all week In favor of
pro-Palestinian and anti·
Zionist reaolutlona puaed by
the .U.N. General Assembly
and against Israeli o_c·

killed six JewiBh teenagers
and wounded 42 others In
Jerusalem's Zion Square.
Two
Arab
guerrilla
organizations in Damascus
claimed responsibility for the
attack.
Pope Paul VI said the
Jerusalem bombing was "an
outrageous flouting of
civilized values."
The Pope, often accused In
Israel of pro-Arab bias, con·
demned tile attack In a

Bombing ups~ts
Pope Paul VI .

VATIC&lt;\f;i CITY CU~!l - lloutln&amp; of civi!lltocl vU.."
Pope l'aial Vl t.oct.y cOO:- The Pope, often aCcused lit
c:apetloll. Iarael has ~ the demned the Arab bombing Israel of a pr(}-Arab bias,
West bank since the June, which killed six Israeli condemned the Zion SqWil'ti
teenagers in Jerusalem bombing in a telegram sent in
1967, Middle East War.
On Thuraday night, a bomb Thursday as "an outrageous

Energy bill is
extended Friday
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford has signed a
30-day extension of domestic
oll price controls which had
been scheduled to ewire at
midnight .tonight, the White
House announced today.
The· ell tension would
postpone any inunedlate hilte
in oil and guollne prices
while Ford and lawmakers
work work on a long-term
energy energy bill~ In
Congress. That bill would
reduce petroleum prices over
the short term and aUow for
gradual booels later.
Before departing Friday
night for an economic
I!Uillmit meeting near Parts,
Ford also signed a bill
temporarlly Increasing the
national debt ceiling from
~77 billlon io $595 biiUon
through March 15, 1978.

Leo111rd Woodcock, president
!I the United Auto Workers
Union, Saturday atta~ked.
environmental blackmail by
lar&amp;e c:orporationa and caUed
for a closer relationship
between environmentalists
'and the labor movement.
Woodcock was guest
apelker beforeLthe annual
meeting of the !'Ianning and
CGnservation League.
"The sometimes delicate
relaUonship between working
people and environmen·
. talilta," he said, "is partlv' a
le1acy of years of environmental blackmail In
whiCh the major corporations
have lrled to hold workers, or

Carew.

" Holy Father expresses
deep regrets at deaths and
injuries caused by bomb
explosion in city of
Jerusalem," the telegram
read.
" His Holiness extends
sympathy .to the families
afflicted by this outrageous
Dooling of civilized values
and he manifests his sincere
compassion for those sufferin g grievous
con-

Campus tee
rates are

increased

attackS corporations
at least their jobs, hostage threatened to close down
against the application of several operations in
. environmental regulations." Tarrytown, N.Y. and put
He cited allesed threats by thousands out of work if the
Union Carbide Corp. in federal government
. Marietta, Ohio, to lay off 600 prevented dumping Into the
workers In response to en· Hudson River.
forcement of Environmental . "Legislation to protect
protect 1on Age n c y · workers from damages
regulations several years suffered In plant shuidowns
ago.
or layoffs resulting from
The unions there, he said, environmental regulation or
refuaed to join with the other reaaona," be said,
company in appealing lor "would be a P.factical, subdellys. And enforcement of stantial . step ,1 to'!l'ard con·
air pollution standlrda finaUy tro111 ft· and distributing the
~'6
brought clean air without lou burden of change."
of jobs.
The UAW president said
He also cited General also ~at environmentalists
Motors Corp. which he said should be concerned about
11\.

his hebalf by Cardinal Jean
Villot, the papal secretary of
state, to the apostolic
delegate in Jerusalem,
Archbishop WIIUam Aquin

With IIWe debBie or oo
dissent, Congress passed the
oil price control · extension
Friday, a move !hat gives
both lawmakers .and the
President time to go over
details of the compromi8e
long-term energy bill.
sequenc~s.
The energy bill, approved · "As he condemns this new
in a House-Senate cOnference senseless act of violence he
committee Wednesday night, renews his earnest plea
is being drawn up In exact against the use of all
language and is not eapected terrorism, always so sterile
to be ready for House and and certainly destructive of
Senate consideration until society."
early December.
The price control extenaion
~
maintains unW Dec. 15 the
price ceiling of ~.25 a barrel
on soo()aUed "old oil,"-based
on the 1972 production rateand the freedom from controls of "new oil" - that
JI'O(llced a.bove the 1972 level
and selling for around $12 a
bllu-el.

Auto workers' leader
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -

telegram sent by Cardinal
Jean Villot, the papal
secretary of state, to Arch' bishop William Aquin
Carew, the Canadian-born
apostolic delegate In
Jerusalem.
"As hli condemns Ibis new
senseless act of violence he
renews his earnest plea
against the use of all
terrorlsn, always so sterile
and certainly destructive of
tiOCiety ,"the Pope's telegram
said.

the poUution in!iide plants and
factories, •
"The allowable con·
centratlon
of carbon
monoxide In the plant is 50
parts per miillon eight hours
a day, every day. While
outdoors, tile concentration Is
limited to only nine parts per
million for only one day a
year.
"To be credible the envirorunental movement must
also plsh hard to prevent the
coats of pollution control fr9m
failing on the victima and
avoid the implied view that
factory workers are partners
In pollution with the corsaid.
porations,". Woodcock
ttl
\

ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) Cftio University's board of
trustees Saturday approved a
15 per cent Increase in main
campus fees, effective with
the winter quarter. ·
The action loUowed similar
increases at seven other state
universities within the past
year.
or the $151ncreaae, $10 was
added to Instructional fees the first such increase in
three and on~alf years. The
remlaning $5 was to be added
to the school's general fee the first Increase in seven
years.
Ohio University's instruction fee will now be $220
and the general fee $55. No
Increase In room and board
charges was considered ..
School spokesmen said the
fee increase was made necessary by the accumulative
effects of civll service wage
increases,
a
$404,000
r'eduction in state subsidies
resulting from Gov. James A.
Rhodes' 2 per cent cut In
allocations to all state
agencies and soaring utility

costs.

~

oil, no matter how expensive
it is, is because it doesn't
require an environmental
impact study," said Peter
McDonald of W'mdow RDck,
Ariz, the chairman of the
Navajo Nation. He told
RockefeUer of the frustrating
government red tape the &gt;
Indians bave to cope with to ,·.•
develop oil reserves on their
reservations.
"If the American govern- ,,
ment responded to Pearl ····
Harbor the way we've :::;,
responded to this energy
crisis, we might all be
speaking Japanese today,'' ...
McDonald said.
'lbe concern for the en· "'·
virorunent is also on the mind ·'
of L.B. Henry, chairman of a
rural Louisiana parish, who
said "In our area the government says we don't care If. •..
you're starving to death , just ·
think of the fine air you're "
ixeathlng."
Sylvester Tinker, head of
the Osage Indian nation in
Oklahoma says he's trying to "
get the government to
)JI'ovide better health ser- ,.
vices for his people and all
the government wants to do is
give him better water.
"We don't need any water ,., .,
because we don't have any
canoes," Tinker said. "I get
amused at the White Man's
way of thinking."
Then
he
said
to • '
RockefeUer- ''you've got so .,.
many people working (In
government) tbat you can 'I
implement a program."

Servicemen

,ro •

convicted

..

of murder ,._
~

FRANKFURT, West
Germany (UP!) - A West
German criminal court has
convicted two American
servicemen of the murder of
a West German laborer and a
third GI of robbery and
•
sentenced them to prison
terms ranging from eight to
•
13 years, a u.s..·' rmy ~,
spokesman said today.
-...~
The court found the three ; •
guUty Friday In the robbery- •
murder of Martin Anders,
who worked at an American
motorpool In Frankfurt, last ••
Jan. 24.
The court handed a !~year
jaU term to I'fc. George
Dallas, 24, of Charleston,
S.C., and a 12-year term to
Spec. 4 Dennis Thomas, 22, of
,.
Trenton, Mich. on cbarges of
murder and robbery.
I'fc. Donald Singleton, 27.
of Chester, Pa.,' was sen· "'
tenced to eight years on
charges of robbery.
,
The presiding judge said ... .'.
that Anders was known to ·
many, Including the three •
•
defendants, who worked as
Army bus drivers, as a black
market operator In American
cigarettes and alcohol.
• West German press reports
said Anders liked to flash
.,
large sums of money lor all to ,,.:
see. At the trial the three men ;· .
admitted that Anders's
:;
.,.:,
money was the motive for the
.:-,
robbery.
·
•''
.•.
M

-·

APPOINTED
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. .....
James A. Rhodes has appointed former deputy and
••
assistant state Auditor Rex
E. Haecker of Circleville as a
.
special assistant lor fiscal "•
affairs In the governor's .. "
office.
H~ecker will assist various
departments with specific
"•
fiscal problems and special
'.
auditing of expenditures, a
spokesman fo~ the governor
said.
Haecker was director of the
..
bureau of inspection and
1•
supervisor of public offices in
,.
the state auditor's office and
supervisor of Ohio , state
examiners fol\ 24 years. ,.

..

..

,,,

.

�.••
~

'
h"
t
fi
Ch
•
t
.
.. ·ower s ow se or . .ns mas.
16 .:.. The Sunday Times ·Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 16,1975

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... .
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!
I

GALLIPOLIS The planting of the fla g pole at
t'hristmas Flower Show was Ga llia Academy and sale of
dl~ussed when theGallipolis geraniums, ' Mrs. Rusk and
Carden L1ub held its regular Mrs. Wyman Sheets are in
monthly meeting recently at charge of the urn s on
the ·home of Mrs. Joseph Chickamauga Bridge and are
Brady with Mrs . Robert planning on replacement of
Fanning, co-hos tess.
the present urns. They will
Devotions given by Mrs. also be In charge of flower
Wilson nusk were on the bOxes at the Post Office. Mrs.
Thanksgiving theme. .
David Johnson and Mrs.
The business meeting was Gerald Valley will be (n
condqcted by the presldent 1 charge Of the plantings at the
Mrs.· Bernard · Niehm with Chamber of Commerce
reports of variou s com- . Building, Mrs. John' Allison
miltees and U1eir plans fot those at the Junior
the coming year. One priority Fairgrounds, Mrs. Donald
project was stressed by Mrs. Robinson , planters on Second
D. E. O'Rourke, t'hairperson Avenue; Mrs. O'Rourke also
ol the Civic Beautification announ ced that the club
I
Committee. The club had would again sponsor the sale
earlier planted a dogwood of dogwood trees and anyone
'
and erec ted a plaque In interested may call their
memory of a former mem- order to her. Mrs. Mel Simon
ber, Mrs. Helen Galloway. and Mrs. Brice Smith will be
Continuing efforts of various in charge of the Herb Carden
plantings at "the ci.rcle" at at Our House.
the entrance of the Holzer
11 was announced that six
Medical Center Emergency ' members attended the recent
en trance have been un- Callia county Carden Club
successful . Soil samples meeting and four members
have been sent to Columbus attended the regional
and in the spring recom- meeting.
mendations following . Mrs. O'Rourke gave the
analysis of the sample will be garden hint for the month,
carried out. Presently bringing a branch of cotton
a~leas purchased lor this which she had grown In her
spot wiU be "holed In" for garden this summer. She
later plal)tlng. She indicated stated she had four rows
oth er members of her which grew shoulder high, It
comml~tee who would be in
had pink and while blossoms
charge of the other Gallipolis and grew shoulder high. She
·, Garden Club projects; Mrs. said It must be planted early,
Fanning will continue the and It was stiU blooming at

ware, a red and white
checkered napkin, with an

Prayer services ~
··continue in area

~~~~~~m·~:n~r. h~~~in~~a1

class, could ha ve fitted dif- berries and fruit in a round .
the time of the first frost.
The program of the eveni ng re·rent classes with slight pew ter container.
"The Now"· a free style
was in charge of Mrs. Ed-·. variations. It fea tured an all
while
Madonna
on
graduated
mode~n
arrangement by Mrs.
ward Berkich wh(\,. helped
white
bases.
She
used
holly
Fanmng
had three var1ed
members with suggestions
•
branches
and
pink
·
height
chrome
cylindrical
and instructions ~hich might
chrysanthemums,
with
the
containers.
She
used large
be utilized in the forthcoming
Christmas Flower Show. The holly curved to give the white spider mums and long
show will be ~eld Dec. 6 an'd 7 illusion of a halo over the needle~ pme. It was noted
at the homes of Mrs. Bernard . Madonna . To curve branches, lew , flowers are used in
Niehm and Mrs. Mel Simon. it was suggested they be mode.rn arrangemen ts,
Mrs. Berkich reviewed tlie Wired in an exagge rated somebmes only one, lhal lme
scale of points lor judging curve, and · placed in water was stressed · and most
arrangements as taken from for several days. This har- arrangemen ts. use height,
the OAGC Jud~es' Manual, dening makes the branches .with at least twice th,e height
stating color combination, more piable also. A lighted of the container as a guide·
design, suitability and ex- altar candle completed the line.
Mrs. Paul Haskins and
pressiveness, originality and arrangement.
"By
the
Fireside"
Mrs.
Alonzo had the
dist.inclion and condition of
arranged
by
Mrs.
Niehm
for
arrangements
for the month.
the material were all given
mantel . · was
an Mrs. Alonzo used a straw
consideration in determining· a
the grade gfven an assymetrical triangle design wreath about ~hioh she
of long needled pine, clusters wound brown rtbbon wtth
arrangement.
dogs ;
wheat,
The flower show theme will of magnolia leaves;. some, of whtte
which.
had
been
sprayed
eucalyptus,
mother
and
child
be "Good :ridings We Bring
gold,
·
with
gold
balls
for
ftgurmes
of
~traw
were
used
You" and a compl et.e
schedule of classes will be glitter and white candles. It at the base of the. wreath
published later. For the was poin te d out that which was completed with a
meeting members had taken ~ ag no!ia leaves may be large bow of ":'bile with
made arrangements suitable trimmed with scissors to any brown dotted rtbbon for
for several of the classes and size desired; also a large contrast. This arrangement
they were presented · for white candle with matching for a door would he suitable
comment, suggestion and small· arrangement could be for the present Thanksgiving
used to provide good balance season.
criticism .
Also in season was Mrs.
Mrs. Brice Smith had for a small mantel, while
right
and
left-sided
triangle
Haskins'
arrangement for a
"Noel,
Noel",
an
matchin
g
arrangements
tea
table
from which the
arrangement for a door,
would
be
suitable
for
a.
large
hos
lesses
later- served
using a straw mat with
mantel.
,
refreshments
: Her
magnolia leaves, cones and
"The Joy of Christmas", an arrangement of a mound of
artificial fruit with a large
bow to complete the circular informal Christmas break· lavendar mtims was in a
fast table composition, was hand-made gold leaf ceramic
design.
shown
by Mrs . Berkich. She bowl. Tall white candles in ·
Mrs. Rusk's arrangement,
used
a
red mat, while dish- low white ceramic containers
· entered in the "I Believe"

. . BY RENE BROYLES ·
ADDISON - The Addison
Free Will Baptist Church il
cont·inuing their Cottage
Prayer SerVices at varlouj
homes thro~hout the area.
Approximately 25 person$
attended the services at the
home of Mrs. Nora t'reme~ri '
of Fifth Ave. The evening wa!
spent in testimony and hymn'
singing. Mr"s. Cremeans, wh!
will be' 00 years old lit
February, san~ her favorili
hymn to show her ap1
predation to her friends an¢
relatives for sharing thei(
evening w'ith her.
Joe Cox, bus driver for the
church, is in charge o~
arranging these home visitS
THE ORDER OF TilE ROSE for 15 years mem·
The pastor of the church
bership was conferred upon Jqne VanVranken , left, when
Rev. Walter Patterson,
the Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Otapter
reminds the congregatiorl:
Sorority met for a tea Thursday night at the home of
and the public . that foot~
RDberta O'Brien, Pomeroy. Conferring the clegree upon
wa shing and co mmunio!J
Mrs. Van Vranken was Norma Amsbary, vice president,
services will be held thi
on the right.
evening at 7:30. Rev. Pyru.\
Fields, of · Columbus, wlq:
assist Rev. Patterson at tht&lt;
completed the setting.
LIFE OUT THERE ·
service. If you wish trans~
The next meeting will he . I.DS ANGELES (UP! )
the Ch ri stmas dinner which is Dr. William H. Pickering, portation to any of the churc~
scheduled for Dec. ll at the director of the Jet Propulsion services, please call Mr. Co
home of Mrs. Niehm.
Laboratory in Pasadena, at 446-1175.
••
Calif., told a news conference
"Consider another plane{
Friday that l.ife forms exist
elsewhere In the universe, but that Is ... lOlight years away
the problem is finding them. that means that If you ask
"When .. . we realire how question, it will take 20 year'
many opportunities there are b,ifore you get the answer''!'
lor other planets like earth, It's rather difficult to carry.,
it's hard to visualize .this is on much of a conversatiort
the only planet that bas life on when you have to wait 2t
years lor an answer ."
it," he said.
.

~

SECOND BIG WEEK OF SUPER SAVINGS

.

II

'
I

All

!·

Bedroom Suites

~

1

1

2

Reduced Now For
Quick Sale
Up To s100 OFF

QFF

Do Not Purchase A Living Room

Suite Anywhere Before You Check
Our Pric•

Good Selection

We Have ABeiutitul 2 Piece Plaid

LIVING ROOM SU

20% OFF
ON ALL

With MMdting Love Seat
All 3 Pieces

Going At On~

1499

VeJY Umited Quantity At This Low Price

LAMPS
Lay Away For Christmas

WOOD DINElTES

WE HAVE A NICE
SELECTION OF LOVE SEATS.
YOU CAN NOW OWN
A LOVE SEAT FOR
THE PRICE OF A CHAIR

CARPET SALE
9x12

TABLE 2 LEAVES
and 6. NICE CHAIRS
ONLY .1

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AND

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'20.00

COFFEE TABLES

~Low

•3995 EACH

"EXTRA NICE"

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Hold Your Dloice

oo
oFF
50

$

Friday
8:30 to 8:00
saturday
8:30 to 5:00

Buy for auisbnas

All Chairs

At

Marked Down!

Reduced Prices!

7 PIECE

DINETTE SETS
ONLY
Some Selling As High As '169.95

MATTRESSES AND
BOX SPRINGS
•

9'5

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AND 4 CHAIRS
Solid Oak
SALE PRICE

Replar

$239.95

.

'

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·juttbl)J ·~hnts .., jmtintl
.

VOL 10

.NO. . 42

'," '

PAGE 17

SUNDAY. NOVEMRER 16. 1975

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

ByJANE D~ISON

pe~;le_c:~~g~: di~h~~~ !?;~,p~::~:rw:~~ :~::·~:t~g ~~~~

WASfUNGTON (UP!) - A
, private researcher said .name-to "go head to head"
: Saturday that evidence pried
· loose from · a reluctant with hbn under oath so that
government proves Investigators botched the ·
• inquiry Into President John
Jlen. RichardS. Schwelker,
F. Kemedy's assassination R-Pa ., who is taking a new
and then conspired to cover lo'ok at the Kennedy
up their mishandling of the assassination, told UP! it
case . .
may be decided within a
The researcher, Harold rrionth whether to hold public
Weisberg, offered to go hearinga but it Is too soon to
before a congressional say whether Weisberg would
· committee to establish that testify.
"a long list of people" · "The government never
committed perjury In an reaUy Intended io investigate
. effort to make people believe the
•ssassination
of
. Lee .Hai'Vey Oswald acted President JOhn F. Kennedy,
alone when he Shot Kennedy and It never did," Weisberg
In Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
said In IJis sixth book on the

whatieuonablemencancall was ignored, suppressed or
an inquiry, a decent pretense destroyed.

:~~t~~t =~ ~: tQev1~aelaborate
!:s~;~~~eo:;;;led
wi~~~i a~ hfs" : : : : .
on · the book, Md., home, Weisberg said, '.'1
0

Weisberg said the entire
investigation
from
moments after Kennedy was
killed WJW publication of the
Warren Conunisaion report
nearly a year later- was
"tainted by corruption and
perjury."·
He said the Warren
Commission, appointed by
President Lyndon B. Johnson, merely rubber-etampeq
the ·preconceived notion of
FBI Director J . Edgar
Hoover that Oswald was the

have no idea who killed him
(Kennedy) . But I know
Oswald could not bave."
Weisberg has spent the last
11 years investigating the
assassination, amassing a
large volwne of documents
and pictures - often after
bitter court battles with
federal agencies. Many of
them are re)JI'inted In his new
liook, "Post Mortem," which
Weisberg had printed
privately after conunercial
publishers rejected lt. .

merzcans e up wzt .
R. ed. fJ1
R
k
ll
~ arne...
oc e e er.'
~

.

·..

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
AUSTIN , Tex. (UP!) "One message is coming
through loud and clear," Vice
President
Nelson
A.
R,ockefeller said. "The
American people are fed up
with federal bureaucracy and
red tape."
Rockefeller was telling the
audience of about 700what he

Rockefeller's comment
has learned so far at ''town
was
inspired by statements
meetings" he had held in
Denver, Tampa, and here in from Indian chiefs, welfare
the Teus state capital. Along recipients, public officials
. with Uree or four cabinet and the mayor of a smaU
town
who
members, the vice president Colorado
Is holding the six meetings to established a "bureau of red
find out for the Ford Ad- tape cutting" in his municipal
ministration what the public government.
"One reason we buy Arab
wants in terms of domestic
policy.

More bombings cause
Twod~rdie • •
iHigh·ranking
emissary
:
.
on MeigS roads ffiJ ury at marketplace
tries to soften rule
~~:n~ill~ ~e:ar~~u:~
POMEROY - Two deer

·

, By PETER UEBERSAX
MADRID, Spain (UP!) ~ b)laln sent a higiH'anldng
emissary to Algeria Saturday
to try to &amp;Often President
Houari Boumedleme's op' position to a Spanish. Moroccan deal for ending 91
. years of Sp&amp;nlsh rule In the
western Sahara.
Under an agreement
• worked out in Madrid Ibis
week among Spain, Morocco
and Mauritania, Spain will
withdraw frmn the disputed
norlhwe.t African · territory
bY the end of February and
hand over to a provilional
adminlltrationlbared by the
three countries.
The deal, Madrid sources
llid, will pave the way for a
likely tabover ri the Spanilh
Sahara by Mcroccu In 'lhe
north and Mauritania In the

WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. William Roth, R·Del.,
IBld Saturday the sovernment is spending more than
$41,000 to study the travel
habits of wUd burroe and
H4,GOO to provide shelter for
electric golf carts.
Roth revealed theae and
other government projects In

condemn
govemment
M~W

(UP!) - Thirty
!IeVen prominent Soviet dissidents condemned the sovarnment today for denying
lityalclsl Andrei D. Sakharov
permiaslon to receive the
Nobel Peace Prize In Norway
next month.
The dlsaldents ssld in a
joint atatement that the
decision to refuse Sakharov
an elllt visa showed the
Krelnlln •s "fear before the
unwavering movement of
civil tlloul!ht and morallty" In

\he .natloa.

YOU'LL SAVE

·

south.
Spain was expected to
retain a meaiUI'e of control
over the territory's desert
treasure-the w·e stern
world'uecond plggeat known
phoaphate deposits which
annuaUy produce t280 million
worth of the basic ingredient
for fertilizer.
Algeria, which backs the
Marxilt-orlented Pollaario
Saharan independence movement, announced Friday It
will oppose any deal which It
baa not helped to shape.
Spain's minister of·
economic Piannbw. Joaquin
Gutierrez Cano, flew to
Alglens to hand Boumediene
a meNa8e from the government and np~ the
qNelllellt to hbn .
Algtrla u.ilts 1111 an internationally supervised

~M~nouncing

the four finalists
competing for his Federal
Frill of the Year award as
''the least vital govemnent
grant of 19'15."
RDth Slid there were "110
many grants deserving this
distinction that' It's not easy
to narrow the field."
RDth 'sloiD' flnaliJts were :

Dissidents Opening given

REGULAR SS91i

NOW ONLY

Evidence shows

referendum In which the
Sahara's 80,000 Inhabitants
should decide the futqre of
their land, as called for in
United Nations resolutions.
A Spanish government
source said there will be
"consultation" of the
population . Other Spanish
sources have said the vote
cciuld be easily swung in
Morocco's favor by allowing
45,000' Saharans living in
Morocco to take part.
Tli!s is the region where
more than 7Al0,000 Moroccan
clvlliarul staged a march last
week to stake King Hassan's
claim to the desert land.
When the Spanish army
threatened to use force,
Hauan called the marchers
beck and the two coWttries
began seriOUJ negotiation.

.G ovemment ~aste projects.
make finalists award list

Item ,For Christmas!

Save Up To

Thursday
8: 30 Till Noon

Tell City Many Others

'

CHAIRS

Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
Open 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM

Bassett, American Drew, Kemp,

You Can
'Lay Away Any

Sale I

New Store
II
" · • Houts

...

.

They described the Nobel
award to Sakharov as
recognition that ''the lllru81de
to turn the U.S.S.R. from a
closed totalitarian syatem
. into an open democratic
IIOCiety .. .terves the lntereata
cl peace and international
security."
Saltharov was refused per·
minion to go to Norway on
Wednelday.
Ofllctals of tile Soviet visa
agency based lhe relunl on
national security, saying
Sakharov acquired state
aecreta durlnl hll work on the
&amp;~viet hydrolen bomb.
'lbe atpera of the cooclemnatlon included
Aleundar Ginzburg, who

Congress for
intenention
OOLUMBUS (UP]) - The
(Jtlo Alloclatlon of Public
School Employes said Friday
the failure by the Ohio
General Assembly to
override the sovernor's veto
of a public employes
bargaining bill opens the door
for the federal government to
intervene.
Larry lleO'eace, executive
director of the OAPSE, said
there is a ,growing awareneu
amona public employees of
the failure of some elected
offlciala to recosnt&amp;e and deal
with their prol!lema.
"B)' failing to override the
veto, the leglalature has
opened the · door for the
federal govenunent to step In
to solve Ohio's labor
problems," said DeCresce.
"Bargaining bills are
In
currenUy pending
Congren to establish
procedarea which are not
apeclflcll17 designed to meet
Cftio 'a needl."

· nJNDS DISTRIBuTED
COLUMBUS State
Auditor
Tbomaa
E.
Fersuson'a office report the
November distribution of
local government money with
t4,488,039.46 going to Ohio's
to live yearaln 88 counlles •nd 311 eitiee 111d
t. labor CIIIIP In 1888 on villagee levying local Income
dw'sll of anti-Soviet ac• lazes. Meigr County's share
Wll f12,5IJO.
,~
uv~~yr

,..llllold

- A $41,055 grant by the
Bureau of Land Management
to ArizOna Slllte University to
study the travel haltta and
behavior of wild burros In the
Colorado River Valley.
- A ~.447 grant by the
Corps of Engineers to Hollis
Construction Co., Baxley,
Ga., to exp&amp;nd the goH club
how at Fort Stewart for
electric goH carts.
- A $30,000 grant by the
Corps of Engineers to an
Alexandria, Va., historian for
a study of the corps' activities
during the Civll War.
- An ..,,000 grant by the
Goddard ~ce Flight Center
to Herschenohn Motion
Picture Productions of
Wllhington, D.C., for a film
on astronomy.
Roth said every one "Is
responsive to a clear public
non-demand, is addressed 1o
a wholly non111'euing need,
and from aU appearances is
100 per cent nonessential."

Saturday according to a
report by the department of
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach.
At 8:15 a.m., on Route 689
in Columbia Townahlp, a car
driven by MWTay Aiken, 24,
Athens, struck a large buck
deer which ran onto the highway. Damages to the car
were heavy but Allten waa not
injured. The deer Wllll killed.
At 10:15 a.m., oo Route 7,
one half mlle west of Rollte
33, a deer ran into the front of
a car driven by Dewey
Horton, Jr., of Middleport,
kllllng the deer. Damages io
the Horlon vehicle were
minor. Horton was not in·
jured.
At 2 p.m. Saturday on
Massar Hlll, located on Route
7 near the Eastern High
School, a van driven by Mark
D. J{awtliofne, 17, Pm,.n.
burl. headed aouth, went off
the right of the road, croued
the highway to the leit and hit
an embankment turning over
and coming io rest on its
wheela. Damages were heaVy
and Hawthrone received
minor lnjwies. Hawthorne
told investigating officers
tllat his vehicle went out of
control when it was
sideswiped by a green truck
which was traveling south
and passed the Hawthorne

van.
At 3:30 p.m. the sheriff's
department received a caU
from Sue Smith, Route 1,
Vinton, that a hive of bees
had been stolen fnm the
Smith property. According to
the report, two pert10ns In a
jeep drove up to the hive and
put it In the vehicle. The
depariment Is investigating.

PROBE ACCIDENT
POMEROY
The
department of Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach investigated a·
single car accident Friday at
6:30 p.m. in which no personal injuries were reporte!l.
Marlon Woods, 20, Rt. I,
Rutland , was traveling north
on township roa\i 1179 when '
he lost control in loose gravel
and went over a culvert.

United Press lnterua\ional
Two bombs exploded in a
marketplace on the Iaraeli·
occupied West Bank of
Jordan Saturday, injuring
two persons. Pope Paul VI
condemned the Arab born·
ling in Jerusalem earlier this
week as "outrageous."
The Israeli military com·
IIUil1d said two improvised
ezplosive charges went off in
the Elbirah marketplace In
RamaUah, 10 mlles north of
Jerusalem. In addition to
Bllghtly wounding two per·
sons, the blasts damaged two.
cars.
High sd!ool students in the
West Bank have been demon·
stratlng all week In favor of
pro-Palestinian and anti·
Zionist reaolutlona puaed by
the .U.N. General Assembly
and against Israeli o_c·

killed six JewiBh teenagers
and wounded 42 others In
Jerusalem's Zion Square.
Two
Arab
guerrilla
organizations in Damascus
claimed responsibility for the
attack.
Pope Paul VI said the
Jerusalem bombing was "an
outrageous flouting of
civilized values."
The Pope, often accused In
Israel of pro-Arab bias, con·
demned tile attack In a

Bombing ups~ts
Pope Paul VI .

VATIC&lt;\f;i CITY CU~!l - lloutln&amp; of civi!lltocl vU.."
Pope l'aial Vl t.oct.y cOO:- The Pope, often aCcused lit
c:apetloll. Iarael has ~ the demned the Arab bombing Israel of a pr(}-Arab bias,
West bank since the June, which killed six Israeli condemned the Zion SqWil'ti
teenagers in Jerusalem bombing in a telegram sent in
1967, Middle East War.
On Thuraday night, a bomb Thursday as "an outrageous

Energy bill is
extended Friday
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford has signed a
30-day extension of domestic
oll price controls which had
been scheduled to ewire at
midnight .tonight, the White
House announced today.
The· ell tension would
postpone any inunedlate hilte
in oil and guollne prices
while Ford and lawmakers
work work on a long-term
energy energy bill~ In
Congress. That bill would
reduce petroleum prices over
the short term and aUow for
gradual booels later.
Before departing Friday
night for an economic
I!Uillmit meeting near Parts,
Ford also signed a bill
temporarlly Increasing the
national debt ceiling from
~77 billlon io $595 biiUon
through March 15, 1978.

Leo111rd Woodcock, president
!I the United Auto Workers
Union, Saturday atta~ked.
environmental blackmail by
lar&amp;e c:orporationa and caUed
for a closer relationship
between environmentalists
'and the labor movement.
Woodcock was guest
apelker beforeLthe annual
meeting of the !'Ianning and
CGnservation League.
"The sometimes delicate
relaUonship between working
people and environmen·
. talilta," he said, "is partlv' a
le1acy of years of environmental blackmail In
whiCh the major corporations
have lrled to hold workers, or

Carew.

" Holy Father expresses
deep regrets at deaths and
injuries caused by bomb
explosion in city of
Jerusalem," the telegram
read.
" His Holiness extends
sympathy .to the families
afflicted by this outrageous
Dooling of civilized values
and he manifests his sincere
compassion for those sufferin g grievous
con-

Campus tee
rates are

increased

attackS corporations
at least their jobs, hostage threatened to close down
against the application of several operations in
. environmental regulations." Tarrytown, N.Y. and put
He cited allesed threats by thousands out of work if the
Union Carbide Corp. in federal government
. Marietta, Ohio, to lay off 600 prevented dumping Into the
workers In response to en· Hudson River.
forcement of Environmental . "Legislation to protect
protect 1on Age n c y · workers from damages
regulations several years suffered In plant shuidowns
ago.
or layoffs resulting from
The unions there, he said, environmental regulation or
refuaed to join with the other reaaona," be said,
company in appealing lor "would be a P.factical, subdellys. And enforcement of stantial . step ,1 to'!l'ard con·
air pollution standlrda finaUy tro111 ft· and distributing the
~'6
brought clean air without lou burden of change."
of jobs.
The UAW president said
He also cited General also ~at environmentalists
Motors Corp. which he said should be concerned about
11\.

his hebalf by Cardinal Jean
Villot, the papal secretary of
state, to the apostolic
delegate in Jerusalem,
Archbishop WIIUam Aquin

With IIWe debBie or oo
dissent, Congress passed the
oil price control · extension
Friday, a move !hat gives
both lawmakers .and the
President time to go over
details of the compromi8e
long-term energy bill.
sequenc~s.
The energy bill, approved · "As he condemns this new
in a House-Senate cOnference senseless act of violence he
committee Wednesday night, renews his earnest plea
is being drawn up In exact against the use of all
language and is not eapected terrorism, always so sterile
to be ready for House and and certainly destructive of
Senate consideration until society."
early December.
The price control extenaion
~
maintains unW Dec. 15 the
price ceiling of ~.25 a barrel
on soo()aUed "old oil,"-based
on the 1972 production rateand the freedom from controls of "new oil" - that
JI'O(llced a.bove the 1972 level
and selling for around $12 a
bllu-el.

Auto workers' leader
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -

telegram sent by Cardinal
Jean Villot, the papal
secretary of state, to Arch' bishop William Aquin
Carew, the Canadian-born
apostolic delegate In
Jerusalem.
"As hli condemns Ibis new
senseless act of violence he
renews his earnest plea
against the use of all
terrorlsn, always so sterile
and certainly destructive of
tiOCiety ,"the Pope's telegram
said.

the poUution in!iide plants and
factories, •
"The allowable con·
centratlon
of carbon
monoxide In the plant is 50
parts per miillon eight hours
a day, every day. While
outdoors, tile concentration Is
limited to only nine parts per
million for only one day a
year.
"To be credible the envirorunental movement must
also plsh hard to prevent the
coats of pollution control fr9m
failing on the victima and
avoid the implied view that
factory workers are partners
In pollution with the corsaid.
porations,". Woodcock
ttl
\

ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) Cftio University's board of
trustees Saturday approved a
15 per cent Increase in main
campus fees, effective with
the winter quarter. ·
The action loUowed similar
increases at seven other state
universities within the past
year.
or the $151ncreaae, $10 was
added to Instructional fees the first such increase in
three and on~alf years. The
remlaning $5 was to be added
to the school's general fee the first Increase in seven
years.
Ohio University's instruction fee will now be $220
and the general fee $55. No
Increase In room and board
charges was considered ..
School spokesmen said the
fee increase was made necessary by the accumulative
effects of civll service wage
increases,
a
$404,000
r'eduction in state subsidies
resulting from Gov. James A.
Rhodes' 2 per cent cut In
allocations to all state
agencies and soaring utility

costs.

~

oil, no matter how expensive
it is, is because it doesn't
require an environmental
impact study," said Peter
McDonald of W'mdow RDck,
Ariz, the chairman of the
Navajo Nation. He told
RockefeUer of the frustrating
government red tape the &gt;
Indians bave to cope with to ,·.•
develop oil reserves on their
reservations.
"If the American govern- ,,
ment responded to Pearl ····
Harbor the way we've :::;,
responded to this energy
crisis, we might all be
speaking Japanese today,'' ...
McDonald said.
'lbe concern for the en· "'·
virorunent is also on the mind ·'
of L.B. Henry, chairman of a
rural Louisiana parish, who
said "In our area the government says we don't care If. •..
you're starving to death , just ·
think of the fine air you're "
ixeathlng."
Sylvester Tinker, head of
the Osage Indian nation in
Oklahoma says he's trying to "
get the government to
)JI'ovide better health ser- ,.
vices for his people and all
the government wants to do is
give him better water.
"We don't need any water ,., .,
because we don't have any
canoes," Tinker said. "I get
amused at the White Man's
way of thinking."
Then
he
said
to • '
RockefeUer- ''you've got so .,.
many people working (In
government) tbat you can 'I
implement a program."

Servicemen

,ro •

convicted

..

of murder ,._
~

FRANKFURT, West
Germany (UP!) - A West
German criminal court has
convicted two American
servicemen of the murder of
a West German laborer and a
third GI of robbery and
•
sentenced them to prison
terms ranging from eight to
•
13 years, a u.s..·' rmy ~,
spokesman said today.
-...~
The court found the three ; •
guUty Friday In the robbery- •
murder of Martin Anders,
who worked at an American
motorpool In Frankfurt, last ••
Jan. 24.
The court handed a !~year
jaU term to I'fc. George
Dallas, 24, of Charleston,
S.C., and a 12-year term to
Spec. 4 Dennis Thomas, 22, of
,.
Trenton, Mich. on cbarges of
murder and robbery.
I'fc. Donald Singleton, 27.
of Chester, Pa.,' was sen· "'
tenced to eight years on
charges of robbery.
,
The presiding judge said ... .'.
that Anders was known to ·
many, Including the three •
•
defendants, who worked as
Army bus drivers, as a black
market operator In American
cigarettes and alcohol.
• West German press reports
said Anders liked to flash
.,
large sums of money lor all to ,,.:
see. At the trial the three men ;· .
admitted that Anders's
:;
.,.:,
money was the motive for the
.:-,
robbery.
·
•''
.•.
M

-·

APPOINTED
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. .....
James A. Rhodes has appointed former deputy and
••
assistant state Auditor Rex
E. Haecker of Circleville as a
.
special assistant lor fiscal "•
affairs In the governor's .. "
office.
H~ecker will assist various
departments with specific
"•
fiscal problems and special
'.
auditing of expenditures, a
spokesman fo~ the governor
said.
Haecker was director of the
..
bureau of inspection and
1•
supervisor of public offices in
,.
the state auditor's office and
supervisor of Ohio , state
examiners fol\ 24 years. ,.

..

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It-TheSundayTtmea.Sentinei,SundaY.Nov. 16.1975

.1!.- The SWlday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

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

Damage miner
in accidt!nt

AIRMAN TAYLOR
MIDDLEPORT
Airman Dale E. Taylor,
son of Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence E. Taylor of Rt. I,
Middleport. has completed
Air Force basle training at
Lackland AFB, Tex. The
airman Is remaining at
Lackland for speclali•ed
training In the security
pollee field. He Is a 1~75
graduate of Rootstown
Hlgh School.

•

II .

PT. PLEASANt - Minor
damage resulted when a
driver le ll ~sleep at the wheel
of his car and went over an
emba nkment Saturday on Rl.
33 near New Haven at 3 a.m.,
according to• deputy Detner
Roush III of the Mason
County Sheriff's Department.
'Driver o! the vehicle has
been identified as Robert Ray
Ohlinger of Rt. 1, Ml. Alto. An
es tim ated $20 wor th of
damage oc'c urred to the
vehicle.
According to Roush's
report, Ohlinger apparently ·
fell asleep while driving, then
went across the center line
and .over an embankment on
the left side or the road.

NOW YOU KNOW
The bongo, a rare horned
African animal, is a native of
the Congo.

LUMBfi."{.BUILDING
MAnRIALS a TER

TUB
CAULK

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-,

PT. PLEASANT - Dessle
Inez Burdette. 78, 1014 Ma in
Street, Point Pleasant, died
at Fairfax. va .. after a long
illness.
·
She was born on April 22.
1897 at Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Parker.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Thomas
Stuart Burdette, who died In

,_
14

19io. .SUrvivors Include 1wo

E

f

WINNERs OF A POSTER CONTESf held at the Pomerox Elementary Slhool by th~
Meigs Jaycees to promote the Pomeroy mini-park which the Jaycees are establishing were
announced Friday at an assembly. All of the posters made will be displayed in Pomeroy
business houses. Winners received latgereplicas of antique coins. Winners pictured include
front row,! tor, Darin Roach, second grade; Julie Sisson, second grade ; Robin Ohlinger,
third grade; back row,l tor, Mike Thomas, third grade; BUI Yooog, Jaycee park project
coordinator holding the winning poster of Anna Baxter, ftfth grader who was absent, and
Terri Roush , sixth grader.

Abortion main issue

Conference' of Catholic amendments to overturn tbe
Bishops is expected to focus Supreme Court's 1973
debate on a proposed decision greatly liberalizing
'"Pastoral Plan for Pro-Life . access to abortions.
At the time, it was
Activities."
suggested
that one reason for
The bishops were dealt a
the
subcommittee's
failure to
severe blow In midendorse
any
of
the
proposed
September when a Senate
amendments
before
it was
Judiciary subcommittee
headed by Sen. Birch Bliyh, the failure of pro-life groups,
!).Ind.; rejected a number of particularly the bishops, to
proposed constitutional get .behind a specific
proposal.
The "Pastoral Plan for
'
.
ProWe Activities," which
the bishops wiD debate, is the
I
work of a conunlttee headed
by Cardinal Terence Cooke of
New York.
The plan, which has not yet
f+&gt;. 2400
By LEONARD CURRY
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton been made public, is said to
Qunplete
WASIII.NGTON (UP!) - Shapp in 1970.
be a wlde;anging proposal
As Shown
The Watergate special He said Gulf also paid a aimed at every segment of
prosecutor's office asked the "retainer" of $25,1100 lo then- society and which wiD seek to
Reg. $79.95
Justice Department In 1973 to Vice President Hubert Hum· establish a constitutional
Investigate alleged phrey before he was basis for laws to guarantee
THIS WEEK
widespread illegal con· nominated for president in the unborn the human and·
trlbutions ' to congressional 1968 and $50,1100 to the late civil rights assured all other
ONLY
candidates, federal court Lyndon B. Johnson shortly persons.
..
recorda show,
after he was elected vice
It will include establish·
No charges have been president in 1960, Senate ment of an ongoing "public
brought to date and the Republican Leader Hugh information effort" as well as
statute of limitations has. Scott of Pennsylvania activlty in the courts and
passed for any illegal received $5,1100 each spring grassroots activity In ,each
financial activities for and fall for "many years," he congressional district.
elections in 1972 or earlier. said.
It · also will call for inThomas Wright, a Pills· Not all of the contributions creased ecumenical eforts
AN EASY WAY TO HAVE
bw-gh lawyer who works on were iUegal corporate fWlds, ' with other churches across a
BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM WALLS.
~:~f;or Gulf Oil Corp., but Wright said the legal broad range of medical
briefly on the money was so mixed with Issues, including the question
in a sworn statement Ulegal funds that it was of euthanasia as well as
Face-lift
~~~~~~-'the U.S. District Court difficult to determine the abortion.
F1
scurce of specific ~ifts.
your bath
with smooth
wnlllnsald the matter was ·-wright's statement was investigated "hundreds of
aeamlese
me~1tioned to him in 1973 by taken for a Securities and
cases" • of corporations
panels.
KISsam, another Pitts- Exchange Commission suit allegedly making illegal
Wipe ~le~n
attorney retained by . against Wild in connection campaign contributions · to
with damp
and former Gulf vice with alleged mishandling of federal candidates, Wright
cloth.
WUd ~r.
corporate funds used In said. "Things were pretty
what Wright federal elections. Federal crowded down at the·
$400,1100 a year Gulf law prohibits corporate Watergate Special
Put en end to brahn tit. and dirty grout lin••· The
pa)•m!~nls
to politicians were contributions to presidenUal Prosecution Force."
molttu.-..proof ptntll un be lnatalled rlgkt over your old
for then-Rep. Gerald R. and congressional can·
wtllt . . . .even over old tlle ... quickly fl"'d Hally.
Because the small siaff was
and varying amounts 1lidates.
assembled primarily to in·
Gold Lace White
t5
three current Democratic Wright made similar state- vestigate White House in·
lllld
candidates- ments to a federal grand jlii'y volvement-la the Watergate
NV-VISTA Avacado
$2,000 for Sen. Uoyd Bentsen empaneled by the special burglary of June,l972, and Its
matters
_.:::::::::::::::::~:.. Sen.
of Texas in 1970, $10,000 for prosecutor for a criminal aftermath,
Henry M. Jackson of investigation. involving Gulf, referring to Congress were
Washington in 1972 and· an the sworn statement showed. turned over to JUBUce.
undetermined amount for The prosecutor's office
"They were asking about
congressional
elections 'and
ONLY
.
..
were
giving
any In·
·-- -,, - - - - formation in thai regard to
95
the Justice Department,"
Wright said.
"You mean the Special
Prosecution
Force was giving
SHOOTS A
the Information to other parts
STAPLE WHERE·
of the Justice Department? l!i
EVER YOU'D
that what your answer
mea1111?" asked SEC attorney
DRIVE A NAILl !.~:""'~""""'
Robert
Ryan.
Preferred bv pro• tnd
1,..11
"That
is
correct,"
do-II·YO\Ir .. lferi.
~ ,f
Powerful compttl·
I:?•
responded Wright. "That is
don sprint dri,...1
1 ~ t .t.U steel conttntdlon
what my notes indicate. I
hlevy t•vgt sleplu I' f r • HIJh ctrlttn, htrdtntd ••••I
don't recall any more than
Into h~rdett woods,
worldn1 ptrft . •
plywood, co~potl• ·
• Doultit Ievert" ' ' " of optrl•
what is here in my notes."

ROOF
CEMENT
99

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.24"

VANITY Probe asked, hut .
CABINET nothing happened

~

u' · '6

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all

HEAVY DUTY STAPLE $10
GUN TACKER

don hotrd, plutlcs
, • , even toft mtlth.

-------,~

THE SPIRIT OF '76
COMES ALIVE IN A
IOWMET BICENTENNIAL
DOOR HOOD.

tlon with ••'l!l'llftlll'l"'
' htnd pr..turt.

TRUCKLOAD SALI

· FOIL FACED INSULATION
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NOV. 21st &amp; 22nd

-

CAROLI'
N
A
LBR. &amp;SUPPLY to.
312 6TH ST.

.
PT. PWSANT, W. VA.

PH.: 675-1160

..

&amp;oreHn.:Moa.·Fru:IN:II

Area Deaths

Dessie Burdette

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The nation 's Roman Catholic
bishops gather here for their
annual fall meeting this week
6 OZ:
with the Issue of abortion on
center stage.
ONLY
With a trimmed down
format aimed at simplifying
procedures, including the use
GAL •1.
of a parliamentarian to aid
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ president Archbishop Joseph
L. Bernardin, the National

$119

Deputy for Appalachian ·agency wan~ed

'

.

Show oH the Red, White and Blue in '76.
quick Installation.
0 Protects your door 1rom rain, sleet. snow. 0 Maintenance-free aluminum construction . 0 Bright, bold
weather-resistant, baked enamel colors . 0 Complete
with 6 additional white slats. Color easily changed to
all white with co lor trim . 0 Fits standard 36'' door.
Other sizes available.

.tlJf!J'

Howmet
•
.
WeatherStopper price o1 only
W8111rSIOPIJ8fl

'17.95 Installed

.

"'""·w•

SQUAD CALLED
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad was·called to 161 Pearl
St., at 10:59 p.m. Friday for
Henry Milliron who was IU.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

,,

GALLIPOLIS- Ruth Ann
Griffith, 34, Rt. 2, Crown City
(Teens Run Rd .) died
unexpectedly around 9: IS
p.m . Friday.
Spe was born Aug . 26, 1941,
In Clay Twp., daughter of
Robert HaZlett and the late
Goldie Saunders Hazlett .
She Is survived by her
husband, William ,· Griffith,
along with three children:
Robert Eugene, William··
Tl mothy and Karla Ann
Griffith, all at home .
She Is also survived by one
brother, Rex EUgene Hazlett,
u. s. Navy. Her grand·
mother, Mrs. Pearl Hazlett,
Rt. 2, Crown City, also sur·
vives. An aunt and uncle, Mr .
and Mrs. Bill Saunders,
Crown City, survive.
She spent most of her life In
Gollia County. She attended
Edna Chapel Chur~h In her

'

earlier years.

Funeral services will be
held 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
Home wlht Rev. Allred
Holley ·officiating.
Burial will he In Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens .
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Monday
from 2·4 and 7·9 p.m.

I

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:Seals colorful in new look
'

MARlETTA :.... &lt;.brlstmas
Seals - an annual tradition in
America's fight against lung
, disease for almost seven
decades - have a youth!)~)
; "new look" this year. For the
: first time, they have been
; designed by school children
throughout the United States.
' The
uninhibited
· Imaginations of 54 youngsters
from 6 to 12, each
' representing a slate or
· territory, have contributed a

BY FLOYD H. NORRIS
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(UP!) - The Democratic
Party has been "reformed"
largely by backers of George
McGovern . Ironically,
Alabama Gov. George
Wallace thinks those reforms
are just what he needed to
mount a serious bid for the
party's presidential
nomination.
"The big thing this time is
that you've got the propor·
tiona! representation,"
Wallace's campaign
manager, Charles S. Snider,
said ·following Wallace 's
formal announcement that he
would seek the nomination.
"II you get 15 per cent of
the vote you're going to get
delegates. 'I'I1at's got to help
us," he said.
Most party professionals
think Wallace may cause
trouble b·ut he has no chance
to win the nomination. But
Wallace 's campajgn
strategists insist the end of

"winner-take-all" primaries
gives him a better chance
than Is generally realized,
· They paint a scenario of
Wallace picking up delegates
everywhere and entering the
co~ventlon
with more
delegates than any other
contender. They say the
party leaders will then
conclude that without
Wallace the party wiD surely
lose in November, and be gels
the nomination, or at least
plays a major role.
Snider points to California
as a state where "there's no
doubt in my mind that we'll
get more than 15 per cent"
and thereby qualify for
· delegates. In 1972, McGovern
eked out a narrow win but
took all the delegates under
the old rules.
II Wallace is to have a
chance of grabbing the
nominaUon, he must be able
to win delegates in non·
primary stales, where porty
officials and Democratic
officeholders normally
dominate caucuses.In 19'j2 he
won few delegates through
caucuses; reflecting his
almost total lack of support
among party officials outside
the Deep South.

"

Reedsville honor
roll is announced
REEDSVILL E - Th e
honor roll of the Eas~rn
Junior and Senior High
Schools for !he first nine week
grading period has been
announced by Chester
Gooding, high school principal.
Grading at the school has
been switched to every nine
weeks from lhe traditional
six weeks period and
recently, the district's board
of education voted to
discontinue final
examinations on a trial basis.
Making a grade of 85 or
more in all their subjects to
be listed on the roll were :
· SEVENTH GRADE Kathy Pooler, April Parker,
Marcy Sexson, Brenda
Rucker, Greg Wigal, Tanunl
Starcher, M~lanie Root,
Traci Sayre, Jim Bahr,
Richard Bearhs.
ElGHTH GRADE- Todd
Bissell, Becky Edwards, Tim
Enevoldsen , Teresa Spencer.
FRESHMAN - Karen
Probert, Jodi Proto, Susan
Hannwn, Clndy Pitzer, Kay
Balderson , Lawrence Pooler,
Ronnie McGrath , Randy
Keller; Valeria LaBonte, ·
Laurl Matthews, Tana
Johnson, Jeff Goebel. '
SOPHOMORE - Cheryl
Griffin, David Brown ,
Dorothy Runyon , Diana
Massar, Sonia Beaver, Ken .
·Enevoldsen , Sheila
·Buchanan , Cindy Scyoc, Joe
Kuhn, Becky Windon , Mary
Mora.
JUNIOR
Carolyn
Harper, Jennifer Gainer,
Marlin Evans, Suzy Goebel,

Larry Longenette, Juli
Whitehead , Jayne Smith,
Bonnie Wood, Barbara
Henderson , Belinda Jackson,
Brenda Lanham, Rachel
Hunter , Teresa Edwards,
Robin Elkins, Paula Hawk,
Susan Henderson, Janet
Ambrose, Te~esa Carr,
Teresa Buckley, Kevin
Barto n, Dave Carnahan,
Belinda Deeter, &lt;.1ndy Dill,
Diana Benedum, Julia
Carpenter, Patricia Boston.
SENIOR - Tim Kuhn,
l'rissy Morlan, Diana Pullins,
Debbie . Sanders, George
Pickens, Edna Boggs, Betsy
Amsbary, Jeff Holter, Tom
Avis, Diana Root, Barbara
Andrews, Nancy Ridenour,
Kathy Newell, Debbie
Windon, Pam Millhone,
Cathy Maxey, Patricia
Windon, Jan Wilson, Melinda
Evans, Denise Dean, -Tammy
Bahr.

million homes and businesses
as part of !he 1975 appeal for
fWJds. Every household in the
eight counties served by the
South East Ohio Lung
Association will receive seals
and have the opportWJity to
contribute toward the support
of the many activities carried
out during the year, including
programs in Professional
Education, School an d
Community Health
Education with special
emphasis on smoking and
l ~:;~~::::~:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
I
~ health, and programs aimed
at securing the best care and
!·!· treatment possible for victims of IWJg diseases.
Meigs
County
is
,
By Cbet TaDDebill
' · The late Andy Harris of Racine loved to let his magnHicenl represented on the SEOLA
:'lma&amp;lnation - t.'OIIpled with estraordinary learning - play board of directors by Mrs.
_with place ·and people rwnes. No name was too droll. Joe Charles Hayes, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Glenn Dill ,
•&amp;nlth?
Sjiracuse
.
~. "Well, now, where did Joe's grandfather Smith live? Oh,
lbat one! Well, be came down lbrough" ... (such and sqch and
.uch alcinllllne of Smilill). And Joe Smith, hoping he was some
tlnd II apeclal Smith, was certain of It after talldng to Andy.
'~y bad the proof, even if not documented.
Andy II not with WI any more. Many t)J!Ies I wish he had
~ uked about our more cvlorful place ·names In Meigs and
;PIIlil .CounUes.
c How, for ewnple, did there ever beCilllle a Lickskillet? ,
nich WU IIOIIleWbere- I think - in the back COWl try twixt
illldoftfnm the Reedtlvllle and Long Bot!Gm area.
, Beanrallow Ridge isn't all that bard to figure out: A
.couple II bean got to wallerlnj! arOWld on It, of course; an
~rt planeer aaw them and Immediately named the place
Jlearwallow Ridge.
• In Glllil County there is Mud.!oc and Shoestring Ridge
'wblch mUll have flllliBlling histories, perhaps forever- to
remain lllllold.
. ~ . Perbape dear readers, there Ia one of you who knows
wherd the naming of Mudaoc, Uckskillet, Shoestring,
Bearwallow Ridge? If ao, do not hesitate to share your in·
{ormation with thll column be II from legend, folklore, or
wrillen hlltory.

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
services for Mrs. ,Ethel 0.
Pritt, 87. of Point Pleasant,
who died Thursday In
Charleston General Hospital
will be conducted Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home.
Rev. Warren Faulknler will
officiate and burial will
follow In the Leon Cemetery .
Friends may call this evening
from 6 to 9 p.m.
Survivors Include two
doughters, Mrs. Leona
Redman and Mrs, Thelma
Casto, of South Charleston ;
and one grandson , James

Casto, of i'fewport News. Va;
GALLI POLIS - Agnes
Marie Walker, 76, a resident
of 2002 Eastern Ave., died at
10:05 ·a.m. Friday In Holzer
Med l~al Center where she
had been a medical patient
the past two weeks. She had
been In falling health the past
three years .
She was born Nov. 24, i89B,
In Henderson, W. va:,
daughter of the late Charles
F. and Sallie V. Casey Glb·
son.
She married Hugh Walker
of Gallipolis on March 4, 191Q.
He survives, along with two
daughters, Hilda VIrginia
Oiler. Gallipolis and Eleanor
G. Furgerson, Charlestop , , ,~.
Va . She was a member of the
Vaught Memorial Church,
1-jenderson. One brother.,
Robert Gibson, Bell , W. V"and one sister, Glenn,
Horton , Gallipolis, sur'·
ylve. She resided
In
&lt;;alllpolls ·all her married
life. ,
Funeral services will btl
held 2 p.m. Sundar, at Miller's
Home for Funera s with Rev;
Everett Delaney and Rev,
Gary Jones otfl~latlng .
"
Burial will follow In Ohid
Valley Memory Gardens. •

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u

in force Monday '
COLUMBUS - Director
t1ifford E. Reich of the Obi~
Department of Llquo(.
Control said Saturday the
previously-announced boltlt
price adjustment, as well as
the quarterly vendors'
changes, wiU go into effecl,l
November 17..
·~
Due
to
roundlnA"
procedures, the department'~!'\
adjustment will effect nol
increase in as many as 44percent of the bottles sol&lt;J.i:
The adjustment, which
compensates for increase61
costs In warehoualng anlll
trucking, will result In i/l
maX!mwn flve-~:ent lncreasi!J
per fifth . The quarterlyi
vendors' changes lncludel
proof, ·bottle size and price:
Increases and decreases. • t
~

15 alBIC FEET ·

FROST CLEAR MODEL~SI
REFRIGERATOR •

TO THE VOnRS OF RACINE
VILLAGE FOR THEIR VOTE
ON NOVEMBER 4th.

SEEAU.lH£
'I

' .

POE SIMPSON
RACINE COUNCIL

PD. POL. ADV.

Point' Pleasant

'

IIISbrf APPLIAMCES

$33goo·
.

CONTRACT ·SALESLEGAL
COPY NO. 71-666
COLUMBUS, OHIO,
OCTOBER 11 , 1975

POMEROY
Mary in Jackson , Ohio , and one at
00 o'clock P .M . , Oh i o
Skinner, Personal Advocacy 7:
Standard Ti me December 16.
Coordinator , and Anna 197S in the At h en s Mun ic ipal
Building , Easl Washingto n
Spires, Secretary, attended Str
eet, in Athens. Ohio . for th e
training session at Nisongcr purpose of hearing statements
th e proposed Rural High .
Center Ohio Stale University . on
way Publ ic Tran spor t- ation
Nlsonger Center is the Demonstrat iO"n Pr og ra m in
lhen !. , Ga lt ia , Hock i ng ,
department of Continuing AJackson
, Meigs , Perry and
Education at Ohio State. This Vinton Coun I ies.
The propos ed three year
large training facility is for program
i s designec;j to
Franklin County Mentally combine transpo r tatio n
of
seven
Retarded and Develop- programs
Southeastern Ohio counties
mentally Disabled children in to one compret1 er)Sive trans·
portation
system .
This
and adults.
program wilt enab l e the
Mary and Anna attended Appa la chian Ohio Regional
Associat ion !AORTAl
morning classes on Wed- Transit
to expanc;j its services in to
nesday Wider the direction of M eigs , Jac~son . Vinton and
llia Coun ties where public
Marie Moore, New York City, Ga
tran sit service Is non ·ex1stent.
who is Director of National
The project w il l offer
comp l ete
public
traos ·
Uniled Cerebral Palsy. The portatlon
service to the region
class was on " Human inc lu ding but ·not l imited to :
fixed rural ro utes , d emand ·
Sexuality". for the mentally respons
ive service , contra c t
retarded and cerebra l services , bus lea~es , spec ial
even t service and small group
palsied.
chart ere;.
The afternoon session was
t.H1fSportation of the labor
•orce will be one of the
advocates and their roles in primary
! 'bfecli\leS of the
meeting the needs of the e~d AORTA service as
as transportat ion to small
mentally retarded, cerebral well
urban areas for shopping ,
palsied and epileptics. This medical , an d social tunct lons ;
tran sit sendee to un i vers iti es
was conducted by Dr . 11nd
technical
educlltion
William Hall, Director of facilities ; and transportation
to
hosp i tals . ou t ~ pa t ient
Nisonger Center.
clinics , and health care
Thursday was an all day fa ci lities .
All citizens of the affected
training program by Dr. .s even
counties Will have ac ·
Donald . Weinstein , Cljnical cess 10 !he program with
being placed on the
Psychologist, Department of emphasis
Inter -coun ty and intra .county
Pediatrics and Psychiatry, communities, the poor, the
and th e handicapped .
Cleveland Metropolitan elderly,
Maps , exhibits , an environ General Hospital.
men!JI assessment , and oth er

Dtrector , Musking um Drive.
Marietta , Oh io . The fin al date
for submission of stat ement
wi ll be December 26 , 1975.
Richard D . Jackson ,
P . E . Director

Nov . 16, Dec. 7

charter will be draped in
memory of One Osborne.
Members are asked to wear
while.

Published every -- SI,Jnda'tf
by
The
Oh i o
Va ll ey
Pu blish in g Co .
GALL I P OL IS
DAILY TRIBUNE
82 5 T hi r d A ve .• Gallipolis,
Oh io 4563\.
Published ev ery weekttav
even in g e)(cep t Saturday .
Second Class Postage Pa1d
at Ga l lipol is, Oh io 45631.
THE DAILY S ENriNEL
Ill Court St .. Pomeroy , 0 .
45169 . Pub lis hed every week .
day ev ening e &gt;~ c ept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing matter at Pomero-y,
Oh io Post Office .
' By carrier daily and
Sunday 75c per week . Motor

ro ut e $3 .25 ~e~, ront h .
• SUBSCR IP TION RATES
The
GalliPQ·IiS
Dally
Tribune in Oh io and West !'
V irg in ia one year S22 .00 ; six
months Sl l SO ; three mont hs '
S7 .00 . Elsewhere S26 .00 per
year ; six months $.13 .50 ;
three months S7 .SO ; motor
route $3. 25 monthly .
~
Th e Da ily Se nt ine l. one
year 522 .00 ; Si )( mo nth s
S11 50 ; three months $7.00 .
Elsewhere
526 .00 ;
six
months S\ 3.50 ; three months
$7 .50 .
The Un i ted Press ln .
ternat ional I s exclusive ly
ent i tled to th.e use fat'
publicat ion of all news
di spat ches credited to the
new sp11per and also the lo c al
ne ws published here in .

o1lma
Christmas
GflREPAID
next year?

·,

I '

~6

Georlle had a heavy, imfrlanl Job here as
f~*intendenl ll( the Meigs
~ Dialrlct. H1a work In
Mttn011 County Is even ·
&amp;ore demanding upon his

. .nil.

i:dllfltl.thoae
talenta are
A brlillant student
~~~~~Ohio State. (major

t

Math)) ltlrgravea aurWYtd the lnfamOUI German
hnur offeJIIIve at l'brlstltH (Bulof!ne).

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MEIGS AND GALUA HAVE NO special claim on unusual
place lllllll!ll. Anyone who travels outaide familiar environs
Cllllll repe8&amp;edly upon engaging names.
. Lilt week the lddr• of person in a news report was given
• Looneyv!Ue, W. Va. Well, now that name is enough to in·
IJ)Ire the tellln&amp; II a packet of West Vlrginla stories. Foregoing
GEO. HARGRAVES
tjlat,lllffice It to be knoWn that there is a LooneyvWe, W. Va.,
~to our 1t72 Atlu, populaUon 30, located roughly 8 to'
Hargraves is proud of his new
~0 mllea 10ut!HoutbeNt of Spencer, ROane County.
vocational school. His friends
· George Hargraves Jr,, who
here wish him nothing but the
II was after coming out o!
fathered the Meills L«al
best.
School Dialrlct from Ita In· that inferno of screaming
c,pUon In llle6 through last airborne steel alive, George
.Chool tenn, went to Jef· once told me, thaI he
fei'IOII County to head up the determined to do something
INQUIRY SLATED
Jeffei'IOII County Vocational worthwhile with his life. Then
barely 19 years old, be made
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
School.
, George, ., do moet strong up his mind to return to Coast Guard Marine board
JDI!II, came to have friends college, so as to prepare will begin an inquiry Tuesday
into 1be sinking of the Ed11!111 enerniel here in the hlm.!elf to teach.
"1
had
the
Idea
l
owed
mWld
Fitzgerald freighter on
cllalrlct I think l1e served with
somebody
something
for
Lake
Superior, the Coast
cijaUncUon. H1a friends wUI be
Guard said Friday.
interested to know the Jef· being alive," George said.
We
knew
George
in
Meigs
The Coast Guard said
fenon County Vocational
COWlty
as
articulate
(too
earlier
that the Inquiry would
School serving 11 high
much
so
for
some,
who
react
be
held
Monday but spokes·
achoola, lncludlni
with
distrust
),
unusually
man
Fred
Doster said It was
Steubenville City High
.lfhool, wu dedicated Nov , 9 capable, always with his cool, pushed back because Monday
doing his best Wider a lot of afternoon memorial services
~idst proper pomp and
lance with Dr, Byrl pressure (frequently) for the would be held In Toledo for
' the 29 crew members missing
maker, Slate Director schools In his charge.
We
are
certain
.
George
and believed dead&gt;
Ilona! Education the
pal apeaker.
t Jeffenon JVS has a faculty
ll tuchlng In It progr81Jl8,
amely
Agricultural
echanica, Auto Body,
lectrlcal Trades, . Car·
lry, Buslneaa Data Ac·
nUng, Child Care,
mmerclal Art, Com·
t!unlcaUona Electronics,
to.metoiOCY, Draftinll, Food
"For That Personal
rvlce, Machine Trades,
&amp; Professional Touch"
flee Dupllca lion and

IE

COMPARE
AND YOU WILL
REASOIS YOU

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING

Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

13

Gibson

the day after

li

Agnes Walker

Price changes

riot of color in the form of
merry Santas, smiling
snowmen, airy angels,
caroling children, and gaily
decorated Yule trees. Ohio's
seal was from a painting done
by · Shari Halker of Uma
when she was in the 6th
grade.
The South East Ohio Lung
Association said Saturday the
child-created Christmas
Seals are. being received
nationwide in more than 60

relations.
Minimwn qualifications for
the position are a college
degree in a business related
field or equivalent experience
and kn owledge of the accrual
basis of accoWJting.
The position of Deputy
Director has a starting salary
range of $8,1100 - $10,000 per
annum, dependent upon
qualifications. Interested
persons should send a per·
sonal reswne to David F.

Pursuant to S ~ c tion 14 7 of
th e Fed eral Ai d Highway Ac t
of 1973 as amended by Se ction
· 103 of the Federa l A id Hig'
way Ame nd ments ot 1974, th e
Director of Transportation o f
Ohio w ill hold two publi c
hearings , one at 2:00 o ' c lock
P .M .. Ohio Sfandard Tim e,
December 16 , 1975 , in th e
Jackso n
Pub l ic Libra r y,
Broadway a nd South Str eets

Attend
training
•
sesswn

OtnO SEAL DESIGN -Ohio is represented by tbe above seal design on the sheets of
' 1975 O!rlltmaa Seals being mailed into over 60 million homes and bUBinesses during the
current Chrlatmas Seal Campaign. The Ohio design is from a painting done by ~ari Halker,
_ Uma, Ohio, when she was a sixth grade student.

Ethel Pritt

MY SINCERE THANKS

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I

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Mobile Home bouaht.
.

sons. John Milton Burdette,
Point Pleasant. and Thomas
Stuart Burdette. St. Peters·
AIRMAN JONES
burg. Fla .; one daughter,
CROWN CITY- Airman ·Mrs . Nina Sarah ' Edls,
Fairfax. Va., grandchi ldren,
Richard C. Jones, son of and
one great grandchild.
Mrs. Helen C. Jones of Rl.
She was a member of the
2, Crown City has com- Main Street Baptist Church of
pleted Air Force basic Point Pleasant .
Funeral services will be
training at Lackland AFB, Monday
at 1 p.m. at ihe Main
Tex. The airman Is Street Baptist Church. The
remaining at Lackland for Rev. John Davis will officiate
burial will follow In lhe
specialized training In the aM
Lone Oak Cemetery .
· security pollee field. A1975
Ca lling hours will be
graduate of Hannan Trace Sunday 2 to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9
. at the Stevens Funeral
High School, his father is p.m
Home. The body will be taken ·
Charles
E.
Jones, to the church one hour prior
to the services.
Smithers, W. Va.

:I

ATHENS - The Ap.
pai ac hian Ohio Regional
Transit .Association (AOHTA ), is now accepting ap.
plications for the position of
Deputy Director.
The Dep uty Director
assists I he Executive
Direclor in the admi nistrative affairs of
AORTA. This includes, but is
not limited to: •upervising
employees and operations;
maintenance of fi nancial
records ; main tenanc e of
records (ridership, far es,
maintenanc~,
e t c.);
negotia ting contracts,
charters, and leases; general
promotion and comm WJity

.I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Eli While ,
Minersville; Raymond
Vaughan, Executive Hartl ey, Raci ne ; Lucille
Director, AORTA, Rt. 3 Box Wi se, Rutland; Bertha
102, Athens, Ohio 4&gt;701, Hobste tler, Pomeroy; Henry
before November 24, 1975. All Milliron, Middleport.
qualified appli ca nts will
DISCHARGED - Amanda
receive a personal interview. Hawk , William Morris,
AORTA is an equal op· Harrison Robinson, Ann
portunity employer.
Marchese, Hubert Sl&lt;wart,
Dorothy Rea, Eli zabe th
Lewis, Richarri Ford, Linda
TO MEET TUESDAY
CHESTE R - Chester Huffman.
Council 323, Daughters of ·
America, will m~et at 7:30
LICENSE ISSUED '
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. The
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued to the
p e rtinen t
i nfor mation
followin
g Satw-day: Robert
dev e loped by the Trans
portation Department will be Stanton
Shaffer ,
27,
made -avai lab le to the publi c
for v i ewing at the hearing and Harrisonville, and Theresa
at the Transportation Depart . Ann Eastman, 24, Pomeroy:
ment ' s Dis t rit:l 10 Office ,
Muskingum
DriH .
In William Ju nior Dye, 32,
Marietta , Ohio .
Racine, and Li nda Kay
An yone wishing to submit a
Shuler,
24, Pomeroy; Craig
wrilfen statement or exhibit
concerning th' ·program may Howard, 22, Pomeroy, and
do so by pr esent ing it at the
Price, 19,
hearing or mai lin g i t to the Debra Jean
Ohi o Department o f Tr ans - Pomeroy .
~rtat ion , District 10, Deputy

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'
It-TheSundayTtmea.Sentinei,SundaY.Nov. 16.1975

.1!.- The SWlday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

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

Damage miner
in accidt!nt

AIRMAN TAYLOR
MIDDLEPORT
Airman Dale E. Taylor,
son of Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence E. Taylor of Rt. I,
Middleport. has completed
Air Force basle training at
Lackland AFB, Tex. The
airman Is remaining at
Lackland for speclali•ed
training In the security
pollee field. He Is a 1~75
graduate of Rootstown
Hlgh School.

•

II .

PT. PLEASANt - Minor
damage resulted when a
driver le ll ~sleep at the wheel
of his car and went over an
emba nkment Saturday on Rl.
33 near New Haven at 3 a.m.,
according to• deputy Detner
Roush III of the Mason
County Sheriff's Department.
'Driver o! the vehicle has
been identified as Robert Ray
Ohlinger of Rt. 1, Ml. Alto. An
es tim ated $20 wor th of
damage oc'c urred to the
vehicle.
According to Roush's
report, Ohlinger apparently ·
fell asleep while driving, then
went across the center line
and .over an embankment on
the left side or the road.

NOW YOU KNOW
The bongo, a rare horned
African animal, is a native of
the Congo.

LUMBfi."{.BUILDING
MAnRIALS a TER

TUB
CAULK

~

'·

-,

PT. PLEASANT - Dessle
Inez Burdette. 78, 1014 Ma in
Street, Point Pleasant, died
at Fairfax. va .. after a long
illness.
·
She was born on April 22.
1897 at Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Parker.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Thomas
Stuart Burdette, who died In

,_
14

19io. .SUrvivors Include 1wo

E

f

WINNERs OF A POSTER CONTESf held at the Pomerox Elementary Slhool by th~
Meigs Jaycees to promote the Pomeroy mini-park which the Jaycees are establishing were
announced Friday at an assembly. All of the posters made will be displayed in Pomeroy
business houses. Winners received latgereplicas of antique coins. Winners pictured include
front row,! tor, Darin Roach, second grade; Julie Sisson, second grade ; Robin Ohlinger,
third grade; back row,l tor, Mike Thomas, third grade; BUI Yooog, Jaycee park project
coordinator holding the winning poster of Anna Baxter, ftfth grader who was absent, and
Terri Roush , sixth grader.

Abortion main issue

Conference' of Catholic amendments to overturn tbe
Bishops is expected to focus Supreme Court's 1973
debate on a proposed decision greatly liberalizing
'"Pastoral Plan for Pro-Life . access to abortions.
At the time, it was
Activities."
suggested
that one reason for
The bishops were dealt a
the
subcommittee's
failure to
severe blow In midendorse
any
of
the
proposed
September when a Senate
amendments
before
it was
Judiciary subcommittee
headed by Sen. Birch Bliyh, the failure of pro-life groups,
!).Ind.; rejected a number of particularly the bishops, to
proposed constitutional get .behind a specific
proposal.
The "Pastoral Plan for
'
.
ProWe Activities," which
the bishops wiD debate, is the
I
work of a conunlttee headed
by Cardinal Terence Cooke of
New York.
The plan, which has not yet
f+&gt;. 2400
By LEONARD CURRY
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton been made public, is said to
Qunplete
WASIII.NGTON (UP!) - Shapp in 1970.
be a wlde;anging proposal
As Shown
The Watergate special He said Gulf also paid a aimed at every segment of
prosecutor's office asked the "retainer" of $25,1100 lo then- society and which wiD seek to
Reg. $79.95
Justice Department In 1973 to Vice President Hubert Hum· establish a constitutional
Investigate alleged phrey before he was basis for laws to guarantee
THIS WEEK
widespread illegal con· nominated for president in the unborn the human and·
trlbutions ' to congressional 1968 and $50,1100 to the late civil rights assured all other
ONLY
candidates, federal court Lyndon B. Johnson shortly persons.
..
recorda show,
after he was elected vice
It will include establish·
No charges have been president in 1960, Senate ment of an ongoing "public
brought to date and the Republican Leader Hugh information effort" as well as
statute of limitations has. Scott of Pennsylvania activlty in the courts and
passed for any illegal received $5,1100 each spring grassroots activity In ,each
financial activities for and fall for "many years," he congressional district.
elections in 1972 or earlier. said.
It · also will call for inThomas Wright, a Pills· Not all of the contributions creased ecumenical eforts
AN EASY WAY TO HAVE
bw-gh lawyer who works on were iUegal corporate fWlds, ' with other churches across a
BEAUTIFUL BATHROOM WALLS.
~:~f;or Gulf Oil Corp., but Wright said the legal broad range of medical
briefly on the money was so mixed with Issues, including the question
in a sworn statement Ulegal funds that it was of euthanasia as well as
Face-lift
~~~~~~-'the U.S. District Court difficult to determine the abortion.
F1
scurce of specific ~ifts.
your bath
with smooth
wnlllnsald the matter was ·-wright's statement was investigated "hundreds of
aeamlese
me~1tioned to him in 1973 by taken for a Securities and
cases" • of corporations
panels.
KISsam, another Pitts- Exchange Commission suit allegedly making illegal
Wipe ~le~n
attorney retained by . against Wild in connection campaign contributions · to
with damp
and former Gulf vice with alleged mishandling of federal candidates, Wright
cloth.
WUd ~r.
corporate funds used In said. "Things were pretty
what Wright federal elections. Federal crowded down at the·
$400,1100 a year Gulf law prohibits corporate Watergate Special
Put en end to brahn tit. and dirty grout lin••· The
pa)•m!~nls
to politicians were contributions to presidenUal Prosecution Force."
molttu.-..proof ptntll un be lnatalled rlgkt over your old
for then-Rep. Gerald R. and congressional can·
wtllt . . . .even over old tlle ... quickly fl"'d Hally.
Because the small siaff was
and varying amounts 1lidates.
assembled primarily to in·
Gold Lace White
t5
three current Democratic Wright made similar state- vestigate White House in·
lllld
candidates- ments to a federal grand jlii'y volvement-la the Watergate
NV-VISTA Avacado
$2,000 for Sen. Uoyd Bentsen empaneled by the special burglary of June,l972, and Its
matters
_.:::::::::::::::::~:.. Sen.
of Texas in 1970, $10,000 for prosecutor for a criminal aftermath,
Henry M. Jackson of investigation. involving Gulf, referring to Congress were
Washington in 1972 and· an the sworn statement showed. turned over to JUBUce.
undetermined amount for The prosecutor's office
"They were asking about
congressional
elections 'and
ONLY
.
..
were
giving
any In·
·-- -,, - - - - formation in thai regard to
95
the Justice Department,"
Wright said.
"You mean the Special
Prosecution
Force was giving
SHOOTS A
the Information to other parts
STAPLE WHERE·
of the Justice Department? l!i
EVER YOU'D
that what your answer
mea1111?" asked SEC attorney
DRIVE A NAILl !.~:""'~""""'
Robert
Ryan.
Preferred bv pro• tnd
1,..11
"That
is
correct,"
do-II·YO\Ir .. lferi.
~ ,f
Powerful compttl·
I:?•
responded Wright. "That is
don sprint dri,...1
1 ~ t .t.U steel conttntdlon
what my notes indicate. I
hlevy t•vgt sleplu I' f r • HIJh ctrlttn, htrdtntd ••••I
don't recall any more than
Into h~rdett woods,
worldn1 ptrft . •
plywood, co~potl• ·
• Doultit Ievert" ' ' " of optrl•
what is here in my notes."

ROOF
CEMENT
99

·---·

'•

.24"

VANITY Probe asked, hut .
CABINET nothing happened

~

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all

HEAVY DUTY STAPLE $10
GUN TACKER

don hotrd, plutlcs
, • , even toft mtlth.

-------,~

THE SPIRIT OF '76
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Area Deaths

Dessie Burdette

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The nation 's Roman Catholic
bishops gather here for their
annual fall meeting this week
6 OZ:
with the Issue of abortion on
center stage.
ONLY
With a trimmed down
format aimed at simplifying
procedures, including the use
GAL •1.
of a parliamentarian to aid
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ president Archbishop Joseph
L. Bernardin, the National

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SQUAD CALLED
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emergency
Squad was·called to 161 Pearl
St., at 10:59 p.m. Friday for
Henry Milliron who was IU.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

,,

GALLIPOLIS- Ruth Ann
Griffith, 34, Rt. 2, Crown City
(Teens Run Rd .) died
unexpectedly around 9: IS
p.m . Friday.
Spe was born Aug . 26, 1941,
In Clay Twp., daughter of
Robert HaZlett and the late
Goldie Saunders Hazlett .
She Is survived by her
husband, William ,· Griffith,
along with three children:
Robert Eugene, William··
Tl mothy and Karla Ann
Griffith, all at home .
She Is also survived by one
brother, Rex EUgene Hazlett,
u. s. Navy. Her grand·
mother, Mrs. Pearl Hazlett,
Rt. 2, Crown City, also sur·
vives. An aunt and uncle, Mr .
and Mrs. Bill Saunders,
Crown City, survive.
She spent most of her life In
Gollia County. She attended
Edna Chapel Chur~h In her

'

earlier years.

Funeral services will be
held 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
Home wlht Rev. Allred
Holley ·officiating.
Burial will he In Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens .
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Monday
from 2·4 and 7·9 p.m.

I

'

'

:Seals colorful in new look
'

MARlETTA :.... &lt;.brlstmas
Seals - an annual tradition in
America's fight against lung
, disease for almost seven
decades - have a youth!)~)
; "new look" this year. For the
: first time, they have been
; designed by school children
throughout the United States.
' The
uninhibited
· Imaginations of 54 youngsters
from 6 to 12, each
' representing a slate or
· territory, have contributed a

BY FLOYD H. NORRIS
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(UP!) - The Democratic
Party has been "reformed"
largely by backers of George
McGovern . Ironically,
Alabama Gov. George
Wallace thinks those reforms
are just what he needed to
mount a serious bid for the
party's presidential
nomination.
"The big thing this time is
that you've got the propor·
tiona! representation,"
Wallace's campaign
manager, Charles S. Snider,
said ·following Wallace 's
formal announcement that he
would seek the nomination.
"II you get 15 per cent of
the vote you're going to get
delegates. 'I'I1at's got to help
us," he said.
Most party professionals
think Wallace may cause
trouble b·ut he has no chance
to win the nomination. But
Wallace 's campajgn
strategists insist the end of

"winner-take-all" primaries
gives him a better chance
than Is generally realized,
· They paint a scenario of
Wallace picking up delegates
everywhere and entering the
co~ventlon
with more
delegates than any other
contender. They say the
party leaders will then
conclude that without
Wallace the party wiD surely
lose in November, and be gels
the nomination, or at least
plays a major role.
Snider points to California
as a state where "there's no
doubt in my mind that we'll
get more than 15 per cent"
and thereby qualify for
· delegates. In 1972, McGovern
eked out a narrow win but
took all the delegates under
the old rules.
II Wallace is to have a
chance of grabbing the
nominaUon, he must be able
to win delegates in non·
primary stales, where porty
officials and Democratic
officeholders normally
dominate caucuses.In 19'j2 he
won few delegates through
caucuses; reflecting his
almost total lack of support
among party officials outside
the Deep South.

"

Reedsville honor
roll is announced
REEDSVILL E - Th e
honor roll of the Eas~rn
Junior and Senior High
Schools for !he first nine week
grading period has been
announced by Chester
Gooding, high school principal.
Grading at the school has
been switched to every nine
weeks from lhe traditional
six weeks period and
recently, the district's board
of education voted to
discontinue final
examinations on a trial basis.
Making a grade of 85 or
more in all their subjects to
be listed on the roll were :
· SEVENTH GRADE Kathy Pooler, April Parker,
Marcy Sexson, Brenda
Rucker, Greg Wigal, Tanunl
Starcher, M~lanie Root,
Traci Sayre, Jim Bahr,
Richard Bearhs.
ElGHTH GRADE- Todd
Bissell, Becky Edwards, Tim
Enevoldsen , Teresa Spencer.
FRESHMAN - Karen
Probert, Jodi Proto, Susan
Hannwn, Clndy Pitzer, Kay
Balderson , Lawrence Pooler,
Ronnie McGrath , Randy
Keller; Valeria LaBonte, ·
Laurl Matthews, Tana
Johnson, Jeff Goebel. '
SOPHOMORE - Cheryl
Griffin, David Brown ,
Dorothy Runyon , Diana
Massar, Sonia Beaver, Ken .
·Enevoldsen , Sheila
·Buchanan , Cindy Scyoc, Joe
Kuhn, Becky Windon , Mary
Mora.
JUNIOR
Carolyn
Harper, Jennifer Gainer,
Marlin Evans, Suzy Goebel,

Larry Longenette, Juli
Whitehead , Jayne Smith,
Bonnie Wood, Barbara
Henderson , Belinda Jackson,
Brenda Lanham, Rachel
Hunter , Teresa Edwards,
Robin Elkins, Paula Hawk,
Susan Henderson, Janet
Ambrose, Te~esa Carr,
Teresa Buckley, Kevin
Barto n, Dave Carnahan,
Belinda Deeter, &lt;.1ndy Dill,
Diana Benedum, Julia
Carpenter, Patricia Boston.
SENIOR - Tim Kuhn,
l'rissy Morlan, Diana Pullins,
Debbie . Sanders, George
Pickens, Edna Boggs, Betsy
Amsbary, Jeff Holter, Tom
Avis, Diana Root, Barbara
Andrews, Nancy Ridenour,
Kathy Newell, Debbie
Windon, Pam Millhone,
Cathy Maxey, Patricia
Windon, Jan Wilson, Melinda
Evans, Denise Dean, -Tammy
Bahr.

million homes and businesses
as part of !he 1975 appeal for
fWJds. Every household in the
eight counties served by the
South East Ohio Lung
Association will receive seals
and have the opportWJity to
contribute toward the support
of the many activities carried
out during the year, including
programs in Professional
Education, School an d
Community Health
Education with special
emphasis on smoking and
l ~:;~~::::~:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
I
~ health, and programs aimed
at securing the best care and
!·!· treatment possible for victims of IWJg diseases.
Meigs
County
is
,
By Cbet TaDDebill
' · The late Andy Harris of Racine loved to let his magnHicenl represented on the SEOLA
:'lma&amp;lnation - t.'OIIpled with estraordinary learning - play board of directors by Mrs.
_with place ·and people rwnes. No name was too droll. Joe Charles Hayes, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Glenn Dill ,
•&amp;nlth?
Sjiracuse
.
~. "Well, now, where did Joe's grandfather Smith live? Oh,
lbat one! Well, be came down lbrough" ... (such and sqch and
.uch alcinllllne of Smilill). And Joe Smith, hoping he was some
tlnd II apeclal Smith, was certain of It after talldng to Andy.
'~y bad the proof, even if not documented.
Andy II not with WI any more. Many t)J!Ies I wish he had
~ uked about our more cvlorful place ·names In Meigs and
;PIIlil .CounUes.
c How, for ewnple, did there ever beCilllle a Lickskillet? ,
nich WU IIOIIleWbere- I think - in the back COWl try twixt
illldoftfnm the Reedtlvllle and Long Bot!Gm area.
, Beanrallow Ridge isn't all that bard to figure out: A
.couple II bean got to wallerlnj! arOWld on It, of course; an
~rt planeer aaw them and Immediately named the place
Jlearwallow Ridge.
• In Glllil County there is Mud.!oc and Shoestring Ridge
'wblch mUll have flllliBlling histories, perhaps forever- to
remain lllllold.
. ~ . Perbape dear readers, there Ia one of you who knows
wherd the naming of Mudaoc, Uckskillet, Shoestring,
Bearwallow Ridge? If ao, do not hesitate to share your in·
{ormation with thll column be II from legend, folklore, or
wrillen hlltory.

PT. PLEASANT - Funeral
services for Mrs. ,Ethel 0.
Pritt, 87. of Point Pleasant,
who died Thursday In
Charleston General Hospital
will be conducted Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home.
Rev. Warren Faulknler will
officiate and burial will
follow In the Leon Cemetery .
Friends may call this evening
from 6 to 9 p.m.
Survivors Include two
doughters, Mrs. Leona
Redman and Mrs, Thelma
Casto, of South Charleston ;
and one grandson , James

Casto, of i'fewport News. Va;
GALLI POLIS - Agnes
Marie Walker, 76, a resident
of 2002 Eastern Ave., died at
10:05 ·a.m. Friday In Holzer
Med l~al Center where she
had been a medical patient
the past two weeks. She had
been In falling health the past
three years .
She was born Nov. 24, i89B,
In Henderson, W. va:,
daughter of the late Charles
F. and Sallie V. Casey Glb·
son.
She married Hugh Walker
of Gallipolis on March 4, 191Q.
He survives, along with two
daughters, Hilda VIrginia
Oiler. Gallipolis and Eleanor
G. Furgerson, Charlestop , , ,~.
Va . She was a member of the
Vaught Memorial Church,
1-jenderson. One brother.,
Robert Gibson, Bell , W. V"and one sister, Glenn,
Horton , Gallipolis, sur'·
ylve. She resided
In
&lt;;alllpolls ·all her married
life. ,
Funeral services will btl
held 2 p.m. Sundar, at Miller's
Home for Funera s with Rev;
Everett Delaney and Rev,
Gary Jones otfl~latlng .
"
Burial will follow In Ohid
Valley Memory Gardens. •

'

u

in force Monday '
COLUMBUS - Director
t1ifford E. Reich of the Obi~
Department of Llquo(.
Control said Saturday the
previously-announced boltlt
price adjustment, as well as
the quarterly vendors'
changes, wiU go into effecl,l
November 17..
·~
Due
to
roundlnA"
procedures, the department'~!'\
adjustment will effect nol
increase in as many as 44percent of the bottles sol&lt;J.i:
The adjustment, which
compensates for increase61
costs In warehoualng anlll
trucking, will result In i/l
maX!mwn flve-~:ent lncreasi!J
per fifth . The quarterlyi
vendors' changes lncludel
proof, ·bottle size and price:
Increases and decreases. • t
~

15 alBIC FEET ·

FROST CLEAR MODEL~SI
REFRIGERATOR •

TO THE VOnRS OF RACINE
VILLAGE FOR THEIR VOTE
ON NOVEMBER 4th.

SEEAU.lH£
'I

' .

POE SIMPSON
RACINE COUNCIL

PD. POL. ADV.

Point' Pleasant

'

IIISbrf APPLIAMCES

$33goo·
.

CONTRACT ·SALESLEGAL
COPY NO. 71-666
COLUMBUS, OHIO,
OCTOBER 11 , 1975

POMEROY
Mary in Jackson , Ohio , and one at
00 o'clock P .M . , Oh i o
Skinner, Personal Advocacy 7:
Standard Ti me December 16.
Coordinator , and Anna 197S in the At h en s Mun ic ipal
Building , Easl Washingto n
Spires, Secretary, attended Str
eet, in Athens. Ohio . for th e
training session at Nisongcr purpose of hearing statements
th e proposed Rural High .
Center Ohio Stale University . on
way Publ ic Tran spor t- ation
Nlsonger Center is the Demonstrat iO"n Pr og ra m in
lhen !. , Ga lt ia , Hock i ng ,
department of Continuing AJackson
, Meigs , Perry and
Education at Ohio State. This Vinton Coun I ies.
The propos ed three year
large training facility is for program
i s designec;j to
Franklin County Mentally combine transpo r tatio n
of
seven
Retarded and Develop- programs
Southeastern Ohio counties
mentally Disabled children in to one compret1 er)Sive trans·
portation
system .
This
and adults.
program wilt enab l e the
Mary and Anna attended Appa la chian Ohio Regional
Associat ion !AORTAl
morning classes on Wed- Transit
to expanc;j its services in to
nesday Wider the direction of M eigs , Jac~son . Vinton and
llia Coun ties where public
Marie Moore, New York City, Ga
tran sit service Is non ·ex1stent.
who is Director of National
The project w il l offer
comp l ete
public
traos ·
Uniled Cerebral Palsy. The portatlon
service to the region
class was on " Human inc lu ding but ·not l imited to :
fixed rural ro utes , d emand ·
Sexuality". for the mentally respons
ive service , contra c t
retarded and cerebra l services , bus lea~es , spec ial
even t service and small group
palsied.
chart ere;.
The afternoon session was
t.H1fSportation of the labor
•orce will be one of the
advocates and their roles in primary
! 'bfecli\leS of the
meeting the needs of the e~d AORTA service as
as transportat ion to small
mentally retarded, cerebral well
urban areas for shopping ,
palsied and epileptics. This medical , an d social tunct lons ;
tran sit sendee to un i vers iti es
was conducted by Dr . 11nd
technical
educlltion
William Hall, Director of facilities ; and transportation
to
hosp i tals . ou t ~ pa t ient
Nisonger Center.
clinics , and health care
Thursday was an all day fa ci lities .
All citizens of the affected
training program by Dr. .s even
counties Will have ac ·
Donald . Weinstein , Cljnical cess 10 !he program with
being placed on the
Psychologist, Department of emphasis
Inter -coun ty and intra .county
Pediatrics and Psychiatry, communities, the poor, the
and th e handicapped .
Cleveland Metropolitan elderly,
Maps , exhibits , an environ General Hospital.
men!JI assessment , and oth er

Dtrector , Musking um Drive.
Marietta , Oh io . The fin al date
for submission of stat ement
wi ll be December 26 , 1975.
Richard D . Jackson ,
P . E . Director

Nov . 16, Dec. 7

charter will be draped in
memory of One Osborne.
Members are asked to wear
while.

Published every -- SI,Jnda'tf
by
The
Oh i o
Va ll ey
Pu blish in g Co .
GALL I P OL IS
DAILY TRIBUNE
82 5 T hi r d A ve .• Gallipolis,
Oh io 4563\.
Published ev ery weekttav
even in g e)(cep t Saturday .
Second Class Postage Pa1d
at Ga l lipol is, Oh io 45631.
THE DAILY S ENriNEL
Ill Court St .. Pomeroy , 0 .
45169 . Pub lis hed every week .
day ev ening e &gt;~ c ept Satur day . Entered as second class
mailing matter at Pomero-y,
Oh io Post Office .
' By carrier daily and
Sunday 75c per week . Motor

ro ut e $3 .25 ~e~, ront h .
• SUBSCR IP TION RATES
The
GalliPQ·IiS
Dally
Tribune in Oh io and West !'
V irg in ia one year S22 .00 ; six
months Sl l SO ; three mont hs '
S7 .00 . Elsewhere S26 .00 per
year ; six months $.13 .50 ;
three months S7 .SO ; motor
route $3. 25 monthly .
~
Th e Da ily Se nt ine l. one
year 522 .00 ; Si )( mo nth s
S11 50 ; three months $7.00 .
Elsewhere
526 .00 ;
six
months S\ 3.50 ; three months
$7 .50 .
The Un i ted Press ln .
ternat ional I s exclusive ly
ent i tled to th.e use fat'
publicat ion of all news
di spat ches credited to the
new sp11per and also the lo c al
ne ws published here in .

o1lma
Christmas
GflREPAID
next year?

·,

I '

~6

Georlle had a heavy, imfrlanl Job here as
f~*intendenl ll( the Meigs
~ Dialrlct. H1a work In
Mttn011 County Is even ·
&amp;ore demanding upon his

. .nil.

i:dllfltl.thoae
talenta are
A brlillant student
~~~~~Ohio State. (major

t

Math)) ltlrgravea aurWYtd the lnfamOUI German
hnur offeJIIIve at l'brlstltH (Bulof!ne).

fu.
~

~

hioValley Bank
c., __.......

,r.::;:--

SAVE '8°

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·was
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trade·in
NOW

1976
CHRISTMAS CLUB

'3245

' winter drivHere's the star ting power that
ing demands! Polypropylene ca1:1e resists
damage rrom extreme temperatures.
High Vo lt~ge means llralght-lhrough·the-partiUon
ce ll connectors deliver more Initial starting power
than 1n otherwiH Identical banery with up-and·
over cell c:onnectort.

SKYLINE LANES and
PRO-SHOP

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OUGHJ TO. BUY,

wn

MEIGS AND GALUA HAVE NO special claim on unusual
place lllllll!ll. Anyone who travels outaide familiar environs
Cllllll repe8&amp;edly upon engaging names.
. Lilt week the lddr• of person in a news report was given
• Looneyv!Ue, W. Va. Well, now that name is enough to in·
IJ)Ire the tellln&amp; II a packet of West Vlrginla stories. Foregoing
GEO. HARGRAVES
tjlat,lllffice It to be knoWn that there is a LooneyvWe, W. Va.,
~to our 1t72 Atlu, populaUon 30, located roughly 8 to'
Hargraves is proud of his new
~0 mllea 10ut!HoutbeNt of Spencer, ROane County.
vocational school. His friends
· George Hargraves Jr,, who
here wish him nothing but the
II was after coming out o!
fathered the Meills L«al
best.
School Dialrlct from Ita In· that inferno of screaming
c,pUon In llle6 through last airborne steel alive, George
.Chool tenn, went to Jef· once told me, thaI he
fei'IOII County to head up the determined to do something
INQUIRY SLATED
Jeffei'IOII County Vocational worthwhile with his life. Then
barely 19 years old, be made
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
School.
, George, ., do moet strong up his mind to return to Coast Guard Marine board
JDI!II, came to have friends college, so as to prepare will begin an inquiry Tuesday
into 1be sinking of the Ed11!111 enerniel here in the hlm.!elf to teach.
"1
had
the
Idea
l
owed
mWld
Fitzgerald freighter on
cllalrlct I think l1e served with
somebody
something
for
Lake
Superior, the Coast
cijaUncUon. H1a friends wUI be
Guard said Friday.
interested to know the Jef· being alive," George said.
We
knew
George
in
Meigs
The Coast Guard said
fenon County Vocational
COWlty
as
articulate
(too
earlier
that the Inquiry would
School serving 11 high
much
so
for
some,
who
react
be
held
Monday but spokes·
achoola, lncludlni
with
distrust
),
unusually
man
Fred
Doster said It was
Steubenville City High
.lfhool, wu dedicated Nov , 9 capable, always with his cool, pushed back because Monday
doing his best Wider a lot of afternoon memorial services
~idst proper pomp and
lance with Dr, Byrl pressure (frequently) for the would be held In Toledo for
' the 29 crew members missing
maker, Slate Director schools In his charge.
We
are
certain
.
George
and believed dead&gt;
Ilona! Education the
pal apeaker.
t Jeffenon JVS has a faculty
ll tuchlng In It progr81Jl8,
amely
Agricultural
echanica, Auto Body,
lectrlcal Trades, . Car·
lry, Buslneaa Data Ac·
nUng, Child Care,
mmerclal Art, Com·
t!unlcaUona Electronics,
to.metoiOCY, Draftinll, Food
"For That Personal
rvlce, Machine Trades,
&amp; Professional Touch"
flee Dupllca lion and

IE

COMPARE
AND YOU WILL
REASOIS YOU

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING

Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

13

Gibson

the day after

li

Agnes Walker

Price changes

riot of color in the form of
merry Santas, smiling
snowmen, airy angels,
caroling children, and gaily
decorated Yule trees. Ohio's
seal was from a painting done
by · Shari Halker of Uma
when she was in the 6th
grade.
The South East Ohio Lung
Association said Saturday the
child-created Christmas
Seals are. being received
nationwide in more than 60

relations.
Minimwn qualifications for
the position are a college
degree in a business related
field or equivalent experience
and kn owledge of the accrual
basis of accoWJting.
The position of Deputy
Director has a starting salary
range of $8,1100 - $10,000 per
annum, dependent upon
qualifications. Interested
persons should send a per·
sonal reswne to David F.

Pursuant to S ~ c tion 14 7 of
th e Fed eral Ai d Highway Ac t
of 1973 as amended by Se ction
· 103 of the Federa l A id Hig'
way Ame nd ments ot 1974, th e
Director of Transportation o f
Ohio w ill hold two publi c
hearings , one at 2:00 o ' c lock
P .M .. Ohio Sfandard Tim e,
December 16 , 1975 , in th e
Jackso n
Pub l ic Libra r y,
Broadway a nd South Str eets

Attend
training
•
sesswn

OtnO SEAL DESIGN -Ohio is represented by tbe above seal design on the sheets of
' 1975 O!rlltmaa Seals being mailed into over 60 million homes and bUBinesses during the
current Chrlatmas Seal Campaign. The Ohio design is from a painting done by ~ari Halker,
_ Uma, Ohio, when she was a sixth grade student.

Ethel Pritt

MY SINCERE THANKS

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME
PARK AND SALES

...___....,_.SIII_.••,..._u.:to-..-~---·.......:J:!!a~c~ks~o!n!f)~v!:e·.....!'~75~-3000

'Reforni'
good for
Wallace

Ruth Griffith

I

,Get a Howmel "Doorhood free with every
Mobile Home bouaht.
.

sons. John Milton Burdette,
Point Pleasant. and Thomas
Stuart Burdette. St. Peters·
AIRMAN JONES
burg. Fla .; one daughter,
CROWN CITY- Airman ·Mrs . Nina Sarah ' Edls,
Fairfax. Va., grandchi ldren,
Richard C. Jones, son of and
one great grandchild.
Mrs. Helen C. Jones of Rl.
She was a member of the
2, Crown City has com- Main Street Baptist Church of
pleted Air Force basic Point Pleasant .
Funeral services will be
training at Lackland AFB, Monday
at 1 p.m. at ihe Main
Tex. The airman Is Street Baptist Church. The
remaining at Lackland for Rev. John Davis will officiate
burial will follow In lhe
specialized training In the aM
Lone Oak Cemetery .
· security pollee field. A1975
Ca lling hours will be
graduate of Hannan Trace Sunday 2 to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9
. at the Stevens Funeral
High School, his father is p.m
Home. The body will be taken ·
Charles
E.
Jones, to the church one hour prior
to the services.
Smithers, W. Va.

:I

ATHENS - The Ap.
pai ac hian Ohio Regional
Transit .Association (AOHTA ), is now accepting ap.
plications for the position of
Deputy Director.
The Dep uty Director
assists I he Executive
Direclor in the admi nistrative affairs of
AORTA. This includes, but is
not limited to: •upervising
employees and operations;
maintenance of fi nancial
records ; main tenanc e of
records (ridership, far es,
maintenanc~,
e t c.);
negotia ting contracts,
charters, and leases; general
promotion and comm WJity

.I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Eli While ,
Minersville; Raymond
Vaughan, Executive Hartl ey, Raci ne ; Lucille
Director, AORTA, Rt. 3 Box Wi se, Rutland; Bertha
102, Athens, Ohio 4&gt;701, Hobste tler, Pomeroy; Henry
before November 24, 1975. All Milliron, Middleport.
qualified appli ca nts will
DISCHARGED - Amanda
receive a personal interview. Hawk , William Morris,
AORTA is an equal op· Harrison Robinson, Ann
portunity employer.
Marchese, Hubert Sl&lt;wart,
Dorothy Rea, Eli zabe th
Lewis, Richarri Ford, Linda
TO MEET TUESDAY
CHESTE R - Chester Huffman.
Council 323, Daughters of ·
America, will m~et at 7:30
LICENSE ISSUED '
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. The
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued to the
p e rtinen t
i nfor mation
followin
g Satw-day: Robert
dev e loped by the Trans
portation Department will be Stanton
Shaffer ,
27,
made -avai lab le to the publi c
for v i ewing at the hearing and Harrisonville, and Theresa
at the Transportation Depart . Ann Eastman, 24, Pomeroy:
ment ' s Dis t rit:l 10 Office ,
Muskingum
DriH .
In William Ju nior Dye, 32,
Marietta , Ohio .
Racine, and Li nda Kay
An yone wishing to submit a
Shuler,
24, Pomeroy; Craig
wrilfen statement or exhibit
concerning th' ·program may Howard, 22, Pomeroy, and
do so by pr esent ing it at the
Price, 19,
hearing or mai lin g i t to the Debra Jean
Ohi o Department o f Tr ans - Pomeroy .
~rtat ion , District 10, Deputy

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:¥l - The SUnday Times -SentineJ, Sunday , Nov. 16, 1975

GALUPOLIS - No arrests Kenneth A. Brown, Patriot
have been made in a breaking Star Rt. , Gallipolis. Entry
and entering Thursday night was made by prying a door
or ea.rly Friday morning at open.
the Warehime Clinic, 530
Missing was a 12. gauge
Second Ave.
shotgun , a 20 ga uge shotgun ,
According to city police a 30.06 rifle with scope, a 22
officers said someone pried a automatic riOe and a single
window open on the north side shot rifle.
of 'he building to gain entrance. Once Inside, they
went to the medicine and
drug room where they took
2,250 gel-propomine (diet
pills) and 600 white diet pills Three injured
which were in plastic containers.
Officers
Friday
in- in auto mishap
vestigated the theft of a tape .
player and three tapes and
GA LLIPOLIS - Three
speakers taken from a 1972
persons
were injured in a
Toyota owned · by David
deer-car
accident Friday on
Patrick of 480 Davis St.,·
Kanauga which was parked Rt. 7-tn Meigs c ounty.
According to the Galliain Iron t of the St. Louis
Meigs
State Highway Patrol
catholic Church.
James N. M. Davis, a deer ran into the path of a
principal of Gallia Academy car operated by Howard R. •
High School, reported an alto Deskins, 35, of Ashland, Ky.
Three persons in his car,
clarinet valued at $225 was
Barbara Deskins, 33, Jeffrey
missing from the school.
D.
Deskins, 11 , and
Galila County sheriff's
Christopher
Deskins, age six,
deputies meanwhile inall
had
visible
Injuries. There
vestigated the theft of $005
was
moderate
damage to the
worth of guns taken Friday
car.
The
deer
ran from the
between 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.
from the trailer home of scene.

reveal identity

Shown above is Richard Mills, city manager, signing .
a proclamatioo during November 1S-22, 1975 as American
Education Week in Galllpolis. Looking on are Donalg
Staggs, &amp;lperintendent Gallipolis City Schools; Jim
Davis, principal and Ed Stewart, Assistant principal of
GAllS, and Neil Sanders, principal of Washington
Elementary School,
. .

AmencaJl
• .Educatl•on
.

week pIanS announced

Models and sizes for every requirement. Color steel or
color alUminum-your choice.
0 Utillly Storage
0 Garages/Workshops
0 Machinery Storage
o Beef/Dairy
0 Horae Barns
0 Commercial Buildings

W".clc81 hill a Cndt
Plan to.fltvourludget.
Clrcle¥lle, Olllo, Box 123 •

Michigan on top ,Buckeyes rip Gophers

Medical records

B&amp;E probe still
·underway in Gallia

(114)474·1732

ITAT. ROUTI M

.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Uty Schools Saturday emphasized that American
Education Week, Nov' 16-22,
is an appropriate time for all
parenta and other citizens to
recommit themselves to
making America's schools
better.
The schools will offer
specialized programs and
demonstrations throughout
the week to mark the observance's theme, "Our
Future Is in Our Schools,",
according to Donald Staggs,
superintendent.
The five schools in the
Galllpolis Glty School District
(Gallia Academy High
School, Green, ·c la y, Rio
Grande, and Washington
Elementary ) have planned
the following for the w~ek of
Nov. 111-22:
t - A special invitation
from each achool to the
parents Inviting them to
come and visit the school and
look around the buildings.
2 - All school bulletin
boards will be 'decorated to
the theme of "Our Future Is
in Our Schoola."
3 .:.. Waahiongton and
G41lla Actdemy High School
have made posters which are
being displayed in several
Gallipolis businesses.
4 - Rio Grande Elementary is conducUng Its annual
PTO drive to coincide with
this week's activities.
5 - Each elementary

building will have their Tit~ I
Parent Advisory Committee
ineetlng during this week.
6- GAHS wiD offer a vocal
music program for the
parents at 11-9:15 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 21.
7- Green school is inviting
all parents to visit the school
and have lunch with the
students and teachers.
6 - All teachers in the
GaiUpolis l~ty Schools are
stressing the importance of
Education in our way of lite
here in America.
American Education Week,
observed annually since 1921,
seeks to encourage local
citizen support arid active
participation in the improvement of education. This
year the program will s·lress
learning more about the
schools as ~ basis for active
and continued personal involvement. The nationwide
event' is sponsored by the
National Education
Association, The American
Legion, . the
National
Congress of Parents and
Teachers, and the U. S. Office
of Education.

Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Spelgel, Anna and Wayne and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Speglel, Columbus, visited
Mr. 8\ld Mrs. Noble Hamon
and Mr. and Mrs. Rex
&lt;.beadle and family during
the weekend.

A $3,000·tax shelter for next year.
I

GAULEY BRIDGE, W. Va. checks.
(UP! ) - ~ skeleton found In
Mrs. Boatwright quoted the
the rugged terrain of this official as saying he wanted
sou!herri West Virginia town to know whether to forward
has been identified as that of her brother's checks to Anan Ohio man who left his s~.
home to visit a sister.
Told that he hadn't yet
Using medical records on arrived here; the official said
file in a Veterans Ad· he had waiched Cottrell
lnintstration hospital where board a•bus Aug. 9 bound for
the victim had been a patient, Gauley Bridge.
state Medical E~amlner Dr.
Not. until she read a newslrvan Sopher identified the paper article about the
body as that of cammte discovery of the skeleton did
CottreU, 48, Mansfield, Ohio. she suspect it might be her
Braxter Mullens, a brother, Mrs. BoatWright told
fisherman from Charleston, police, adding a missing
spotted the body Tuesday at person's report was on file in
the base of a 15Q.foot rock · Oh10.
cliff, from which authorities
believe the victim feU.
Fallure to override
Foul play hasn't been ruled
out, but police say they
cannot understand why bill
d
CottreU wandered 10 the area
opens oor
of a cliff, accessible only by a
path winding through the
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
New River G&lt;irge area .
General Assembly's failure
Cottrell was discovered to override Gov, James A.
below the Hawk's Nest Golf Rhodes' veto of a public
l1ub, half a mile from the workers bargalnil1! bill opens
nearest road.
the door for the federal
"He apparently didn't have govemment to intervene, the
any money with him, so &lt;lllo Association of Public
robbery is not likely a School Employes said
motive," one trooper ob- Friday,
served. "And, if you're going
There Is a growing
to kiD someone, why walk awareness among public
through some of the roughest employes of the failure of
cOI!IJil'y in the state to do it?" some elected officials to
Cottrell's identification reeognize and deal with their
came after his sister, Mrs. II'Oblems, said associatloo
Irene Boatwright of Ansted, Executive Director Larry
read a news account of the OeCreece.
discovery and became
"By falling to override ·the
alarmed.
veto," DeCresce said, '1he
He had planned to visit her legislature has opened the
later in the year, and Mrs. door for the federal governBoatwright said she became ment to step in to solve Ohio's
concerned in October after 'an labor II'Oblems. Bargaining
official of a Volunteers of bills are currenUy pending in
A1Jlerica mission in Mans- Congress to establish
field, where Cottrell had II'Ocedures which are not
stayed, ·telephoned her to spaclflcally designed to meet
report the receipt of some VA atlo's needs."

DR. TIIOMAS Morgan, Gallipolis, was the first t0°
make a donation to help save Jllew York from financl81"

disaster.

·
lib

New York relief fun~.
.

started by Atty.

Crow~~
'"'&gt;jO

POMEROY - Fred C..'row, collected is not large, jleu
a surgical patient at Holzer must remember we are llvJQg
,:;~
Medical Center, has a fund in Appalachia.
Nevertheless, it appelli'.s
drive going at the hospital for
the city of New York. The that a part of your problelll
first donation was made by could be solved if the Nrio
Dr. ThomasW . Morgan, chief York residents would helP
of the surgical staff at HMC. themselvs by donating to q
The following Is a copy. of government. Get Jen&gt;r
the letter Fred has sent to Lewis, Howard CoseJI or Me
New York City Mayor or two other outstandlllk
Abraham Beame, Also there citizens and solicit modq
is a list of those who have through T.V. and radio. lltlt
the policemen, flremi:lf,
contributed to the cause:
school teachers and garbage
Mayor Abraham Beame
Mayor of City of New York collectors go house to house
in order to raise money to
Muoicipal Building
save New York. The ~
New York, N.Y. 10000
and
other financ ial inDear Mayor Beame :
While recovering from stitutions should also help.
cancer surgery, I became Each executive could diMdistressed about the New tribute 10 pet. of his earnings.
1 am certain that if ·NFW
York City financial situation.
York
City would make 1[fll
I discussed the matter with a
nwnber of friends and it was attempt to help itself, mqffl:•
·decided to raise money many communities ·woy~~
locally to help your situation. help to save the ship! : ~
It is morally wrong for 0~ .
Donors have contributed
without solicitation, and, Federal Government to pay
although
the amount New York's bills - New Y~k
should do this itself. .
Enclosed please find c~
in the amount of tJ4.88 "
s,tart you on your way. ,.ii
Very truly Y0\1!~~
FredW .CNw
'
l.DRAIN, Ohio (UP!) desire for a ceiling on a cost''
ta:l
Ratification meetings will be of-living clause.
DONORS
::or
held nen week by six of seven
The longest strike ever
NEW YORK CITY ~ ··1
lllioos which have reached against American Ship, 97
RELIEF FUND ""'~
tentative agreements with days in 1969, would be ex$1.00
Fred W. C..'row, ~•h
the strikebound American ceeded llhould the current
Slip Building Co.
strike last through Wed- Eleanor K. Grow, 11
Thomas W. Morgan, M.P.,' '
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ray · 'lbe unlona Involved in the nesday.
I. Carson &lt;.'rOw, 1.00 Oscar .
Leonard, Celumbul, hu flied !~Way-old strike indude the
Clark,
M.D., 1.00 Harollf'
boilermakers, carpenters,
a '150 million damit&amp;e llllit In paintera, plpefltters,
Delth , 1.00 Corky Kld~t
Franklin County Common
(Paul ), 1.00 Grace Cro'w~·
Pleas
Court
against operating engineers and the
Etch, 1.00 John E. Halliday,
International~ Brotherhood of ·
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.;
1.00 Ted Reed. 1.00 waa
the Columbus arxl Southern Electrical Workers. Still
Grueser,
.10 Rich ,
without an agresnelit and
~o Electric Co.; and city
Glasgow,
.50 . Geo
negotiating separately Ia the
olflciU.
Meinhsrt, 1.00 Lawrence
International Assoclalioo of
Leonard,ln his suit, alleged
Bastian!, 1.00 Nancy B. Rciii,
Machin!Jt8.
gas arx1 electric rate in1.00 Leo Roberts, 1.00 J . .,Jil•:
The strike involves some
crea.aea iJnpol!!d llillce Jan. I,
Vanity,
Jr., 1.00 Paul Eill1!\G
1,000 workers in Lorain,
1974 ue illecll.
Jr.,
1.00
Mary and Fred
'!be suit claimed a city Olicago and Toledo.
Morrow, ..10 Jack &amp;
No details of the
ordinance prevents the
agreements were·announced,
SACRAMENTO, Csllf. - Whittle, .25 Paul Karr, ·
l'ltbllc Utllltles Collllllilllllori
M it was reported a main Videotape testimony by Maggie Barrett frost, , .
of Oblo (PUOO) ~ acting
Henry Wells, .25 Richard
upon a utility finn's rate issue was management's President Ford at the trial of Fick, 1.00 Marcia B. Karr, :1
Lynette Fromme may hold
inc~ request unless the
the key to persuading the jury Scott ?, .10 Kathryn Mora 1
requelt hu lint been voted
that the Manson cultiat was Altana Karr, 2.00 VirginiB
upon by the dty COWJdl and
not trying to klll him, ~c­ l'rew and Family, 1.00 Rich
wten.
NEW ASSIGNMENT
Jones, I.OOGlennl'undiff, ~.I
Leonard said Columlia .in·
GREAT FALLS, Mont. - cording to her defense 1.00 Dale C. Warner, 1:110''
creued rates by 45 per cent The son ~ a New Haven, W. lawyer.
Attorney John E. Virga Steve Cartwright, 1.00 -e.n•
Iince Jill. I, lf/4, and the Va,, couple has been assigned
Willlam O'Neil, .115 P. Browlr( •
eleetric compeny rates haw to Malmstrom AFB, Mont., said Ford "didn't hear a click .50 Dr. Schmidt, 1.00 iJOiCl
jumped by • per cent Iince for duty with a uolt of the and he dldn 't hear her say Davis, 1.00 Mag Meadows, ,:l(ot
lbe Sllll8 date.
Strategic Air Corrunand. Air anything," and that was Margaret Van Cooney, V.~
The llllit Baked the court lor Force Sergeant Thomas E. "very favorable" to the Eck. and Martha Moore, •.WI!
a
restraining
order ROUSh, son of Mr. and Mrs. defense of Miss Fromme, , Evelyn Knight, 5.00 Rd~a
preventing the PU00 from Detner Roush ,' Is a security accused of trying to Couch, .40 C..'het and Nadcy1"
acting upon IllY more rate policeman with the 341st assassinate the President Buckley, Ann and Jim aflll'•
hlltea illlllllilllllitla lettled. Mlsalie Security Squadron: with a .45&lt;8Uber pistol.
Many of the 'II defense 1.00 Manning Wetherholt. " J&gt;./1
Leonard ubd damalea He previously served at Osan
11e1a
wilnelllles testified they heard
!rom Columbul Mayor Tom AB, Republic Of Korea.
lifr
Moody, city llOWICII, IJtllltia
The ~~ergeant is a 1972 a "metallic click," poasibly
,,;n I
Direclor Robert Newton and graduate of Wahama High the IOIIIId of the hammer of - -- - -----.JI:O"tl
the pistol ltrildng the firing
the two utlllty firms.
~ School.
:u:ol
pin about the time Secret
Service agents dlaarmed the :ID witnesaell. The hiatlxllt'
case could go to the jury !at« m
'
~~An
****~********************** defendlnt.
V1rp Biked Ford, the first thls week.
If
convicted
of
attemptinl ~•)
defense wltn-, If he heard
a "click CJI' any other sound to murder the Prelldent tl(ll&lt;l!
'-'CIII the weapon" as Miss the 'United States, Mi~~r\11
Fromme lbruat tile plato! at Fromme faces il life prlatm
111m Sept. $ in Capitol Psrt. term.
A fervent t!Uciple ol the
"Not that I can recall," the
Imprisoned
Manson, Mlsa
Prelldent answered in the
F'roliune !Joycotted the lint
unique t.pe.
65x14 Total Electric, 2 Bedroom,
He said he saw the weapon week Of her trial. During tbe
''inltantaiiiQIII!y becauae al· Jroceedlnp, abe sat in a
Modern Decor;
111011 automaUcaUy ooe of the courthouse holding room
Secret Service 11111111 lunged, equipped with closed clratlt
televilion.
ll'lbbed
tbe
weapon,
lllld
She wu can1ed each day
tben I wu plilhed of! by other
Into
the courihouse from a
membe~a of the Secret
van
truck.
Chief U.S. D1atr1ct
Service detail ' " '
Court Judge 'lbomaa J.
lndteaticllllare the delenae
~cBrlde of!nd to let her
return to the courtroom if abe
Mill Framme wu caJIIns would !l'omlle not to dinpt
attmliDn &amp;o her CIIIICII'II for the proceacllags. Eleh ·day
tthe ......
~
' .
Virp lndbtetl he did not
.. - f llllllldller Charlet Manion. favor the Idea of Mill
See Jim Staats or Jot Giln
i Virga pllnl to lllMe hla Fromme tedylna. But
P:lone 446-t340 . ·
· Gallipolis, Ohio ~ openlntl statement Mcllday said' "If the )rllllllo leiiii~Y,"""
I can't stop her."
arxl present between one lllld
.,
~

Utility
firms are '

"'t

Ratification meetings set '

f'·

defendants

Tape may ·
be key in
F.romme
case

Shari
-l.

•

We take it for granted- sinee you
are ~till young- that you are more
interested in today's cost of living than
tomorrow's cost of retiring.
But if you begin now to save for the
future, you can save money in taxes as
fast as next year. So can your wife.
It's called the Individual Retirement
Account. It's free when you or&gt;en it at
our bank.
If you and your wife are both
employed, and both are not covered by
qualified retirement plans, you each ·
can begin separate retirement plans of
your own.
Under the law, you may contribute
15% ofyoureamed annual income-up"
to $1;500-to the account. The
amount you contribute each year is
deductible from your gross annual
income. The amount your wife contributes
each year Is deductible from her gross
annual income. That means, the combined total of your and your wife's deductio.ns could be as ~uch as $3,000.
The $3,000 deduction could save you

as much as $1,350 or more in taxes
each year.
For example, if both you and your
wife qualify for contributions of $1,500
yearly, the following shows the tax
benefit you 'II receive:
If your
You'll save
combined taxable this much in taxes
--~n_c_o_m ~_!s_ _ __ ..oeac~ear
$20,000
$ 840~--

24,000
28,000

960
1,080
,1,170

30,000
_ __:40
.::..:•:::.:
000
:..::.__ _ __:,1~~
...:.........Also, your contributions are tucked
away in separate Individual Retirement
Accounts where they grow at S~!t annual
Interest year after year after year. And,
not one peMy of the Interest earned on
each account Is taxed until you decide to
withdraw at retirement.
Until that time, the $3,000 you can
contribute each year Is tax deductible.
Now where can you find a better tax
shelter than thnt these days?

Theil Is No BIHir lime Than Now F.- Us To 8t Your an

.COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
Sirer

Marlette

'1 5 00
&lt;2('

... ( / . f:/~b

::=:tU:b~vt:,

"'fr

Matber F.D.I.C.

C.rtsn.t,Fipall

SPECJA.L
SAVE ·
:.-.'7"

Bridal Pilla

MOBILE ·HOMES INC. . :.:~~n=n~·:

**** *'************'************"
~

21_- The Sunday 'l}ffies -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

~

~

CHAMPAIGN, Ill, (UP!) _
Gordon ~II ran for 141 yards
and two touchdowns Sa turday to lead fourth-ranked
Michigan to its ninth straigh t
victory over Illinois, 21-1~
·and set up a showdown batU~
with top-ranked Ohio State
Saturday for the Big Ten
Conference title.
. Dllnols helped the Michigan
.cause •by throwing pass Interceptions, losing the ball
once on a fwn.ble, committing
a pass interference for a 16yard penalty to set a
Michigan score and losing the
ll811 once on a fourth down
B!ld Inches try with a fumble.
But Michigan came up with
an acute case of butterfingers
iltelf to hurt its own cause,
l..ing the ball four times in
five fumbles.
Sparked by BeD's running
And some power running
i~ide Roo· Little, Michigan
threw only one pass in the
ball game and completued . It, . a
27-yard
· •lliSS from freshman quar. terback Rick Leach to
&lt;illm Smith which carried to
:tiR llllni 22 before Michigan
'oi1111t the ball on one of Its
.1umbles; by Bell . Another
'INISS attempt by Michigan
nullified on the pass
~nlerference penalty, by
.IWnois' Rickie Mitchem,
'J'hlch set up a one-yard
~tinge
by Leach for
·.ldichlgan's decisive touch'1;;-:

down.
Michigan scored :twice the
first three times it had the
hall, ta!dng over on the lllini
30 when Don Dufek recovered
Steve Greene's fumble . Bell
dove over from the two on the
Wolverines sixth play.
Ncxl time Michigim had the
hall it covered 48 yards in 12
plays before Bell's one yard
scoring run. Michigan's last
score came on a 46-yard drive
in nine plays after Dwight
Hicks made one of his two
interceptions on a pass by
Lonnie Perrin whi ch he
returned 20 yards to the lllini
46. It took nine plays before
Leach scored,
Both of Illinois' touchdowns ·
came in the last period .
Quarterback Kurt Steger
passed 20 yards to Frank
Johnson to wind up an 11play, 57-yard drive for the
first score and Chubby

Phillips ran twoyards for th~J.• COLUI\fBUS, Ohio (UP! )second touchdown to wmd up .Seniors Co rnelius Greene,
a 63-yard parade in 13 plays Archie Griffin and Brian
with 1:14 to play.
Baschn agel, playing their
Steger hit Johnson with a final game in tradition-rich
two-point conversion to put Oh io Stadlwn, all got into the
the Illinois within range of scoring act Saturday ·to lead
winning but an onside l&lt;ick top-rated Ohio slate to a 311-6
failed
and
Michigan Big Ten victory over Minrecovered the bali and nesola .
maintained possession Ito tbe
Green e had tou chdown
finish.
·ruos of 14 and 31 yards,
Steger completed only one Griffin· scored on a 19•yard
of nine passes for II Yards in run, Baschnagel from 21
the first half, but hit on 10 of yards out and Pe te ·Johnson,
14 for 92 yards in the second the nation 's leading scorer,
half.
It was the seventh defeat in
10 games lor Illinois and gave
e

~~~~~np:;;y~2ecord, 7~in

A

got his 22nd touchdown of the
seas.onon an eight-yard blas t.
Minn esota's only score
came on a five-yard iouch·
down pass from Tony Dungy
to fWiback Greg Barlow.
The Bucke yes, whose
victo ry sends them into
·sa turday's showdown at
Michigan with a lo.&lt;l. record,
managed only one score in
the first quarter, a 29-yard
field goal by Tom Klaban, but
the next time they got the bidl
they marched 64 yards in
eight plays, capp ed by

~gzes·

-· •.
Michigan's game with Ohio
State Saturday will decide the
Rose Bowl participant from
HOUSTON (UP!) - Thirdthe Big Ten, but the loser also
ranked
Te:q~s A&amp;M broke
is certain to go to another
loose for two third quarter
Bowl game.
touchdowns after big
·defensive plays by .Robert
Jackson and Lester Hayes
Saturday to whip Rice 33-14
and remain unbeaten in nine
games.
Trailing by one point late in
the third quarter, Aggie
safety Hayes forced rice
punter Mike Landrum to
abandon plans to kick and
a short pass from cavanaugh Jackson tackled Landrum on
PITTSBURGH ( UPI ) Unstoppable Tony Dorsett and scored from 49 yards out . · the 'Rice 12. Aggie quarrushed for a school record 303 On the fourth quarter in- terback Mike Jay scored his'
yards and scored on touch- sura nee touchdown drive, second touchdown on the next
down rW!s of 71 and 49 yards Dorsett picked up 42 yards on play, but t,Qe A&amp;M run for two
points faDed.
to lead Pi ttsburgh to a 34-20 . three carries .
His three pass receptions
But on Rice's next ~~eries
upset vi ctory over Notre
gave him a total of 365 yards
'~"
Dame
Saturday
for
the
AI
Panthers' first triumph over gained.
Hudson sets new the Irish In 12 years.
The Irish moved the ball
well
, but were uoable to
The Irish, who needed a
Dorsett's
exvic tory for an expected invite contain
to the Cotton Bowl, fell to 7-3. plosiveness. Notre Dame's
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Pi tt, 7-3, kept its hopes alive touchdowns came on a one....,.,
Dan
Shepard field goals of 34
· -GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. lor a post-season invitation yard plunge by quarterback
and
'11 yard.!, the final one
~tJPI ) - The Hudson Tigers but may have to upset Penn Rick Slager, and Slager's. IGwith
7:10 left in the game,
!Wh their 72nd high school State next week to earn a yard pass to Ken MacAfee.
Dave Reeve added field goals helped boost the Cincinnati
¥~6tball game in a row bowl bid.
' Bearcats to a 6-5 win
Saturday to set a national
Dorsett's rushing total was of 48 and 47 yards.
over
Ohio
'fllip recOrd.
The ·Irish played without Saturday
the most ever gained against
University.
1;~ by halfbacks Greg Notre Dame, a mark Dorse tt leading rusher AI Hunter and
Cincinnati quarterback
IJIIlierrez and Terry Carr, previously held, and his two · reserve quar terback Joe
Henry
Miller gave the
Montana, both out with inH~!I&amp;On racked up 24 points in touchdowns ga ve him 14 on
Bobcats a fourth-ijuarter
!lie first
half pnd then held off the season, also a Pitt mark. juries.
tH i
·
safety rather than kick from
a fired-up Kalamazoo Dorse tt was involved in all
his own end zone. The
Hackett team for ~ a 24-14 four Panther touchdowns. He
Bearcats'
Lou
West
1fl!lory.
se t up the first with a 57-yard
""The vi ctory · advanced run to the Notre Dame three
Coach Tom Saylor's team to and · quarterback Matt
next week's Glass C Cavanaugh swept into the end
SAUNA, Kan. (UPI)- Mike points to 144 for eastern New
finals . in
the
fi rs t zone on the following play. Boil of eastern New Mexico Mexico, the defendin g
I.ater in the first period, won the individual title and champion . Fort Hays (Kan.)
poet • season prep playever held By the ' Dorse tt took a pitch around Edinboro State (Pa.) College state was third, College of St.
· hlgan Htgn , I)Cnoo• right end, waited for a key
placed all iIs runners in the Francis (Ill.) was fourth and
letic Association .
block by Rodney Clark, then top 50 Saturday to win the Malone (Ohio) was fifth.
·f)le 72 wins In a row broke dashed 71 yards for a touchteam title in the 20th annual , Edinboro was paced by·
tij.,?l consecutive victories down .
NAIA
National Cross Country Henry Winger, who finished
rNed up by Jefferson &lt;-~ty ,
Still in the fir~t half, he championship.
and Jeff Foster In
"1Vv between 1958 and 1966. delayed over the middle, took Edinboro scored a low of 97 . eighth,
11th.
, r(~
Boil covered the five-mile
distance In 24 :23 and held off
a challenge from Tony Brien
of Marymount (Kan. ) who
finished ~cond in 24 :26.
'~"'
- " ... (UP!) - yards, two yards and one skins to a 27-11 Mid-American
Others in the top five in
Rod Csr- yard Saturday to pace the · Confe~ence win over Kent order were Dan Hall of
~ler scored on runs of 20 Tangerine Bowl-bound Red- State.
Willamette (Ore )., Dave
Carpenter broke open the
Conover of Kansas State''"
game with !wo third.perind Pittsburg and Desmond
touchdOWDJ after Kent State, O'CQnnor of Angelo (Tex.)
4-4, took a ~ halfUme lead
State.
with a flrst-ijuarter safety.
.
· Carpenter's running on the
Redaldna' first po!l~""sj'lll in
the third quarter lad lbe MAC
~ I !!
champloos,
9-1, fr!lll theit
'
I f .II
own
13-yard
line in 16 plays
~ESVILLE - Af~r a the Blue Devils and Hovers
for the go-ahead score.
~ start here Saturday were quick. .
••
"We got towork a lot on our Quarterback Sherman Smith
m~ning,
Coach
Jim
Oiborne 's Gallipolis Blue pressing offense," Osborne connected with Gary Qu1sno r
Di!vlia came back strong in said. "We also got to 5ee a for 16 yards and the touchUJt final four sessions to variety of things. It was a down.
carpenter then continued
. IIJIJ!e a good showing in a go od experi ence for the
his mastery of the Kent State
tlge-way cage scrlnunage boys," he added .
defense,
oo his way to a 1~
No
statistics
were
kept
on
autnst Clasa AAA Zanesville
yard
performance
for the
of ,~ Central, Ohio League the three-way scrimmage.
game,
capping
the
Redsldns'
Osborne said all 13 varsity
aqjl:j\kron Rootstown 1a l1ass
AA team in the Northwestern players saw action. Terry second possession with hla
Wall, sophomore guard, saw first score on a 00-yard run.
[Hsbictnear Akron.
Kent State's lone second-I·.
Nine quarters of action limited action due to an ankle
half
scoring effort was
found the Blue DevUs winning injury suffered in Friday's
clima1ed
with a Greg Kokal.
fi~LL sessions while losing scrimmage agalnst North·
western .
lour.
Kim FeatBent psss Ior nine .
"'
Following the scrlnunage, yards that ~lied the Golden ,
'Wter losing three ~~esslons
GAHS
players
and
coaches
in 1t row, our boys bouoced
~~es to within five points,
back," remarked. Coach stopped at Tom's .lce t'ream
C.rpenter, who totaled
h~lf
Os~e. The GAHS mentor Parlor for d.inner before
aaiyl&gt; Zanesville and Roots· returning home Saturday yards in the aecond half, . XL ,
added his two other touch- ' . c atn saws
Iowa,.were JlOt b~ but. both afternoon.
downs on short nms,
built and sold.
flu

Pitt upsets
Irish, 34-20

Greene's 14-yard scorlng rWI
around right ·end.
Griffin, who finis hed the
game with 124 yards in 23
carri es - the 31st consecutive reg ular-season
game in which the Heisman
Trophy-winning tailback has
rushed for more than 100
yards .- scored from the 19yard line on a spectacular
sideline rUn to make the score
17~ at halftime.
The Golphers, ~-5 overall
and 2-5 in the league, used
nearly seven minutes on an

b
un .eaten

the Owls' Ed Loftin attempted to throw a rulllling
pass·, was hit by JacksOn and
fumbled. Hayes recovered on
the Rice 15. ·
Aggie fullback George
Woodard, who gained 167
tough yards on 32 carries,
blasted 15 yards on the first
play after the fumble for
another Aggie touchdown.
Running back Skip Walker
dove two yards with an insurance touchdown with 3:58
left in the game.
Rice, on two Tommy
Kramer first half touchdowns
passes to John Coleman,
scored more points than any
other team had managed
against the tojH'ated Aggie
defense this year.

And a gambling Owl
defense in the first half
stymied A&amp;M to Jay's twoyard nln for a touchdown and
Tony Franklin's two field
· goals of 28 ·and 59 yards.
·Franklin's 59-yarder was a
school record and tied the
second longest field goal In
Southwest
Conference
history.
· The Aggie victory, coupled
with the Texas Longhorns'
triumph
over
Texas
Christian, set up their Nov. 29
showdown at CoUege Station.
Texas is S.O in conference and
A&amp;M is~witha Dec. 6 game
against Arkansas which still
has a chance at the league
Utle.

64-yard drive for their only
touchdown, Dungy hitting
Barlow to cut lhe lead to 17-6
with 5:31 left in the third
period.
OS U stor med back,
however, with touchdowns
the next three times it had the
ball. Johnson capped an 86yard drive In 13 plays with his
·ght.- d
G
t
el yar run , reene wen
31yards up the middle for his
sec ond · tou chdown an d
wingback Baschnagel raced
21yards topaydirt on the first
play after freshman Leonard
Mills blocked a Minnesota
Puot and recovered the ball
on the Gophers' 21.
Dun gy, who came into the
gam e the conference's
leading passer, didn't get a
completion . wttil the 11 :02
mark of the third quarter. He
finished !Oout of 25 with three
Intercepted.

· F umbles~IO!it

1·0

2-1'

Penalties.yards 2·24 3·25
By Quarters:
Minnesota
o o 6 o- 6
Ohio St.
3 14 o 21- 38
Ohio-FG Klaban 29.
Oh io- Greene 14 run
(Klaban kick) .
Oh io- Griffin 19 run
t Ktabon kick).
Mlnn- Bartow 5 pass from
Dungy (pass failed ) . .
Oh io- John son 8 run
{Kiaban kick I.
Oh io- Greene 31 run
t Ktaban kick ).
Ohlo-Baschnagel 21 run
{Kiaban· kick ).

ON DISPLAY FOR
YOUR INSPECTION

•.

A3 BR TOTAL ELECTRIC
DOUBLE WIDE HOME.

.

This home features a shingle roof, housetype siding, total wrap Fom -Cor shea1hing,
sliding patio door' in kitchen, carpeted
throughout. 1!4'' paneling, one piece molded
acrylic tub &amp; shower, huge walk-In closet.
the best furniture available and name brand
appliances.
All T~is For Just
Set Up on Your Lot.

Bearcat field goals beat Ohio U.
recovered the ensuing free
kick to enable CinclnnsU to
run out the clock for the win.
Ohio University acored first
on Gary Homer's 36-yard
field goal and held the lead
wttil Shepard tied the score
on a 34-yard boot in the third
quarter and put the Bearcats
ahead midway m the final
period.
With the score 6-3, Cln-

Greene compleied seven of•
14 passes for 131 yards .and
Johnson, the Buckeyes' 243pound ful lback, had 90 yards
in 22 carries.
~~Statis t i cs of the MinnesotaOhio St. football game:
Minn. osu
Firs tdowns
16
30 •
Rushes.yards 38·141 69-380
Pass ing yard s
117 131
Retur n yar&lt;ls
8 ·. 52
Passes
12-26~ 3 7-14·0
. Punts
7-35. 5 3-46.6

cinnati was unable to move
the ball out of its own fiveyard line and. Miller leU on
the ball in his end zone for the
safety.
Connell punted to midfield
and West jumped on the lree
ball,
· The win was Cincinnati's
sixth this year against lour
defeats. Ohio University is

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Ohio

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Pearl Ash 992-3323, Roger o..K 992-7671

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Malone fifth in CC finals

Bowl-bound 'Skins win
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After
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:¥l - The SUnday Times -SentineJ, Sunday , Nov. 16, 1975

GALUPOLIS - No arrests Kenneth A. Brown, Patriot
have been made in a breaking Star Rt. , Gallipolis. Entry
and entering Thursday night was made by prying a door
or ea.rly Friday morning at open.
the Warehime Clinic, 530
Missing was a 12. gauge
Second Ave.
shotgun , a 20 ga uge shotgun ,
According to city police a 30.06 rifle with scope, a 22
officers said someone pried a automatic riOe and a single
window open on the north side shot rifle.
of 'he building to gain entrance. Once Inside, they
went to the medicine and
drug room where they took
2,250 gel-propomine (diet
pills) and 600 white diet pills Three injured
which were in plastic containers.
Officers
Friday
in- in auto mishap
vestigated the theft of a tape .
player and three tapes and
GA LLIPOLIS - Three
speakers taken from a 1972
persons
were injured in a
Toyota owned · by David
deer-car
accident Friday on
Patrick of 480 Davis St.,·
Kanauga which was parked Rt. 7-tn Meigs c ounty.
According to the Galliain Iron t of the St. Louis
Meigs
State Highway Patrol
catholic Church.
James N. M. Davis, a deer ran into the path of a
principal of Gallia Academy car operated by Howard R. •
High School, reported an alto Deskins, 35, of Ashland, Ky.
Three persons in his car,
clarinet valued at $225 was
Barbara Deskins, 33, Jeffrey
missing from the school.
D.
Deskins, 11 , and
Galila County sheriff's
Christopher
Deskins, age six,
deputies meanwhile inall
had
visible
Injuries. There
vestigated the theft of $005
was
moderate
damage to the
worth of guns taken Friday
car.
The
deer
ran from the
between 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.
from the trailer home of scene.

reveal identity

Shown above is Richard Mills, city manager, signing .
a proclamatioo during November 1S-22, 1975 as American
Education Week in Galllpolis. Looking on are Donalg
Staggs, &amp;lperintendent Gallipolis City Schools; Jim
Davis, principal and Ed Stewart, Assistant principal of
GAllS, and Neil Sanders, principal of Washington
Elementary School,
. .

AmencaJl
• .Educatl•on
.

week pIanS announced

Models and sizes for every requirement. Color steel or
color alUminum-your choice.
0 Utillly Storage
0 Garages/Workshops
0 Machinery Storage
o Beef/Dairy
0 Horae Barns
0 Commercial Buildings

W".clc81 hill a Cndt
Plan to.fltvourludget.
Clrcle¥lle, Olllo, Box 123 •

Michigan on top ,Buckeyes rip Gophers

Medical records

B&amp;E probe still
·underway in Gallia

(114)474·1732

ITAT. ROUTI M

.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Uty Schools Saturday emphasized that American
Education Week, Nov' 16-22,
is an appropriate time for all
parenta and other citizens to
recommit themselves to
making America's schools
better.
The schools will offer
specialized programs and
demonstrations throughout
the week to mark the observance's theme, "Our
Future Is in Our Schools,",
according to Donald Staggs,
superintendent.
The five schools in the
Galllpolis Glty School District
(Gallia Academy High
School, Green, ·c la y, Rio
Grande, and Washington
Elementary ) have planned
the following for the w~ek of
Nov. 111-22:
t - A special invitation
from each achool to the
parents Inviting them to
come and visit the school and
look around the buildings.
2 - All school bulletin
boards will be 'decorated to
the theme of "Our Future Is
in Our Schoola."
3 .:.. Waahiongton and
G41lla Actdemy High School
have made posters which are
being displayed in several
Gallipolis businesses.
4 - Rio Grande Elementary is conducUng Its annual
PTO drive to coincide with
this week's activities.
5 - Each elementary

building will have their Tit~ I
Parent Advisory Committee
ineetlng during this week.
6- GAHS wiD offer a vocal
music program for the
parents at 11-9:15 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 21.
7- Green school is inviting
all parents to visit the school
and have lunch with the
students and teachers.
6 - All teachers in the
GaiUpolis l~ty Schools are
stressing the importance of
Education in our way of lite
here in America.
American Education Week,
observed annually since 1921,
seeks to encourage local
citizen support arid active
participation in the improvement of education. This
year the program will s·lress
learning more about the
schools as ~ basis for active
and continued personal involvement. The nationwide
event' is sponsored by the
National Education
Association, The American
Legion, . the
National
Congress of Parents and
Teachers, and the U. S. Office
of Education.

Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Spelgel, Anna and Wayne and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Speglel, Columbus, visited
Mr. 8\ld Mrs. Noble Hamon
and Mr. and Mrs. Rex
&lt;.beadle and family during
the weekend.

A $3,000·tax shelter for next year.
I

GAULEY BRIDGE, W. Va. checks.
(UP! ) - ~ skeleton found In
Mrs. Boatwright quoted the
the rugged terrain of this official as saying he wanted
sou!herri West Virginia town to know whether to forward
has been identified as that of her brother's checks to Anan Ohio man who left his s~.
home to visit a sister.
Told that he hadn't yet
Using medical records on arrived here; the official said
file in a Veterans Ad· he had waiched Cottrell
lnintstration hospital where board a•bus Aug. 9 bound for
the victim had been a patient, Gauley Bridge.
state Medical E~amlner Dr.
Not. until she read a newslrvan Sopher identified the paper article about the
body as that of cammte discovery of the skeleton did
CottreU, 48, Mansfield, Ohio. she suspect it might be her
Braxter Mullens, a brother, Mrs. BoatWright told
fisherman from Charleston, police, adding a missing
spotted the body Tuesday at person's report was on file in
the base of a 15Q.foot rock · Oh10.
cliff, from which authorities
believe the victim feU.
Fallure to override
Foul play hasn't been ruled
out, but police say they
cannot understand why bill
d
CottreU wandered 10 the area
opens oor
of a cliff, accessible only by a
path winding through the
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
New River G&lt;irge area .
General Assembly's failure
Cottrell was discovered to override Gov, James A.
below the Hawk's Nest Golf Rhodes' veto of a public
l1ub, half a mile from the workers bargalnil1! bill opens
nearest road.
the door for the federal
"He apparently didn't have govemment to intervene, the
any money with him, so &lt;lllo Association of Public
robbery is not likely a School Employes said
motive," one trooper ob- Friday,
served. "And, if you're going
There Is a growing
to kiD someone, why walk awareness among public
through some of the roughest employes of the failure of
cOI!IJil'y in the state to do it?" some elected officials to
Cottrell's identification reeognize and deal with their
came after his sister, Mrs. II'Oblems, said associatloo
Irene Boatwright of Ansted, Executive Director Larry
read a news account of the OeCreece.
discovery and became
"By falling to override ·the
alarmed.
veto," DeCresce said, '1he
He had planned to visit her legislature has opened the
later in the year, and Mrs. door for the federal governBoatwright said she became ment to step in to solve Ohio's
concerned in October after 'an labor II'Oblems. Bargaining
official of a Volunteers of bills are currenUy pending in
A1Jlerica mission in Mans- Congress to establish
field, where Cottrell had II'Ocedures which are not
stayed, ·telephoned her to spaclflcally designed to meet
report the receipt of some VA atlo's needs."

DR. TIIOMAS Morgan, Gallipolis, was the first t0°
make a donation to help save Jllew York from financl81"

disaster.

·
lib

New York relief fun~.
.

started by Atty.

Crow~~
'"'&gt;jO

POMEROY - Fred C..'row, collected is not large, jleu
a surgical patient at Holzer must remember we are llvJQg
,:;~
Medical Center, has a fund in Appalachia.
Nevertheless, it appelli'.s
drive going at the hospital for
the city of New York. The that a part of your problelll
first donation was made by could be solved if the Nrio
Dr. ThomasW . Morgan, chief York residents would helP
of the surgical staff at HMC. themselvs by donating to q
The following Is a copy. of government. Get Jen&gt;r
the letter Fred has sent to Lewis, Howard CoseJI or Me
New York City Mayor or two other outstandlllk
Abraham Beame, Also there citizens and solicit modq
is a list of those who have through T.V. and radio. lltlt
the policemen, flremi:lf,
contributed to the cause:
school teachers and garbage
Mayor Abraham Beame
Mayor of City of New York collectors go house to house
in order to raise money to
Muoicipal Building
save New York. The ~
New York, N.Y. 10000
and
other financ ial inDear Mayor Beame :
While recovering from stitutions should also help.
cancer surgery, I became Each executive could diMdistressed about the New tribute 10 pet. of his earnings.
1 am certain that if ·NFW
York City financial situation.
York
City would make 1[fll
I discussed the matter with a
nwnber of friends and it was attempt to help itself, mqffl:•
·decided to raise money many communities ·woy~~
locally to help your situation. help to save the ship! : ~
It is morally wrong for 0~ .
Donors have contributed
without solicitation, and, Federal Government to pay
although
the amount New York's bills - New Y~k
should do this itself. .
Enclosed please find c~
in the amount of tJ4.88 "
s,tart you on your way. ,.ii
Very truly Y0\1!~~
FredW .CNw
'
l.DRAIN, Ohio (UP!) desire for a ceiling on a cost''
ta:l
Ratification meetings will be of-living clause.
DONORS
::or
held nen week by six of seven
The longest strike ever
NEW YORK CITY ~ ··1
lllioos which have reached against American Ship, 97
RELIEF FUND ""'~
tentative agreements with days in 1969, would be ex$1.00
Fred W. C..'row, ~•h
the strikebound American ceeded llhould the current
Slip Building Co.
strike last through Wed- Eleanor K. Grow, 11
Thomas W. Morgan, M.P.,' '
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ray · 'lbe unlona Involved in the nesday.
I. Carson &lt;.'rOw, 1.00 Oscar .
Leonard, Celumbul, hu flied !~Way-old strike indude the
Clark,
M.D., 1.00 Harollf'
boilermakers, carpenters,
a '150 million damit&amp;e llllit In paintera, plpefltters,
Delth , 1.00 Corky Kld~t
Franklin County Common
(Paul ), 1.00 Grace Cro'w~·
Pleas
Court
against operating engineers and the
Etch, 1.00 John E. Halliday,
International~ Brotherhood of ·
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.;
1.00 Ted Reed. 1.00 waa
the Columbus arxl Southern Electrical Workers. Still
Grueser,
.10 Rich ,
without an agresnelit and
~o Electric Co.; and city
Glasgow,
.50 . Geo
negotiating separately Ia the
olflciU.
Meinhsrt, 1.00 Lawrence
International Assoclalioo of
Leonard,ln his suit, alleged
Bastian!, 1.00 Nancy B. Rciii,
Machin!Jt8.
gas arx1 electric rate in1.00 Leo Roberts, 1.00 J . .,Jil•:
The strike involves some
crea.aea iJnpol!!d llillce Jan. I,
Vanity,
Jr., 1.00 Paul Eill1!\G
1,000 workers in Lorain,
1974 ue illecll.
Jr.,
1.00
Mary and Fred
'!be suit claimed a city Olicago and Toledo.
Morrow, ..10 Jack &amp;
No details of the
ordinance prevents the
agreements were·announced,
SACRAMENTO, Csllf. - Whittle, .25 Paul Karr, ·
l'ltbllc Utllltles Collllllilllllori
M it was reported a main Videotape testimony by Maggie Barrett frost, , .
of Oblo (PUOO) ~ acting
Henry Wells, .25 Richard
upon a utility finn's rate issue was management's President Ford at the trial of Fick, 1.00 Marcia B. Karr, :1
Lynette Fromme may hold
inc~ request unless the
the key to persuading the jury Scott ?, .10 Kathryn Mora 1
requelt hu lint been voted
that the Manson cultiat was Altana Karr, 2.00 VirginiB
upon by the dty COWJdl and
not trying to klll him, ~c­ l'rew and Family, 1.00 Rich
wten.
NEW ASSIGNMENT
Jones, I.OOGlennl'undiff, ~.I
Leonard said Columlia .in·
GREAT FALLS, Mont. - cording to her defense 1.00 Dale C. Warner, 1:110''
creued rates by 45 per cent The son ~ a New Haven, W. lawyer.
Attorney John E. Virga Steve Cartwright, 1.00 -e.n•
Iince Jill. I, lf/4, and the Va,, couple has been assigned
Willlam O'Neil, .115 P. Browlr( •
eleetric compeny rates haw to Malmstrom AFB, Mont., said Ford "didn't hear a click .50 Dr. Schmidt, 1.00 iJOiCl
jumped by • per cent Iince for duty with a uolt of the and he dldn 't hear her say Davis, 1.00 Mag Meadows, ,:l(ot
lbe Sllll8 date.
Strategic Air Corrunand. Air anything," and that was Margaret Van Cooney, V.~
The llllit Baked the court lor Force Sergeant Thomas E. "very favorable" to the Eck. and Martha Moore, •.WI!
a
restraining
order ROUSh, son of Mr. and Mrs. defense of Miss Fromme, , Evelyn Knight, 5.00 Rd~a
preventing the PU00 from Detner Roush ,' Is a security accused of trying to Couch, .40 C..'het and Nadcy1"
acting upon IllY more rate policeman with the 341st assassinate the President Buckley, Ann and Jim aflll'•
hlltea illlllllilllllitla lettled. Mlsalie Security Squadron: with a .45&lt;8Uber pistol.
Many of the 'II defense 1.00 Manning Wetherholt. " J&gt;./1
Leonard ubd damalea He previously served at Osan
11e1a
wilnelllles testified they heard
!rom Columbul Mayor Tom AB, Republic Of Korea.
lifr
Moody, city llOWICII, IJtllltia
The ~~ergeant is a 1972 a "metallic click," poasibly
,,;n I
Direclor Robert Newton and graduate of Wahama High the IOIIIId of the hammer of - -- - -----.JI:O"tl
the pistol ltrildng the firing
the two utlllty firms.
~ School.
:u:ol
pin about the time Secret
Service agents dlaarmed the :ID witnesaell. The hiatlxllt'
case could go to the jury !at« m
'
~~An
****~********************** defendlnt.
V1rp Biked Ford, the first thls week.
If
convicted
of
attemptinl ~•)
defense wltn-, If he heard
a "click CJI' any other sound to murder the Prelldent tl(ll&lt;l!
'-'CIII the weapon" as Miss the 'United States, Mi~~r\11
Fromme lbruat tile plato! at Fromme faces il life prlatm
111m Sept. $ in Capitol Psrt. term.
A fervent t!Uciple ol the
"Not that I can recall," the
Imprisoned
Manson, Mlsa
Prelldent answered in the
F'roliune !Joycotted the lint
unique t.pe.
65x14 Total Electric, 2 Bedroom,
He said he saw the weapon week Of her trial. During tbe
''inltantaiiiQIII!y becauae al· Jroceedlnp, abe sat in a
Modern Decor;
111011 automaUcaUy ooe of the courthouse holding room
Secret Service 11111111 lunged, equipped with closed clratlt
televilion.
ll'lbbed
tbe
weapon,
lllld
She wu can1ed each day
tben I wu plilhed of! by other
Into
the courihouse from a
membe~a of the Secret
van
truck.
Chief U.S. D1atr1ct
Service detail ' " '
Court Judge 'lbomaa J.
lndteaticllllare the delenae
~cBrlde of!nd to let her
return to the courtroom if abe
Mill Framme wu caJIIns would !l'omlle not to dinpt
attmliDn &amp;o her CIIIICII'II for the proceacllags. Eleh ·day
tthe ......
~
' .
Virp lndbtetl he did not
.. - f llllllldller Charlet Manion. favor the Idea of Mill
See Jim Staats or Jot Giln
i Virga pllnl to lllMe hla Fromme tedylna. But
P:lone 446-t340 . ·
· Gallipolis, Ohio ~ openlntl statement Mcllday said' "If the )rllllllo leiiii~Y,"""
I can't stop her."
arxl present between one lllld
.,
~

Utility
firms are '

"'t

Ratification meetings set '

f'·

defendants

Tape may ·
be key in
F.romme
case

Shari
-l.

•

We take it for granted- sinee you
are ~till young- that you are more
interested in today's cost of living than
tomorrow's cost of retiring.
But if you begin now to save for the
future, you can save money in taxes as
fast as next year. So can your wife.
It's called the Individual Retirement
Account. It's free when you or&gt;en it at
our bank.
If you and your wife are both
employed, and both are not covered by
qualified retirement plans, you each ·
can begin separate retirement plans of
your own.
Under the law, you may contribute
15% ofyoureamed annual income-up"
to $1;500-to the account. The
amount you contribute each year is
deductible from your gross annual
income. The amount your wife contributes
each year Is deductible from her gross
annual income. That means, the combined total of your and your wife's deductio.ns could be as ~uch as $3,000.
The $3,000 deduction could save you

as much as $1,350 or more in taxes
each year.
For example, if both you and your
wife qualify for contributions of $1,500
yearly, the following shows the tax
benefit you 'II receive:
If your
You'll save
combined taxable this much in taxes
--~n_c_o_m ~_!s_ _ __ ..oeac~ear
$20,000
$ 840~--

24,000
28,000

960
1,080
,1,170

30,000
_ __:40
.::..:•:::.:
000
:..::.__ _ __:,1~~
...:.........Also, your contributions are tucked
away in separate Individual Retirement
Accounts where they grow at S~!t annual
Interest year after year after year. And,
not one peMy of the Interest earned on
each account Is taxed until you decide to
withdraw at retirement.
Until that time, the $3,000 you can
contribute each year Is tax deductible.
Now where can you find a better tax
shelter than thnt these days?

Theil Is No BIHir lime Than Now F.- Us To 8t Your an

.COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
Sirer

Marlette

'1 5 00
&lt;2('

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Matber F.D.I.C.

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SPECJA.L
SAVE ·
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Bridal Pilla

MOBILE ·HOMES INC. . :.:~~n=n~·:

**** *'************'************"
~

21_- The Sunday 'l}ffies -Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

~

~

CHAMPAIGN, Ill, (UP!) _
Gordon ~II ran for 141 yards
and two touchdowns Sa turday to lead fourth-ranked
Michigan to its ninth straigh t
victory over Illinois, 21-1~
·and set up a showdown batU~
with top-ranked Ohio State
Saturday for the Big Ten
Conference title.
. Dllnols helped the Michigan
.cause •by throwing pass Interceptions, losing the ball
once on a fwn.ble, committing
a pass interference for a 16yard penalty to set a
Michigan score and losing the
ll811 once on a fourth down
B!ld Inches try with a fumble.
But Michigan came up with
an acute case of butterfingers
iltelf to hurt its own cause,
l..ing the ball four times in
five fumbles.
Sparked by BeD's running
And some power running
i~ide Roo· Little, Michigan
threw only one pass in the
ball game and completued . It, . a
27-yard
· •lliSS from freshman quar. terback Rick Leach to
&lt;illm Smith which carried to
:tiR llllni 22 before Michigan
'oi1111t the ball on one of Its
.1umbles; by Bell . Another
'INISS attempt by Michigan
nullified on the pass
~nlerference penalty, by
.IWnois' Rickie Mitchem,
'J'hlch set up a one-yard
~tinge
by Leach for
·.ldichlgan's decisive touch'1;;-:

down.
Michigan scored :twice the
first three times it had the
hall, ta!dng over on the lllini
30 when Don Dufek recovered
Steve Greene's fumble . Bell
dove over from the two on the
Wolverines sixth play.
Ncxl time Michigim had the
hall it covered 48 yards in 12
plays before Bell's one yard
scoring run. Michigan's last
score came on a 46-yard drive
in nine plays after Dwight
Hicks made one of his two
interceptions on a pass by
Lonnie Perrin whi ch he
returned 20 yards to the lllini
46. It took nine plays before
Leach scored,
Both of Illinois' touchdowns ·
came in the last period .
Quarterback Kurt Steger
passed 20 yards to Frank
Johnson to wind up an 11play, 57-yard drive for the
first score and Chubby

Phillips ran twoyards for th~J.• COLUI\fBUS, Ohio (UP! )second touchdown to wmd up .Seniors Co rnelius Greene,
a 63-yard parade in 13 plays Archie Griffin and Brian
with 1:14 to play.
Baschn agel, playing their
Steger hit Johnson with a final game in tradition-rich
two-point conversion to put Oh io Stadlwn, all got into the
the Illinois within range of scoring act Saturday ·to lead
winning but an onside l&lt;ick top-rated Ohio slate to a 311-6
failed
and
Michigan Big Ten victory over Minrecovered the bali and nesola .
maintained possession Ito tbe
Green e had tou chdown
finish.
·ruos of 14 and 31 yards,
Steger completed only one Griffin· scored on a 19•yard
of nine passes for II Yards in run, Baschnagel from 21
the first half, but hit on 10 of yards out and Pe te ·Johnson,
14 for 92 yards in the second the nation 's leading scorer,
half.
It was the seventh defeat in
10 games lor Illinois and gave
e

~~~~~np:;;y~2ecord, 7~in

A

got his 22nd touchdown of the
seas.onon an eight-yard blas t.
Minn esota's only score
came on a five-yard iouch·
down pass from Tony Dungy
to fWiback Greg Barlow.
The Bucke yes, whose
victo ry sends them into
·sa turday's showdown at
Michigan with a lo.&lt;l. record,
managed only one score in
the first quarter, a 29-yard
field goal by Tom Klaban, but
the next time they got the bidl
they marched 64 yards in
eight plays, capp ed by

~gzes·

-· •.
Michigan's game with Ohio
State Saturday will decide the
Rose Bowl participant from
HOUSTON (UP!) - Thirdthe Big Ten, but the loser also
ranked
Te:q~s A&amp;M broke
is certain to go to another
loose for two third quarter
Bowl game.
touchdowns after big
·defensive plays by .Robert
Jackson and Lester Hayes
Saturday to whip Rice 33-14
and remain unbeaten in nine
games.
Trailing by one point late in
the third quarter, Aggie
safety Hayes forced rice
punter Mike Landrum to
abandon plans to kick and
a short pass from cavanaugh Jackson tackled Landrum on
PITTSBURGH ( UPI ) Unstoppable Tony Dorsett and scored from 49 yards out . · the 'Rice 12. Aggie quarrushed for a school record 303 On the fourth quarter in- terback Mike Jay scored his'
yards and scored on touch- sura nee touchdown drive, second touchdown on the next
down rW!s of 71 and 49 yards Dorsett picked up 42 yards on play, but t,Qe A&amp;M run for two
points faDed.
to lead Pi ttsburgh to a 34-20 . three carries .
His three pass receptions
But on Rice's next ~~eries
upset vi ctory over Notre
gave him a total of 365 yards
'~"
Dame
Saturday
for
the
AI
Panthers' first triumph over gained.
Hudson sets new the Irish In 12 years.
The Irish moved the ball
well
, but were uoable to
The Irish, who needed a
Dorsett's
exvic tory for an expected invite contain
to the Cotton Bowl, fell to 7-3. plosiveness. Notre Dame's
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Pi tt, 7-3, kept its hopes alive touchdowns came on a one....,.,
Dan
Shepard field goals of 34
· -GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. lor a post-season invitation yard plunge by quarterback
and
'11 yard.!, the final one
~tJPI ) - The Hudson Tigers but may have to upset Penn Rick Slager, and Slager's. IGwith
7:10 left in the game,
!Wh their 72nd high school State next week to earn a yard pass to Ken MacAfee.
Dave Reeve added field goals helped boost the Cincinnati
¥~6tball game in a row bowl bid.
' Bearcats to a 6-5 win
Saturday to set a national
Dorsett's rushing total was of 48 and 47 yards.
over
Ohio
'fllip recOrd.
The ·Irish played without Saturday
the most ever gained against
University.
1;~ by halfbacks Greg Notre Dame, a mark Dorse tt leading rusher AI Hunter and
Cincinnati quarterback
IJIIlierrez and Terry Carr, previously held, and his two · reserve quar terback Joe
Henry
Miller gave the
Montana, both out with inH~!I&amp;On racked up 24 points in touchdowns ga ve him 14 on
Bobcats a fourth-ijuarter
!lie first
half pnd then held off the season, also a Pitt mark. juries.
tH i
·
safety rather than kick from
a fired-up Kalamazoo Dorse tt was involved in all
his own end zone. The
Hackett team for ~ a 24-14 four Panther touchdowns. He
Bearcats'
Lou
West
1fl!lory.
se t up the first with a 57-yard
""The vi ctory · advanced run to the Notre Dame three
Coach Tom Saylor's team to and · quarterback Matt
next week's Glass C Cavanaugh swept into the end
SAUNA, Kan. (UPI)- Mike points to 144 for eastern New
finals . in
the
fi rs t zone on the following play. Boil of eastern New Mexico Mexico, the defendin g
I.ater in the first period, won the individual title and champion . Fort Hays (Kan.)
poet • season prep playever held By the ' Dorse tt took a pitch around Edinboro State (Pa.) College state was third, College of St.
· hlgan Htgn , I)Cnoo• right end, waited for a key
placed all iIs runners in the Francis (Ill.) was fourth and
letic Association .
block by Rodney Clark, then top 50 Saturday to win the Malone (Ohio) was fifth.
·f)le 72 wins In a row broke dashed 71 yards for a touchteam title in the 20th annual , Edinboro was paced by·
tij.,?l consecutive victories down .
NAIA
National Cross Country Henry Winger, who finished
rNed up by Jefferson &lt;-~ty ,
Still in the fir~t half, he championship.
and Jeff Foster In
"1Vv between 1958 and 1966. delayed over the middle, took Edinboro scored a low of 97 . eighth,
11th.
, r(~
Boil covered the five-mile
distance In 24 :23 and held off
a challenge from Tony Brien
of Marymount (Kan. ) who
finished ~cond in 24 :26.
'~"'
- " ... (UP!) - yards, two yards and one skins to a 27-11 Mid-American
Others in the top five in
Rod Csr- yard Saturday to pace the · Confe~ence win over Kent order were Dan Hall of
~ler scored on runs of 20 Tangerine Bowl-bound Red- State.
Willamette (Ore )., Dave
Carpenter broke open the
Conover of Kansas State''"
game with !wo third.perind Pittsburg and Desmond
touchdOWDJ after Kent State, O'CQnnor of Angelo (Tex.)
4-4, took a ~ halfUme lead
State.
with a flrst-ijuarter safety.
.
· Carpenter's running on the
Redaldna' first po!l~""sj'lll in
the third quarter lad lbe MAC
~ I !!
champloos,
9-1, fr!lll theit
'
I f .II
own
13-yard
line in 16 plays
~ESVILLE - Af~r a the Blue Devils and Hovers
for the go-ahead score.
~ start here Saturday were quick. .
••
"We got towork a lot on our Quarterback Sherman Smith
m~ning,
Coach
Jim
Oiborne 's Gallipolis Blue pressing offense," Osborne connected with Gary Qu1sno r
Di!vlia came back strong in said. "We also got to 5ee a for 16 yards and the touchUJt final four sessions to variety of things. It was a down.
carpenter then continued
. IIJIJ!e a good showing in a go od experi ence for the
his mastery of the Kent State
tlge-way cage scrlnunage boys," he added .
defense,
oo his way to a 1~
No
statistics
were
kept
on
autnst Clasa AAA Zanesville
yard
performance
for the
of ,~ Central, Ohio League the three-way scrimmage.
game,
capping
the
Redsldns'
Osborne said all 13 varsity
aqjl:j\kron Rootstown 1a l1ass
AA team in the Northwestern players saw action. Terry second possession with hla
Wall, sophomore guard, saw first score on a 00-yard run.
[Hsbictnear Akron.
Kent State's lone second-I·.
Nine quarters of action limited action due to an ankle
half
scoring effort was
found the Blue DevUs winning injury suffered in Friday's
clima1ed
with a Greg Kokal.
fi~LL sessions while losing scrimmage agalnst North·
western .
lour.
Kim FeatBent psss Ior nine .
"'
Following the scrlnunage, yards that ~lied the Golden ,
'Wter losing three ~~esslons
GAHS
players
and
coaches
in 1t row, our boys bouoced
~~es to within five points,
back," remarked. Coach stopped at Tom's .lce t'ream
C.rpenter, who totaled
h~lf
Os~e. The GAHS mentor Parlor for d.inner before
aaiyl&gt; Zanesville and Roots· returning home Saturday yards in the aecond half, . XL ,
added his two other touch- ' . c atn saws
Iowa,.were JlOt b~ but. both afternoon.
downs on short nms,
built and sold.
flu

Pitt upsets
Irish, 34-20

Greene's 14-yard scorlng rWI
around right ·end.
Griffin, who finis hed the
game with 124 yards in 23
carri es - the 31st consecutive reg ular-season
game in which the Heisman
Trophy-winning tailback has
rushed for more than 100
yards .- scored from the 19yard line on a spectacular
sideline rUn to make the score
17~ at halftime.
The Golphers, ~-5 overall
and 2-5 in the league, used
nearly seven minutes on an

b
un .eaten

the Owls' Ed Loftin attempted to throw a rulllling
pass·, was hit by JacksOn and
fumbled. Hayes recovered on
the Rice 15. ·
Aggie fullback George
Woodard, who gained 167
tough yards on 32 carries,
blasted 15 yards on the first
play after the fumble for
another Aggie touchdown.
Running back Skip Walker
dove two yards with an insurance touchdown with 3:58
left in the game.
Rice, on two Tommy
Kramer first half touchdowns
passes to John Coleman,
scored more points than any
other team had managed
against the tojH'ated Aggie
defense this year.

And a gambling Owl
defense in the first half
stymied A&amp;M to Jay's twoyard nln for a touchdown and
Tony Franklin's two field
· goals of 28 ·and 59 yards.
·Franklin's 59-yarder was a
school record and tied the
second longest field goal In
Southwest
Conference
history.
· The Aggie victory, coupled
with the Texas Longhorns'
triumph
over
Texas
Christian, set up their Nov. 29
showdown at CoUege Station.
Texas is S.O in conference and
A&amp;M is~witha Dec. 6 game
against Arkansas which still
has a chance at the league
Utle.

64-yard drive for their only
touchdown, Dungy hitting
Barlow to cut lhe lead to 17-6
with 5:31 left in the third
period.
OS U stor med back,
however, with touchdowns
the next three times it had the
ball. Johnson capped an 86yard drive In 13 plays with his
·ght.- d
G
t
el yar run , reene wen
31yards up the middle for his
sec ond · tou chdown an d
wingback Baschnagel raced
21yards topaydirt on the first
play after freshman Leonard
Mills blocked a Minnesota
Puot and recovered the ball
on the Gophers' 21.
Dun gy, who came into the
gam e the conference's
leading passer, didn't get a
completion . wttil the 11 :02
mark of the third quarter. He
finished !Oout of 25 with three
Intercepted.

· F umbles~IO!it

1·0

2-1'

Penalties.yards 2·24 3·25
By Quarters:
Minnesota
o o 6 o- 6
Ohio St.
3 14 o 21- 38
Ohio-FG Klaban 29.
Oh io- Greene 14 run
(Klaban kick) .
Oh io- Griffin 19 run
t Ktabon kick).
Mlnn- Bartow 5 pass from
Dungy (pass failed ) . .
Oh io- John son 8 run
{Kiaban kick I.
Oh io- Greene 31 run
t Ktaban kick ).
Ohlo-Baschnagel 21 run
{Kiaban· kick ).

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Bearcat field goals beat Ohio U.
recovered the ensuing free
kick to enable CinclnnsU to
run out the clock for the win.
Ohio University acored first
on Gary Homer's 36-yard
field goal and held the lead
wttil Shepard tied the score
on a 34-yard boot in the third
quarter and put the Bearcats
ahead midway m the final
period.
With the score 6-3, Cln-

Greene compleied seven of•
14 passes for 131 yards .and
Johnson, the Buckeyes' 243pound ful lback, had 90 yards
in 22 carries.
~~Statis t i cs of the MinnesotaOhio St. football game:
Minn. osu
Firs tdowns
16
30 •
Rushes.yards 38·141 69-380
Pass ing yard s
117 131
Retur n yar&lt;ls
8 ·. 52
Passes
12-26~ 3 7-14·0
. Punts
7-35. 5 3-46.6

cinnati was unable to move
the ball out of its own fiveyard line and. Miller leU on
the ball in his end zone for the
safety.
Connell punted to midfield
and West jumped on the lree
ball,
· The win was Cincinnati's
sixth this year against lour
defeats. Ohio University is

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23 - The Sunday Tunes · Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 18.1975

22 - TheSundayTimes -Sentlnei,Sunday,Nov. l6, 1975

Bengals out to stop .OJ, Bills

Devils battle
Northwestern
GALlJPOI.iiS - Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue
Devils won four,lost two and
Ued one here Friday night in
a ~~even quarter scrimmage
. ~ith visiting Springfield
Northwestern..
. Coach Jim i..egg's Hustlln'
Warriors, a Class AA toughie
out of Clark County, are
members .of the Twin Rivers
Conferenee whtch Includes
Shawree, Sidney Lehman ,
Graham, Versailles, Bethel
and Indian Lake.
One of Northwestern's
starters was Gallipolis native
Howard Lee Weal, a 8-3 1&gt;
junior forward, son of Mr.
aad Mn. Howard West,
former GaUipolls residents.
GAHS won the first two
sessions, 10-7 and lf&gt;.IO. The
, Warriors came back to win
the third eight-minute
session, !i-ll. Alter a 14-14 tie
In the fourth session, Gary
Snowden's short jumper at
the gun gave GAHS a 14-13
edge in the fifth outing.
Northwestern won the sixth
seaaion on four consecutive
free throws in the final
minute of play, 14-12. GAHS
captured the last session, 199.
Coach
Osborne
ex·
perlmented with 13 different
players during lhe Blue
Devils second pre-season
scrimmage. Starters in·
eluded Herb Epling, 6·1
junior forward; Gary Swain,
&amp;-1 junior forward; Gary
Snowden, ~ senior guard;
Keith McGuire, 8-4 junior
center and Tony Folden, IHI
aenior guard.
01boroe felt Gallla 'a
defe•lve play bad Improved,
but wa1 not plea1ed wllb tbe
Galllaaa' bell handling. Tbe
Blue Devils committed 49

turnovers, an average of
oeven
per
quarter.
Coach Legg felt · his
Warriors, usually a welldisciplined ball club, could
have done better . Northwes!A!rn, 17-3 two years ago
and i5-7 last win!A!r, bas two
lettermen , back from last
year's squad which bowed to
Class AA Regional rumierup
Shawnee by one point In the
Dayton Sectional finals .
The Warriors commitl~ 15
turnovers. Northwestern hit
36 of 81 field goal attempts for
14 per cent. The Warriors
were 13 of 21 at the foul line
( 54 percent). The visitors
pulled down 34 reounds.
GAHS hit 44 of 93 field goal
attempts (47 per cent) and
four of 10 charity tosses (40
per cent). GAHS picked off 63
rebounds.
Saturday morning, GAHS
scrimmaged Zanesville and
Akron Rootstown at Zanes·
ville. The Blue Devils are
scheduled to meet defending
C.1ass AAA West Virginia
State Champion Harbours·
ville
at
Huntington's
Memorial Field House 6 p.m.
Tuesday.
Saturday, Nov. 22, the Blue
Devlla
host Sh~rldan and
Chillicothe in ·8 three-way
scrimmaae, starting at 10:30
a.m.
Following Friday night's
scrimmage, players of both
teams were serv~ pizza and
soft drinks, sponsored by the
Blue Devil Boosters. The
Northwestern players stayed
overnight in the Old French
City with Blue Devil players,
then departed for McArthur
Saturday morning for a·
scrimmage with Vinton
County
and
RossSoutheas!A!rn .

will

,
GAHS SCRIMMAGE STATS
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A RB TO
Herb Epling, 1-g
6-7 1·2 s 2
Gary Snowden,,g. 1
5-10 o.o 2 3
Gary Swaln,f.g ·'
3·12 0·0 s 7
Keith McGuire. c·l
3·3 0·2 12 2
Tony Folden, f.g
5·1
1·2 4 9
llntnt Johnson, g
1·3
2·2 · 3 6
Brent S.undtrs, I
1-4
0-2 • 2
T1rry Wall. g
1;3 0-0 4 3
lcltmlttl,c.l .
5-12 0.0 10 2
Mike Dr•Hl, I
1·2 o.o 1 2
DlvldOwens. c-1
6-14 0-0 2 3
Dlvld War....,.f.c
7-13 0-0 10 2
Gr111 Maynard, g
0·3 0-0 1 6
TOTALS
44·93 4-10 63 49
SNW
:16·11 13-24 34 4S
ly Quarters:
GAHS
10 15 s 14 14 12
SNW
7 10 IS U 13 lA
Olllclalt- Milhoan &amp; Ellis.

,OMIEROY IOWLING

Stlndlngs

2

12
14

o
as
\12

19
9

34

High Series - Men : Roger
Spencer
Jim Roberts 425 ;
Women : Mary Hoover 420,

T11m

Ttom No. s
6()
Quillly Print Shop
58
Peully'S Ins. &amp; Really •o
loom No . 2 ·
36
32
Ttam No . •

2
2
10

lSD : Women : Mary Hoover
178, Jean Spencer IS2.

Nov . 9, 1971

61

6

11
4

High Game - Men : Jim
Roberts ,151 , Ro ger Spen ce r

LANES
Sun~ay Lite Nllhl Mixed
Tt1m No . 6

TP
1.3
10
6

,.,.1.

Slmonds JSS.

36

Dee

:18
S6

Team High Game No . 6, S96 .

60
64

No . 6,

Team

Tearn High Series - Team
ISS&lt; .

Jly RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI ( UP)~
· Oren thai James Simpson
struts his stuff on national
television when the· Buffalo
Bills visit the Cincinnati
Bengais Monday night.
· The game should be a good
indicator of whether O.J. can
break the NFL record of 2,003
yard rushing he set in 1973.
With 1,128 yards in his first
eight gi!JIIes, Simpson is now
28 yards ahead oi his 1973
pace. O.J. needs to average
146 yards rushing In his last
six games to break the mark.

Atlanta downs
Capitals, 4-1
.

Pro Hockey Roaodup ·

By United Preu In·
United Press International
The Atlanta Flames started
the season as only an ember
but now are going full
blaze.
The Flames lost lbeir first
four National Hockey League
games this season, including

~~d~y o~~e~o~:~~~~
one game of the .500 mark
when they defeated the
Washington Capitals 4-1.
Atlanta scored all of its
goals within eight minutes
and 20 seconds, with Bill Flett
knocking In a pair, and the
victory left Coach Fred
Q-elghton with an optlmi!tlc
feeling about the future qf hla
club.
"We have to go one step at
a time and we are well aware
that .500 will get us nowhere
in our division.'' said
Q-eighton. '
The
victory
raiaed
Atlanta's record to 7-f.l, far
behind Phlladephla and lhe
New Y""k Islanders in the
Patrick Division, but
respectable considering the
team's start.
"We opened with two at
home and lost both despite
playing
well,"
said
Q-eighton. "We lost OlD' first
four games and three of them
were at home, and that's a
pretty big hole to dig yourself

start Tuesday

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n•OUGHOVI'

yearo()ld halfback scrambled
1.23 yards in 19 carries in a 42351oss to the Baltimore Colts.
Simpson scored three touchdowns in that game, the first
time he's had that many TDs
in one game in his seven year
pro career.
Some compare O.J. with
.funrny Brown, but Bengals
coach Paul Brown, who
coached .Jimmy several
years and spent much of this
past week studying films of
O.J. , says no.
"O.J. reminds me of Ollie

LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE
Week of November 16
POOL
DATE- GYMNASIUM
Closed
Nov. 16-Ciosed-Concerl
7:30p.m. Coli. Swim
Nov. 17- 7-8:30 p.m. College Rf!: .
Closed
Nov . 16-7-8:30p.m. College Rec,
8:30-lOp.m. Coli. Swim
Nov. 19- 8: 30-IOp.m. College Rec.
7-8:30 p.m. Coli. Swim
Npv. 2D-7 ·8: 30 p.m. College Rec.
C!osed
-Nov. 21- Ciosed
S.V.A.C. Basketball Previews
Closed
Nov. 22- Closed
6 p.m. . JV's vs. Wilmington
8 p.m. - Varsity vs. Wilmington
NOTE: Lyne Center Gym &amp; Pool will be closed until the
week of January 6, 1976.

Alumni drills

~ARRJNlJTO

In his last time out, the 28-

GALLIPOLIS - Alumni
grid drills will begin 7 p.m.
Tuesday on Memorial Field
for the second annual
"Turkey Bowl" game on
.Thanksgiving Day between
odd and even year GAHS
graduates.
Several alumni planning to
play In this year's fund·
raising game for new locker
room facilities on Memorial
Field have been working out
daily the past week and a
half.
Monday, equipment will be
issued to "odd year" grads at
the GAHS equipment room at
7 p.m. "l!:veq year" grads
will receive their togs at 8
p.m. Monday. Thoae unable
to get their · equipment
Monday should contact
Coaches Bill Eachus or Ron
Janey.

,

into. Things look like they're
starting to go pretty well
now."
The Caps, now 2·13·2,
jumped to a 1.0 lead when
Nelson Pyatt scored late in
tl!e first period, but Flames
then erupted, scoring four
goals in the next 8:20. of!
goalies Ron Low ami Bernie
Wolfe. Hilliard Graves and
Dave Kryskow each ·had a
goal during that span to
support Flett.
The Toronto Maple Leafs
whipped California, 4-2, in the
only other NHL game. In
World Hockey Association
action, Winnipeg routed
Edmon.ton . 11-1· and the
Toronto Toros played
Phoenix 19 a 2-2 tle.
Maple Leali 4, Seals 2
Blaine Stoughton scored
two goals to spark Toronto.
The victory moved the Maple
Leafs five points ahead of the
SeaiJ in the Adama Dlvl!lon.
Lamy McDonald Bl)d Bob
Neely also scoted lor Toronto
while Ralph Klassen and Bob
Murdoch
tallied
for
Callfornla.
•
Jets&amp;, Otlers 1
" Piayer-Olach Bobby Hull
and Peter Sulllvan each
scored two goals to apark
WinnlP,eg's roul of Ed·
monton. Dan FoniiiCOred one
and assisted on lllOther as~
Jets scored three In the !lnt
period tD break the game
open . . Winnipeg outahot
Edmonton 41-13.
Toros %, Roadi'UIIIII!n 2 ·
Lauri Mononen of Phoenix
scored the tying goal In the
second period but rookie
goalie Marlo Vien of Toroo!D
kept the tie, turning back 38
shots. Phoenix also got a goal
from Gary Lariviere while
Frank Mahlovllch and Jeff
Jacques 11ClX'ed for Toronto.
saturday's College
Football Results
Unlttd PrMs International
New Hampshire u Mass•·
chusells 11
Dllrfmouth 33 Cornell 10
Rutgers 41 Boston University
3

-

Maine 2 Norlheostern 0
Rochester 31 Tufts 28
Marylond 22 Clemson 20 .
Michigan St. ~7 Northwestern

u

Vlllan011a 13 Holy Cross 12
Bucknell 32 Lehigh 25
Connecticut 21 Rhode Island
10
Wagner 24 Fordham 0
Yale 24 Princeton 13
Syracuse 37 VIrginia 0
Colgale 21 William &amp; Mary 17
Duke 21 No. Carolina St. 21
Georgia Tech 14 Navy 13
West VIrginia 31 Richmond 13
Georglo 28 Auburn 13

Ironton· beaten 26-7

Cincinnati in a heated defense.
..
battle with Pittsburgh for the
"We've ,scored 89 points in
counting passes," adds leadership of the American tl!e past three games, but
Brown. "We know going in Conference Central Division · given up 100," laments coach
we're going to have to cope will be trying for its eighth . lou Saban. "And, Clnciiuiatl
is hardly . the team you'd
with him having the ball this win in nine games.
After
a·
good
start,
Buffalo
choose
to play when you're
often."
.
has
lost
three
of
its
last
foilr
having
defensive troubles,
Besides his impressive
games
and
sliPPed
to
a
5-3
parti~~arly
in the seconrushing , Simpson has
.
averaged 19 yards per pass ' record, two games behind dary.
~aban referred to Ken
reception this season and has Miami in the AFC East.
i\Jthcugh the Billli lead the · AIJdeJ'IIOn, whose, pailslrig is
scored three times off passes.
NFL
1D touchdowns with 34, most of Cmcy s ~ffense.
Despite \he presence . of
with
quarterback Joe Fer· Anderson has ~ompleted . 58
Simpson, the Bengals have
guson's
.passing com· per cent of his pa~tl'!and
been made six point favorites
plimenting
Q.J.'s running, thrown for a dozen t®Ch·
by Harrah's Reno-Tahoe
Racebook to beat the Bills. Buffalo has a big problem on downs.

says. Brown, him one way or another tip to
referring to the running star 35 or · 40 times a game,

Matson,"

of the old Chicago Cardinals.
"O.J. is a will of the wisplike Ollie was. Jimmy was
inore of a power ·runner.
Brown has been trying ID
set a defense for O.J., but
says it's hard to organize one.
"That's because O.J. gets
his yards all ways-inside,
outside, when a hole is closed
he still bounces off people. A
lot of times he just makes
yardage on individual
lrilliance.
"Buffalo will get the ball to

"

Winless Browns are 21-poi~t ~..
underdogs against Raiders ..."
OAKLAN!&gt; (UPI) - Ob·
VIOUS1y, when a team is 0-8, it
has nowhere to go bUt up.
The Cleveland Browns may
eventually win a game this
season but realistically, it
won't be Sunday, because
that's when they play the
Oakland Raiders.
The Raiders are pro
football's version of the
impassioned businessman.
Whetl!ertheopponentjs weak
or strong, ihe Raiders play
with the same tenacity.
All of which means tbe poor
BroWns, 21 point underdogs,
are in for a long afternoon in
tl!e Oakland Coliseum, and
they'll receive no sympathy
from the Raider fans who
are among the most parttsan
in sports. The game has been
sold out, so it will be televised
locally.
Forrest Gregg, one of football's
great · linemen
&amp;BSOciated mostly will! the
. Vince Lombardi led Green
Bay Packers, Is the
Cleveland coach these days
and he has no Illusions about
his club.
"We're trying to build

something and win at the
same time," he says. "It's a
difficult thing to do,
. especially when you have to
play teams like tl!e Raiders. I
played against Oakland not
too many years ago and I
remember it a fine team.
From what I can see, the
Raiders may be even better
now.''
Gregg's lone game against
the Raiders was on Jan. 15,
1968 in the Super Bowl. The
Packers won that game but
Gregg's recollection is of a
tough game.
"They had Ike Lassiter,
Tom Keating and Ben
Davidson then," sald Gregg,
· "and they not only were
tough but mean. I think If you
compare that team with
Wday's, you'd have to say the
Raiders are deeper and

Sa '\I''S

• "dent

lRCl

'blown .up'

i

•••

FOR YOUR
WORK ·

Braves stop Milwaukee

324 Second Ave •

Gallipolis

I·

up.''

Gibbs was sporting a
skinned knuckle and admitted he got in one good
pwich.
"Gibbsmayhavethought It
was fun, " Brokaw said, "but
it's not fun when you take the
punch and don't even get a
chance to get one back."
The fight took most of the
anention from the game that
saw the Braves get double
figure scoring from all five
starters. Bob McAdoo had 'l/;
Jack Marin 23, Ernie DIGre·
gorio 19, Randy Smith 18 and
Garfield Heard 12.
The Jlucka were led by
Brian Winters' 20 points.
Elsewhere in tl!e NBA,
Philadelphia beat Boston 119109, · Atlanta defeated
Washington 97-M, Los
Angeles downed Phoenix 114lll'I,PortlandcllJ1PedOllcago
93-89 and Seattle edged
aeveland 100-97 in overtime.
In the ABA, Denver downed
Kentucky 117·111, St. Louts
downed Virginia 108-102 and
Indiana beat Utah 127·119.
78ers 119, Cellicslot
Doug Collins had 32 points
wilb support from Fred Car·
ter's 27 and George
McGinnis' 22 81 Phllaclelphla
beat Boaton. 'JoJo While led
Bostoo with 24 points. The
76era were ahead 61-411 45
seconds into the second ha1f
when Celtic center Dave
Cowens had to leave with
beck spasms.
Hawks 9'7, Ballets 88
Tom Henderson's 21 points
led Atlanta, wblchmovedln!D
a first place tie with
· Washington in the NBA
Central Division. Elvin
Hayes was high for
Wllllhlngtoo with 27.
Laken 114, SuDS1t7
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar had
3fi pclnts, 13 in the fb\al
period, and added 18
rebounds, nine aaallts and
eight blocked lhots to pace
Los Angeles. Rookie center
Alvan Adama of Phoenix hit
llfi points, Including 10 in the
final period.
(
Bla1ers IS, Bulls 89
Uoyd Neal's --bigh 31
Nov. 21
Marlon -Frankltn 11 PortS · pcinta, BW Walton •a 20 re·
•movth
N~v. 22
bowtdl, Larry Sleele'a 13
Athens at Columbps lllillaand Geoff Petrle'si2Eastmoor
pclnt fourth quartar led PortNov. 25
Portsmouth
Wtst
•• lind. Bob lDve bid • pcinta,
Jackson
18 Ill llle fourth )lll'iod, for
VInton County at Wellston
..... 2'
Ollcaao.
Athens &amp;t Nelsonville-York
Sollic11to, CIVI t7
Logan at Hilliard
Groen at Whttltrsburo ·
Seattle'• Fred Brown 11101e
the bali from Cleveland •s
Portsmouth at Milford
Nov. 21
Dick Sllycler and ICored the
Ironton •t Athens
tleclllve IMiaket with 64
Wellston et Oalllpblls
....... lilt Ill .......
~ Jacuon
Sou
:f~t II Hllnnlll . .. . . tied It It ,..;
Trace
with 2:1tleft, he llole the lllll
Portsmouth et Springfield
at mldcoll't and hll a layup.
.
Nov. 2!
Waverlv et Portsmouth
NUIIets 117, CeloMis 1ll
West
Rookie David Thompaon

November
cage cards

Lri
"' n

DAN OOMAS &amp; SON

_,
threw for 232 yards and 'two
touchdowns against · ' ~he
Saints last Sunday while Pete
Banaszak, Clarence O.vis
and Marv Hubbard led a~,260
yard advance on the grollnd.
The Raiders are &amp;-2 gb1ng
into Sunday's game and lead
their division, the AfC West,
by two games ·over ~s
City.
~· .
Will Cureton started ·1Jis
first game in the NFL 'last
Sunday and will be at" t]le,
controls again this Sunday for )
Cleveland. Against !he Lll!!ts,
Cureton completed 11) dl' 32
passes for 95 y!!rds and qne
touchdown. His TD tbroW':fas
a 12 yarder to tight end ~ar
Roan, who has caughr 29
passes this season. Greg
Pruitt and Billy Prichett are
the top Browns' run\llng
backs.
Ill
'"'

Pro Buketball Roundup
By United Preu In·
United Press lntemalioDBI
The Buffalo Braves beat
the Milwaukee Bucks more
decisively in tbe basketball
.f ' . game,ll2-98, than in the fight
1'
'
near the end of the Frl,day
night game.
Buffalo's win broke Mil·
waukee's fivf1!arne winning
streak.
The. Braves took a 31·14
lead by tlie end of the first
period and the Bucks whittled
MILWAUKEE (UP!) awayuntlltl!eyweredown by
Tony Kubek, one of the.NBC ooly six when the fight broke
broadcasters during the out with 5:43left in tl!e game.
World Series, said Friday the
MUwaukee's Gary Brokaw
threats on the lives of umpire. and Buffalo's Dick Gibbs got
Larry Barnett, Marion, Ohio, l!lto a shoving match and
and his family during the Gibbs grabbed Brokaw and
series show that sports today threw him into the press
have been · blown out of table. Before Brokaw could
proportion .
get up, Bob Dandridge hit
Kubek said two of Ills Gibbs with a flying tackle .
former New York Yankees Boll! players went over the
IA!ammates, Mickey Mantle table a!ld both benches
and Phil Rizzuto, received empUed.
similar threatening lette.rs
There 11!88 a lot of pusblng
during their playing days but and shoving and a couple of
that ''the threats In those punchea but the main aclloo
dayS were taken with a grain was over ·and the Braves held
of salt."
tl!e Bucks to sii points the
"They were called kooks rest of the way as tl!ey
then," he said in an interview coasted to the win.
with The Milwaukee Sentinel.
Glbba apoke eagerly of the
"But it's different today. It's fight.
a sad commentary on our
"llrokaw stepped in froot of
society when threats are me so I threw him out of the
made on an umpire and hJa way," Glbbts said. "Dan·
family and then by his dridge grabbed me and we
(Barnett's) opening up a can rolled over the table but I
of worms."
rolled oo !Dp of him. It was
Kubek's comment was a Just your friendly NBA fight.
reference to Barnett blaming ~cldy forgotten . will! nc
Kubek and fellow broad- grudges held.
caster Curt Gowdy for the
"I'm coming off the bench
threats because of their . and I mlghl be a llWe
criticisms of a con!foversial frustrated If lbin&amp;s don't 80
play ~~ which Barnett was well. You play thia game wilb
involved during the series. · intensity and tempers might
.
Dare. As long aa ncbody geta
hurt, it reall)' Jacka the game
South Carolina 37 Wake
Forest 26
Ylrglnla Tech 33 VMI 0
Purdue 19 Iowa 18
Wayne Sf. 24 Evansville 21
Dayton 29 Marshall 8
Ohio St. 38 Minnesota 6

KUbek

tougher now.''
.
The Browns didn't play all
tl!at bad in dropping a 21·10
decision to the Detroit Lions
last week while the Raiders
were rolling over the New
Orleans Saints, another
yoiDig and weak team, 48-10.
"We play everyone the
same way," Is how Raider
Coach John Madden puts it.
"The records of our opponimts have no bearing on
how important a game is to
us. Our goal is to win encugh
games to take the division,
tl!en keep on winning all the
way tl!rough the Super Bowl.
It doesn't matter who these
wins are against, just so long
as you achieve your goal.''
The Oakland offense
probably is the most con·
slstent in the NFL, and the
most balanced. Ken Stabler·

•••Ply .

'"'
scored 2i of hlic areer-btj 34
points in the . first bali&lt; in
leading Denver to its •(ifth
straight win. Kentucky .. was
led by ArUs Gilmore wllll 'l1
points and 17 rebounds' and
Bird Averitt with 27 polhta )
and 11 aaailt.!.
'"'
1
Spirits 1118, Squlresl02
Maurice Lucas scored four
baskets In overtime •and
Freddie Lewla alkled twi•to
pace St. Louis. Lewis lllll"1l.
Louis will! 22 points wlille
Lucas and Don &lt;luiney ad&amp;d
21 apiece. Johnny Neumlllm
hit a seaso1'lgh 'l1 polnll ofor
Virginia, which has now lost
seven straight games an"ls
1-12.

...

~·

"
"

"~

Pacers 1%7, Stars 111~· 1
Billy Kntght poiD'~ tn!!r'o.f
his 43 points in the secood 1Wf
and Indiana came fniJn
behind in the final mlnutw.to
defeat Utah. Darnell~
scored 32 points for .,. ae
Pacers.
":'

... . .

Sportsmen '8 ··•
calendar "

lllfi
.... t

'£1~'

••

.

·~~'Jir·
n
~1:r
~ ~ .,~,

...

. •t-

'!&gt;'

.Class AA contest

o,;i ·,-

·7"j"UIIIted Press International
lui.

"" ~ Newark Catholic coach
&lt;i .J.D. Graham has turned a
.,_.;/!gut feeling" into a ticket to
~?.- ~on's Rubber Bo\vl and the
~:!!: finalS of the Class A Ohio
n·~Jiigh School Athletic
•J I..,
, ,Association Football Playoffs
next Saturday.·
Graham's Green Wave
which has not given up ~
touchdown from scrimmage
ali year, got the only points It
needed with 4:17 left in the
f~rst quarter of Friday night's
semifmals at Groveport when
defensive tackle Dan· Bell
blocked a Middletown
....
Fenwick
punt and the ball
"' , , J
. .. rolled through the end zone
;;;·•·r a. safety .
·
"..,.....
, \,1,A seven-yard touchdown
,;,:,Jlllss from Mitch Breneman to
.u1 ~,ck Booth and a 27-yard Bell
,:.. eld goal helped push the
•-' ' al score to II~.
~S;;: "I had a gut feeling and
.. ~ ..called off the return and went
·--lilock," Graham said of his
;,"strategy against the Falcons
'",.punt from their own !&amp;-yard

: t·.;Jine.

ni),, The victory avenged Ne. ·~·s 3-4-' loss to Fenwick in

::!:1 1~ year's seinls.
?!i• Middletown, 7-1, was paced
,·. Jty 1974 Class A Back of the
;. ~~ar Mike Harkrader will!
,, IQO rushing yards ln 26
• ; ~@rries.
; ;., ;"We
contained
the
;;~krader boy a lot better in
· 'the second half, but every
. time he touched the ball, I
just held my breath," said
Gra!Jam, whose charges take
• - .Ill 11.0 record to Akron.
· ~ ·".The key to OlD' defense
:· lfBB that we took the pass
"' ;~ay from them with our
'N pass rusll," he said . "It's
,.·.-.easier to play defense if you
~~ iust have to defense the

~nd

Mike Boland, as keys to
Ironton scored late in the 152.
lis pass rush.
fourtl! quarter, cliinaxing a
Carey's most crucial toucJi.
Falcons coach Jerry Hark- 64-yard drive with a nine- doWn came on a IS-yard pass
rader figured errors played a yard run by Jeff Kreibel. · from quarterback John Greer
big part in his team's defeat.
Wyom~ rushed for 237 to Dennis Kessler in the third
"They played well and we yards and p~ for 88 while quarter . That put Carey
dldn 't," said the . Fenwick holding the Tigers to 57 yards ahead of the Badgers for the
Coach. "That's about alii can passing and min!IS 15 first time, a lead the team
say. You juBt can't make rushing.
held until the end.
··
miBtakes in .a game like this
Holy Name scored In the
At halftime, Berkahlre ·was
and win, and we did make first 2:04 and went 111 ·to winning decisively 1~.
·
mistakes."
overwhelm Oregoo Cardinal
Both teama are 9-1.
In Class AA playoffs action Stritch.
Wyoming
o 6 s 12- 26
Friday night, Cleveland Holy
The Green Wave will take • ronton
o o o 7- 7
Name shut out Oregon Strltch its 9.Q record into tbe AA
Wyo-Ba,teo 9 paS$ from
35-0 at Berea and Wyoming championship game in the Russell
l~lck failed)
.
Wyo-Jacobs
1 run (ktck
whippe~ Ironton 26·7 at
Rubber Bowl next week pass from Russell)
Dayton.
against Wyoming, 11.0.
Wyo-Jacobs 1 run !kick
Carey shaded Burton Berk· · End Tom Amato recowred failed I
shire 26-24 at Mansfield in the a fumble by halfback Dave ki~~~Krelbel ~ run IHughes
other Class A gari)e.
Kotowski that rolled into the
Wyo- McCrecken 7 run
Findlay Jaces Cincinnati end zone for tbe fifsl acore !kick failed)
.
~~
Mil
oe er at Dayton and and caught a 37-yard pass
' ·
Lakewood St. Edward meets from quarterback Ke\'in Holy Name
14. 1 t4 o-:as ,
Newark at Akron jn Class Hartman for tl!e second.
Oregon
0 o 0 o-. .:4 •
AAA sem lfin·'·
'""'"hi
Har
...
,
HolyAmato
""'_..,. .
tmanrannlneyar.. ,or fumble in end zonerecovered
(Minor
Wyoming's . Cowboys Holy Name's third touchdOwn kick)
survived three fwnbles and and a 21.0 halftime lead.
Holy- Amato 37 pass from
two pass interceptions en
Kotowski went three yards Hartman
!Minor kick)9 run
Holy- Hartman
route to an easy victory over ·and
fullback
Brian !Minor kick)
Ironton.
McLaughlin eight for a pair
Holy- Kotowski 3 run
The Cowboys fumbled of tl!ird~rter scores.
I Minor kick I
three times deep in Tigers
Carey tailback Dave Myers ~~~~kt~~aughlln 8 run
territory ill the first half and pushed his season nllhlng
A- 5,4()0.
managed only a IHI halftime IDtal to 1,737 yards with 188
Fenwick
0 0 0 o- 0
lead on a nine-yard pass from Friday night to lead the Newark
8 0 0 3-11
quarterback Doug Russell to Carey Blqe Devils to victory
New- Safety blocked punt
rolled out of end zone.
Kevin Bales.
over Burton.
New- Booth 7 pass from
Wyoming maintained
Carey meets Newark Breneman
(run failed)
control of the ball in the 9&amp;thoiic in one week for the A
New- FG Bell 27
A- 2.700
second half and pushed title .
across touchdownaoo runs of
Myers, a 15ZiJOIDid junior, Carey
0 6 14 6-26
one and two yardl by Fred was held to only 36 yards in Berkshire
8 8 8 D-24
Berk- Kellogg 53 run
Jacobs and a seven-yard run the first half but plunged
by Dave McCracken.
ahead in the second to tally (Kellogg run)
Berk- Brooker 60 pus
from Kellogg (Ebner run I
Car.-Shook JO pass fr
Greer lrun failed) ·
.
. Car.-Greer 1 run (Sn~&lt; ·

8th grade SEO .

pass from Greer)

.champs honored

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
~: t'U$h' II
.
Academy
Elghih Grade
~;;;;· Graham pointed out three
football
team
attended a
~~:tilorers, linebacker Jim
banquet
Tuesday
evening in
' 'Puckett, Bell and defensive
r· •l .,
their honor. The Uttle Blue
Devils, coached by William
'""'
THISTLEDOWN
Leedy, head coach and
""" NORTH RANDALL, Ohio · Spencer Suskin, assistant
v; j -UPJ) - Market Report, with · coach, are the S.E.O.A.L.
.~ Cooper aboard, Friday
&lt;.'hamplonship Eighth Grade
;;~ tbe featured fi,OOO Ohio
Team. They finished 5 and 0
~=NJowance at Thistledown.
In the league .
'
;:~hten was second and
Thebanquetwasheldat the
1~win third.
r,,,, Market Report was timed Jackson Production Credit
building with 118 people at·
di ii• ~ : 41 U for the mile and
tending. -The room was
:~ld $9, $5, and $3.
'!lie l~trlfecta of Mike's beautifully decorated with
blue and white streamers and
~ :A11bhal, King Fibber and
l!Nfltr&amp; Our Olance was worth pompons.
Seated al the head table
~ for each holder of lll'l
were
Mr. and Mrs. Willard
n~ets. The 11·1 daily double
n'GI'•Astor Admiral and Fritzko (Buddy J Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
William Leedy, and Mr. and
iilenot returned $1,851.
Mrs.
Spencer Suskln.
, , ~e 2,581 racing fans bet
Coach
Leedy served as
$2'11,072.
Mas!er
of
Ceremonies. He
'
thanked the team for a job
1
well done and presented each
BEULAH
player
with a ghampionshlp
GROVE CITY, Ohio ( UPI)
trophy
when he introduced
- Red Pipe rallied from off
them
along with their
lil~~opace on the outside In the
parenta.
' ~ch and waa up in lbe final
Coach Leedy also ex·~des to defeat Banquet Bld
pressed
his thanks to a fine
;&amp;JY one and one-half length&amp; In
cheerleadlng
squad and
1-the- featured $5,200 seventl!
presented
each
girl
a trophy.
••lillewance race at Beulah
wer.
e
also
Trophies
t~kFrlday.
presented to Coach Leedy
, :Jndian Pet showed.
and Coach Susl!ln. Flowers
~ o!Jlte winner, ridden by Jim
:@enck, covered the mile were given '" their wives.
-and 70 yards in 1:44 ~ and These were given as
remembrances from the
·· ~ed $12, $6 and $6.40.
... .

...

team .
Guest speaker for the
evening was Willard (Buddy)
Moore, head coach of the
Gallipolis Blue Devils. COach
Moore directed his talk to the
players. He spoke on loylllly,
trust, dedication, and the
desire to play good football.
In closing, Coach Leedy
thank~ all the people for
their support to the team.
Also for all the contribUtions
and time that had been
donated to make the evening
a complete success.

'\1,•

Berk - Kellogg 80 ruii
I Ebner JliiSS from Greer I
Care- Nye 5 run I run
failed)
Care- Kessler 15 pass from
Greer (JliiSS failed)
A- 2,600.

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servic.e is a Gallia County
tradition .

'"t\at\oJ'·

SILVER IRIDitE
PLAIA
~
PH, 446·277G

~--'RT.

2 BYPASS, POINT PLEASANT

NtAMM, IfiUt '( 'l ANDf 'O.

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23 - The Sunday Tunes · Sentinel, Sunday. Nov. 18.1975

22 - TheSundayTimes -Sentlnei,Sunday,Nov. l6, 1975

Bengals out to stop .OJ, Bills

Devils battle
Northwestern
GALlJPOI.iiS - Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue
Devils won four,lost two and
Ued one here Friday night in
a ~~even quarter scrimmage
. ~ith visiting Springfield
Northwestern..
. Coach Jim i..egg's Hustlln'
Warriors, a Class AA toughie
out of Clark County, are
members .of the Twin Rivers
Conferenee whtch Includes
Shawree, Sidney Lehman ,
Graham, Versailles, Bethel
and Indian Lake.
One of Northwestern's
starters was Gallipolis native
Howard Lee Weal, a 8-3 1&gt;
junior forward, son of Mr.
aad Mn. Howard West,
former GaUipolls residents.
GAHS won the first two
sessions, 10-7 and lf&gt;.IO. The
, Warriors came back to win
the third eight-minute
session, !i-ll. Alter a 14-14 tie
In the fourth session, Gary
Snowden's short jumper at
the gun gave GAHS a 14-13
edge in the fifth outing.
Northwestern won the sixth
seaaion on four consecutive
free throws in the final
minute of play, 14-12. GAHS
captured the last session, 199.
Coach
Osborne
ex·
perlmented with 13 different
players during lhe Blue
Devils second pre-season
scrimmage. Starters in·
eluded Herb Epling, 6·1
junior forward; Gary Swain,
&amp;-1 junior forward; Gary
Snowden, ~ senior guard;
Keith McGuire, 8-4 junior
center and Tony Folden, IHI
aenior guard.
01boroe felt Gallla 'a
defe•lve play bad Improved,
but wa1 not plea1ed wllb tbe
Galllaaa' bell handling. Tbe
Blue Devils committed 49

turnovers, an average of
oeven
per
quarter.
Coach Legg felt · his
Warriors, usually a welldisciplined ball club, could
have done better . Northwes!A!rn, 17-3 two years ago
and i5-7 last win!A!r, bas two
lettermen , back from last
year's squad which bowed to
Class AA Regional rumierup
Shawnee by one point In the
Dayton Sectional finals .
The Warriors commitl~ 15
turnovers. Northwestern hit
36 of 81 field goal attempts for
14 per cent. The Warriors
were 13 of 21 at the foul line
( 54 percent). The visitors
pulled down 34 reounds.
GAHS hit 44 of 93 field goal
attempts (47 per cent) and
four of 10 charity tosses (40
per cent). GAHS picked off 63
rebounds.
Saturday morning, GAHS
scrimmaged Zanesville and
Akron Rootstown at Zanes·
ville. The Blue Devils are
scheduled to meet defending
C.1ass AAA West Virginia
State Champion Harbours·
ville
at
Huntington's
Memorial Field House 6 p.m.
Tuesday.
Saturday, Nov. 22, the Blue
Devlla
host Sh~rldan and
Chillicothe in ·8 three-way
scrimmaae, starting at 10:30
a.m.
Following Friday night's
scrimmage, players of both
teams were serv~ pizza and
soft drinks, sponsored by the
Blue Devil Boosters. The
Northwestern players stayed
overnight in the Old French
City with Blue Devil players,
then departed for McArthur
Saturday morning for a·
scrimmage with Vinton
County
and
RossSoutheas!A!rn .

will

,
GAHS SCRIMMAGE STATS
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A RB TO
Herb Epling, 1-g
6-7 1·2 s 2
Gary Snowden,,g. 1
5-10 o.o 2 3
Gary Swaln,f.g ·'
3·12 0·0 s 7
Keith McGuire. c·l
3·3 0·2 12 2
Tony Folden, f.g
5·1
1·2 4 9
llntnt Johnson, g
1·3
2·2 · 3 6
Brent S.undtrs, I
1-4
0-2 • 2
T1rry Wall. g
1;3 0-0 4 3
lcltmlttl,c.l .
5-12 0.0 10 2
Mike Dr•Hl, I
1·2 o.o 1 2
DlvldOwens. c-1
6-14 0-0 2 3
Dlvld War....,.f.c
7-13 0-0 10 2
Gr111 Maynard, g
0·3 0-0 1 6
TOTALS
44·93 4-10 63 49
SNW
:16·11 13-24 34 4S
ly Quarters:
GAHS
10 15 s 14 14 12
SNW
7 10 IS U 13 lA
Olllclalt- Milhoan &amp; Ellis.

,OMIEROY IOWLING

Stlndlngs

2

12
14

o
as
\12

19
9

34

High Series - Men : Roger
Spencer
Jim Roberts 425 ;
Women : Mary Hoover 420,

T11m

Ttom No. s
6()
Quillly Print Shop
58
Peully'S Ins. &amp; Really •o
loom No . 2 ·
36
32
Ttam No . •

2
2
10

lSD : Women : Mary Hoover
178, Jean Spencer IS2.

Nov . 9, 1971

61

6

11
4

High Game - Men : Jim
Roberts ,151 , Ro ger Spen ce r

LANES
Sun~ay Lite Nllhl Mixed
Tt1m No . 6

TP
1.3
10
6

,.,.1.

Slmonds JSS.

36

Dee

:18
S6

Team High Game No . 6, S96 .

60
64

No . 6,

Team

Tearn High Series - Team
ISS&lt; .

Jly RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI ( UP)~
· Oren thai James Simpson
struts his stuff on national
television when the· Buffalo
Bills visit the Cincinnati
Bengais Monday night.
· The game should be a good
indicator of whether O.J. can
break the NFL record of 2,003
yard rushing he set in 1973.
With 1,128 yards in his first
eight gi!JIIes, Simpson is now
28 yards ahead oi his 1973
pace. O.J. needs to average
146 yards rushing In his last
six games to break the mark.

Atlanta downs
Capitals, 4-1
.

Pro Hockey Roaodup ·

By United Preu In·
United Press International
The Atlanta Flames started
the season as only an ember
but now are going full
blaze.
The Flames lost lbeir first
four National Hockey League
games this season, including

~~d~y o~~e~o~:~~~~
one game of the .500 mark
when they defeated the
Washington Capitals 4-1.
Atlanta scored all of its
goals within eight minutes
and 20 seconds, with Bill Flett
knocking In a pair, and the
victory left Coach Fred
Q-elghton with an optlmi!tlc
feeling about the future qf hla
club.
"We have to go one step at
a time and we are well aware
that .500 will get us nowhere
in our division.'' said
Q-eighton. '
The
victory
raiaed
Atlanta's record to 7-f.l, far
behind Phlladephla and lhe
New Y""k Islanders in the
Patrick Division, but
respectable considering the
team's start.
"We opened with two at
home and lost both despite
playing
well,"
said
Q-eighton. "We lost OlD' first
four games and three of them
were at home, and that's a
pretty big hole to dig yourself

start Tuesday

•

,.t
·",.

'16,995

IIDUCIDTO

Some of the features offered in this lovely
home:

'
••

:
•
••=

..•••

•••
•

••

••
'

••

•'IOI'AL IUCIIIC •OV. 1~ Of ~CIOUS
UVING · •l IIOIIOOM •MIIIOIIO WAIDIOII
'DOOIS • CAl PIT • ITOIM-- ·.WINDOWS
n•aUCIHOUf. •
100M HUTCMw: ill• Ill" MtaHCMI PA"''I i'&amp;IMOII 11111~L
o lUlLT·IN WALL OYIN • :t" • "" liD WAL ·
CONITtUCTION • :t" .. " su• HOOI
OQNS1IUC1ION o 40 GMLON IUCIIIC 'WATII

-.u-. D•••a

......

...

NIATII •LAIIOIII . . WltDOWS
:..-.~

n•OUGHOVI'

yearo()ld halfback scrambled
1.23 yards in 19 carries in a 42351oss to the Baltimore Colts.
Simpson scored three touchdowns in that game, the first
time he's had that many TDs
in one game in his seven year
pro career.
Some compare O.J. with
.funrny Brown, but Bengals
coach Paul Brown, who
coached .Jimmy several
years and spent much of this
past week studying films of
O.J. , says no.
"O.J. reminds me of Ollie

LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE
Week of November 16
POOL
DATE- GYMNASIUM
Closed
Nov. 16-Ciosed-Concerl
7:30p.m. Coli. Swim
Nov. 17- 7-8:30 p.m. College Rf!: .
Closed
Nov . 16-7-8:30p.m. College Rec,
8:30-lOp.m. Coli. Swim
Nov. 19- 8: 30-IOp.m. College Rec.
7-8:30 p.m. Coli. Swim
Npv. 2D-7 ·8: 30 p.m. College Rec.
C!osed
-Nov. 21- Ciosed
S.V.A.C. Basketball Previews
Closed
Nov. 22- Closed
6 p.m. . JV's vs. Wilmington
8 p.m. - Varsity vs. Wilmington
NOTE: Lyne Center Gym &amp; Pool will be closed until the
week of January 6, 1976.

Alumni drills

~ARRJNlJTO

In his last time out, the 28-

GALLIPOLIS - Alumni
grid drills will begin 7 p.m.
Tuesday on Memorial Field
for the second annual
"Turkey Bowl" game on
.Thanksgiving Day between
odd and even year GAHS
graduates.
Several alumni planning to
play In this year's fund·
raising game for new locker
room facilities on Memorial
Field have been working out
daily the past week and a
half.
Monday, equipment will be
issued to "odd year" grads at
the GAHS equipment room at
7 p.m. "l!:veq year" grads
will receive their togs at 8
p.m. Monday. Thoae unable
to get their · equipment
Monday should contact
Coaches Bill Eachus or Ron
Janey.

,

into. Things look like they're
starting to go pretty well
now."
The Caps, now 2·13·2,
jumped to a 1.0 lead when
Nelson Pyatt scored late in
tl!e first period, but Flames
then erupted, scoring four
goals in the next 8:20. of!
goalies Ron Low ami Bernie
Wolfe. Hilliard Graves and
Dave Kryskow each ·had a
goal during that span to
support Flett.
The Toronto Maple Leafs
whipped California, 4-2, in the
only other NHL game. In
World Hockey Association
action, Winnipeg routed
Edmon.ton . 11-1· and the
Toronto Toros played
Phoenix 19 a 2-2 tle.
Maple Leali 4, Seals 2
Blaine Stoughton scored
two goals to spark Toronto.
The victory moved the Maple
Leafs five points ahead of the
SeaiJ in the Adama Dlvl!lon.
Lamy McDonald Bl)d Bob
Neely also scoted lor Toronto
while Ralph Klassen and Bob
Murdoch
tallied
for
Callfornla.
•
Jets&amp;, Otlers 1
" Piayer-Olach Bobby Hull
and Peter Sulllvan each
scored two goals to apark
WinnlP,eg's roul of Ed·
monton. Dan FoniiiCOred one
and assisted on lllOther as~
Jets scored three In the !lnt
period tD break the game
open . . Winnipeg outahot
Edmonton 41-13.
Toros %, Roadi'UIIIII!n 2 ·
Lauri Mononen of Phoenix
scored the tying goal In the
second period but rookie
goalie Marlo Vien of Toroo!D
kept the tie, turning back 38
shots. Phoenix also got a goal
from Gary Lariviere while
Frank Mahlovllch and Jeff
Jacques 11ClX'ed for Toronto.
saturday's College
Football Results
Unlttd PrMs International
New Hampshire u Mass•·
chusells 11
Dllrfmouth 33 Cornell 10
Rutgers 41 Boston University
3

-

Maine 2 Norlheostern 0
Rochester 31 Tufts 28
Marylond 22 Clemson 20 .
Michigan St. ~7 Northwestern

u

Vlllan011a 13 Holy Cross 12
Bucknell 32 Lehigh 25
Connecticut 21 Rhode Island
10
Wagner 24 Fordham 0
Yale 24 Princeton 13
Syracuse 37 VIrginia 0
Colgale 21 William &amp; Mary 17
Duke 21 No. Carolina St. 21
Georgia Tech 14 Navy 13
West VIrginia 31 Richmond 13
Georglo 28 Auburn 13

Ironton· beaten 26-7

Cincinnati in a heated defense.
..
battle with Pittsburgh for the
"We've ,scored 89 points in
counting passes," adds leadership of the American tl!e past three games, but
Brown. "We know going in Conference Central Division · given up 100," laments coach
we're going to have to cope will be trying for its eighth . lou Saban. "And, Clnciiuiatl
is hardly . the team you'd
with him having the ball this win in nine games.
After
a·
good
start,
Buffalo
choose
to play when you're
often."
.
has
lost
three
of
its
last
foilr
having
defensive troubles,
Besides his impressive
games
and
sliPPed
to
a
5-3
parti~~arly
in the seconrushing , Simpson has
.
averaged 19 yards per pass ' record, two games behind dary.
~aban referred to Ken
reception this season and has Miami in the AFC East.
i\Jthcugh the Billli lead the · AIJdeJ'IIOn, whose, pailslrig is
scored three times off passes.
NFL
1D touchdowns with 34, most of Cmcy s ~ffense.
Despite \he presence . of
with
quarterback Joe Fer· Anderson has ~ompleted . 58
Simpson, the Bengals have
guson's
.passing com· per cent of his pa~tl'!and
been made six point favorites
plimenting
Q.J.'s running, thrown for a dozen t®Ch·
by Harrah's Reno-Tahoe
Racebook to beat the Bills. Buffalo has a big problem on downs.

says. Brown, him one way or another tip to
referring to the running star 35 or · 40 times a game,

Matson,"

of the old Chicago Cardinals.
"O.J. is a will of the wisplike Ollie was. Jimmy was
inore of a power ·runner.
Brown has been trying ID
set a defense for O.J., but
says it's hard to organize one.
"That's because O.J. gets
his yards all ways-inside,
outside, when a hole is closed
he still bounces off people. A
lot of times he just makes
yardage on individual
lrilliance.
"Buffalo will get the ball to

"

Winless Browns are 21-poi~t ~..
underdogs against Raiders ..."
OAKLAN!&gt; (UPI) - Ob·
VIOUS1y, when a team is 0-8, it
has nowhere to go bUt up.
The Cleveland Browns may
eventually win a game this
season but realistically, it
won't be Sunday, because
that's when they play the
Oakland Raiders.
The Raiders are pro
football's version of the
impassioned businessman.
Whetl!ertheopponentjs weak
or strong, ihe Raiders play
with the same tenacity.
All of which means tbe poor
BroWns, 21 point underdogs,
are in for a long afternoon in
tl!e Oakland Coliseum, and
they'll receive no sympathy
from the Raider fans who
are among the most parttsan
in sports. The game has been
sold out, so it will be televised
locally.
Forrest Gregg, one of football's
great · linemen
&amp;BSOciated mostly will! the
. Vince Lombardi led Green
Bay Packers, Is the
Cleveland coach these days
and he has no Illusions about
his club.
"We're trying to build

something and win at the
same time," he says. "It's a
difficult thing to do,
. especially when you have to
play teams like tl!e Raiders. I
played against Oakland not
too many years ago and I
remember it a fine team.
From what I can see, the
Raiders may be even better
now.''
Gregg's lone game against
the Raiders was on Jan. 15,
1968 in the Super Bowl. The
Packers won that game but
Gregg's recollection is of a
tough game.
"They had Ike Lassiter,
Tom Keating and Ben
Davidson then," sald Gregg,
· "and they not only were
tough but mean. I think If you
compare that team with
Wday's, you'd have to say the
Raiders are deeper and

Sa '\I''S

• "dent

lRCl

'blown .up'

i

•••

FOR YOUR
WORK ·

Braves stop Milwaukee

324 Second Ave •

Gallipolis

I·

up.''

Gibbs was sporting a
skinned knuckle and admitted he got in one good
pwich.
"Gibbsmayhavethought It
was fun, " Brokaw said, "but
it's not fun when you take the
punch and don't even get a
chance to get one back."
The fight took most of the
anention from the game that
saw the Braves get double
figure scoring from all five
starters. Bob McAdoo had 'l/;
Jack Marin 23, Ernie DIGre·
gorio 19, Randy Smith 18 and
Garfield Heard 12.
The Jlucka were led by
Brian Winters' 20 points.
Elsewhere in tl!e NBA,
Philadelphia beat Boston 119109, · Atlanta defeated
Washington 97-M, Los
Angeles downed Phoenix 114lll'I,PortlandcllJ1PedOllcago
93-89 and Seattle edged
aeveland 100-97 in overtime.
In the ABA, Denver downed
Kentucky 117·111, St. Louts
downed Virginia 108-102 and
Indiana beat Utah 127·119.
78ers 119, Cellicslot
Doug Collins had 32 points
wilb support from Fred Car·
ter's 27 and George
McGinnis' 22 81 Phllaclelphla
beat Boaton. 'JoJo While led
Bostoo with 24 points. The
76era were ahead 61-411 45
seconds into the second ha1f
when Celtic center Dave
Cowens had to leave with
beck spasms.
Hawks 9'7, Ballets 88
Tom Henderson's 21 points
led Atlanta, wblchmovedln!D
a first place tie with
· Washington in the NBA
Central Division. Elvin
Hayes was high for
Wllllhlngtoo with 27.
Laken 114, SuDS1t7
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar had
3fi pclnts, 13 in the fb\al
period, and added 18
rebounds, nine aaallts and
eight blocked lhots to pace
Los Angeles. Rookie center
Alvan Adama of Phoenix hit
llfi points, Including 10 in the
final period.
(
Bla1ers IS, Bulls 89
Uoyd Neal's --bigh 31
Nov. 21
Marlon -Frankltn 11 PortS · pcinta, BW Walton •a 20 re·
•movth
N~v. 22
bowtdl, Larry Sleele'a 13
Athens at Columbps lllillaand Geoff Petrle'si2Eastmoor
pclnt fourth quartar led PortNov. 25
Portsmouth
Wtst
•• lind. Bob lDve bid • pcinta,
Jackson
18 Ill llle fourth )lll'iod, for
VInton County at Wellston
..... 2'
Ollcaao.
Athens &amp;t Nelsonville-York
Sollic11to, CIVI t7
Logan at Hilliard
Groen at Whttltrsburo ·
Seattle'• Fred Brown 11101e
the bali from Cleveland •s
Portsmouth at Milford
Nov. 21
Dick Sllycler and ICored the
Ironton •t Athens
tleclllve IMiaket with 64
Wellston et Oalllpblls
....... lilt Ill .......
~ Jacuon
Sou
:f~t II Hllnnlll . .. . . tied It It ,..;
Trace
with 2:1tleft, he llole the lllll
Portsmouth et Springfield
at mldcoll't and hll a layup.
.
Nov. 2!
Waverlv et Portsmouth
NUIIets 117, CeloMis 1ll
West
Rookie David Thompaon

November
cage cards

Lri
"' n

DAN OOMAS &amp; SON

_,
threw for 232 yards and 'two
touchdowns against · ' ~he
Saints last Sunday while Pete
Banaszak, Clarence O.vis
and Marv Hubbard led a~,260
yard advance on the grollnd.
The Raiders are &amp;-2 gb1ng
into Sunday's game and lead
their division, the AfC West,
by two games ·over ~s
City.
~· .
Will Cureton started ·1Jis
first game in the NFL 'last
Sunday and will be at" t]le,
controls again this Sunday for )
Cleveland. Against !he Lll!!ts,
Cureton completed 11) dl' 32
passes for 95 y!!rds and qne
touchdown. His TD tbroW':fas
a 12 yarder to tight end ~ar
Roan, who has caughr 29
passes this season. Greg
Pruitt and Billy Prichett are
the top Browns' run\llng
backs.
Ill
'"'

Pro Buketball Roundup
By United Preu In·
United Press lntemalioDBI
The Buffalo Braves beat
the Milwaukee Bucks more
decisively in tbe basketball
.f ' . game,ll2-98, than in the fight
1'
'
near the end of the Frl,day
night game.
Buffalo's win broke Mil·
waukee's fivf1!arne winning
streak.
The. Braves took a 31·14
lead by tlie end of the first
period and the Bucks whittled
MILWAUKEE (UP!) awayuntlltl!eyweredown by
Tony Kubek, one of the.NBC ooly six when the fight broke
broadcasters during the out with 5:43left in tl!e game.
World Series, said Friday the
MUwaukee's Gary Brokaw
threats on the lives of umpire. and Buffalo's Dick Gibbs got
Larry Barnett, Marion, Ohio, l!lto a shoving match and
and his family during the Gibbs grabbed Brokaw and
series show that sports today threw him into the press
have been · blown out of table. Before Brokaw could
proportion .
get up, Bob Dandridge hit
Kubek said two of Ills Gibbs with a flying tackle .
former New York Yankees Boll! players went over the
IA!ammates, Mickey Mantle table a!ld both benches
and Phil Rizzuto, received empUed.
similar threatening lette.rs
There 11!88 a lot of pusblng
during their playing days but and shoving and a couple of
that ''the threats In those punchea but the main aclloo
dayS were taken with a grain was over ·and the Braves held
of salt."
tl!e Bucks to sii points the
"They were called kooks rest of the way as tl!ey
then," he said in an interview coasted to the win.
with The Milwaukee Sentinel.
Glbba apoke eagerly of the
"But it's different today. It's fight.
a sad commentary on our
"llrokaw stepped in froot of
society when threats are me so I threw him out of the
made on an umpire and hJa way," Glbbts said. "Dan·
family and then by his dridge grabbed me and we
(Barnett's) opening up a can rolled over the table but I
of worms."
rolled oo !Dp of him. It was
Kubek's comment was a Just your friendly NBA fight.
reference to Barnett blaming ~cldy forgotten . will! nc
Kubek and fellow broad- grudges held.
caster Curt Gowdy for the
"I'm coming off the bench
threats because of their . and I mlghl be a llWe
criticisms of a con!foversial frustrated If lbin&amp;s don't 80
play ~~ which Barnett was well. You play thia game wilb
involved during the series. · intensity and tempers might
.
Dare. As long aa ncbody geta
hurt, it reall)' Jacka the game
South Carolina 37 Wake
Forest 26
Ylrglnla Tech 33 VMI 0
Purdue 19 Iowa 18
Wayne Sf. 24 Evansville 21
Dayton 29 Marshall 8
Ohio St. 38 Minnesota 6

KUbek

tougher now.''
.
The Browns didn't play all
tl!at bad in dropping a 21·10
decision to the Detroit Lions
last week while the Raiders
were rolling over the New
Orleans Saints, another
yoiDig and weak team, 48-10.
"We play everyone the
same way," Is how Raider
Coach John Madden puts it.
"The records of our opponimts have no bearing on
how important a game is to
us. Our goal is to win encugh
games to take the division,
tl!en keep on winning all the
way tl!rough the Super Bowl.
It doesn't matter who these
wins are against, just so long
as you achieve your goal.''
The Oakland offense
probably is the most con·
slstent in the NFL, and the
most balanced. Ken Stabler·

•••Ply .

'"'
scored 2i of hlic areer-btj 34
points in the . first bali&lt; in
leading Denver to its •(ifth
straight win. Kentucky .. was
led by ArUs Gilmore wllll 'l1
points and 17 rebounds' and
Bird Averitt with 27 polhta )
and 11 aaailt.!.
'"'
1
Spirits 1118, Squlresl02
Maurice Lucas scored four
baskets In overtime •and
Freddie Lewla alkled twi•to
pace St. Louis. Lewis lllll"1l.
Louis will! 22 points wlille
Lucas and Don &lt;luiney ad&amp;d
21 apiece. Johnny Neumlllm
hit a seaso1'lgh 'l1 polnll ofor
Virginia, which has now lost
seven straight games an"ls
1-12.

...

~·

"
"

"~

Pacers 1%7, Stars 111~· 1
Billy Kntght poiD'~ tn!!r'o.f
his 43 points in the secood 1Wf
and Indiana came fniJn
behind in the final mlnutw.to
defeat Utah. Darnell~
scored 32 points for .,. ae
Pacers.
":'

... . .

Sportsmen '8 ··•
calendar "

lllfi
.... t

'£1~'

••

.

·~~'Jir·
n
~1:r
~ ~ .,~,

...

. •t-

'!&gt;'

.Class AA contest

o,;i ·,-

·7"j"UIIIted Press International
lui.

"" ~ Newark Catholic coach
&lt;i .J.D. Graham has turned a
.,_.;/!gut feeling" into a ticket to
~?.- ~on's Rubber Bo\vl and the
~:!!: finalS of the Class A Ohio
n·~Jiigh School Athletic
•J I..,
, ,Association Football Playoffs
next Saturday.·
Graham's Green Wave
which has not given up ~
touchdown from scrimmage
ali year, got the only points It
needed with 4:17 left in the
f~rst quarter of Friday night's
semifmals at Groveport when
defensive tackle Dan· Bell
blocked a Middletown
....
Fenwick
punt and the ball
"' , , J
. .. rolled through the end zone
;;;·•·r a. safety .
·
"..,.....
, \,1,A seven-yard touchdown
,;,:,Jlllss from Mitch Breneman to
.u1 ~,ck Booth and a 27-yard Bell
,:.. eld goal helped push the
•-' ' al score to II~.
~S;;: "I had a gut feeling and
.. ~ ..called off the return and went
·--lilock," Graham said of his
;,"strategy against the Falcons
'",.punt from their own !&amp;-yard

: t·.;Jine.

ni),, The victory avenged Ne. ·~·s 3-4-' loss to Fenwick in

::!:1 1~ year's seinls.
?!i• Middletown, 7-1, was paced
,·. Jty 1974 Class A Back of the
;. ~~ar Mike Harkrader will!
,, IQO rushing yards ln 26
• ; ~@rries.
; ;., ;"We
contained
the
;;~krader boy a lot better in
· 'the second half, but every
. time he touched the ball, I
just held my breath," said
Gra!Jam, whose charges take
• - .Ill 11.0 record to Akron.
· ~ ·".The key to OlD' defense
:· lfBB that we took the pass
"' ;~ay from them with our
'N pass rusll," he said . "It's
,.·.-.easier to play defense if you
~~ iust have to defense the

~nd

Mike Boland, as keys to
Ironton scored late in the 152.
lis pass rush.
fourtl! quarter, cliinaxing a
Carey's most crucial toucJi.
Falcons coach Jerry Hark- 64-yard drive with a nine- doWn came on a IS-yard pass
rader figured errors played a yard run by Jeff Kreibel. · from quarterback John Greer
big part in his team's defeat.
Wyom~ rushed for 237 to Dennis Kessler in the third
"They played well and we yards and p~ for 88 while quarter . That put Carey
dldn 't," said the . Fenwick holding the Tigers to 57 yards ahead of the Badgers for the
Coach. "That's about alii can passing and min!IS 15 first time, a lead the team
say. You juBt can't make rushing.
held until the end.
··
miBtakes in .a game like this
Holy Name scored In the
At halftime, Berkahlre ·was
and win, and we did make first 2:04 and went 111 ·to winning decisively 1~.
·
mistakes."
overwhelm Oregoo Cardinal
Both teama are 9-1.
In Class AA playoffs action Stritch.
Wyoming
o 6 s 12- 26
Friday night, Cleveland Holy
The Green Wave will take • ronton
o o o 7- 7
Name shut out Oregon Strltch its 9.Q record into tbe AA
Wyo-Ba,teo 9 paS$ from
35-0 at Berea and Wyoming championship game in the Russell
l~lck failed)
.
Wyo-Jacobs
1 run (ktck
whippe~ Ironton 26·7 at
Rubber Bowl next week pass from Russell)
Dayton.
against Wyoming, 11.0.
Wyo-Jacobs 1 run !kick
Carey shaded Burton Berk· · End Tom Amato recowred failed I
shire 26-24 at Mansfield in the a fumble by halfback Dave ki~~~Krelbel ~ run IHughes
other Class A gari)e.
Kotowski that rolled into the
Wyo- McCrecken 7 run
Findlay Jaces Cincinnati end zone for tbe fifsl acore !kick failed)
.
~~
Mil
oe er at Dayton and and caught a 37-yard pass
' ·
Lakewood St. Edward meets from quarterback Ke\'in Holy Name
14. 1 t4 o-:as ,
Newark at Akron jn Class Hartman for tl!e second.
Oregon
0 o 0 o-. .:4 •
AAA sem lfin·'·
'""'"hi
Har
...
,
HolyAmato
""'_..,. .
tmanrannlneyar.. ,or fumble in end zonerecovered
(Minor
Wyoming's . Cowboys Holy Name's third touchdOwn kick)
survived three fwnbles and and a 21.0 halftime lead.
Holy- Amato 37 pass from
two pass interceptions en
Kotowski went three yards Hartman
!Minor kick)9 run
Holy- Hartman
route to an easy victory over ·and
fullback
Brian !Minor kick)
Ironton.
McLaughlin eight for a pair
Holy- Kotowski 3 run
The Cowboys fumbled of tl!ird~rter scores.
I Minor kick I
three times deep in Tigers
Carey tailback Dave Myers ~~~~kt~~aughlln 8 run
territory ill the first half and pushed his season nllhlng
A- 5,4()0.
managed only a IHI halftime IDtal to 1,737 yards with 188
Fenwick
0 0 0 o- 0
lead on a nine-yard pass from Friday night to lead the Newark
8 0 0 3-11
quarterback Doug Russell to Carey Blqe Devils to victory
New- Safety blocked punt
rolled out of end zone.
Kevin Bales.
over Burton.
New- Booth 7 pass from
Wyoming maintained
Carey meets Newark Breneman
(run failed)
control of the ball in the 9&amp;thoiic in one week for the A
New- FG Bell 27
A- 2.700
second half and pushed title .
across touchdownaoo runs of
Myers, a 15ZiJOIDid junior, Carey
0 6 14 6-26
one and two yardl by Fred was held to only 36 yards in Berkshire
8 8 8 D-24
Berk- Kellogg 53 run
Jacobs and a seven-yard run the first half but plunged
by Dave McCracken.
ahead in the second to tally (Kellogg run)
Berk- Brooker 60 pus
from Kellogg (Ebner run I
Car.-Shook JO pass fr
Greer lrun failed) ·
.
. Car.-Greer 1 run (Sn~&lt; ·

8th grade SEO .

pass from Greer)

.champs honored

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
~: t'U$h' II
.
Academy
Elghih Grade
~;;;;· Graham pointed out three
football
team
attended a
~~:tilorers, linebacker Jim
banquet
Tuesday
evening in
' 'Puckett, Bell and defensive
r· •l .,
their honor. The Uttle Blue
Devils, coached by William
'""'
THISTLEDOWN
Leedy, head coach and
""" NORTH RANDALL, Ohio · Spencer Suskin, assistant
v; j -UPJ) - Market Report, with · coach, are the S.E.O.A.L.
.~ Cooper aboard, Friday
&lt;.'hamplonship Eighth Grade
;;~ tbe featured fi,OOO Ohio
Team. They finished 5 and 0
~=NJowance at Thistledown.
In the league .
'
;:~hten was second and
Thebanquetwasheldat the
1~win third.
r,,,, Market Report was timed Jackson Production Credit
building with 118 people at·
di ii• ~ : 41 U for the mile and
tending. -The room was
:~ld $9, $5, and $3.
'!lie l~trlfecta of Mike's beautifully decorated with
blue and white streamers and
~ :A11bhal, King Fibber and
l!Nfltr&amp; Our Olance was worth pompons.
Seated al the head table
~ for each holder of lll'l
were
Mr. and Mrs. Willard
n~ets. The 11·1 daily double
n'GI'•Astor Admiral and Fritzko (Buddy J Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
William Leedy, and Mr. and
iilenot returned $1,851.
Mrs.
Spencer Suskln.
, , ~e 2,581 racing fans bet
Coach
Leedy served as
$2'11,072.
Mas!er
of
Ceremonies. He
'
thanked the team for a job
1
well done and presented each
BEULAH
player
with a ghampionshlp
GROVE CITY, Ohio ( UPI)
trophy
when he introduced
- Red Pipe rallied from off
them
along with their
lil~~opace on the outside In the
parenta.
' ~ch and waa up in lbe final
Coach Leedy also ex·~des to defeat Banquet Bld
pressed
his thanks to a fine
;&amp;JY one and one-half length&amp; In
cheerleadlng
squad and
1-the- featured $5,200 seventl!
presented
each
girl
a trophy.
••lillewance race at Beulah
wer.
e
also
Trophies
t~kFrlday.
presented to Coach Leedy
, :Jndian Pet showed.
and Coach Susl!ln. Flowers
~ o!Jlte winner, ridden by Jim
:@enck, covered the mile were given '" their wives.
-and 70 yards in 1:44 ~ and These were given as
remembrances from the
·· ~ed $12, $6 and $6.40.
... .

...

team .
Guest speaker for the
evening was Willard (Buddy)
Moore, head coach of the
Gallipolis Blue Devils. COach
Moore directed his talk to the
players. He spoke on loylllly,
trust, dedication, and the
desire to play good football.
In closing, Coach Leedy
thank~ all the people for
their support to the team.
Also for all the contribUtions
and time that had been
donated to make the evening
a complete success.

'\1,•

Berk - Kellogg 80 ruii
I Ebner JliiSS from Greer I
Care- Nye 5 run I run
failed)
Care- Kessler 15 pass from
Greer (JliiSS failed)
A- 2,600.

2
DAYS.
ONLY

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
·On New Bean
Visualiner

'12.50

SAT. 15th

SUN. 16th

g.g

with Certain-teed
FiberGlass
Attic lraJiation
• Cuts healing and cool·
lng COlla up to 30%.
~afteFyear.

• Keepe ahome warmer In

winter, cooler in summer.
• Easy to install between
attic Joists in a day
Of less.

1·7

6x23 Batts
76.67 sq. ft.
6xl5 Batts
30 sq. ft.

,,,

f\9\\\ '

SAVE-- 35%

Dynaglass. Belted
XST ~ Snow Tires

31hx23 Batts
184 sq. ft.

PRE-SEASON STORE
CLEARANCE

31hx15 Batts
120 sq. ft.

G-78-14 &amp; G-78-15
ONLY

OPEN 24 HOURS*
I

QI)ICE

'3000·

Sears Expert Installation
Available , tt.t extra cOlt ror tirea , hatterieR and Rhock11
Automuti ~e

'

Center.

ANDHAVE

Home Insulation

a Install it in your attic,
walls Qr floors.

a Cuts heating and
cooling costs.

Hardmans
Home
Center
THAN A LUMBER Y
"LOTS MORE"

AT SJ::AHS~

•Closed Sunday night at 10:00 p.m.

FiberGlass

'

IN STOCK ONLY
at your nearett Sears Catalog

with Certain-teed

• Keeps on saving money
lor the life of your home .

\

For real home cookln ' the
whole family will enjoy any- ·
time, come to the Bob Evans
Steak House. Where once
again, 'rou11d the clock
servic.e is a Gallia County
tradition .

'"t\at\oJ'·

SILVER IRIDitE
PLAIA
~
PH, 446·277G

~--'RT.

2 BYPASS, POINT PLEASANT

NtAMM, IfiUt '( 'l ANDf 'O.

'· I

,.,

•

,,

•

�SUPER MARKETS .
We rilwne the right to
limit ,uantltles on all
lt~MM n this ecf, None
10hltotleale,.. ·

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9-CLDSED
- . SUNDAY
··252
THIRD AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.
2500 JACKSON AVENUE-PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
'

'

. ,.,,.•.

PENNYFARE QUALITY

. ROAST-RITE -U.S.D.A.

,

_,

Made With U.S. Govt.lnspected Beef

Self-Basted Plump Young ·

,.~

TU

'

.•
"'

ROYAL 'CROWN
·COLA

•

.

Family Pak 5-lbs. Or More

•,_

-

to 12
lb. Avg.

"

PLUS
DESPO~IT

lb.

IN GAU.IPOUS STORE ONLY
RID

or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

lb.

WESTIRN

APPLES OR D'ANJOU PEARS

ARMOUR "'k STAR- U.S. Govt. Inspected

5 ·BEEF SALE
BONELESS
ROASTS·

LAND 0 LAKES Sliced
. BABY

.
,•..
. ,.,.
,,

..

.

:~

09
....
--,. ,.

ENTREES

TANGELOS

GRAVY &amp; SLICED TURKEY
GRAVY &amp; SALISBURY STEAKS
CHAR BROILED BEEF PATliES
MAN SIZE BEEF PAniES

'"

2-lb.
Pk

9•

oCra rries

.

9

BONELESS CHUCK ROASTS ·RoLLED ••••••••••• 111• $139

'"
,,•. •.

..,.....

AIMOUh STAR-U.S. GOVT. INSP•

ARMOUR * STAR-U.S. GOVT.INSP.

BONELESS

BONELESS .

. CUBED StEAKS

SWISS STEAK

,. ,... $139

~.::.~~k
Mort

lb.

lb.

2tor

$
lb. .

Flat
Cuts

..
. --------------------------.i
'"
FREEZER QUEEN
COOK

RED RIPE I. PRESH

s

'"

FREEZER QUEEN

ORLANDO

Cucu

•.
•'"

c

For

PIISH TASTY GREEN

ONE
PER
CUSTOMER

lb.

..,..

99

. S

.
..

8-PAK
.
.-

~

SUPER MARKETS

'

RED EMPERIQR

PINT BOmES
.

....

I

t

t

I

I

I

I

I

a..eltss Sllo•IHr

I

t I

'outs aoa .. $1.39
I

I

I

•

I

I

I

t

I '

I

$1b
•

I I I I I

t

179

I I I t I I I t

Bon•u Chvck for Stew • • • . " $1.59

ARMOUR*STAR-'U.S. GOYT. INSP.

FULLY COOKED
SHANK PORTION-Some Slices Removed

09

$
lb.

BUn HALF - NO SLICES REMOVED •••• •· s1 19
WHOLE- 1610 19-1.1. AVG......... •· s1 1'
CENTER CUT HAM ROASTS 1" THICK • :. •· '1 5'

•
•

AGAR-U.S. GOVT.INSPECTED

, Full Cooked

ARMOUR * ST AI-U.S. GOVT. INSP.

fresh Lean GROUND liEF
FORMIRL Y CALLID

GROUND CHUCK

$129
'
lb.
• •••••••••••••••••

Beneltn Stew Beef • • • • • • • •.$1 .39

.,

THOROFARE

RE VANILLA

FOIL WRAP

-..)

\I

\

ICE CREAM
I

11" I 25'

••

$ 49
1-oz.
PI!g.

Gal.
PI!g.

Dozen ·
Ctn •

..••

THOROFARE-SOn

FRUIT COCKTAIL

MARGARINE
1-lb.
4-oz.
Silt

$
1-lb.
Bowl

9.5-oz.
Ctn.

14.$

1-11.
13-oz.
Can

1-oz.
C..s

LIMIT 3

GIVE APENNYFARE

FOOD GIFT ·
CERTIFICATE

INSriAD cw'rHI USUAL Glnl
. AVAILAIU NOWI
,

POST
SUPIR SUGAR CRISP

GOLD MEDAL

CEREAL
.
1·111. 2-oa. Pkg.

FLOUR

Regular Retail Without Coupon - $1 .05
Limit One Pkg, Per Coupon ,
Valid Thru Sat. , Nov. 22, 1975
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

·Ill YOU. NNNYPAn MANAOBTODA Yl

SHOP AND COMPARE OUR EYERYDA Y LOW PRICES!!!
(

'
I

5-lll.lklt
Regular Retail Without Coupon- 93'
Limil One Bog Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sal.. Nov. 22, 1975
Limit 0"" Coupon Per Customer

•'

~

�SUPER MARKETS .
We rilwne the right to
limit ,uantltles on all
lt~MM n this ecf, None
10hltotleale,.. ·

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9-CLDSED
- . SUNDAY
··252
THIRD AVENUE-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.
2500 JACKSON AVENUE-PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
'

'

. ,.,,.•.

PENNYFARE QUALITY

. ROAST-RITE -U.S.D.A.

,

_,

Made With U.S. Govt.lnspected Beef

Self-Basted Plump Young ·

,.~

TU

'

.•
"'

ROYAL 'CROWN
·COLA

•

.

Family Pak 5-lbs. Or More

•,_

-

to 12
lb. Avg.

"

PLUS
DESPO~IT

lb.

IN GAU.IPOUS STORE ONLY
RID

or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

lb.

WESTIRN

APPLES OR D'ANJOU PEARS

ARMOUR "'k STAR- U.S. Govt. Inspected

5 ·BEEF SALE
BONELESS
ROASTS·

LAND 0 LAKES Sliced
. BABY

.
,•..
. ,.,.
,,

..

.

:~

09
....
--,. ,.

ENTREES

TANGELOS

GRAVY &amp; SLICED TURKEY
GRAVY &amp; SALISBURY STEAKS
CHAR BROILED BEEF PATliES
MAN SIZE BEEF PAniES

'"

2-lb.
Pk

9•

oCra rries

.

9

BONELESS CHUCK ROASTS ·RoLLED ••••••••••• 111• $139

'"
,,•. •.

..,.....

AIMOUh STAR-U.S. GOVT. INSP•

ARMOUR * STAR-U.S. GOVT.INSP.

BONELESS

BONELESS .

. CUBED StEAKS

SWISS STEAK

,. ,... $139

~.::.~~k
Mort

lb.

lb.

2tor

$
lb. .

Flat
Cuts

..
. --------------------------.i
'"
FREEZER QUEEN
COOK

RED RIPE I. PRESH

s

'"

FREEZER QUEEN

ORLANDO

Cucu

•.
•'"

c

For

PIISH TASTY GREEN

ONE
PER
CUSTOMER

lb.

..,..

99

. S

.
..

8-PAK
.
.-

~

SUPER MARKETS

'

RED EMPERIQR

PINT BOmES
.

....

I

t

t

I

I

I

I

I

a..eltss Sllo•IHr

I

t I

'outs aoa .. $1.39
I

I

I

•

I

I

I

t

I '

I

$1b
•

I I I I I

t

179

I I I t I I I t

Bon•u Chvck for Stew • • • . " $1.59

ARMOUR*STAR-'U.S. GOYT. INSP.

FULLY COOKED
SHANK PORTION-Some Slices Removed

09

$
lb.

BUn HALF - NO SLICES REMOVED •••• •· s1 19
WHOLE- 1610 19-1.1. AVG......... •· s1 1'
CENTER CUT HAM ROASTS 1" THICK • :. •· '1 5'

•
•

AGAR-U.S. GOVT.INSPECTED

, Full Cooked

ARMOUR * ST AI-U.S. GOVT. INSP.

fresh Lean GROUND liEF
FORMIRL Y CALLID

GROUND CHUCK

$129
'
lb.
• •••••••••••••••••

Beneltn Stew Beef • • • • • • • •.$1 .39

.,

THOROFARE

RE VANILLA

FOIL WRAP

-..)

\I

\

ICE CREAM
I

11" I 25'

••

$ 49
1-oz.
PI!g.

Gal.
PI!g.

Dozen ·
Ctn •

..••

THOROFARE-SOn

FRUIT COCKTAIL

MARGARINE
1-lb.
4-oz.
Silt

$
1-lb.
Bowl

9.5-oz.
Ctn.

14.$

1-11.
13-oz.
Can

1-oz.
C..s

LIMIT 3

GIVE APENNYFARE

FOOD GIFT ·
CERTIFICATE

INSriAD cw'rHI USUAL Glnl
. AVAILAIU NOWI
,

POST
SUPIR SUGAR CRISP

GOLD MEDAL

CEREAL
.
1·111. 2-oa. Pkg.

FLOUR

Regular Retail Without Coupon - $1 .05
Limit One Pkg, Per Coupon ,
Valid Thru Sat. , Nov. 22, 1975
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

·Ill YOU. NNNYPAn MANAOBTODA Yl

SHOP AND COMPARE OUR EYERYDA Y LOW PRICES!!!
(

'
I

5-lll.lklt
Regular Retail Without Coupon- 93'
Limil One Bog Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sal.. Nov. 22, 1975
Limit 0"" Coupon Per Customer

•'

~

�.

'

.' ... .

••

~

~

'

'll - The SWid~y Time~· Sen~IEeJ., Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

!:~::::~tc:::um [Y;;;-w;;;;;N;;;;~JF;;;t)

71! - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

POMEROY - " If you
haven't .stopped in at the
Metgs County Museum on
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy,
may, we recommend a visit.
You 11 marvel at the crude
beauty of the Indian artifacts
on display. A table of books
offer extensive Indi an
h1story ," spokesman sa id
. .
In the mtm-theater, you
can see a close-up of nature's
beauty. Through the wonders
of photography, a spider web
becomes an intriguing jewel;
look deep inside fl ower
blossoms, watch such things
as worms, mushrooms and
tree fungus unveil th eir
unseen beauty.
"On display, also, is a hand
carved cane, having belonged
to Samuel Pomeroy, which
was carved of wood from the
(;harler Oak Tree. This tree
was the subject of a colonial
legend. . According
to

Sa,~urday.

...
...
''·

..

tractili'l!' the charter freeing
Co nn ecticut Colony from
direc t Parliamentary control, was hidHen in the
Charter Oak Tree.
" Museum hou rs . are
Tuesday, Thursday, Friday
a.m. and p.m. and
10 10 11 2 to 4 24
Sunday
p.m. Other
hours by appoin tment.
"May we also remind you
of our request for articles for
the December display, 'An
Old Fashioned (;hristmas."
For information phone the
museum at
or
_
.
992
.
_ 992
,.. 3810
the spokes·
992 5877
2264
man concluded.
·

j
~:~:
';!;
~;~;
;~;:

'~!~
: ~:

TAKEN TO HOLZER
MASON _ John Herman
Ross, , of Mason was taken
82
to Holzer
Medical Center
Sa turday at , a.m . by the
8 04Squad.
1\lason Rescue
_ ,

~: :
~;~; ~d

..-

•

rl~er

As I he newest addl tiorl 'lcJ L ANDMAIIK's ••big. automaied
I
feed facilily at Washillglon C.H.. the liq'uid.Jeed plant
•'
,•
load
:!4 Io ns at a time in to stainless stei!ll'semi·\a nkers
,.,.
. h . h d.
,.,
.,
w Th
IC W1
au 1 dtree! 10 L.INil.MAHK"
",,,,
, , 11ere· • . • . .
h '. 11
:: _.....
ts
mo ern P1?nl W1 11, assure ple nllfu.t supplies of
"
Pro-Las 331or th e growrng number of farm ers who rely on
'·
this new lyfl e of ,.rq uiC. I fce d· ,,
:•

'r,•

.

h.e~.

~

::
::

COST -CUTTING SUPPLEMENT FOR
DAIRY, BEEF &amp; SHEEP.

l~cked,the

glan~e ~long
tr~tl

::

, Pro-Las 33 .can be top·dressed on hay. silage or grain.
can be use d with au lorvated feediriiJ sys1
,
It s easiest to fe ed free-choice. using lick-wh
eel tank
· feeders. Flows readily at zero. rerels in;ects in sum mer.
-Las 33
,'prov'de
I S ps.
r0 Iimproves
ell)
· a t IOW pa
COS
1 IS
· flitOfyt'f'
I of
te doth
WJ·er
th
viPro
tamins
and
mineral
la;abi

Frce-fl~wing,
tem~

br~~her c~uld

~~!bur Jtlo~.~dld~·
~desi~ned ~he ~:s, I

SUPPLEMENl·l',

POMEROY LANDMARK

future .

"
n

'

. ._,_a
- ' , I' - .
"'«•·'!'•;'V;,.....-

'

·· .. ...•-r ·- "'~ _li:'

,.

"\lo ' -

.

y

. ... ~, . '-

;~:~

;';~

th~ t
~:

'

'

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··
t,.
· I +"~~':,.1
. Y.';~
·••....t...._ :1?~''
.....,..- -~

·'Y

,

~

·wE'RE STUCK
Killi~g~.Jhe

' "When you have liD·
seasonably warm 1feather,
there's an Increase 1n Ice
a-earn consumption and that
plays a part 1n the datry
shortage."
He said tllat when colder
weather comes, not mly does
milk production rise but Ice
cream con3umptlon
decrease&amp;. "That wiD help
the chllflllng situation conllderably,'' he said.
• "I can't IIBY for lllfe that
prlcea wiD fall," he said, '1t
all depends on the supply
situation."
A spokesman for ACME
Markets, Inc., whlcb lll!lla

1

1

1

12:3Wo-Gtrandsland 3,&lt;,15; NFL Pre-Game Show 8·
or d Tomorrow 13.
'
12:5So-Five Minutes to Klck.Ofl to
1:1l0-:-NFL Football 3,4,15; NFL .Football 8. NFL
. Football 10; Next Generation 13• Tribal Eye '33
1.31)-lssues &amp; Answers 6,13.
·
2'00-CLI ommunlque 6; College Football 1975 · Onedln
ne 33.
·
2:»-Aware 6.
2:453 ' ~,Forby's Antique Workshop 6; Rivals of Sherlock
o mes 33• Town Topics 13.
·
.
~:::~~at' Good. Ole Nashville Music 6; ·Medlx 13..
ssue 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4· Friends of
.
Man 6' NFL Football 8, 10; Frleends' of Man 13 .
&lt;:~~bile Polley Forums 1.i; Know Your Anllques 3l.
&lt;:.,Movie "Story of a Woman" 3; Meet The Press&lt; ·
Mission: Impossible 6; Nashville On The Road 13:
Play Chess 33.
'
5:1l0-:-Bonanza 4; Movie "The Glass Menagerle"13 · To
Be Announced 15: A Bit With Knit 33
'
5:31).
5:31)-.Magnlflcai-Mary's Song of Llherotlon 15 . FBI 6.
Preserving Food 33.
'
•
6:1l0-:-News ~; Carrascotendas 33.

the~~~

6:1l0-:-Columbus Today 4: Sunrise Semester 10.
6;15--Folk Literature 3.
6:2So-Farm Report 13.
6:31)-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6: Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Good News 13.
6:4C}-{)unce of Prevention 10.
6:4So-Morntng Report 3.
6:5So-Chuck While Reports 10; News 13 .
7:1l0-:-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8:1l0-:-Lucy Show 6i Capt . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame St.
33.
.
8:31)-Big Valley 6.
9:1l0-:-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13 .
9:31)-Not For Women Only 3; One Life lo Live 6; Give.
N-Take 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
lO :oo-&lt;:etebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Pri ce Is
Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13 .
10 :31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15. ·
·11 :1l0-:-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8; Let's Face It 10; Etec. Co. 20.
11 :».-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life8, 10; Sesa~e Sl.20,33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12 :1l0-:-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :31)-3· for the Money 3,1'5; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :5s-NBC News 3,15. .
I:llO-:-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :31)-Days of Our Llves 3,4, 15; Let's Make ADeal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:1l0-:-SIO.OOO Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8,1 0.
2:31)-Doctors 3.4.15 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 • Edge of

Vinton club
·in drive for

soup labels
VINTON
VInton
Elementary sChool Is In the
midst of a special collection
drive aimed at obU.lnlng
greatly needed audio-visual
and athletic equipment.
The program, "campbell's
Labels for Education," Is
sponsored by the C&amp;mpbeU
Soup Company and offered to
public, private, and parochial
schools (K-4).
"Between now and January
9, the school hopes to collect
enough Campbell's . Soup
labels to earn"produ~ts.''sald

5·741-9-10 HP,•
.'
STEAL ONE NOW

..."'••

:

I

.'

~

11
'

Arou~ o1smu~TEo ~SEOUT rR1~s

I Meigs·Equipment &amp;o.
,,,.

Ph. 992-2176

•

,._,, 0.

CUST" WAm"

BUY NOW AND SAVE 1CJ% OFF

\

The mantOer of your. local Federal Land
Bank Altcclatlon Is there to help you. He
knows the local agricultural situation. He's
.farT)iliar with the money market. He 's an
agribusiness man who talks your language.
·
Give him a call today.
. 221 Upper ltlvtr Ro8d
· P. 0. lox 207, Gllllpolls
Phone rM6.eH3
. Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

not be thinking as clearly as
you should . Best you sleep on

rt

GEMINI CM1y 21-Junt 201
Problems today will be of your
o~n mak 1ng . 11 you keep th is in
mmd . trouble can be avoided.

1 Binds
6 Haste
11 Partners
16 Muscular
contraction

21 Lessen
22 Girl's name
23 Coral island
2C Worthless thil"!g
!sl•ngl

25 Cr•lty
26 Swollen ptrt

{July

23-Aug. 22) You're

71 Norse goddess
72 Danish land
division
74 Singing voice
76 Tear
77 Antltrad animal

78 Franch priest
79 Publicltion
82 Soup ingredient
84 Wingad
85 Roman dale
86 Matured
88 Actual
89 Three -banded

28 Liquid
armadino
30 Sailor's Clll
90 Walking sticks
32 Guido's low note 92 WorstMI yarn
33 Symbol lor
g.c Actively
tellurium
98 Region
34 Thus .
99 Hou..hold pets
35 French plural
100 Encountered
article
102 EriHs lprinting l
36 Cook slowly
103 Bishopric
37 Prefi• : before
104 Ethiopian title
38 Bitter vetch
105 Cushions
40 Apportioned
106 L1nded estate
•2 Distant
108 Noi..
43 Pour forth
109 A state fabbr .J
44 ltrge truckl
110 Negative prefix
45 Hawaiian wreath 111 Poddlot
47 Wetrder
112 Revival
49 Burma natives
114 Unit of Siamese
60 Pronoun
currencv

ALIEV OOP

·51 looks ll•edly

116 Weigh! of

54 Lavis" fondness
on
55 Oepreuion
56 Peny ruler
59 Old pronoun
60 Music : 11 written
62 Hurling
&amp;a Preposition
65 French article
66 Note ohttle
67 Urge on

69 Harvests
70 Resorts

I

SA.Dit=

IHAWKINS
C!O.Y
' C!O.wNS
6RIM
AND

1HREA1EN-

"

India

117 Outlaw
119 Dispatch
120 Limb's pen

name
122 Sailors

124 Succor
1:25
126
128
129

Highwav

Propagates

Mlture
Twirl
131 Tiller
132 Th ings, in law

I
E I Now arranrt t.ht elrclt\1 ltlltn
.A
aurrtaltd by thuhon hrtoon.
~

to rorm the 1urpriae Wwer, '81

1.=.-:..1 AT A r x xxrn) r xx_x ]
.

Yrlllt&gt;rda\

~

Jun•lolf'll: OZONE

I

An•w"r:

GAUDY zmtER

w..r toiiO atltrtompltltlw flllln,oula ,
l•rm-GOOHADIET
1.

down .

AQUARIUS

{JCIII. 20-F.... 111
Don't begin a do-it- ~ourself
project around the house late
in the day. You'll upset things

PISCES (F.... 20-Mifch 20) If
make a lata nlghtollt. don 'llry

WIN AT BRIDGE
Take care with slam bldd~ng

LIBRA CS.pt. 23-0cl.

23)
You 'll come out on the shor1
end if you get involved in a

.

a friend

24- NOY. 221 ·
The early part of the day will be
pleasant . but toward evening
neither vou nor vour mate wll!
be as tolerant of one ano·ther
as you should be .

SAG ITT ARtUS (Nov. 21-Doc.

21) Slow down a bit or '(Ou're
likely to RUSh your mental and
physical energies beyond the ir

limits today.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jin.
11) If you're too Insistent upon
having your own way today
vou 're going to spoil the fun tor

11y vswatd &amp; ~unes Jacoby
You can have a lot of fun
with the weak two bids in
suits except clubs and the artificial two-club opening to
cover all forcing two bids plus
23-24 and 27 · 28 poin t'
notrumps.
You open two notrump with
21-22 and three notrump with
25-26 point notrumpers.
You need two artificial
responses and can use more if
you wish . Two diamonds
should be reserved for .very

·1.38 Everyone

139 Metal tube

140 Evatorun tree
141 Crony l col~ .t
142 Chine'o
~iltanct~

me11ure
10 Note of scale
1•c B1cteriologist's

wire

t45 8y WIY Of
147 Pitt

27 Servicemen's
CIMtMil tabbr J

89 AIIPintntltives
90 South American
lndiln
11 Macew

29 Win~itl
31 Cut
36 Pin or

92 Uncouth persons
83 Unaspirated
95 Pefvic bones

fireplace
31 Young salmon

91 Aivtr btnk
97 long for

20 Apporttons

39 Kill
40 Expire'!

99 VaNclt
101 Tali structures

41 let fall

105 Remunerated

42 Tacrile org1n of an 106 RtPiir

150 Babylonian hero

44 Reject

152 Oormou ae

46 Teutonic deily
~ Roman r01d

• 9 Part Qf •Y•
50 Ch~peaus

116 Merganser
118 Metal fastener

154 Get up

156 Make amends
158 Revo lulionarv
159 Satiltll
ISO Bishop's
headdress
161 Tiny openings

animl l

43 Warbled

51 Stnp of 1t11her

119 Food fish

52 Subject of

121 Fatty

ditcourn

53 Spirited horses
55 lad_le .

DOWN

123 Symbol for silver

125 ReputHs
128 Citw in Switzerland

56 Proteetmg tooth 127
57 Wid.. wake
129
1 hperitnce
58 M1ninique
130
2 More competent
volcano
3 Remunerate
61 Ved IC' t'111 god
131
4 latin conjunction 63 Cau~l appendage 132
S Deposit
64 Semi-precious
134
6 Figure Of speech
stone
138
1 Go
68 Strollers
137

8 Without end

70 Quieted

(!:JOlt.)
71 VitaiOfgln jpl,l
9 Printer' s measure 73 Chords of three
Ca~denled
tones
mo1sture
7C Pedal digits
11 latin for ''mother' ' 75 Ranta
12 The tWftttop
77 Sedate

10

13 Rocky hill

NORTH
I,
.AKQ752
• QJ
t863

78 Pfot

tC St;»~~ilh IMiclt
15 Wnttng tablets

80 Mental im1ge
81 Man's nickname

115 P~ck ~way
17 l•h w•th lever
18 Three· toed sloth

83 Man's nickn1me
8C Imitates
87 Requ ire

Mort vap id

Morestcure
Piece of

dinnerware
Pronoun
Oiaturbances

Btvtrtge
P~ce in line

Ea11

139 Tell

140 MIIIOffk)ating
ice
144 Number
145 SkiN
141 School of whalea
1C7 Strike

148 Wetktn

149 Prepolition

151 Hebrew month
153 Btbylonien deity
155 A. state labb 1
157 Preposition r ·

15

.. 72
WEST

EAST

•J96 43

•IUA

•AK6

"10 9~532

t4 2

.. 963

t97 I'

.. 85~
SOUTH IDI

·-• 81

t AKQJ l0 5
.. A KQJIO

Both vulnerable
West

North East

Pass 2.
Pass 3.
Pass
Pass

5.-

·

107 OeathJiitl8
111 NorMgod
112 Paper measu"
113 Fatnhaods
115 Aip

·149 Fish limb

I

all

16. 1975
19 Retecr

coming year. Howeveri , new
alliances should not tje established at the expense of
long standing relatlonsh{ps.

you go out this evening and
to catch up for lost lime by

133 Hindu guitar
135 Smlltlump

. I
Partners w ill play very i,rnportant roles in your affair's this

more than you'll Improve them .

driving home In a hurry .

today.
SCORPIO (Oct.

@Your i
Noo~~~~~~~1ay
..

e"Jeryone. RelaM. let your hair

VIRGO CAul 2S-8ept. 22) T0·

financial situa1ion with

(An•wrn Mund• \·)
BODICE
.

South

3.

2.1·
Pass
Pass a
Pass Pass

Opening lead - K •

. :

•
"!
•·I

. bad hands and should only be
forcmg to one trick I below
game. Two hearts shooid he a
catch-all to say respom1er had
en~u~h lor game, liut no
deltmte bid he wants tO' make
Other responses sho~ld b~
spec1f1c and reasonably normal.
'!'e recommended . arlier
thts week to use two nothlmp

J
'

to cover all notrump hands
and suit responses 01two
spades or three In any other
s~tt to guarantee at 'least a
ftve-card suit aDjl at-leUt!wo
·of the four tops hoM~ &lt; ~
Today's hand is !i" bJiP in
any system. South has galile
m hts own hand, North has a
sound opening bid of his own
but there is no slam. Here's
how it is bid in the melholls we
have shown . The iw4-club
opening is artificial and forctng. The two-spade response
and three-diamond rebid are
normal as is North ·5 three·
spade call.
.
South 's jump to ·five lubs
says I can make game ut I
am afraid of the heari ·suit
North is also and merelY, bid~
five diamonds.
·:

t.

~~~~Sl:J~

In a recent answer we
recommended replying. two
dtamonds to partqer' s
Stayman response holding :
• 7543. AQ5. AQ8 .. AJ9.
and not showing our l·foor
spades. An Indiana ~der
agrees with our bid. btil not
with our facetious remart,."If
tt goes wrong w~ explai~ we
had a spade mtxed in oor
clubs."
.
This last is a standard
bridge writer joke. Everyone
finds occaston to violate convention in bidding. If it doesn't
work you .can also say
truthfully , " ! made a ·mts. take." The main point is riot to
fight with your partner. 1You
rna~ have to play with him
agam.
(For e copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send Sl tO: Win

ULAIINER

IN6-

\

at Br lc.lge." clo this
newspaper. P. 0 . Box llil9.
Radio City Station. New York ,
N. Y. 10019)
'

•
•
~

•"'•

.

..•
~

••

•

•••
~

••

•
~

••

•

..

-

~

•

\

TAU~US (April 20-Miy 20)
Do~ .t make important
. dects1ons late in th~ day . You'll

ACROSS

.
'
... have a banker who

understands farming!

,

J

day you're apt lo search more
diligently for faults in others
than for. their good points, Try
not to criticize unless It's constructive. ·

FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER

HA7RS ~:t;~

AVAILABLE. WITH INDIVIDUAL STALLS

tEMBALC
'lA j

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE.R

•

HAY
·FEEDERS
FOR REGULAR AND ROUND IAUS

You'd better give some serious
t~ought now as to how you Intend to clear up obligations you
owe .to two different panies.

LEO

Simplicity &amp; lnter...n atlonal

RIDING MOWERS

ARIES (lbrch 21-Aprll 11)

'

0:,

Hay
Feeder

For S111day, Nov. 11, 1175

CAPI'Alii 1!ASY

Mrs. Wanda Ball of the Beta clean.
(,1ub, sponsor. "Our students
~. thla can ~ done any time ; however, If the
are saving their labels, and carcasa Ia to be aged,·the llkln wll1 prevent excessive drying
they would appreciate It if within the aging process.
.
friends of the school would do
Aging, It Ia generally BUggested that venison be aged
the aame," she said.
before processing. One week or more at 37to 40 degrees F. Ia
Any Campbell's Soup or·' recommended. A8inl call. be done outdoors, II proper ternBeans label counts in the perature and18111tatlon Ia maintained; however, It Is best to
drive. More than 130 alldlo- have some lltef!liU- In mind: oqe Ja to contact a local
visual and athleUc eqllipment proCe&amp;ling plant. Spedal arrangements m11st be made to
Items are being offered. A procesa Oeld.Uugbterecl meat 1n inspected meat facillUes. Or
qarUclpatlng scboollll!nds. ln ' P&amp;n !CJ cut 1¥ deer yllW'II!If, then age major cuts 1n a
the assighed number of labels refrigerator·
for the par titular Items
Cuttlnl the carcasa, do It yourself or provide Instructions
lll!lected ·
Ill the pJWelllll'. Remembei' tlpeClal arrangements muat be
This Campbell Soup Label · made to procea fleld.Uuabtered meat 1n Inspected faciiiUea.
Collection Ia being sponsored
For ''"!JielelnfonnlllOII on proper handllllg of venison,
by the Beta club at VInton get a copy olltxtenlloll balletln 581, "&amp;lccess - You Haw
Elementary, The advisor of Your Deer •" by EvelJn J. Gray. Extenilon nutr!U!IIIllt; Bobby
thla club li Mrs. Ball. The Van!llvtrn, EKtenslon meat specialist; and T0111 Stockdale,
school principal Is Alfred Etrtenalon wildlife apeclallat. Copies are available 11 our oiScarberry.
·
free of charge .11 you wish a copy stop 1n or call 111 at 992-

Grass . . .

II

extremely vulnerabl8 today
where your pride is concerned
Don't take yourself too serious~
ly. Don't expect applause If
none is due you.
.

Alloi~ attending a function th is
evemng where you could run
into som~one you've had CfOSS
words w•th. The matter is not
yet resolved.

By JoluiC. Riee
Elleasloa Aielll, A&amp;riealture

Curtis Nichols, Leon; Betty
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Unley, Middleport ; Shirley
Garland Mayes, Point DeWees, Leon ; Timothy
Pleasant; Mrs . Qulckland Thomas, Southside; Birth: a
Kerwood, Cott8gevllle; John son to Mr. and Mrs. Bob
_Cooper, Point Pleasant; Steinbach, Gallipolis.

I (
tNlGLAC]

10:31)-Calch·33 33.
11 :llO-:-News 3,4.8, 10,15: ABC News J3.
'11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "The Weekend
Nun" 8; Movie "The Secret Life of Waller Mttty"
10; Janakl 33 .

CANCER {June 21-July 22)

County .a gent's
;

Night 8.10.
3:1l0-:-Anolher World 3,&lt;, IS; General Hospital 6 13
Match Game 8, 10; Woman 20.
' ·
3::K&gt;-One life lo Live 13; Bewllched 6; Taltletales
a. to: Consumer Surviva l Kit 20.
4:1l0-:-Misler Cartoon 3; .Merv Griffin 4; Somersell5;
~1ckey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20.33 ; Movie
· The Blue Max" 10; Dinah 13.
·
4 ·»-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20 .•3; Get Smar! 15.
5.:1l0-:-Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
5.31)-Adam -12 4; News 6: Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec
Co. 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:1l0-:-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6: HodgepodgE
Lodge 20; Special Education 33 .
6:21)-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6·
CBS News 8.10; Making II Count 20.
'
7;llO-:-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dol lars6,; Buck Owens 8 : News 10; Candid Camera
13; Famrly Affair 15; On Aging 20; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.
7:».-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen TestA ; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right 8;
Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; High
Road loAdvenlur~ 10: To Tetlthe Truth 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sporlltle: Football 33.
8:1l0-:-Movle "Guilty or Innocent :· 3,4,15; Mobile One
6.13; Gunsmoke 8; In Performance at Wolf Trap
20,33 : Rhoda 10.
8:».-Phyllls 10.
9:1l0-:-NFL Football 6,13; All In The Family 8,10;
Mystery Murals of Baja California 20,33.
9:31)-Maude 8,10; Monet 20• Emphasis 33.
lO:oo-:-Medlcal Center 8,10; News 2Q; Bi Ways 33.

MONDAY, NOVEMBtR 17,1975

tdnce m

&lt;0 f I

OUR PRICES RlGHT
NOW
,,
IS LIKE"' STEALIN' .

11 3

butter near the wholesale to $1:07 i pOund Friday. .•
price, said the wholesale . Wagner said butter prices
·
hikes had pushed Its super- have climbed steadily since
market price of a pound of · last September when they hit'
POMEROY - Bringing down the deer Ia the first step 1n
blltter Friday to $1.09 for the 94'1• cenlll on the mercantile providing venison lor the table, bill hunters must be aware of
bouse ll'and and $1.19 for t)le .exchange, the highest prices _ "what to.do nut" If they are to get complele satisfaction, say
most expensive brand.
. had been
when ~ Extension specialists at The Ohio State University.
1
"There may be ·some ad- pricea climbed to 92 ~ents
' Venlsoft can spoil; 11 best, develop undesirable characjustment nut week," the · "The wirm weather ·IB ·terlltlca If not handled properly and pr.omptiy.
spokesman said.
. helping people save money on
For best satllfactlon and 118fety In handling venlaon,
Aspokeswoman for Plmtry heatinl bills," Wagner said, ~ 11111.-: '
'
Pride !lotes said Its boose- ''but they're spending thoae
Field dnl8na.lmmetllately.
~and butter price had risen savinp on butter."
Rapid cooiJna·. 'I1111 II essenttal and helpa to assure
wholesome and Davorflll venllon.
TriiJIIIIOi'\inl, remember to keep the carc818 cool and

With Too Many Mowers and

Frost Is

1

Plan JIDW to attend: I'm hoping that I'll have 'the opportunlty to, also, toUr
that day.
I'VE 'JUST RECEIVED a report on the Nov. 11 Area
Feeder n.ll
uw Sale aI '"'"""cothe
uuw
. A total of 404 hea d of feeder
calves averaging 4411 powtda sold for an average of f',ll.99 per
hundred weight. Of thele 163 steers, average weight 459
po--••
......;, sold for $32.89 per hwtdred and 241 helfen, averaging
UlpOunda IIi weight sold loran average of $22.93. The overall
price range for allcatUe rB!l8ed from a low of S1U5 to a high
,of $50.

·.~~ comer
..

UQUIIl

f

~teaks, ven~n

,,

''The 11118811sonably warm
weather
acroas the country
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Butter prices are reaching has kept the cows out in the
record levels nationwide but puture Instead of Inside
the prices m,ay fall with the producing milk," Wagner
.:.t I
temperatures, a spokesman · said. Supplies are tight
for the U.S. Dairy Association everywhere."
·'
The area •s whOlesale price
said Friday.
"The problem stems back rose 19¥• cents from Thurs·
day, Wagner said, setting
Servin~
Ohio A~rictilcurc
"'
for over 40 Years
_ to milk production," said IIIOther record. In Ollcago,
I
Allen Wagner, a U.S. Dairy
'v
Association market Wagner 118id, the wholesale
spokesmari after It was an- butter price roee 71&gt; cents per
nounced Friday that the price poiDid Friday.
v
He said the dropping temof a pound of butter 1n the
Jack W. tarsey, Mgr.
Ph . 992-:il81
Philadelphia area soared to a peratures, however, may
"
Serving Meigs, Galli a &amp; Mason Counties
help drop prices In the near
record $1.18.
v

v~ '-

deli~ous
~enlSon

;~:~

By AN'l110NY R. WOOD · .

Charlie About
Our Specia l
Price On
Liquid at\d Tanks

Soup 3• Garner Ted Armslrong 4 ·
Ttm"e ~~~~r: ~' ~~~ML~~ ~waggarf 6; Testimony'
11 :1l0-:-TV Chapel ; Focus en Columbus 4· Point of
, ~~~~~xD7umba rd 15; REv. Henry Mahan 13.
F
mens on 3; Make A Wish 6· OSU
00tba 1
E1 Highlights 4; FAce the Nation a.' REv
Ca1v1n vans 13.
'
·
12 't~~~~~~~~cess3,t5; CBPA Bowtlng6; Thinking
Wish t3ac • olumbus Town Meeting 10; Make A

r

Butter prices may fall with temperature

Ask Buck or ,.

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· · 31D;~~~~~?:':~~heABible Plainly say 8; It Is Wrlller
'
.
e nswer 13; Insight 15
IO :'fe;;~il~s ~lue Marble 3:. Church Servtc~' 4: Leroy

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feeds. aids in herd health. Ask us about Pro-Las 33.

.

~ilbur

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83

~ ;~ ~oughtmeup-to-dateonthevoca!ionalagrlculturalprogr~tms

"salt':, hitch on
camp cooked meals of :::;
said
Wilbur
,
steaks, beef
. ::::
:,:,
d . W f d t 1 t It
b • I It" d . shown o carry
lver smothered ln fried onions and ::::
:::: yar s. e oun ou a er was a
ags o sa ) an m ort order the
fresh fish all washed down wt'th a ::::
:·:· ne ck shot. ...
buck was snugged across the saddle
•
;.;.
. ::::
popular western
drink called Coors ::::
1
,
·
Now what? The''swlft current is
for the long trip back to Wilbur's
otcour
:::: tuiging at the deer It apjjl!ared as
jeep
1 11 bo 1 tseh
s muchlmhored to ::::
:·:· though it will drift away
.
,
. 'l'e drew near the bridge 1
e : a 1 ucold enight
uneon
wethe
near
y a to ,.,.
and sink at
As
· spend
mountain
any moment.
.
asked Wilbur to walt while John and
or the six elk that Whitey saw,
:;:; .. By this time Whtley and John
I went ahead to set up our cameras.
buffalo ths! was spotted, or when ';:;
JOined 4s and we began Searching
We were barely half way across
· Mike nearly got run over by 8 big
. lor.a·spot to cross.It was no use. The
when we heard a rwnble and looked
buck.
.
'· ii
curre.nt was ,loo swift and•cold. Last
up to see a 5 car passenger train,
I'll probably spin those yanis :;;;
;:;: . _mght s tempera)ure was 0 degrees
traveling at what must have been 70
around next year's campfire.
.........
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...............·.···········'·'..· ···········
·
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ca~•· it' least, a fanta~ic sho;:tcl:::~ ~

",,

6'1l0-:-Ftlm 4; This Is the Llf·e' to
..
6·3o-T
· Way Street 4; Viewpoint
· 8; Public Polley
. F woorum 10, .Newsmaker '75 13
,
7;DO-Church by the Side of th R d ·
Evans 8; Spring Street
l3oa 4: Rev. Calvin
7 :3~jhls Is the Life 3; Cadle Chap~ l 4 ; Revival Fires
Llghf~~s:~~~ell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower
&amp; : ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4 . Gospel
. ~avr~ 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13
· Kuhr~an °!"'~s 3; Yours for the Asking,., Kathry~
p
· • ay of Discovery 8; James Robison
. resents 10; Rex Humbard 13; See the U SA 15
9 ·~~~pel Singing Jubllee3; Hour of Powe~ 4·· orai
, . A~ro~;st~~ ~~c~u~~bard 6' Rv . LeOnard RE~ass 8;

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Plant- t me~.berof party.,"Dl~.
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SUfojDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1975

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.
or so'mph, coming around the bend. (
We finally dectded that Whitey
Wilbur had told us only 5 minutes !;!l
By Bryson R. (Bud) Carter
would stay and watch the deer while
earlier that , if we were ever caught
·
Gallia
County Extension Agent
the rest of went for help. Whitey was
on a railroad bridge, 'llie best bet :;:l
.mstructed to follow the deer if it
was to lie down near the railing.
broke free - a very disturbing
Perhaps foolishly, w.e both broke j;!:
thought to me.
· into a run for the other side and
Anyone Interested in learning more about sheep
As.we began the
climb out,
made it with time to spare - about 5 g . production Ia more than welcome to attend a meeting this
we noltced a set of railroad tracks on
seconds.
;:::. conilng Wednesday, November 19, 7:30p.m. We realize It wlll
the other stde' anct ·another hunter !
Wilbur and 'Mike, of course,
be of interest toour·sheepproducers but others are welcome _to
shouted over the roar of the
were still on tile ot)ler side. !looked g, .attllnd, especially I{ they would like to learn more about the
nver , and finally, with sign
back to see Mike giving an ann ';!;; sheep business.
·
language, told him of our plight. For
pumping signal {or the engineer to
This sheep producer·l!ducatlonal meeting will be held at
some reason . he was reluc\ant to
blow his whistle, which he promptly . :;:; the new Buckeye Hills Career Center (vocational school) near
help. Eventually he did ; the buck
did.
::;: RloGrande,OhloonoldU.S.Route ·35(West) . .
was pulled to safety on the far shore.
Mter all we have been through
Our Jackson Area Extension Animal Industry Agent, Mr.
. We made the tough half mile
to get the buck, my half-wit brother :!:; Jim Clay, will be diacuJBlng the following subjects: 1 - Type
htke to
where l called the
Is going to biow 11 all by sending thai ';'! of Ewes and Rami for Commercial Lamb Production; 2 ranch. on our CB radio. The inmule and deer into ORBIT! 1 ex- i;!; Forageprogramforlatelambs; 3- Feedillgthereplacement
struct10ns came back - cross the
peeled to see the mule and deer bolt ;:;: ewe; 4- Protein requlrements.for lambs; 5- Size of ewes In
on a railroad bridge one-half
off the grade never to be SI'Cn again
our breeding Dock;' 6 -Methods of expanding the pure-bred
mt!e upstream, field dress the
but, aside from a nervous prance, :::; markets.
anunal , help Is on. the way.
old Lu held ·her ground.
+++
We enthustasllcally set out and
An hour later John and 1 were :;:;
WHD..E WE ARE TALKING aboul the Buckeye Hills
soon found ourselves looking at a
back at camp skinning a 190 pouild
Career Center, I want to remind you of their Open Houllj! which
truly fine 10 point buck (eastern
(dresses weight) buck. 1 found a ;:;: is scheduled for SWiday, November 23, 1975 from 1 to 5 p.m.
count).
a brief picture taking
bullet under the hide near 'the front ·
Just this week I talked with Larry Marr at the Canter and he
session, I qwcldy dressed the deer.
· shoulder-itwasn'tevendefor.rned! ;:;;
, &lt;-1jp, clop, clip clop. We looked
No wonder the buck nearly got j;! that ate available and some Or the detsils on the Open House.
up .to·8ee
ranch owner,
away. In hand ioadlitg my amPrograms In agriculture include Ag Buslneits, Ag I!Jdustry
Luark, commg down the railroad
munition prior to the hunt some :;:; Mechanics, Forestry, and the lull-time adult Farm Business
grade on his favorite pack animal,
heavy copper jacketed bull~ts had
Planning and Analyidl.
Lu, a coal black mare mule.
., unknowingly been loaded instead of :;:;
During the Open House you will have the opportunity to
It's pure delight to \vatch a pro.
the proper soft nose expanding big !:!; visit with Mr. Marr and others ln the Ag programs concerning
In no ume Wilbur had taken my
game bullets.
•
these offerlhgs to students. This wiD be a good opportunity for
good Insulated hunting vest,, placed
Anyhow, that's how it all hap- ~;~; psrentstolearnmoreaboutwhatlsavaUsbletnagricultureat
the armholes over the mule's ears
pened.
;:;: the Buckeye Hllls Career Canter.
and
loose
In around
The third day of season John :';!
The Open House wlll cover much IJiore than agriculture.
the brulle. Keeps her from spookln'
bagged a nice !2 point buck( eastern :::; Those attending wll1 alao have an opportunity to-Jearn more
when. we load .the deer ," Wilbur
count) while hunting Jn,the aspens at } about the programs and facllltles available in all of the areas
explamed.
9,000 feet. Wlllley passed Up a three :;;; offered at 'the Center. 'l'hes Include: Trade, Industrial
. There's a wise guy in eyery
pointer the same day while my :!!, Eljucation, Btllineu Office Education, Home Economics, and
group. My
not resist
brother didn't get a shot.
Edllcatlon.
the remark, how good the vest
we all had a super vacation :::::;:; DistribUtive
The lllldteye Hllll Career Center Ia located on old US
looked now that it was on the
. from the dally routine of our lives.
RDute35justw.\oftheliltersectlonofRoute 325 and old us 35
With hardly a wasted mot10n, . The change ·Of pace Included ;:;i just outside of Rio Grande, Ohio.

ayT. Allan WoUer
Dlstrlt(Ranger
. IRONTON -:- Here's the
stlualton: My brother Mtke and I are
tratlmg a large mule deer buck that
I had .shot a~d wounded earher.
} Titere ts a fairly good snow cover
{ tnlerspaced .wtth patches of bare
;:;: ground. We Jumped the buck on a.
steep. hillside
terminated in
( the Colorado Rtver.
,
As we broke Into a narrow
{ opemng 30 feet above the river, we
:;:; could
the buck In the water.
!;': . Its tllegal to shoot any swimf mmg _game ,' and, even if It were
:;:! legal,tt would be foolish as the game
( would only
to the bottom. .
':':
As we fipally reached the r1ver
;:;: bank and raced downstream, our
plan was shoot when he reached
{ the other stde. We had to
the
{ gap to about 200 yards and fmd a
;:;: sp?t f?r a
shot. Ahead .a small
poml Jutled mto the river - II would
;!;' have to do.
I eased around the rqcky point '
;?;!
there
the buck on the fl!f
Side. of the
Just as · I was
gettmg into post lion on the
a,
;:;: shot rang out from the cUffs above.
{ The deer fell backwards Into the
:;:: nver.
::;:
What next? Not only
some else shot the deer , now 11
':': ~ould be lost for good in· the
;:;: Colorado:
.
My ltrst thought was that some
:::; other hunter had,shpped In and shot.
A quick
the cUff tops
:;:: revealed. nolhmg. A shout from our
back
spun us both around, and
there ,at least 200yardsaway,,w:asa
';!; · hunteronthehillside. ItwasWhtley,
a
our
you
:':' shoot? Mike hollered. Yep the

!;:;

Television Log ·

Agriculture and.
out: commumty,

1

6:31)-NBC News 3,4,15: News 6 ; Witness lo Yesterday
33.
7:1l0-:-World of Disney 3,4, 15: WCHS -TV REporl 8.
'
. World Press 20,33; Three for the Road IO.
7. 31)-Hc~h s,hool Bowl 8; Evening at Symphony 20 33
~ : (!0--,Stx Mill ion Dollar Man 6,13 : Cher 8.10
• .
9:1l0-:-McCtoud 3,4,15; Movie "The Great .Galsby"
6,13n Maslerplece Theatre 20.3 3.
lO:IlO-:-Bronk. 8.10 : Ascent of Man 20 33
11 :llO-:-News 3,4,S, 10, 15; Monty Pytho~·s'Ftying Ci rcus
20; Kup's Show 33.
11 :15-&lt;:BS News 8,10: PMA Pu lse 15 .
II :31)-Satnl 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8·
Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concer't
15; Soundstage 20.
12 : ~ABC News 6; Movie "Foster and Laurie" iO ·
News 13• Janak! 33.
•
12: Is-Notre Dame Highllghls·6.
12:31)-Bonanza 4; Sammy II, Cojllpany 8; 700 Club 13·
News 20 .
•
1:31)-Peyton Place 4.
2:1l0-:-ABC News 1,
'

'j•

,I

�.

'

.' ... .

••

~

~

'

'll - The SWid~y Time~· Sen~IEeJ., Sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

!:~::::~tc:::um [Y;;;-w;;;;;N;;;;~JF;;;t)

71! - The Sunday Times- Sentinel,sunday, Nov. 16, 1975

POMEROY - " If you
haven't .stopped in at the
Metgs County Museum on
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy,
may, we recommend a visit.
You 11 marvel at the crude
beauty of the Indian artifacts
on display. A table of books
offer extensive Indi an
h1story ," spokesman sa id
. .
In the mtm-theater, you
can see a close-up of nature's
beauty. Through the wonders
of photography, a spider web
becomes an intriguing jewel;
look deep inside fl ower
blossoms, watch such things
as worms, mushrooms and
tree fungus unveil th eir
unseen beauty.
"On display, also, is a hand
carved cane, having belonged
to Samuel Pomeroy, which
was carved of wood from the
(;harler Oak Tree. This tree
was the subject of a colonial
legend. . According
to

Sa,~urday.

...
...
''·

..

tractili'l!' the charter freeing
Co nn ecticut Colony from
direc t Parliamentary control, was hidHen in the
Charter Oak Tree.
" Museum hou rs . are
Tuesday, Thursday, Friday
a.m. and p.m. and
10 10 11 2 to 4 24
Sunday
p.m. Other
hours by appoin tment.
"May we also remind you
of our request for articles for
the December display, 'An
Old Fashioned (;hristmas."
For information phone the
museum at
or
_
.
992
.
_ 992
,.. 3810
the spokes·
992 5877
2264
man concluded.
·

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TAKEN TO HOLZER
MASON _ John Herman
Ross, , of Mason was taken
82
to Holzer
Medical Center
Sa turday at , a.m . by the
8 04Squad.
1\lason Rescue
_ ,

~: :
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As I he newest addl tiorl 'lcJ L ANDMAIIK's ••big. automaied
I
feed facilily at Washillglon C.H.. the liq'uid.Jeed plant
•'
,•
load
:!4 Io ns at a time in to stainless stei!ll'semi·\a nkers
,.,.
. h . h d.
,.,
.,
w Th
IC W1
au 1 dtree! 10 L.INil.MAHK"
",,,,
, , 11ere· • . • . .
h '. 11
:: _.....
ts
mo ern P1?nl W1 11, assure ple nllfu.t supplies of
"
Pro-Las 331or th e growrng number of farm ers who rely on
'·
this new lyfl e of ,.rq uiC. I fce d· ,,
:•

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::

COST -CUTTING SUPPLEMENT FOR
DAIRY, BEEF &amp; SHEEP.

l~cked,the

glan~e ~long
tr~tl

::

, Pro-Las 33 .can be top·dressed on hay. silage or grain.
can be use d with au lorvated feediriiJ sys1
,
It s easiest to fe ed free-choice. using lick-wh
eel tank
· feeders. Flows readily at zero. rerels in;ects in sum mer.
-Las 33
,'prov'de
I S ps.
r0 Iimproves
ell)
· a t IOW pa
COS
1 IS
· flitOfyt'f'
I of
te doth
WJ·er
th
viPro
tamins
and
mineral
la;abi

Frce-fl~wing,
tem~

br~~her c~uld

~~!bur Jtlo~.~dld~·
~desi~ned ~he ~:s, I

SUPPLEMENl·l',

POMEROY LANDMARK

future .

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·wE'RE STUCK
Killi~g~.Jhe

' "When you have liD·
seasonably warm 1feather,
there's an Increase 1n Ice
a-earn consumption and that
plays a part 1n the datry
shortage."
He said tllat when colder
weather comes, not mly does
milk production rise but Ice
cream con3umptlon
decrease&amp;. "That wiD help
the chllflllng situation conllderably,'' he said.
• "I can't IIBY for lllfe that
prlcea wiD fall," he said, '1t
all depends on the supply
situation."
A spokesman for ACME
Markets, Inc., whlcb lll!lla

1

1

1

12:3Wo-Gtrandsland 3,&lt;,15; NFL Pre-Game Show 8·
or d Tomorrow 13.
'
12:5So-Five Minutes to Klck.Ofl to
1:1l0-:-NFL Football 3,4,15; NFL .Football 8. NFL
. Football 10; Next Generation 13• Tribal Eye '33
1.31)-lssues &amp; Answers 6,13.
·
2'00-CLI ommunlque 6; College Football 1975 · Onedln
ne 33.
·
2:»-Aware 6.
2:453 ' ~,Forby's Antique Workshop 6; Rivals of Sherlock
o mes 33• Town Topics 13.
·
.
~:::~~at' Good. Ole Nashville Music 6; ·Medlx 13..
ssue 3. I Dream of Jeannie 4· Friends of
.
Man 6' NFL Football 8, 10; Frleends' of Man 13 .
&lt;:~~bile Polley Forums 1.i; Know Your Anllques 3l.
&lt;:.,Movie "Story of a Woman" 3; Meet The Press&lt; ·
Mission: Impossible 6; Nashville On The Road 13:
Play Chess 33.
'
5:1l0-:-Bonanza 4; Movie "The Glass Menagerle"13 · To
Be Announced 15: A Bit With Knit 33
'
5:31).
5:31)-.Magnlflcai-Mary's Song of Llherotlon 15 . FBI 6.
Preserving Food 33.
'
•
6:1l0-:-News ~; Carrascotendas 33.

the~~~

6:1l0-:-Columbus Today 4: Sunrise Semester 10.
6;15--Folk Literature 3.
6:2So-Farm Report 13.
6:31)-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6: Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Good News 13.
6:4C}-{)unce of Prevention 10.
6:4So-Morntng Report 3.
6:5So-Chuck While Reports 10; News 13 .
7:1l0-:-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8:1l0-:-Lucy Show 6i Capt . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame St.
33.
.
8:31)-Big Valley 6.
9:1l0-:-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13 .
9:31)-Not For Women Only 3; One Life lo Live 6; Give.
N-Take 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
lO :oo-&lt;:etebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Pri ce Is
Right 8,10; Mike Douglas 13 .
10 :31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15. ·
·11 :1l0-:-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie 4:
Gambit 8; Let's Face It 10; Etec. Co. 20.
11 :».-Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life8, 10; Sesa~e Sl.20,33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12 :1l0-:-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-SO Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :31)-3· for the Money 3,1'5; All My Children 6,13;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45-Eiec. Co. 33.
12 :5s-NBC News 3,15. .
I:llO-:-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :31)-Days of Our Llves 3,4, 15; Let's Make ADeal6,13;
As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:1l0-:-SIO.OOO Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8,1 0.
2:31)-Doctors 3.4.15 ; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 • Edge of

Vinton club
·in drive for

soup labels
VINTON
VInton
Elementary sChool Is In the
midst of a special collection
drive aimed at obU.lnlng
greatly needed audio-visual
and athletic equipment.
The program, "campbell's
Labels for Education," Is
sponsored by the C&amp;mpbeU
Soup Company and offered to
public, private, and parochial
schools (K-4).
"Between now and January
9, the school hopes to collect
enough Campbell's . Soup
labels to earn"produ~ts.''sald

5·741-9-10 HP,•
.'
STEAL ONE NOW

..."'••

:

I

.'

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11
'

Arou~ o1smu~TEo ~SEOUT rR1~s

I Meigs·Equipment &amp;o.
,,,.

Ph. 992-2176

•

,._,, 0.

CUST" WAm"

BUY NOW AND SAVE 1CJ% OFF

\

The mantOer of your. local Federal Land
Bank Altcclatlon Is there to help you. He
knows the local agricultural situation. He's
.farT)iliar with the money market. He 's an
agribusiness man who talks your language.
·
Give him a call today.
. 221 Upper ltlvtr Ro8d
· P. 0. lox 207, Gllllpolls
Phone rM6.eH3
. Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

not be thinking as clearly as
you should . Best you sleep on

rt

GEMINI CM1y 21-Junt 201
Problems today will be of your
o~n mak 1ng . 11 you keep th is in
mmd . trouble can be avoided.

1 Binds
6 Haste
11 Partners
16 Muscular
contraction

21 Lessen
22 Girl's name
23 Coral island
2C Worthless thil"!g
!sl•ngl

25 Cr•lty
26 Swollen ptrt

{July

23-Aug. 22) You're

71 Norse goddess
72 Danish land
division
74 Singing voice
76 Tear
77 Antltrad animal

78 Franch priest
79 Publicltion
82 Soup ingredient
84 Wingad
85 Roman dale
86 Matured
88 Actual
89 Three -banded

28 Liquid
armadino
30 Sailor's Clll
90 Walking sticks
32 Guido's low note 92 WorstMI yarn
33 Symbol lor
g.c Actively
tellurium
98 Region
34 Thus .
99 Hou..hold pets
35 French plural
100 Encountered
article
102 EriHs lprinting l
36 Cook slowly
103 Bishopric
37 Prefi• : before
104 Ethiopian title
38 Bitter vetch
105 Cushions
40 Apportioned
106 L1nded estate
•2 Distant
108 Noi..
43 Pour forth
109 A state fabbr .J
44 ltrge truckl
110 Negative prefix
45 Hawaiian wreath 111 Poddlot
47 Wetrder
112 Revival
49 Burma natives
114 Unit of Siamese
60 Pronoun
currencv

ALIEV OOP

·51 looks ll•edly

116 Weigh! of

54 Lavis" fondness
on
55 Oepreuion
56 Peny ruler
59 Old pronoun
60 Music : 11 written
62 Hurling
&amp;a Preposition
65 French article
66 Note ohttle
67 Urge on

69 Harvests
70 Resorts

I

SA.Dit=

IHAWKINS
C!O.Y
' C!O.wNS
6RIM
AND

1HREA1EN-

"

India

117 Outlaw
119 Dispatch
120 Limb's pen

name
122 Sailors

124 Succor
1:25
126
128
129

Highwav

Propagates

Mlture
Twirl
131 Tiller
132 Th ings, in law

I
E I Now arranrt t.ht elrclt\1 ltlltn
.A
aurrtaltd by thuhon hrtoon.
~

to rorm the 1urpriae Wwer, '81

1.=.-:..1 AT A r x xxrn) r xx_x ]
.

Yrlllt&gt;rda\

~

Jun•lolf'll: OZONE

I

An•w"r:

GAUDY zmtER

w..r toiiO atltrtompltltlw flllln,oula ,
l•rm-GOOHADIET
1.

down .

AQUARIUS

{JCIII. 20-F.... 111
Don't begin a do-it- ~ourself
project around the house late
in the day. You'll upset things

PISCES (F.... 20-Mifch 20) If
make a lata nlghtollt. don 'llry

WIN AT BRIDGE
Take care with slam bldd~ng

LIBRA CS.pt. 23-0cl.

23)
You 'll come out on the shor1
end if you get involved in a

.

a friend

24- NOY. 221 ·
The early part of the day will be
pleasant . but toward evening
neither vou nor vour mate wll!
be as tolerant of one ano·ther
as you should be .

SAG ITT ARtUS (Nov. 21-Doc.

21) Slow down a bit or '(Ou're
likely to RUSh your mental and
physical energies beyond the ir

limits today.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jin.
11) If you're too Insistent upon
having your own way today
vou 're going to spoil the fun tor

11y vswatd &amp; ~unes Jacoby
You can have a lot of fun
with the weak two bids in
suits except clubs and the artificial two-club opening to
cover all forcing two bids plus
23-24 and 27 · 28 poin t'
notrumps.
You open two notrump with
21-22 and three notrump with
25-26 point notrumpers.
You need two artificial
responses and can use more if
you wish . Two diamonds
should be reserved for .very

·1.38 Everyone

139 Metal tube

140 Evatorun tree
141 Crony l col~ .t
142 Chine'o
~iltanct~

me11ure
10 Note of scale
1•c B1cteriologist's

wire

t45 8y WIY Of
147 Pitt

27 Servicemen's
CIMtMil tabbr J

89 AIIPintntltives
90 South American
lndiln
11 Macew

29 Win~itl
31 Cut
36 Pin or

92 Uncouth persons
83 Unaspirated
95 Pefvic bones

fireplace
31 Young salmon

91 Aivtr btnk
97 long for

20 Apporttons

39 Kill
40 Expire'!

99 VaNclt
101 Tali structures

41 let fall

105 Remunerated

42 Tacrile org1n of an 106 RtPiir

150 Babylonian hero

44 Reject

152 Oormou ae

46 Teutonic deily
~ Roman r01d

• 9 Part Qf •Y•
50 Ch~peaus

116 Merganser
118 Metal fastener

154 Get up

156 Make amends
158 Revo lulionarv
159 Satiltll
ISO Bishop's
headdress
161 Tiny openings

animl l

43 Warbled

51 Stnp of 1t11her

119 Food fish

52 Subject of

121 Fatty

ditcourn

53 Spirited horses
55 lad_le .

DOWN

123 Symbol for silver

125 ReputHs
128 Citw in Switzerland

56 Proteetmg tooth 127
57 Wid.. wake
129
1 hperitnce
58 M1ninique
130
2 More competent
volcano
3 Remunerate
61 Ved IC' t'111 god
131
4 latin conjunction 63 Cau~l appendage 132
S Deposit
64 Semi-precious
134
6 Figure Of speech
stone
138
1 Go
68 Strollers
137

8 Without end

70 Quieted

(!:JOlt.)
71 VitaiOfgln jpl,l
9 Printer' s measure 73 Chords of three
Ca~denled
tones
mo1sture
7C Pedal digits
11 latin for ''mother' ' 75 Ranta
12 The tWftttop
77 Sedate

10

13 Rocky hill

NORTH
I,
.AKQ752
• QJ
t863

78 Pfot

tC St;»~~ilh IMiclt
15 Wnttng tablets

80 Mental im1ge
81 Man's nickname

115 P~ck ~way
17 l•h w•th lever
18 Three· toed sloth

83 Man's nickn1me
8C Imitates
87 Requ ire

Mort vap id

Morestcure
Piece of

dinnerware
Pronoun
Oiaturbances

Btvtrtge
P~ce in line

Ea11

139 Tell

140 MIIIOffk)ating
ice
144 Number
145 SkiN
141 School of whalea
1C7 Strike

148 Wetktn

149 Prepolition

151 Hebrew month
153 Btbylonien deity
155 A. state labb 1
157 Preposition r ·

15

.. 72
WEST

EAST

•J96 43

•IUA

•AK6

"10 9~532

t4 2

.. 963

t97 I'

.. 85~
SOUTH IDI

·-• 81

t AKQJ l0 5
.. A KQJIO

Both vulnerable
West

North East

Pass 2.
Pass 3.
Pass
Pass

5.-

·

107 OeathJiitl8
111 NorMgod
112 Paper measu"
113 Fatnhaods
115 Aip

·149 Fish limb

I

all

16. 1975
19 Retecr

coming year. Howeveri , new
alliances should not tje established at the expense of
long standing relatlonsh{ps.

you go out this evening and
to catch up for lost lime by

133 Hindu guitar
135 Smlltlump

. I
Partners w ill play very i,rnportant roles in your affair's this

more than you'll Improve them .

driving home In a hurry .

today.
SCORPIO (Oct.

@Your i
Noo~~~~~~~1ay
..

e"Jeryone. RelaM. let your hair

VIRGO CAul 2S-8ept. 22) T0·

financial situa1ion with

(An•wrn Mund• \·)
BODICE
.

South

3.

2.1·
Pass
Pass a
Pass Pass

Opening lead - K •

. :

•
"!
•·I

. bad hands and should only be
forcmg to one trick I below
game. Two hearts shooid he a
catch-all to say respom1er had
en~u~h lor game, liut no
deltmte bid he wants tO' make
Other responses sho~ld b~
spec1f1c and reasonably normal.
'!'e recommended . arlier
thts week to use two nothlmp

J
'

to cover all notrump hands
and suit responses 01two
spades or three In any other
s~tt to guarantee at 'least a
ftve-card suit aDjl at-leUt!wo
·of the four tops hoM~ &lt; ~
Today's hand is !i" bJiP in
any system. South has galile
m hts own hand, North has a
sound opening bid of his own
but there is no slam. Here's
how it is bid in the melholls we
have shown . The iw4-club
opening is artificial and forctng. The two-spade response
and three-diamond rebid are
normal as is North ·5 three·
spade call.
.
South 's jump to ·five lubs
says I can make game ut I
am afraid of the heari ·suit
North is also and merelY, bid~
five diamonds.
·:

t.

~~~~Sl:J~

In a recent answer we
recommended replying. two
dtamonds to partqer' s
Stayman response holding :
• 7543. AQ5. AQ8 .. AJ9.
and not showing our l·foor
spades. An Indiana ~der
agrees with our bid. btil not
with our facetious remart,."If
tt goes wrong w~ explai~ we
had a spade mtxed in oor
clubs."
.
This last is a standard
bridge writer joke. Everyone
finds occaston to violate convention in bidding. If it doesn't
work you .can also say
truthfully , " ! made a ·mts. take." The main point is riot to
fight with your partner. 1You
rna~ have to play with him
agam.
(For e copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send Sl tO: Win

ULAIINER

IN6-

\

at Br lc.lge." clo this
newspaper. P. 0 . Box llil9.
Radio City Station. New York ,
N. Y. 10019)
'

•
•
~

•"'•

.

..•
~

••

•

•••
~

••

•
~

••

•

..

-

~

•

\

TAU~US (April 20-Miy 20)
Do~ .t make important
. dects1ons late in th~ day . You'll

ACROSS

.
'
... have a banker who

understands farming!

,

J

day you're apt lo search more
diligently for faults in others
than for. their good points, Try
not to criticize unless It's constructive. ·

FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER

HA7RS ~:t;~

AVAILABLE. WITH INDIVIDUAL STALLS

tEMBALC
'lA j

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE.R

•

HAY
·FEEDERS
FOR REGULAR AND ROUND IAUS

You'd better give some serious
t~ought now as to how you Intend to clear up obligations you
owe .to two different panies.

LEO

Simplicity &amp; lnter...n atlonal

RIDING MOWERS

ARIES (lbrch 21-Aprll 11)

'

0:,

Hay
Feeder

For S111day, Nov. 11, 1175

CAPI'Alii 1!ASY

Mrs. Wanda Ball of the Beta clean.
(,1ub, sponsor. "Our students
~. thla can ~ done any time ; however, If the
are saving their labels, and carcasa Ia to be aged,·the llkln wll1 prevent excessive drying
they would appreciate It if within the aging process.
.
friends of the school would do
Aging, It Ia generally BUggested that venison be aged
the aame," she said.
before processing. One week or more at 37to 40 degrees F. Ia
Any Campbell's Soup or·' recommended. A8inl call. be done outdoors, II proper ternBeans label counts in the perature and18111tatlon Ia maintained; however, It Is best to
drive. More than 130 alldlo- have some lltef!liU- In mind: oqe Ja to contact a local
visual and athleUc eqllipment proCe&amp;ling plant. Spedal arrangements m11st be made to
Items are being offered. A procesa Oeld.Uugbterecl meat 1n inspected meat facillUes. Or
qarUclpatlng scboollll!nds. ln ' P&amp;n !CJ cut 1¥ deer yllW'II!If, then age major cuts 1n a
the assighed number of labels refrigerator·
for the par titular Items
Cuttlnl the carcasa, do It yourself or provide Instructions
lll!lected ·
Ill the pJWelllll'. Remembei' tlpeClal arrangements muat be
This Campbell Soup Label · made to procea fleld.Uuabtered meat 1n Inspected faciiiUea.
Collection Ia being sponsored
For ''"!JielelnfonnlllOII on proper handllllg of venison,
by the Beta club at VInton get a copy olltxtenlloll balletln 581, "&amp;lccess - You Haw
Elementary, The advisor of Your Deer •" by EvelJn J. Gray. Extenilon nutr!U!IIIllt; Bobby
thla club li Mrs. Ball. The Van!llvtrn, EKtenslon meat specialist; and T0111 Stockdale,
school principal Is Alfred Etrtenalon wildlife apeclallat. Copies are available 11 our oiScarberry.
·
free of charge .11 you wish a copy stop 1n or call 111 at 992-

Grass . . .

II

extremely vulnerabl8 today
where your pride is concerned
Don't take yourself too serious~
ly. Don't expect applause If
none is due you.
.

Alloi~ attending a function th is
evemng where you could run
into som~one you've had CfOSS
words w•th. The matter is not
yet resolved.

By JoluiC. Riee
Elleasloa Aielll, A&amp;riealture

Curtis Nichols, Leon; Betty
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Unley, Middleport ; Shirley
Garland Mayes, Point DeWees, Leon ; Timothy
Pleasant; Mrs . Qulckland Thomas, Southside; Birth: a
Kerwood, Cott8gevllle; John son to Mr. and Mrs. Bob
_Cooper, Point Pleasant; Steinbach, Gallipolis.

I (
tNlGLAC]

10:31)-Calch·33 33.
11 :llO-:-News 3,4.8, 10,15: ABC News J3.
'11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "The Weekend
Nun" 8; Movie "The Secret Life of Waller Mttty"
10; Janakl 33 .

CANCER {June 21-July 22)

County .a gent's
;

Night 8.10.
3:1l0-:-Anolher World 3,&lt;, IS; General Hospital 6 13
Match Game 8, 10; Woman 20.
' ·
3::K&gt;-One life lo Live 13; Bewllched 6; Taltletales
a. to: Consumer Surviva l Kit 20.
4:1l0-:-Misler Cartoon 3; .Merv Griffin 4; Somersell5;
~1ckey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20.33 ; Movie
· The Blue Max" 10; Dinah 13.
·
4 ·»-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20 .•3; Get Smar! 15.
5.:1l0-:-Bonanza 3; Family Altair 8; Star Trek 15.
5.31)-Adam -12 4; News 6: Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec
Co. 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:1l0-:-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6: HodgepodgE
Lodge 20; Special Education 33 .
6:21)-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6·
CBS News 8.10; Making II Count 20.
'
7;llO-:-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dol lars6,; Buck Owens 8 : News 10; Candid Camera
13; Famrly Affair 15; On Aging 20; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.
7:».-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen TestA ; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right 8;
Evening Edition with Marlin Agronsky 20; High
Road loAdvenlur~ 10: To Tetlthe Truth 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sporlltle: Football 33.
8:1l0-:-Movle "Guilty or Innocent :· 3,4,15; Mobile One
6.13; Gunsmoke 8; In Performance at Wolf Trap
20,33 : Rhoda 10.
8:».-Phyllls 10.
9:1l0-:-NFL Football 6,13; All In The Family 8,10;
Mystery Murals of Baja California 20,33.
9:31)-Maude 8,10; Monet 20• Emphasis 33.
lO:oo-:-Medlcal Center 8,10; News 2Q; Bi Ways 33.

MONDAY, NOVEMBtR 17,1975

tdnce m

&lt;0 f I

OUR PRICES RlGHT
NOW
,,
IS LIKE"' STEALIN' .

11 3

butter near the wholesale to $1:07 i pOund Friday. .•
price, said the wholesale . Wagner said butter prices
·
hikes had pushed Its super- have climbed steadily since
market price of a pound of · last September when they hit'
POMEROY - Bringing down the deer Ia the first step 1n
blltter Friday to $1.09 for the 94'1• cenlll on the mercantile providing venison lor the table, bill hunters must be aware of
bouse ll'and and $1.19 for t)le .exchange, the highest prices _ "what to.do nut" If they are to get complele satisfaction, say
most expensive brand.
. had been
when ~ Extension specialists at The Ohio State University.
1
"There may be ·some ad- pricea climbed to 92 ~ents
' Venlsoft can spoil; 11 best, develop undesirable characjustment nut week," the · "The wirm weather ·IB ·terlltlca If not handled properly and pr.omptiy.
spokesman said.
. helping people save money on
For best satllfactlon and 118fety In handling venlaon,
Aspokeswoman for Plmtry heatinl bills," Wagner said, ~ 11111.-: '
'
Pride !lotes said Its boose- ''but they're spending thoae
Field dnl8na.lmmetllately.
~and butter price had risen savinp on butter."
Rapid cooiJna·. 'I1111 II essenttal and helpa to assure
wholesome and Davorflll venllon.
TriiJIIIIOi'\inl, remember to keep the carc818 cool and

With Too Many Mowers and

Frost Is

1

Plan JIDW to attend: I'm hoping that I'll have 'the opportunlty to, also, toUr
that day.
I'VE 'JUST RECEIVED a report on the Nov. 11 Area
Feeder n.ll
uw Sale aI '"'"""cothe
uuw
. A total of 404 hea d of feeder
calves averaging 4411 powtda sold for an average of f',ll.99 per
hundred weight. Of thele 163 steers, average weight 459
po--••
......;, sold for $32.89 per hwtdred and 241 helfen, averaging
UlpOunda IIi weight sold loran average of $22.93. The overall
price range for allcatUe rB!l8ed from a low of S1U5 to a high
,of $50.

·.~~ comer
..

UQUIIl

f

~teaks, ven~n

,,

''The 11118811sonably warm
weather
acroas the country
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Butter prices are reaching has kept the cows out in the
record levels nationwide but puture Instead of Inside
the prices m,ay fall with the producing milk," Wagner
.:.t I
temperatures, a spokesman · said. Supplies are tight
for the U.S. Dairy Association everywhere."
·'
The area •s whOlesale price
said Friday.
"The problem stems back rose 19¥• cents from Thurs·
day, Wagner said, setting
Servin~
Ohio A~rictilcurc
"'
for over 40 Years
_ to milk production," said IIIOther record. In Ollcago,
I
Allen Wagner, a U.S. Dairy
'v
Association market Wagner 118id, the wholesale
spokesmari after It was an- butter price roee 71&gt; cents per
nounced Friday that the price poiDid Friday.
v
He said the dropping temof a pound of butter 1n the
Jack W. tarsey, Mgr.
Ph . 992-:il81
Philadelphia area soared to a peratures, however, may
"
Serving Meigs, Galli a &amp; Mason Counties
help drop prices In the near
record $1.18.
v

v~ '-

deli~ous
~enlSon

;~:~

By AN'l110NY R. WOOD · .

Charlie About
Our Specia l
Price On
Liquid at\d Tanks

Soup 3• Garner Ted Armslrong 4 ·
Ttm"e ~~~~r: ~' ~~~ML~~ ~waggarf 6; Testimony'
11 :1l0-:-TV Chapel ; Focus en Columbus 4· Point of
, ~~~~~xD7umba rd 15; REv. Henry Mahan 13.
F
mens on 3; Make A Wish 6· OSU
00tba 1
E1 Highlights 4; FAce the Nation a.' REv
Ca1v1n vans 13.
'
·
12 't~~~~~~~~cess3,t5; CBPA Bowtlng6; Thinking
Wish t3ac • olumbus Town Meeting 10; Make A

r

Butter prices may fall with temperature

Ask Buck or ,.

..

m~e."

~

&lt;I

lO :~~V~etable

•

~nds

t~ere

. ; ~:

· · 31D;~~~~~?:':~~heABible Plainly say 8; It Is Wrlller
'
.
e nswer 13; Insight 15
IO :'fe;;~il~s ~lue Marble 3:. Church Servtc~' 4: Leroy

t
t

;:;~

feeds. aids in herd health. Ask us about Pro-Las 33.

.

~ilbur

;~:!

!~:~

83

~ ;~ ~oughtmeup-to-dateonthevoca!ionalagrlculturalprogr~tms

"salt':, hitch on
camp cooked meals of :::;
said
Wilbur
,
steaks, beef
. ::::
:,:,
d . W f d t 1 t It
b • I It" d . shown o carry
lver smothered ln fried onions and ::::
:::: yar s. e oun ou a er was a
ags o sa ) an m ort order the
fresh fish all washed down wt'th a ::::
:·:· ne ck shot. ...
buck was snugged across the saddle
•
;.;.
. ::::
popular western
drink called Coors ::::
1
,
·
Now what? The''swlft current is
for the long trip back to Wilbur's
otcour
:::: tuiging at the deer It apjjl!ared as
jeep
1 11 bo 1 tseh
s muchlmhored to ::::
:·:· though it will drift away
.
,
. 'l'e drew near the bridge 1
e : a 1 ucold enight
uneon
wethe
near
y a to ,.,.
and sink at
As
· spend
mountain
any moment.
.
asked Wilbur to walt while John and
or the six elk that Whitey saw,
:;:; .. By this time Whtley and John
I went ahead to set up our cameras.
buffalo ths! was spotted, or when ';:;
JOined 4s and we began Searching
We were barely half way across
· Mike nearly got run over by 8 big
. lor.a·spot to cross.It was no use. The
when we heard a rwnble and looked
buck.
.
'· ii
curre.nt was ,loo swift and•cold. Last
up to see a 5 car passenger train,
I'll probably spin those yanis :;;;
;:;: . _mght s tempera)ure was 0 degrees
traveling at what must have been 70
around next year's campfire.
.........
'·'·'·'·'·',,,,,
••••••
.......•,,.,.,.,.,.,
•·•··••.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,
•••·····........
.-.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:-:-:.:-:-~.;.:.:.:-:.•.•,•.·.•.•.•.•.·.•,·.•,•.•.•.·.·,·.•!•:•:•:•:·:•:•!·!•!·'·
...............·.···········'·'..· ···········
·
··········
·
···············
···
····
··
'
:'·:·::'·'·'·'·'•'•':'•'•'·'•'•'·'•'::.•,·:•:•:•:•:·:·:·:•:·:·:
··
··
·······
····
····
··
•
&lt;·":·;·:·i·O·i·i·i·;+;·:•i•'•
• ,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,
,.,.,...,.,.•.•.••., ,., • • •···············.-··'·'
....
.. ,.. .. ... .......... ... ........,. ............ . ................ .............,........ .......................,,.,.;.;.;.,
.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.;.;.;.;.;.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,.,.,"'''·''''''

~ ~i
~;~;

us:

,.

i~i!

t ~~: ~~~~ ~ep!~~~~ "shor: did, h~s
ca~•· it' least, a fanta~ic sho;:tcl:::~ ~

",,

6'1l0-:-Ftlm 4; This Is the Llf·e' to
..
6·3o-T
· Way Street 4; Viewpoint
· 8; Public Polley
. F woorum 10, .Newsmaker '75 13
,
7;DO-Church by the Side of th R d ·
Evans 8; Spring Street
l3oa 4: Rev. Calvin
7 :3~jhls Is the Life 3; Cadle Chap~ l 4 ; Revival Fires
Llghf~~s:~~~ell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower
&amp; : ~Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4 . Gospel
. ~avr~ 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13
· Kuhr~an °!"'~s 3; Yours for the Asking,., Kathry~
p
· • ay of Discovery 8; James Robison
. resents 10; Rex Humbard 13; See the U SA 15
9 ·~~~pel Singing Jubllee3; Hour of Powe~ 4·· orai
, . A~ro~;st~~ ~~c~u~~bard 6' Rv . LeOnard RE~ass 8;

~:~:
~;~;

th~

..
.
LAN
' .. .rna .
In .. OM
ARK'S ;:;:
. de
,,
,,
NEw Liquid Feed
Plant- t me~.berof party.,"Dl~.
,.
.
,
.•

SUfojDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1975

t

Aile~

ha~

t
t
;~:

I

'! ~
i~;

theBronc~

~ks,

;: ~

•

~J

~e

narro~

wa~
rt~er,

-·- ·- ---··-------.-:= ;~~::~~;

•

~:;~

~teep

~mk

cl~ar

'

i

~ ll
~:;(

.se~

t~

.

F.

~hich

t

'

.

.
.
or so'mph, coming around the bend. (
We finally dectded that Whitey
Wilbur had told us only 5 minutes !;!l
By Bryson R. (Bud) Carter
would stay and watch the deer while
earlier that , if we were ever caught
·
Gallia
County Extension Agent
the rest of went for help. Whitey was
on a railroad bridge, 'llie best bet :;:l
.mstructed to follow the deer if it
was to lie down near the railing.
broke free - a very disturbing
Perhaps foolishly, w.e both broke j;!:
thought to me.
· into a run for the other side and
Anyone Interested in learning more about sheep
As.we began the
climb out,
made it with time to spare - about 5 g . production Ia more than welcome to attend a meeting this
we noltced a set of railroad tracks on
seconds.
;:::. conilng Wednesday, November 19, 7:30p.m. We realize It wlll
the other stde' anct ·another hunter !
Wilbur and 'Mike, of course,
be of interest toour·sheepproducers but others are welcome _to
shouted over the roar of the
were still on tile ot)ler side. !looked g, .attllnd, especially I{ they would like to learn more about the
nver , and finally, with sign
back to see Mike giving an ann ';!;; sheep business.
·
language, told him of our plight. For
pumping signal {or the engineer to
This sheep producer·l!ducatlonal meeting will be held at
some reason . he was reluc\ant to
blow his whistle, which he promptly . :;:; the new Buckeye Hills Career Center (vocational school) near
help. Eventually he did ; the buck
did.
::;: RloGrande,OhloonoldU.S.Route ·35(West) . .
was pulled to safety on the far shore.
Mter all we have been through
Our Jackson Area Extension Animal Industry Agent, Mr.
. We made the tough half mile
to get the buck, my half-wit brother :!:; Jim Clay, will be diacuJBlng the following subjects: 1 - Type
htke to
where l called the
Is going to biow 11 all by sending thai ';'! of Ewes and Rami for Commercial Lamb Production; 2 ranch. on our CB radio. The inmule and deer into ORBIT! 1 ex- i;!; Forageprogramforlatelambs; 3- Feedillgthereplacement
struct10ns came back - cross the
peeled to see the mule and deer bolt ;:;: ewe; 4- Protein requlrements.for lambs; 5- Size of ewes In
on a railroad bridge one-half
off the grade never to be SI'Cn again
our breeding Dock;' 6 -Methods of expanding the pure-bred
mt!e upstream, field dress the
but, aside from a nervous prance, :::; markets.
anunal , help Is on. the way.
old Lu held ·her ground.
+++
We enthustasllcally set out and
An hour later John and 1 were :;:;
WHD..E WE ARE TALKING aboul the Buckeye Hills
soon found ourselves looking at a
back at camp skinning a 190 pouild
Career Center, I want to remind you of their Open Houllj! which
truly fine 10 point buck (eastern
(dresses weight) buck. 1 found a ;:;: is scheduled for SWiday, November 23, 1975 from 1 to 5 p.m.
count).
a brief picture taking
bullet under the hide near 'the front ·
Just this week I talked with Larry Marr at the Canter and he
session, I qwcldy dressed the deer.
· shoulder-itwasn'tevendefor.rned! ;:;;
, &lt;-1jp, clop, clip clop. We looked
No wonder the buck nearly got j;! that ate available and some Or the detsils on the Open House.
up .to·8ee
ranch owner,
away. In hand ioadlitg my amPrograms In agriculture include Ag Buslneits, Ag I!Jdustry
Luark, commg down the railroad
munition prior to the hunt some :;:; Mechanics, Forestry, and the lull-time adult Farm Business
grade on his favorite pack animal,
heavy copper jacketed bull~ts had
Planning and Analyidl.
Lu, a coal black mare mule.
., unknowingly been loaded instead of :;:;
During the Open House you will have the opportunity to
It's pure delight to \vatch a pro.
the proper soft nose expanding big !:!; visit with Mr. Marr and others ln the Ag programs concerning
In no ume Wilbur had taken my
game bullets.
•
these offerlhgs to students. This wiD be a good opportunity for
good Insulated hunting vest,, placed
Anyhow, that's how it all hap- ~;~; psrentstolearnmoreaboutwhatlsavaUsbletnagricultureat
the armholes over the mule's ears
pened.
;:;: the Buckeye Hllls Career Canter.
and
loose
In around
The third day of season John :';!
The Open House wlll cover much IJiore than agriculture.
the brulle. Keeps her from spookln'
bagged a nice !2 point buck( eastern :::; Those attending wll1 alao have an opportunity to-Jearn more
when. we load .the deer ," Wilbur
count) while hunting Jn,the aspens at } about the programs and facllltles available in all of the areas
explamed.
9,000 feet. Wlllley passed Up a three :;;; offered at 'the Center. 'l'hes Include: Trade, Industrial
. There's a wise guy in eyery
pointer the same day while my :!!, Eljucation, Btllineu Office Education, Home Economics, and
group. My
not resist
brother didn't get a shot.
Edllcatlon.
the remark, how good the vest
we all had a super vacation :::::;:; DistribUtive
The lllldteye Hllll Career Center Ia located on old US
looked now that it was on the
. from the dally routine of our lives.
RDute35justw.\oftheliltersectlonofRoute 325 and old us 35
With hardly a wasted mot10n, . The change ·Of pace Included ;:;i just outside of Rio Grande, Ohio.

ayT. Allan WoUer
Dlstrlt(Ranger
. IRONTON -:- Here's the
stlualton: My brother Mtke and I are
tratlmg a large mule deer buck that
I had .shot a~d wounded earher.
} Titere ts a fairly good snow cover
{ tnlerspaced .wtth patches of bare
;:;: ground. We Jumped the buck on a.
steep. hillside
terminated in
( the Colorado Rtver.
,
As we broke Into a narrow
{ opemng 30 feet above the river, we
:;:; could
the buck In the water.
!;': . Its tllegal to shoot any swimf mmg _game ,' and, even if It were
:;:! legal,tt would be foolish as the game
( would only
to the bottom. .
':':
As we fipally reached the r1ver
;:;: bank and raced downstream, our
plan was shoot when he reached
{ the other stde. We had to
the
{ gap to about 200 yards and fmd a
;:;: sp?t f?r a
shot. Ahead .a small
poml Jutled mto the river - II would
;!;' have to do.
I eased around the rqcky point '
;?;!
there
the buck on the fl!f
Side. of the
Just as · I was
gettmg into post lion on the
a,
;:;: shot rang out from the cUffs above.
{ The deer fell backwards Into the
:;:: nver.
::;:
What next? Not only
some else shot the deer , now 11
':': ~ould be lost for good in· the
;:;: Colorado:
.
My ltrst thought was that some
:::; other hunter had,shpped In and shot.
A quick
the cUff tops
:;:: revealed. nolhmg. A shout from our
back
spun us both around, and
there ,at least 200yardsaway,,w:asa
';!; · hunteronthehillside. ItwasWhtley,
a
our
you
:':' shoot? Mike hollered. Yep the

!;:;

Television Log ·

Agriculture and.
out: commumty,

1

6:31)-NBC News 3,4,15: News 6 ; Witness lo Yesterday
33.
7:1l0-:-World of Disney 3,4, 15: WCHS -TV REporl 8.
'
. World Press 20,33; Three for the Road IO.
7. 31)-Hc~h s,hool Bowl 8; Evening at Symphony 20 33
~ : (!0--,Stx Mill ion Dollar Man 6,13 : Cher 8.10
• .
9:1l0-:-McCtoud 3,4,15; Movie "The Great .Galsby"
6,13n Maslerplece Theatre 20.3 3.
lO:IlO-:-Bronk. 8.10 : Ascent of Man 20 33
11 :llO-:-News 3,4,S, 10, 15; Monty Pytho~·s'Ftying Ci rcus
20; Kup's Show 33.
11 :15-&lt;:BS News 8,10: PMA Pu lse 15 .
II :31)-Satnl 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8·
Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concer't
15; Soundstage 20.
12 : ~ABC News 6; Movie "Foster and Laurie" iO ·
News 13• Janak! 33.
•
12: Is-Notre Dame Highllghls·6.
12:31)-Bonanza 4; Sammy II, Cojllpany 8; 700 Club 13·
News 20 .
•
1:31)-Peyton Place 4.
2:1l0-:-ABC News 1,
'

'j•

,I

�28- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWlday Nov 16, 1975

Auto Sales

:For Fast R~sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
••
•

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES

•

•

..,..ASM paid tor all makes and
P M
Oav
Before ,.. models o f mobile homes
Publi cation
Phone erel!l code 614 ~23
Monday O~&amp;CIItne f a m
9lll
4 13 tfc
Cancella110n - Correctton•
Wilt be IICCepted until 9 a m ._ - - w~-for Day of PublicatiOn
-

.., 5
•
•
:
,
•

•

The Publisher ruer\leS the
r1ght lq ed it or reje ct any ads TWO 5 mon th old Seagl e pups
deemed Ob!HIIonal
The
and so m e tratned up to 5
pub lis her
will
nor
be
vears Old Wtl! sell or trade
respons. lbte tor more !han one
for ~ uns Phone 747 25'21
tncorrecl lns.erljon
1116 31C

•

RAUS

t

1

..
t

~

'
'

For Want Ad Serv•ce
5 cents ger word one tnsert lon
Minimum Cherge Sl 00
14 c; ents per word three
consecut 1ve Insertions
26 cents per word six con
sec:utl~e Insertions
2S Per Cenl Discount on paid
ads and ads patd within 10
days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2 00 for SO word m lntmum
Each add iti onal word J

, cen1s

Mobile Homes For Sale
19 75 l ·h 70 tRAILER
ex
cellent condllt on espec 1ally
butlt lor off1 ces Low pn c:e
for qutck sa l e Phone (J04 )
615 1921 or 675 5829
10 30 lf c

1973 NASHUA

14 x 70

l

bedrm 1 , bath gas heat
Take over payments Phone

992 ll88

BLIND ADS

1970 BUDDY lreller fur
nl~hed Priced 10 se tl Phone

, Card of Thanks

16141 698 l366

WE WISH to thBnk our meny
friends and ne ighbors for
the beautiful flowers food
and ttle many deeds of

kindness shown us dur ing

the Illness and at the time of
the del!lth of our beloved
husband and falher c W
Stansburv We extend our
appreciation to the Holler
Hosp lfal Medical Staff Or
Oavls
Walker Funeral
Home Rutland Emergency
Rev

FOR RENT OR SALE

&gt;n
Pomerov 2 bedrm home
Iaroe tot full basement
Phone 742 2757
11136tp

For Rent

mile
north of Meigs High School
on old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
II i6 lie

Bumgardner

for hiS consoling words
Mrs C W Stansbury a d
Femlly
r

__________ __ _
_.. 11

16 He

citizens, very nice Phone

H"eLe"NT
at

~ A"T.'iiiiv - shap

Tuppers

Pla 1ns

M~rv

noun ces that

has

lolned

the

turn/shed and
unturnls.hed apts Phone 992
SAl4
11 9 lfc

ah

on

Thursday
Friday
and
Sl!lturday
November Get
Acquainted S5)ecla l Is 52
rebate on 515 Coldwave
Helen Dorst owner Phone

16W 661 l966

J AND 4 rm

Newell

staff

II 12

all

elec tri c modern ranch
located outside Racine Up
to 25 acres bottom tend
available
References
reQuired Call 992 ssso after
S p m
11 16 7tc

p.tOUM and board for senior
10 12 lfc

1•

AVAILABLE 2 bedrm

Notice
992 ll09

II 12 61p

For Rent or Sale

SQ uad the Masonic LOdge
and Rutland Methodist i'fiiA ILER s.pace
Church

6~c

o~e

bedrm mobl te nuu,c for
rent Phone 992 l509
10 Jl tfc

F'U RNISHED
apartment,
~dults onlv In Middleport

SC HEDULE SATURDAYS
ONLY STARTING NOV
l&lt;lh
RACINE
6 40
SYRACUSE 6 SO MID
DLEPORT 7 IS Thanks
OIV InG Part'tl Nov 26 end 28
OPEN WED, FR I, ANil
SA TURDAY 7 lO 10 00
PRIVATE
PART I E.S')
MON
TUES
THURS
EVE SAT AND SUNDAY
AFTERNOONS
PHONE
161•1 985 l929 or 981 9996 or

ns .,.,

11 9 12tc

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

sHOoTING Matth
Corn
Hollow Gun Club Sundl!IV
Nov 16 12 noon 1 mile past
Miles Cemetery out ot

Rulland

1l 14 21c

--..------------

WITHOu'' T ~ni y permiSSIOn
the re will be no hunting or
tres.paulng on my property
Bo b McGraw . Meaoan
F arm off lower Bowmen !t

Run

11~26tc

Help W1nted
SOMEO NE to build
Phone 992 52~7

fence

11 16 3tc

Employment Wanted
-'iEMODELING

Plumbing'

heating and att typ es oil
oenenlt
repa1r
Work
gu8rlln1llCd 20 years e"'
penence
f3hone 992 2409

---------- -- =-~~.

CARPENTRY
paneling,
flooring and ceiling Phone
992 275!
10 21 lOlc
WILL. babysl! In mv home
dallv
For
more
In
format ton phone 9A9 2546
11 16 ltc

Wanted To l!uv
u

turrimJre
i ce boxes
brass beets or complete
households Wr!te M
0.
Miller Rt 4 Pom eroy

OhiO Cell 992 1110

10 1 1•

TRAILER Spl!lCe for- rent In
Middleport Phone 992 5434

--

10 21 26tc

for quarters
$1 20 tor
halves Call Rutland 742

HOUSE ln Svrocuse
Oh io Basement garage
real n ic e home must have
references If Interested Call
dliV j61.tl ) 446 7699, even1ngs

1 RM

1614 1 &lt;46 9539

11 s ttc

HI-C
A

BEAUTIFUL. furn ished
apartment for couples only
tncludes washer dryer and
ce:ble In Middleport over
Sl im l!lnd Trim Phone 992

7889

trader in Re edsvdlt Ohio

Phone 16141 318 6l84
111161c

---~

l

A QUal lfltd

callcolltcl (30113&lt;5 7300or
Including

phone

numbtr to SUNRIPE
INC 621S Grttnbtfl IIOid,

M•ryfand

201&lt;0
I Nora

sut.sldtar";~

of

roc• Cola Comp1nyl
-~-

---~·----~-

BEORM partly fvrn1shed
basement new furna ~:e and
water heater propane gas
on Co Rd 28 SlOO per

monlh and 1100 dep0$11
Phone
Ul 279l doy or 949 2828 offtr
6p m
reterence r1quested

CI\SH REQUIRED
Plln I
Sl,,50
Pion 2
16 "0 4 ~M
Pion l
110 221 1 ont-;
pm
Training provided N&lt;

experience required Tn.
shelter with wrlteoff In
vtstment stcurtd by ntw
equipment
(five veer
warrtn t~) lnd lrwenlorr
Eernlngs guaranteed with
•
~rllttn
buy
btck
agretment For lmmedlttt
lnformlllon or lnttrvitw

\11161p

---------.-2 BEORM apt end 2 bedrm

-~---

Individual may start part
time and expand witt\
comDanv financing to 1 full
time bus.inen

Perk

1911 CHEVY P1c kup Wllh 8 fl
camper Phone (6 14) 661

6221
11 146tc
1970 CAMARO and 197 1
Chevelle Phon e (6 141 985

4269

I I 14 61c
1955 FOR 0 V 8 original pamt
Conta c t Roge r Hol ma n 1A2

3094

1116 lie

1972 CHEVY Capr1ce 4 ctr 400
Sport Sedan 2 barrel all
t1nted glass 1111 steer~ng
a c and power windows
52 J50 Also 1911 Oldsmobile
Delta 88 d dr 350 2 barrel
row mileage
like new
52 100 Phone 949 2051
11 16 61c

1968

CHEVROLET

1964

Chev
1961 Buick Spec ial
1960 Foret PIC kup truck 4
mag wheels Phone 742 2185

1116llc

-·----- - - ----- ~ ,

TON Int ernational pickup
4 speed transmiSSion H D
springs to carry camper
heavy bumper wtth htl ch for
horse tra•ter Low m lleage
To see contac t 992 7011
II 12 41p

1969 CORVETTE red with
removable black vinyl top
r ed intertor, tow m i leage
Ki ng ro ll bar cragers on
rel!lr 4 s.peed ms.lde pipes
som eone to take over
payments Phone 992 7179
11 12 4tc
1972 RA LLY No-va One loca l
owner call after 5 p m 843

2591

11 9 71c

- ---- ---DOOG = Conventional

1965
cab 2 ton truck 12 fl ftal
good rubber V 8 4 speed 2
speed axle
S650
Phone

(614) 985 l594

II 911p

1947 DODGE ton 1~ 12ft llat
good rubber oood cOndition

SlOO Phone 16141 985 ll94

11 9 71p

NICE bay mare 3 year old
green broke S250 Phone
742 2738
11 13 lie
FRENCH style dlntng room
su 1t e table 6 cha 1rs chma
cupboard red cherry fmtsh
Phone 992 76B.t

II 16 l ie

1974
HONDA
Elc1nore
MT 250 Phone 992 7803
11 16 3tc
GIRLS new 5 speed btcvcre
ridden twiCe Cost S129 will
take 585 has basket Also a
mteroscope cost $18 wtlt
take S10 Dl!lughter away at
college and needs the
monev Call 992 2324
11 16 li e
ONE cow to freshen soon One
250 gallon Un lco bulk m1lk
tank 2 un11 Delaval mil ke rs
w1 th vacuum pump A ll for
$475 Phone Arthur Spen cer

1614 1 98 5 l891

11 16 61p
B 1L L. Y goat

27l9

$20

Phone 949
11 16 Jtc

GOOD used RCA black and
wh1te 18 Inch televlston
table model Also Alto
Saxophone may need some
repatr Ca11 992 5250

11 16 lie

1973 FX 350 Harley Dav idson
tess than 1 000 miles ex
cetlent condttton tor saoo
Phone 992 2967
11 14 6tc
WORK pony with or wllhoul
harness Phone evenings
9A9 2471
Ben
Bickers
Bashan. Rd
1114 31c
KEEP carpets
beeul!fu l
desp te footsteps of a busy
fam lly Buy Blue Lustre
Rent electr1c shempooer
Nelsons Drug Store
..._
11 13 6tc

____ _________ _
16• FT TRAVEL Trailer
!tleeps 6 Phone 992 2318 day
or call 9927133 after 5 p m

""")

10 2l IIC

...

11 11 lfc

furn ished apt adults
Phon e 992 5908 before 2

Phone 161'1 985 ll9&lt;

-

1197fp

----..·-------

197 1 LHEVROLET .., uburbttn
350 p s b b A t Phon e

9112 H91

II 11 61p

,

Tuppers Plains, Oh1o

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
smallest Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radtator Spec1a'1$l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 991 2174

3 BE DRM house tn Riggs
crest F•replace tn ltvmg
room tam lly room 2 bath s
and full basement 2 car
garage Phone (61.4! 985

II 16 lip

GIVE YOUR wife a Chr1stmas
presen t lhls year of grea l
entovment A new Bt Level
home bath &amp; 12 ) or 4
bedrms
two car garage
and acre of ground located
on lhe Wildwood Estates at
Flatwoods 6 m11es from
Pomeroy Ohio Selling at
cost
pr1c e
George S
Hobstetter Owner Box 101
Pomeroy Ohto Phone (614)
11 16 61(

ONe- JYea70idfKOfOU9hbred
t 1ttv S450 Also one vearllng
half Thoroughbred cot! 59
Ia It s ISO Phone 997: 7583
11 A 12tc
WE H AVE shotgun she11S
rtfte shells cleaning ac
cessor1es huntmg cloth es
boots black powder guns
and accessor1es re1oad1ng
ma1er1ats scopes mounts
knives sleepmg bags boat
1ackets
and
c ushtons
holsters belts rifle straps
and much .. much more at
Ind ian Joe s Sports and
CBs 308 Page St
Mtd
dleport
10 H 301c

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM house wtth oa~n
1
M1ddleport on a SOx 120 tot
Wa ll to wall carpetmg
paneling
new ceilmgs
garbage d1sposat
etc
Garage Wtlh storage area
! 13 500 For appomlment
ca ll 992 '10'12
11 4 121c
HOUSE on L1ncoln He1ghts 2
bedrm large K1tchen full
basement n1 ce back yard
onlv sa 900 Wtth new fur
ntture only S10 300 Phone
992

7648

116261c
3 BR hvME tust fmtshed
remodeling
Salem Sl
Rutland Phone 742 2306
after 4 p m or see Mtto B
Hutchinson
10_ 9_lfC
_ _ _ _ _ _ .L. _ _ _ _ _
_
6 ROOM House wtth bath
garage basement buil t m
porch
12 acre
Hobson
Phone 992 7773
l 11Jifc
CUS TOM Holnes no down
pevmenl VA Loans FHA As tow as 3 percent down
Your plans or ours Call or
wrlle Shepard Conrracttng ,
Box 2BA Rutland AS775
Phone 742 1409

10 ll 261&lt;

-

11 u 6fc
- - - - - - - - ---

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

992 7730 '

Ill• 2tp
1969 OLDSMOBILE engine,'
speed transmiSSIOn, 390 rur
end Phont 9•9 2450
11

- --.,
ONE Stgler

u ,.,c

~

-------

fuel oil heater

C1ll 992 5114

11 l-4 31C

_____________II 9 7fp
(614) 985 ll94

__,

FIRE WOOD Pllone 992 l640
11126tc

-------------~ IER~U

H l\ 010 , moelerfl
des ign am fm radio -track
tape comblnatton Balan ce
S104 70 or 1e~ms Call 992

3965

11 i2 lfc
----4~---------

1912 G MIDGET II 000 A(
TUAL MILES II ISO for

more mformat10n call {6141

661 l1S9 or 667 36S2 II 12 Sic

"i ------

758l

11 7 12tc

SEP T I C TANK S c leaneo
Modern Sanilahon 99 2 3954
or 99 7 13 19
9 I B tic

Buy, Sell or Trade

NO 123 - 95 o , more or
less. good place to raise &amp;
train horses, box stalfs,
rldlng ring, lge home
carpeted mod kllchen
beautiful country setting
$10 000 00
ACREAGE- 9 64 a, 6 a
112 o and olmost 2 a
804W. Mam
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter !:lours Call
992-7133
CONTACT
Lois P•uley
Branch MaMQtr

1974 Ford Pinto ........................... 2695
5

2 Dr Sedan Aula trans , new 76 trade tn A bright red
beauty Well equipped

210 I

02l9

AppraiSal service on
estate• and collectoons

1973 Ford 9 Pass. Sta. Wagun~.~~~~.~.~~an

268

Extra sharp wagon with lull equipment Including air con
dltlonlng

l

1974 Ford Gran Torino .................. 53295

FOR RENT Treller space,
septic tank city water ,
cement pad' Call 446 0239

R&amp;J OOINS

4 Dr Sedan Air conditioned New Ford Trade In N1ce

2683

Phone 742 2331
Roger Wamsley. Rutland
101Simo.

1972 lbln Qlarpr...................... 52495
2 Dr Hardt\'/! small V 8 air conditioned vinyl top A real

, TARA

0 DELL Altnement located
behind
Rutland Grade
School Tuneup brakes
wheel balancing allnement
Phone 742 2004
1116trc

complete service
Phone
9119 2487 or 949 2000 Rac 1ne
Oh10 Crttt BradfOrd
10 9 tfc

"cream PUff

1972 Volkswagen Beelle 2 Dr........ 51995

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay O!liY One Ultlrly
Add 1son, Oh1o
For lnformali09
Call Shirley Adktns

ONnedliy local minister Extra sharp and low mileage

73 Ford Van Type ........................ 53795
Club Wagon Small V 8 Luxurious Chatteau model B pass
Like new Full glass model

71 Ford LTD $ta. Wa~11... ............ '1795
Counlry Squire Model Full equipment Including air con
dltlonlno &amp; luggage rack Exceptional condition for 71

367-7250

MANY MORE

UGA'f houseke~pl ng room
Park Centra) Hotel

78

._ _ ----

SEE: Fred Blaettnar, Pat H11J, Melvin Utile,
or Dan Thompson

If

EXC A\fAT INV OOu:l IUdU~ I
OFFICE space tor r~nt
and bac khoe work sepltc
downtown Ph 446 0008
tank s 1ns talted
dump,
2l7 If
trucks and o boys lo r htre
wd! ha ul fill dirt l op sot I
MOBile home space 1 mile
li mestone and graoyet,. Call
from HMC Ph 446 3805
Bob or Roger Jeflers dav
phone R92 70fl9 n1ght phon e ____ ...... _______ _!~I f
99 2 3525 or 9915'23'2
lfc MOBILE home Space ror rent
2 11

esttma te s Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready Mt)l, Co
M•ddteport Otlto.
6 30 tf;

FURNISHED apl 112S mo
Phone 446 4007

INCOatOaATSD

NO- 147 - Lovely 2 BR
home excellent condition,
corpetlng drapes, full
base, lge backyard Well
worth seeing, $9 000 oo

270 l

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

Strout" For Rent
Realty

1975 NEW CARRY OVERS in LTDs, Tortnos,
Elites, Granadas, Mavericks, Mustang ll's,
P1ntos &amp; Ptckup Trucks- A large selection and
pnced to sell. Also several Demos and
Execultve cars.

4 RM HOUSE Clly water
chemical to ilet call 446

WE SPECIALIZE In mobile
home furnace repair Phone
992 S8SB
9 18 lie "READY MIX CONCRETE
de l 1/ered r~ght lo your
pro !ect r as1 and easy Free

Real Estate for Sale

house J1, bath all drapes
and rugs furn ished 2 per
ches and garage in town
Adults preferred No pets
Deposit requtred Call 446

0008

sowE~ s REPAIR 1
EXCAVATING BACKHIJES oLWOOD
Sweepers toasters Irons
AND DOZER LARGE AND
all small appliances Lawn
SMA LL SEP TIC TANKS
mow er next to Sl ate Htgh
IN STALLED
BILL
way Garage on Route 71
PULLIN S PHONE 992 2478
Phone 985 3825
DAY OR NIGHT
.:1 16 tfc
n 11 7atp
-IF YOU ... re ~n ; ;;ftfd -,; a c sRAoFo~Auctlone~
a
new home or have your
present one remodeled or
you ar e tn need of a new
roof
Call
Roush Con
stru cllon Greg Roush 992

This man trades almost every year and thiS one has only
14 000 miles

261 6

446 0008

2l1

Open Evenings Ttl6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Tll5:00

DAN THOMPSON

If

FORD

2 SR Mobile Homes. one at
Gallipolis Ferry
one on

Neighborhood Rd 675•886
267 9

461

PHONE
I

PIDNEE~

·~

112·2U&amp;

~

CHAIN SAWS

V.W. --- AM C ···JEEP

FUR N house In Thurman
Oh io utilities paid Sl25 a
month Sl25 dep req Dey

l643

266 If

TRAILER: no pets
adults
only at K&amp;K mobile home
park Ph 446 0390

267 ,,

2 BR MOBILE home for SIOO l
br

Olll

mobile home S125

Through Nov. 26-An 18lb.
Kroger 'Wish Bone' Turkey with every New
or Demo. V. W,, AMC or Jeep or a '72' or
newer used car,

498 Locust Street
Middle~1ort, Ohio

If

- T----~ -------

TEAFORD REALTY

$3000

RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath
carpeting
paneling
porches garage good
condition $9,500
DEXTER - 157 acres
Iorge house, water system
barn &amp; other bldgs S38 000
POMEROY - 7'12 acres 4
BR, bath, carpeting
paneling, hot water heat
basement, storage S15,000
PHDNEm 2259

Ul Living Room Sciiai
20.ot up
121 Hld•A lltds
5995&amp; 11"5
(New} Wood Rocker
2495
I 1I Maple Rocker w &lt;ulllion s.. t &amp; beck
(1 I Recliner, good condition
I11 Lovt Slat
125.00
Ul Odd Living Room Cllairs
10.00 up
I11 B11sett Roll Top Desk and 10
Othtr Desks
39 95 up
I 271 Chests &amp; Dressers
Check tlot Prien
111 Bedroom SultH, 1 with nile st•nd

,,5
.,,
73VW 411Wag
Auto AM FM,
eMire clean
lllh 00

73 Clltv

c 10

tom.va.ps,

red

e. while

$3195 00

12 M G. Midget

4 speed orange,
radials, ;M,OOO
miles
$1995 00

74 Monte Ctrlo
Auto, ps , &amp;c,
AM FM sharp
$409500

For Christmas Gifts/
Black VeMt Framed PictUres
3 SiDs 5.95, 8.95, 19.95

7J

C.IIISS

S..preme
Auto,ps, AC,
etc N C trade
In

Super Special
'12 Comet 2 dr ,
6' auto, p s
Was $1995

2 '73' Capri's

Sharp
$2795 00

Very

Nowmn

~ -----

SAW LOGS
'85.00 m'200.00 PER M
VENEER WHITE OAK, '400.00 PER M

Assortment ot .....,, Rlfl'lllf"llln &amp; lrMkfast Sell
You've liMn Asking For Them - Htrt Thtr Art 141
Wringer w..htrs
01 Mavt•ttl\ulomlllc walhtr
" "
121 Auto Drytrs, I Portalllt, I Full Sin ltoldl
(1 I Wtlnut Lint c:Hir Chtsl
121 Ustd CiiiHns
Radios, one s chtn1111, one 21
chtnnet with power

71 Dodge
Coronet
Custom 4 dr ,
A C, p s, ~u~ 1
etc,

Ph. 992·2689

Porn

Ohio

~-----.----~----

74-ntt X
V 1, auto p s,
very lherp
S1195 DG

$2095

DON WATTS V.W.
••
••
•

,•.

IIVIISIDI AMC.JIIP
IT. 7' H. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

1973 Coventry 3 Br
197l kirkwood 3 Br
1972 Greenbrier 3 Br
1957 Neusha 1 Br
1957 Travel Trailer
1911 Olds V1sta Crutser
mileage

lOW
23 9 If

KANAUGA MOBILE
HOME SALES
Ph 446 t662

Buddy 12x50 2 Br
ParktanCI 1 Br 1'2x60
Dartan 12x.60
Esquire 14x6S 2 Br
Sc hull I~X60 2 Br

270.

BABYS il liNG m my home
weekday even1ngs after S
Have tots of exp and exc
ref Catt 4•6 6579 after 5
262 If

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

268 l

Highest Discount In Trt
Stat~
We s.ell service and
qu1llty complete package
dtal
financing arranged
Camp Conley Star Craft
Sites, Rt 62 N, Pt Pleasan t

w v.

mob t le

168

6

81.5 Mobile

Home Sales
Pt Pletunt, W Va

11NG In my home
Ph 4A6 6551

2l7

If

AUL. T ::.
MuBTLr
Home
Service
Skirting
roof
coating patios awn1ngs
anchors cement work Free
estimates Call 245 9411 "'"
2•5 9-472 after ~ 30 p m
If

Notice
NO HUNTING or trespasstng
on my propertv located on
Slorv's Run Oalsy Saun
ders

266 6

REWARD
REWARD of S100 for th e
arrest and conv1clion of
person or persons who broke
1nto the property a mob1le
home and house on Story s
Run No tify Sheriffs Office
ol Gallla County
De1SV
Saunders
266 6

I
I

'5100

WAS SSIOO

NOW

I ~~~~. w~~ r~w..".:i~y:::.lr ~~~n~:!~~ ';:r

I

9915342

LOAN~

OPER:ATING capltl!ll
s.tart
ups
expans1ons
et&lt;.
Howard A Merkle 216 455

Cadtllac Oldsmobile
GMAC Ftnanc1ng Available

I

Notice

&amp; E SHOE Serv1 ce 427
Se cond
Ave
are an
nounctng St mco Dea lership
Leather goods new end
used work harness Can
order saddles nd tng equip
Santa Rosa boot! tn stock

2693

FOR THE
best
In ar
c htlectural
des.•on
of
newhomes
sma ll com
mercia! but ldtngs ap!s or
NOW OPEN
remodeling w it h state ap
THU~MAN House Furn iture
prova l of plan s Call collect
Stripping Mastrr Method
B 11 walker 1 68:t149B
Process Specla rates fo t
268 II
one week. Nov 17 23 An
llques restored bought and
t:'ean Soup or
sold Ph 245 U19 Cen HlJMt::M~o~.uE:
chili dally at The Burger
lerYIIIe Co Rd 8
270 6 Hut Jackson Pike
224 If

268 l

BEAUTICIAN
wen1eo,
Foun ta ln of Youth 446 3613
261 4

SALESWOMEN
Men

Olange Your Image
Ga in new confidence oet in
on the good pay and the
good ltfe with a nat1onal
corporation menufaclur lng
lighting products. for In
dustrlal and commercial
accounts In local area
Take the firs. I step forward
and start a new career In
Must be Intelligent
at
tractive go getter non
preuure honest sincere
Individual tooklng
for
rewarding future Perfect
bUsiness secure future
Liberal tr11lnlng
com
pens.atlon benefits
We hire nles persons not
r11vme
For tocallntenlew - send
post card or note

Jewel Electric
Products Inc.
17-10 Willow St.
Fairlawn. New
Jersey 07410
-Equa I opportunity
employer •• F

$WEEPER
end
sew1ng
machine repa tr part s and
suppllts
P ick up and
deltverv Davis Vacuum
Cleaner 1 ., mile up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294

HIGLE Y S Used Book Store
Buy sell trade Upp e r
R rver Rd 446 000 2

23711

16l 11

.:::--------------ATTENTION ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS

Up to $30,000 Is now
available to you when
you must e"ter a
Convalescent
Nur
sing Home
For ftn mformcitlon
w1th nO&lt; obligation, moil
this coupon lot

Mutual Protective
Insurance Co.
P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446-1875

------

Name ________ _
Streel--------Citl'------Zip__ _
Phone ________ _

T&amp; T

I
I

1

Pomeroy 1

For Rent

I
I

75 atEVY

Malibu , 2 dr H T, AM
Radio P S

'3895

73 FORD

Gran Torino 2 dr
P S P B a1r

HT ,

•2595
4 Dr

auto

•3395

1

S3815.00

ll l CK20906 Cust Deluxe Suburban 350-4,
auto, P S, P B, center seat. headliner,
mtrrDrs, rad1o, fuel tank , sh1eld, gauges.
H D shocks

(1 l
(1)
(1)
(I)

1973 tnt C&amp;C 104" C A. 8 cyt
19611nt. C&amp;C Tandum 8 cyl.
1972 Chev. 3/4 ton 4 speed 8 cyl
1974 Chev. 3/4 ton 4x4 auto 8 cyl.
(I) 1974

__ _
If

201 If

LOW wee~ly and mont hly
rates at Ltbby Hotel -146 ~~l:oiNG ~ \." I'
r" Ck l\'
IHl
TLl l C'S t 1r ~ C. C'IJir tll Hotel
I

••6
__________

Ca ll '46 9234

-- ~

269 26

NICELY turn lsl1ed 2 BR
aparlmen t Adults only

depl req Ph

l67 0300 or
269 If

446 2852 all er 1 p m

2995 00
3095.00
3895.00
1295 00
2095 00
4495 00
31 00

so

ClaSSI C 4 Door. Co Demo with low mileage, light
green green vinyl roof power door locks windows

"Reliable Service After The Deal"
See
Dallas
Blevtns

See
George Hams

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. T1l8
Pomeroy

For Rent

2 BEDROOM apartment at
Jackson Estates on JS West
$126 monthly plus eteclr tc:

197 t
_..._
~ t: W all elec tr1 l nlll.11 lu 1ome
l n Gall i poliS Adu lts only
~h .. 6 Oll8

3846.00

(2) CC10903 112 Ton Cust Deluxe 350·2, std
P S, P B, rad1o , foam seat, mtrrors.
gauges L78 15 l1res. ta n

992·2126

See Tom Rue,
or Ray Douglas
Ph 992 2594

RE A C) tJ/\tJ L' pr! ccrJ roomS
Special
weeklv
ra tes
Clrcte s Motet 1380 Eastern

J06

P S., H D, P B, rad1o, P S B m1rrors,
gauges, L78 15 l1res, foam seat, H D S
Stabilizer bar, moss gold &amp; whtle

For Rent

weekly

201

•4823.00

(I) CC10903 1!2 Ton, Cust Deluxe 350-2 std ,

LUV PICKUPS IN STOCK &amp; 1976 4x4

203,.1 f

Av' 446 2101
... -

m1rrors, H D S &amp; shocks, H D, P B, P.S,
rad1o, gauges, dua I rear wheels. Red.

Come In Look This
New Chev. Lark Mmi Home
By Travel Equip. Corp.

73 AUDI

•3895

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

!1) CC31003 1 ton Stake 9', Custom deluxe

brakes factory a1r t10l glass Comlorllll AM rad1o &amp;
s loaded &amp; 1t s n 1ce

NI CE Mob il e Home 5pace
Rodney Oh10 446 3434 or
4327
261 II
..._

rate Gallia Hotel

(2) CC109031f2 Ton Cust Deluxe 350-2, auto ,
P S , HD. P B , rad1o, H. D S &amp; shocks, L78151tres, R S B gauges foam seat M~rrors,
red green tan
'4039.00

tape , Cru tse Control 1t

74 PLYMOUTH

Ph. 446·1599

'5898.00

1975 Chev. Chevelle ........... Onlv 14995

Salelllfe 3 seal wag , P S
P B air

Located "" mile west of
Hol1er Hospital on Rt 35

P S, P B, mirrors. radio, deluxe pam!,
chrome front bumper &amp; guards, Stlverodo
equip

CHRYSLER

•3895

I &amp;2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
From $140per mo
Opan Dilly 1to s
S.turd•y 12to 5
Cio5td on Sund•~

SLEEPING Room

TOM RUE
MOTORS

Charger S E , 2 dr H T
P S P B, cru1se control
air console AM FM rad io

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APAR~ENTS

'5497.00

3f• ton 4x4 S1lverodo 350 4, auto ,

Il

74 DODGE

F URN I'i HtO c1 JJ ilrln~o.;l
off
street par king 1 or 2 adults
centratlv 1oc1ted 446 0338

24~ 11

1

l ______ ------------'

____________ _!!._0 8

WANT E 0 res.ponslble woman
to babysit In my home on
occasional davs for sub
s.tliute teacher 446 0625

I
I

Open Eves Ttl6-Til5 p .m Sat.
You II Like Our Qualify Way of Dotng Bus 10 ess"
See one of these courteous salesmen.
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marv1n Keeba ugl!

I

2nd Ave Ph "6 9027 Oul&lt;e 8
Cleaners ~4B 2nd Ave Ph
204 If

(1) CK20903

I
'3895 ·.. ·:
I KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT I
I1
I

BY Professiona ls Residential
t4nd Commercial
InSide l=OR Maximum Securrtv use
Tie Down Anchors to
r,our trom e or business
#l'rotect Your Mobile Home
Clean qule1 and efficient
Complete Service Call Ron
Outside In our truck Noise
Sktdmore, 379 2152 or •u
E)Ctracted W1ter
Heavv
1756
Equipment Free estimates.
For more rntor contact
22011
sco tch Clean Cleaner. 656

'
-------------AVAILABLE

'4995

II 72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEANING

"6 W2

( 1) CK20903 lf• ton 4x4 Cust Deluxe 350 4
auto , P S , P B , rad1o, HDS R S B
m1rrors, 750x16 lube type on &amp; off tread
foam seat, gauges, upper mldg Green

While blue vinyl lop blue cloth 10lerlor lull power
Climate Control a1r T&amp; T wheel AM FM stereo tape
radial ttres

S Decoratmg

BA.BY~II

(NEW 1975 MODELS)

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

262 If

pa n11ng
wall pap e r1n g panel1n9
I r ee es t1 mates 075 5689
53 If

LONG LASTING VALUES

full pow AM FM stereo tape T&amp; T wheel factory a1r
radtal tires

HO US EWORK I day a week
REt Cal l 4466579 after 5
...-UN Y

QUICK MOVING
PRICES

Yellow wtth wh1te vinyl top and whtfe leather tnt erior

TRISTAit:

MOBILE HOME SALES

PATRlt!K

DELIVERED TOt

OHIO PALLET CO.

71 Beetle
Yellow,
radio, real nice

for Only '3695

lop Very n1ce Bird

---------- ---------73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

269 2

lht fast growing Sale$ field

WANTED I

1972 Ford T·Bird
Th1s B1rd has everything on tt New Butck trade'" Blue w1th wh1te

·-------,
I
I

Wanted To Do

Bored With Typ1ng?
Low Pay?

Was2"·"· Now 241.00

'2695

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Wanted To Buy

Help Wanted

73 O.tsun
Pickup
4 speed radio,
;10,000 miles
$259500

We sold thiS car

We haves good Used Cars in stock pnced under $1,000 oo So come on m and buy
vour next car from the Frtendly Dealership We want to be your frtend. See one
of these Fnendly Salesmen: Ceward Calvert, J, D Story or B1ll Nelson.
Open Evenmgs 11117 p m. &amp; Sat 9 am 1115 p m Serv1ce 8 a.m . hl4:30 p m Mon
lhru Frt

0181

75V W R1bbll
Auto , radio
15 000
radlels
miles
$37f5 00

'3795

MOBILE HOMES

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

Check Us Flnt For
lest Buys In
Used &amp; New Furniture

a real sharp G P

.

onlv '3695

1976 NOVA 12x60 J br all
electric
1976 Nova 12x.60 2 BR: a ll OLD toy trelns
any ptec es
elrc tnc
parts or accessories No Ho
1969 R1tzcratt J2x60 2 Br
446 1822 call after 6
1970 Kit 12x.47 1 Br
2692
1968 Sty le Mar 121(52 2 Br
1967 F leetwood 12x60 2 Br
•BUYING
1971 Concord 12X65 M H 1968 OLD si lver coins 1964 and
c
under Sl for halves SOc for
Commodore 12)1,52 M H
quarters
20c tor d1mes
1959 Colonial 10X50 M H
Premlurf1 for sliver do lla rs
8&amp;5 Mob1le
N&lt;'IOm 1 Wigs 405 2nd Ave
Home Sates
Ph 446 8533 Hrs
lues
Pt Pleas;,nt w va
Wed
Thurs
Sat
10 30
237 If
5 l O Frl 10 lO lo 7 p m
209 If
1972 l:tx60 MOOtle Home c.CC
cond Fully carpeted except
kitchen wtth window a~r
cond Call 388 8764 or 3fl8
8611 alter 5 p m
BABYSITTING tn my home
261 6 anv lime 446 4946

21&gt;

POMEROY - 2 BR, bath,
full basement has I BR, TV
room , utility workshop
Lorge yard $9,500
MIDDLEPORT Ex
celfent cond , 2 BR. bath,
carpeted, paneled, full
basement, carport, FA N
gas heal $13,000 ,
POMEROY - 200 It
frontage lor home or
trailer water available
originally has 2 houses

one

1973 Opel Wagon

1973 GMC lh Ton Pickup

500 E. MAIN ST.

1911 Concora 12x 65 M H 1968
Comma dore 12xS2 M H
1'59 Colonial 10x50 M H

FREE

IS

Auto, 4 cyl eng1ne red tn color Only 39 421 mdes
new Local owner gas saver

Long bed, V 8 auto P S , P B Deluxe two tone pa1nt Local owner,
low mileage

Mobile Homes For Sale

6926

SMALL ENGINES

1973 Pontiac Grand Prix

}3195

OWNER 1971 Monte
carlo 400 v 8 automa1tc
1ransm ISSion P S P 8 a ir
condlttonmg bucket seats
AM radio
stereo tape
player
green with dark
green vinyl top Can be seen
at The GalliPOliS DallY
Tribune 825 Th lrd Ave
before 3 JO p m or call 992
6192 after 4 p m
249 If

down payment and tak.e
over payments f3hone '156

WILKINSON

clean

IS

'4595

Wh1le with while vinyl fop AM &amp; tape P W This
Must see th iS one Pr~ced R1ght

atr Cru1se Control One owner Extra

267 4

12X60 MOBILE HOME small

We serv1ce all saws
and prects1on grind
cham.

'3595

lust '3695

ONE -

1965
1965
1973
1912

sharp wagon We sold thiS one new local owner

1973 Buick Custom LeSabre 4 Dr. KT

FOR: your T1re and 8atterv
needs come to Sears Ttre
Sh op In Tl1e Stiver Bndge
Pll!lZa
ll If

a&amp; S

Auto P S P B , auto a1r AM FM P seals til l wheel ThiS

1974 Buick CentUIY 2 Dr. KT

Beige with vinyl top P S P B

1972 PLYMOUTH Dusler

268 5

446

267

65 FAIRLANE sport coupe
exc cond 446 145 I
267 6

1974 Pontiac Grandville 9 Pass. Wagon

fill wheel new

P S P B, air AM FM&amp; tape Solid black Just like new Local

269 l

l91l - 2 BR: 12xSO
home 446 76\l

266 4

A~fo
owner

engine Good condtlton
.42 000 miles 245 5862

OUR INFlATION
--------------FIGHTING
SPECIAL

even ing lll

VERY nice J or nome range
and
refrlg
carpeting
throughout , S200 mo plus
deposit Calli k.e Wiseman at
The Wls.eman Agency 446

1969 PLYMO UTH Furv 3 l8l

good cond 446 9352

f~res

•

269 J

STAR( RAFT Fa ll Slle -

266 6

V 8 auto P S, P B super custom cab Radial
G M C trade m

1968 PONTIAC 428 engtne '1
door hardlop excellent
cond F'h 446 1550 after 5

197~

266 l
TRAILER spoce Upper Rf 1
Coil 446 0002

1974 Clev. lh Ton Pickup

4

266 6

s. lbinl

FVRN ap 1 3 rms and bath
dep req 602 Fourtt, Ave
446 2796

ph lll lSSO
6928

1909 DODGE Swmger 3AO
spd 245 5603

BANK FINANCING
PH 446 7572

119 lip

used 1 ._ - - - - - - - - - - - - 1964 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer
11 I• lip
WinCh
6 ft 1 a blade
cano py reversible new
1975 KAWASAK 1 motorcvcle
paint and eng lne good
400 cc luggage rack ufety
condtllon, SA 500 Pnone

bars end wlndshiNd Sl 200
Phone 991 l"l

BEAU TI FY your home Wllh
Perma Stone New homes
as well as remodelmg work
Expert mstallatlon
Free
est1mates Phone 742 2409
10 3i 26tc

1975 LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ................. ..S4395

270 3

MODERN 3 br Ranch Close to
town w w car pet bui ll In
k1tchen garage S175 per
mo plus securtly dep .1146

Coins, Curtency
and Supplies

2628 l

9 l3

good condtt1on $175 Phone

ONE S1Qnet clarinet
year Call 992 2924

&amp; D fREE Trimming 20
years exper1en ce Insured
tree es!lmates C:all 992 3057
or ( 11 667 3041 Coolvtlle
10 ISifc

446

254l

Call 446 3646

--------------lfc

only
used
3
If
Interested

11141 985 lS94

mo ..

vinyl hardtop
after 5 pm

condlfloned full equipment

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

3291fc ,

D

4 dr Sedan Driver's -Training Cor Very low mileage a1r

-------------UNFURNISHED 6 room

Syracuse, Ohto

4-10 1

1975 Ford Gran Tllino ....................$AVE

270 l

0151

1961 BUI'C"K Skylark A C

Let Sm1th Nelson Motors feed your fam1ly Turkey on Than ksg1vmg Day Buy any
used car pnced 9ver $500 00 &amp; we w11t g1ve you a Turkey for your Thanksgtvmg
Day Dtnner Thts offer good lhru Nov. 30, 1975. Plus you can get some of the
cleanest Used Cars tn Town.

P B power windows 5 000
mil es A .speed Ph 446 3132
270 l

power E)(ecutlve Car

------

38RI;;~e-;;iEvergre~n

quickly in fastest turnover and
largest volume.
Sta Wagon like new pastel blue finish w1fh matching In
lerlor Landau Luxury Group Air conditioning and full

bath burn
or unturn •
pasture and !a wn can be
rented tf des tred ~orlland
area call614843 2256atter6

Pm

l974 CORVETTE T lop PS

1975 Ford LTD CountiY Squire ........ $AVE

210 6

COuNTRYho~-;~-;;;:--;jth

LARRY LAVENDER
Ph 992 3993

602 Fourth Ave

=~~~lityGreatest Values
- with Best Service. Priced to sell

BEDRM
home
lust
finished remodeling Sal-:m
St R:u!land Phone 742 'n9.9
after 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutchison

---.------------

Phone 949 2803

dept req
446 2796

Blown
lnsulalton Serv1ces
Blown mto Walls &amp; Att1cs'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp;DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

Butld an all sleet bu ld~ng at
Pole Barn pr 1ces" Golden
Gtant All Steel Build 1ngs
Rt A Bo x 146 waverlv
Oh to Phone 9&lt;17 2296
7 24 tic

S EWING
MACH- INE
Repa 1r s servtee all makes
997. 2284 Th e F.p bric Shop
Por;n eroy Au thor~ zed's nger
&lt;, ates and Servtce
We
sharpen Sqssors

270 I

-fU- RN
-----------apt 3 rms and bath

FREE ESTIMATES

11121mo

5 ROOM house for sale m
Ru t land Phone 742 280 1 or
992 5195
11 12 61c
3

446 1052 4460851

WOU LD YOU BELIEVE?

FOR SALE by Owner Jl,.,
story small frame house tn
Tuppers Platns Ohio on Rt
7 4 bedrm
ilvmg rm
k1lchen bath ul1l1tV room 2
porches Elec
baseboard
heat storm door and wm
dows well tnsulated AP
pro x 2 acre lot S12 SOO
Phone (614) 667 6361
11 16 6tp

985 4186

Five new 3 bedroom
homes Now under con
structlon with carpet
ceramic tile, goroge Iorge
lot Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available Price S21 500
Phone 661 6304

Pomeroy

• FOr Sale

l867

MORLAN
Construction Co.

,

Service

Sills

n'E'ver used SOO Also Seers
Glass lined 30 gallon hot
water htlter new Phone

standard 6 new paint $600

Radlato

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

111 14 3tc

1966 DODGE window von

EXPERIENCED

:. '*" '

housetratler 3 ml from town

.

--- - -:-==-:-

PHONE 9'12 3325
10 Mechanic
Pomeroy, 0
mont~s
RUTLAND
8
rms
, 4 or s
Clll H2 1701
A thought for the day
II 1111&lt; B R s, bath 2 car garage
Scothsh novelist Robert
and garden $12,000
Louts Stevenson said, NOW settmg Fuller Brush POMEROY - 8 Rms, 1'12
baths, hot water heat
Products Phone 992 3410
''Mankind was never so
10 6 lie Basement &amp; large yard
happ1ly Inspired as when it
S20 000
A n;l&lt;.o we l d i ng ma chine
made a cathedral "
157 ACRES - Good fences,
new etec: all accessortes
Improved
pastures, 8 room
Included
Phone '92 l410
For
10 28 lie house, &amp; minerals $60,000
TRAILER LAND - 3 9S
ONE FEMALE roglslered red
acres one troller with
RABBIT dog and ducks
and white beagle pup and 8
$Ole Second septic tank
foo t used camper top Phone
Phone 742 2185
992 27&lt;0
11 12 Btc ' Alf for Only S8500
11 lA 3tc
26 ACRES - Of rolling
-~-----------land Good 6 Rm house,
REG Po11ed Hereford bull!i
'REMINGTON 1.100 eutn , one S veer old two both, barn &amp; other
new 12 or 20 ge 1112 50
yearlings
Excellent
buildings S26 000
t:lf~~t' Mlddl~1 Ohj.R.:.,_
d iSpOStliOn$ Phone 992 5565
MIDDLEPORT
3
10 I l61C or 9911826
bedrooms
dining.
nice
------------11 10 61C
kitchen, gos furnace and
GOOD upr ight pract ice piano , - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - full basement 117,000
Just tuned
reas.onablt BUSH hog 5 fl 3 pi h!lch
TOPPER

llltfc
-----------------.,.-------.,ENCLOSED IUb and Shower

Auto Sales

Business Services

BASS E TT twm bed bedrm
sulle and smgle beds
d ressers and double bedrm
su 1IS Refrigerators and
b lack l!lnd wh1le televiS ion
set
Ph one j614) 667 63'61
I I 16 6tp

__ ___________ _

11161tc

• natlonaiiV advert1sed
non .. arbonated vltllm In C
enriched fruit drink. Is
avalttblt for vending In 12
ot cans IndiV Iduals who
are seriously considering a
business of tt,tlr own
should investigate
an
extraordln~rv opportunity
currently available in this
area
Thl~ rs a secure
buslntSI for those who can
s.pare a few hours each
wttk
Cno
selling)
rtstocklng vendon pieced
on
location
by
our

I iOn rord f
350 Heavy du t y LWB ex
ce llent cond I on CDtl 304
773 SJOS alter 5 p m
11 16 If

111 73 TRUCK

11 ll 31&lt;
fhe Alm8118c
Washer
and
By United Pren ID• ELECTRIC
1 8R tlouse at ''6 Locust St
dryer matched set RCA
Mlddleporl or coli 992 5758 tematlonal
stereCI rad10 Am Fm golf
II ll 61p
cart
bags
and clubs
Today is Sunday, Nov 16,
bowl tng bai t and bag
4
2 bedrm Moblte Home in
the 320th day of 1975 with 45 to
ladder back chairs new
Sy racuse
Lo c ated
on
Phone 949 2135
follow
priva te tot Adults only no
111l lip
pels Phone 16141985 lS04 or
The moon Is approaching
992 ll91
ONE FULL lead gll!ISS door
its full phase
11 1l liC
wi th brass fiflings one
The morning stars are
storm
door
and
one
basement door w ith brl!lss
COUNTRY Mobile HOme Mercury, Venus, Mars and
fttttngs
Real cheap
405
P ark Rf Jl ten mlles north
Spring Ave Pomeroy
of Pomeroy ll~rge lots w1th Saturn
II 1J lie
c oncret e p8tiOS \,l dewatks
The evening star is Jupiter
runne r s and off street
Those born on this date are GOLDEN
and
si lver
pafkmg "Phone 99 2 1419
pheasants and pel!lfowl
12 31 If(' Wider the sign of Scorpio
Robert Lew ts Spring Ave
Famed American black
Pomerov Phone 992 2924
1 RAILER s.pt~~c:e for rent
All
II ll lip
W
C
Handy,
composer
uttlltles Phone 992 5535
9 16 ttc
known as the "Father of the WATER HEATER 52 gallon
like new etectr1c S60 GAS
Blues," was born Nov ,6,
2 BEORM
oouDte wtuc
CLOTHES DRYER used
ull tlllu
paid .
near
1873 American actor Burgess
S40 or best ofter Phone 992
Pomeroy Phone 992 7017 or
2082
Meredith also was born on
992 1!66
1113 lie
1l 12 ~lp this date in 1909.
CUSTOM handmade and
On thiS day in history
FREE RENT AT VILLA"E
car \led leather bells purses
In 1007, Oklahoma became
MANOR
IN
MID
dQg collars hair cllps 1 brass
DLEPORTI We are 50 sure the 46th state admitted to !he
ha1r clips Special buckle!.
that you will rove our epart
ideal g ifts Call 9927097
ments lhat we give you two Uruon
II 1l lip
weeks RENT FR:EE Just
In
1933,
the
United
States
pay vour secvrltv deposit
SHOTGUNS AMMO AND
diplomatic
and stay six. months and the established
POWDER Shotgun 410 16
f1rs1 2 weeks is free You wtll relations with the Sov1et
and 12 gauge, 529 up pump
enlov monthlY teases all
guns 20 and 12 gauge SS9
Uruon
l!'lect ric living cerpetlng
automellcs 12 gauqe $99
range end refrigerator free
H10h power sheels S3 83
In 1966, Dr Sam Sheppard
trash pickup cabl~;~ TV
IMR powder S4 98 black
( opllonal&gt; and taundrv was acquitted In a second
powder S2 90 deer slugs
fa ci lities Convenient to trial for the 1954 slaying of his
S1 29
Match and deer
shopping on Third and Milt
barrels for S1100 and S870
10
Middleport
VILLAGE wife He had served more
F tfe s Middleport Phone
MANOR Is yours tor one than 10 years on the original
992 7494
bedroom
apartments
II ll 61&lt;
starling al $10.tl monthiV plus convictton
etec we pay tor everything
In 1968, the Soviet Union
e ts e See the Manager at
t:tAY for sate Phone 843 2.Jdl
orbited
a IHon scientific
R1verslde Ap~rtments or
11 11 61c
calf m J27l This offer will space satellite
- - -----------...,..
end soon so move In now
lU)d save ssss

For Rent

H &amp; N day old or start ed
Leghorn pu l lets Both floor
or cage grown ava tl able
Pou l try
houstng
and
1969 CHEVY Super Sport 4
BUIOITJallon
Modern
speed S900 Phone 74'1 3076
Poultry
399 W
M~ .
11 13 Jtc
Pomeroy 992 2164
-"11 16 ltc
197 1 DODGE Pi ck up 1, ton
v 8 engine automatic good r. fREFJL.ACE Wood Free
runn1ng co ndllton 1800
delivery and stacking Ca ll
Phone 16141 247 2161
(304) 675 1820 after 6 p m
11 1481p
11 16 lip

lllltfc

2lll Roger WamSley

Colltge

1966COMET 6CVI automaltC
Phone 992 7885 between 12
noon and fl p m No ph one
ca ll s on Sunday
I I 1J 61 c

Phone ll041 882 lll6 or 71l
S611

Will pay 26&lt; tor dimes 60c

wrltt

V 8 au tomatt c transmtSSIOn
easy on gas S300 Phone '92
3746
II t331c

- ----~--=---

LARGE busln~::t:t uu11dlno In
Muon large glass fl"ont
drive In rear doors wilt ren t
1 , or al 1of ground floor , 3200
square feet good local ion

196• and older

sptCIIIIIIS

1964 CHEVY NOVA 2 dr 28l

3 25

WA~

U S COINS

FORD PiCkUp
' IOn 6
cy l standar d runs good
S300 Phone 992 3746
II 13 Jlc

Phon e 992 l87A

ttc
-------------SKA TE A
ROLLER --------------RINK ANNOUNCES BUS

L

196~

11 16 6tc

Add it ional 2Sc Charge per
Adverlls.ement
TRA ILER and lo t In Rutland
OFFICE HOURS
Will consider l&amp;nd contr8cf
I 30 1 m to s 00 p m
Phone 992 3960
Dlldy 8 30 a m IO 12 00 Noon
II II 61c
Saturday

For Sal'e

Auto Sales

Pels

REGuLATioNs

:
•
•
•
:
•

~

Wanted

FREE THA,NKSGIVING TURKEY

1969 LE SABRE BUICk
all
power
48 000 mdes
1\ l
446 i61 5 or 446 1143
cond
264 If

THIRTY.fiVE
WEST
Now Available for Rent, 2
Bdnn Townhouse Apts
- Private entry and polio
- Wall to wall carpel
- Ringe •nd Refrlger~tor
- Utilities pal~ . ucept
electric
pool
- Swimming
prtvlteves
C.l1446 98Uor446 3746

For Rent

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
Lots For Rent
Lot s tor r ent Rent Inc ludes
s~ wag e
trash
cottcctton T V hook Up 2
acre re( re atlon area
Rodney Cora Rd
Rodney Ohio
Ph Hl SOl t Gallipolis area
992 7717 Pom~roy area

w~ter

FURN A PT all utilit ies PCI
Adults on ly "'6 952 3

219

If

-----.--'-------t;-

l

�28- The SWlday Times. Sentinel, SWlday Nov 16, 1975

Auto Sales

:For Fast R~sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
••
•

WANT AOS
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES

•

•

..,..ASM paid tor all makes and
P M
Oav
Before ,.. models o f mobile homes
Publi cation
Phone erel!l code 614 ~23
Monday O~&amp;CIItne f a m
9lll
4 13 tfc
Cancella110n - Correctton•
Wilt be IICCepted until 9 a m ._ - - w~-for Day of PublicatiOn
-

.., 5
•
•
:
,
•

•

The Publisher ruer\leS the
r1ght lq ed it or reje ct any ads TWO 5 mon th old Seagl e pups
deemed Ob!HIIonal
The
and so m e tratned up to 5
pub lis her
will
nor
be
vears Old Wtl! sell or trade
respons. lbte tor more !han one
for ~ uns Phone 747 25'21
tncorrecl lns.erljon
1116 31C

•

RAUS

t

1

..
t

~

'
'

For Want Ad Serv•ce
5 cents ger word one tnsert lon
Minimum Cherge Sl 00
14 c; ents per word three
consecut 1ve Insertions
26 cents per word six con
sec:utl~e Insertions
2S Per Cenl Discount on paid
ads and ads patd within 10
days

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2 00 for SO word m lntmum
Each add iti onal word J

, cen1s

Mobile Homes For Sale
19 75 l ·h 70 tRAILER
ex
cellent condllt on espec 1ally
butlt lor off1 ces Low pn c:e
for qutck sa l e Phone (J04 )
615 1921 or 675 5829
10 30 lf c

1973 NASHUA

14 x 70

l

bedrm 1 , bath gas heat
Take over payments Phone

992 ll88

BLIND ADS

1970 BUDDY lreller fur
nl~hed Priced 10 se tl Phone

, Card of Thanks

16141 698 l366

WE WISH to thBnk our meny
friends and ne ighbors for
the beautiful flowers food
and ttle many deeds of

kindness shown us dur ing

the Illness and at the time of
the del!lth of our beloved
husband and falher c W
Stansburv We extend our
appreciation to the Holler
Hosp lfal Medical Staff Or
Oavls
Walker Funeral
Home Rutland Emergency
Rev

FOR RENT OR SALE

&gt;n
Pomerov 2 bedrm home
Iaroe tot full basement
Phone 742 2757
11136tp

For Rent

mile
north of Meigs High School
on old Rt 33 Phone 992 2941
II i6 lie

Bumgardner

for hiS consoling words
Mrs C W Stansbury a d
Femlly
r

__________ __ _
_.. 11

16 He

citizens, very nice Phone

H"eLe"NT
at

~ A"T.'iiiiv - shap

Tuppers

Pla 1ns

M~rv

noun ces that

has

lolned

the

turn/shed and
unturnls.hed apts Phone 992
SAl4
11 9 lfc

ah

on

Thursday
Friday
and
Sl!lturday
November Get
Acquainted S5)ecla l Is 52
rebate on 515 Coldwave
Helen Dorst owner Phone

16W 661 l966

J AND 4 rm

Newell

staff

II 12

all

elec tri c modern ranch
located outside Racine Up
to 25 acres bottom tend
available
References
reQuired Call 992 ssso after
S p m
11 16 7tc

p.tOUM and board for senior
10 12 lfc

1•

AVAILABLE 2 bedrm

Notice
992 ll09

II 12 61p

For Rent or Sale

SQ uad the Masonic LOdge
and Rutland Methodist i'fiiA ILER s.pace
Church

6~c

o~e

bedrm mobl te nuu,c for
rent Phone 992 l509
10 Jl tfc

F'U RNISHED
apartment,
~dults onlv In Middleport

SC HEDULE SATURDAYS
ONLY STARTING NOV
l&lt;lh
RACINE
6 40
SYRACUSE 6 SO MID
DLEPORT 7 IS Thanks
OIV InG Part'tl Nov 26 end 28
OPEN WED, FR I, ANil
SA TURDAY 7 lO 10 00
PRIVATE
PART I E.S')
MON
TUES
THURS
EVE SAT AND SUNDAY
AFTERNOONS
PHONE
161•1 985 l929 or 981 9996 or

ns .,.,

11 9 12tc

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

sHOoTING Matth
Corn
Hollow Gun Club Sundl!IV
Nov 16 12 noon 1 mile past
Miles Cemetery out ot

Rulland

1l 14 21c

--..------------

WITHOu'' T ~ni y permiSSIOn
the re will be no hunting or
tres.paulng on my property
Bo b McGraw . Meaoan
F arm off lower Bowmen !t

Run

11~26tc

Help W1nted
SOMEO NE to build
Phone 992 52~7

fence

11 16 3tc

Employment Wanted
-'iEMODELING

Plumbing'

heating and att typ es oil
oenenlt
repa1r
Work
gu8rlln1llCd 20 years e"'
penence
f3hone 992 2409

---------- -- =-~~.

CARPENTRY
paneling,
flooring and ceiling Phone
992 275!
10 21 lOlc
WILL. babysl! In mv home
dallv
For
more
In
format ton phone 9A9 2546
11 16 ltc

Wanted To l!uv
u

turrimJre
i ce boxes
brass beets or complete
households Wr!te M
0.
Miller Rt 4 Pom eroy

OhiO Cell 992 1110

10 1 1•

TRAILER Spl!lCe for- rent In
Middleport Phone 992 5434

--

10 21 26tc

for quarters
$1 20 tor
halves Call Rutland 742

HOUSE ln Svrocuse
Oh io Basement garage
real n ic e home must have
references If Interested Call
dliV j61.tl ) 446 7699, even1ngs

1 RM

1614 1 &lt;46 9539

11 s ttc

HI-C
A

BEAUTIFUL. furn ished
apartment for couples only
tncludes washer dryer and
ce:ble In Middleport over
Sl im l!lnd Trim Phone 992

7889

trader in Re edsvdlt Ohio

Phone 16141 318 6l84
111161c

---~

l

A QUal lfltd

callcolltcl (30113&lt;5 7300or
Including

phone

numbtr to SUNRIPE
INC 621S Grttnbtfl IIOid,

M•ryfand

201&lt;0
I Nora

sut.sldtar";~

of

roc• Cola Comp1nyl
-~-

---~·----~-

BEORM partly fvrn1shed
basement new furna ~:e and
water heater propane gas
on Co Rd 28 SlOO per

monlh and 1100 dep0$11
Phone
Ul 279l doy or 949 2828 offtr
6p m
reterence r1quested

CI\SH REQUIRED
Plln I
Sl,,50
Pion 2
16 "0 4 ~M
Pion l
110 221 1 ont-;
pm
Training provided N&lt;

experience required Tn.
shelter with wrlteoff In
vtstment stcurtd by ntw
equipment
(five veer
warrtn t~) lnd lrwenlorr
Eernlngs guaranteed with
•
~rllttn
buy
btck
agretment For lmmedlttt
lnformlllon or lnttrvitw

\11161p

---------.-2 BEORM apt end 2 bedrm

-~---

Individual may start part
time and expand witt\
comDanv financing to 1 full
time bus.inen

Perk

1911 CHEVY P1c kup Wllh 8 fl
camper Phone (6 14) 661

6221
11 146tc
1970 CAMARO and 197 1
Chevelle Phon e (6 141 985

4269

I I 14 61c
1955 FOR 0 V 8 original pamt
Conta c t Roge r Hol ma n 1A2

3094

1116 lie

1972 CHEVY Capr1ce 4 ctr 400
Sport Sedan 2 barrel all
t1nted glass 1111 steer~ng
a c and power windows
52 J50 Also 1911 Oldsmobile
Delta 88 d dr 350 2 barrel
row mileage
like new
52 100 Phone 949 2051
11 16 61c

1968

CHEVROLET

1964

Chev
1961 Buick Spec ial
1960 Foret PIC kup truck 4
mag wheels Phone 742 2185

1116llc

-·----- - - ----- ~ ,

TON Int ernational pickup
4 speed transmiSSion H D
springs to carry camper
heavy bumper wtth htl ch for
horse tra•ter Low m lleage
To see contac t 992 7011
II 12 41p

1969 CORVETTE red with
removable black vinyl top
r ed intertor, tow m i leage
Ki ng ro ll bar cragers on
rel!lr 4 s.peed ms.lde pipes
som eone to take over
payments Phone 992 7179
11 12 4tc
1972 RA LLY No-va One loca l
owner call after 5 p m 843

2591

11 9 71c

- ---- ---DOOG = Conventional

1965
cab 2 ton truck 12 fl ftal
good rubber V 8 4 speed 2
speed axle
S650
Phone

(614) 985 l594

II 911p

1947 DODGE ton 1~ 12ft llat
good rubber oood cOndition

SlOO Phone 16141 985 ll94

11 9 71p

NICE bay mare 3 year old
green broke S250 Phone
742 2738
11 13 lie
FRENCH style dlntng room
su 1t e table 6 cha 1rs chma
cupboard red cherry fmtsh
Phone 992 76B.t

II 16 l ie

1974
HONDA
Elc1nore
MT 250 Phone 992 7803
11 16 3tc
GIRLS new 5 speed btcvcre
ridden twiCe Cost S129 will
take 585 has basket Also a
mteroscope cost $18 wtlt
take S10 Dl!lughter away at
college and needs the
monev Call 992 2324
11 16 li e
ONE cow to freshen soon One
250 gallon Un lco bulk m1lk
tank 2 un11 Delaval mil ke rs
w1 th vacuum pump A ll for
$475 Phone Arthur Spen cer

1614 1 98 5 l891

11 16 61p
B 1L L. Y goat

27l9

$20

Phone 949
11 16 Jtc

GOOD used RCA black and
wh1te 18 Inch televlston
table model Also Alto
Saxophone may need some
repatr Ca11 992 5250

11 16 lie

1973 FX 350 Harley Dav idson
tess than 1 000 miles ex
cetlent condttton tor saoo
Phone 992 2967
11 14 6tc
WORK pony with or wllhoul
harness Phone evenings
9A9 2471
Ben
Bickers
Bashan. Rd
1114 31c
KEEP carpets
beeul!fu l
desp te footsteps of a busy
fam lly Buy Blue Lustre
Rent electr1c shempooer
Nelsons Drug Store
..._
11 13 6tc

____ _________ _
16• FT TRAVEL Trailer
!tleeps 6 Phone 992 2318 day
or call 9927133 after 5 p m

""")

10 2l IIC

...

11 11 lfc

furn ished apt adults
Phon e 992 5908 before 2

Phone 161'1 985 ll9&lt;

-

1197fp

----..·-------

197 1 LHEVROLET .., uburbttn
350 p s b b A t Phon e

9112 H91

II 11 61p

,

Tuppers Plains, Oh1o

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtator to the
smallest Heater Core
Nathan Btggs
Radtator Spec1a'1$l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph 991 2174

3 BE DRM house tn Riggs
crest F•replace tn ltvmg
room tam lly room 2 bath s
and full basement 2 car
garage Phone (61.4! 985

II 16 lip

GIVE YOUR wife a Chr1stmas
presen t lhls year of grea l
entovment A new Bt Level
home bath &amp; 12 ) or 4
bedrms
two car garage
and acre of ground located
on lhe Wildwood Estates at
Flatwoods 6 m11es from
Pomeroy Ohio Selling at
cost
pr1c e
George S
Hobstetter Owner Box 101
Pomeroy Ohto Phone (614)
11 16 61(

ONe- JYea70idfKOfOU9hbred
t 1ttv S450 Also one vearllng
half Thoroughbred cot! 59
Ia It s ISO Phone 997: 7583
11 A 12tc
WE H AVE shotgun she11S
rtfte shells cleaning ac
cessor1es huntmg cloth es
boots black powder guns
and accessor1es re1oad1ng
ma1er1ats scopes mounts
knives sleepmg bags boat
1ackets
and
c ushtons
holsters belts rifle straps
and much .. much more at
Ind ian Joe s Sports and
CBs 308 Page St
Mtd
dleport
10 H 301c

Real Estate For Sale
6 ROOM house wtth oa~n
1
M1ddleport on a SOx 120 tot
Wa ll to wall carpetmg
paneling
new ceilmgs
garbage d1sposat
etc
Garage Wtlh storage area
! 13 500 For appomlment
ca ll 992 '10'12
11 4 121c
HOUSE on L1ncoln He1ghts 2
bedrm large K1tchen full
basement n1 ce back yard
onlv sa 900 Wtth new fur
ntture only S10 300 Phone
992

7648

116261c
3 BR hvME tust fmtshed
remodeling
Salem Sl
Rutland Phone 742 2306
after 4 p m or see Mtto B
Hutchinson
10_ 9_lfC
_ _ _ _ _ _ .L. _ _ _ _ _
_
6 ROOM House wtth bath
garage basement buil t m
porch
12 acre
Hobson
Phone 992 7773
l 11Jifc
CUS TOM Holnes no down
pevmenl VA Loans FHA As tow as 3 percent down
Your plans or ours Call or
wrlle Shepard Conrracttng ,
Box 2BA Rutland AS775
Phone 742 1409

10 ll 261&lt;

-

11 u 6fc
- - - - - - - - ---

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

992 7730 '

Ill• 2tp
1969 OLDSMOBILE engine,'
speed transmiSSIOn, 390 rur
end Phont 9•9 2450
11

- --.,
ONE Stgler

u ,.,c

~

-------

fuel oil heater

C1ll 992 5114

11 l-4 31C

_____________II 9 7fp
(614) 985 ll94

__,

FIRE WOOD Pllone 992 l640
11126tc

-------------~ IER~U

H l\ 010 , moelerfl
des ign am fm radio -track
tape comblnatton Balan ce
S104 70 or 1e~ms Call 992

3965

11 i2 lfc
----4~---------

1912 G MIDGET II 000 A(
TUAL MILES II ISO for

more mformat10n call {6141

661 l1S9 or 667 36S2 II 12 Sic

"i ------

758l

11 7 12tc

SEP T I C TANK S c leaneo
Modern Sanilahon 99 2 3954
or 99 7 13 19
9 I B tic

Buy, Sell or Trade

NO 123 - 95 o , more or
less. good place to raise &amp;
train horses, box stalfs,
rldlng ring, lge home
carpeted mod kllchen
beautiful country setting
$10 000 00
ACREAGE- 9 64 a, 6 a
112 o and olmost 2 a
804W. Mam
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter !:lours Call
992-7133
CONTACT
Lois P•uley
Branch MaMQtr

1974 Ford Pinto ........................... 2695
5

2 Dr Sedan Aula trans , new 76 trade tn A bright red
beauty Well equipped

210 I

02l9

AppraiSal service on
estate• and collectoons

1973 Ford 9 Pass. Sta. Wagun~.~~~~.~.~~an

268

Extra sharp wagon with lull equipment Including air con
dltlonlng

l

1974 Ford Gran Torino .................. 53295

FOR RENT Treller space,
septic tank city water ,
cement pad' Call 446 0239

R&amp;J OOINS

4 Dr Sedan Air conditioned New Ford Trade In N1ce

2683

Phone 742 2331
Roger Wamsley. Rutland
101Simo.

1972 lbln Qlarpr...................... 52495
2 Dr Hardt\'/! small V 8 air conditioned vinyl top A real

, TARA

0 DELL Altnement located
behind
Rutland Grade
School Tuneup brakes
wheel balancing allnement
Phone 742 2004
1116trc

complete service
Phone
9119 2487 or 949 2000 Rac 1ne
Oh10 Crttt BradfOrd
10 9 tfc

"cream PUff

1972 Volkswagen Beelle 2 Dr........ 51995

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
1112 Baths
Pay O!liY One Ultlrly
Add 1son, Oh1o
For lnformali09
Call Shirley Adktns

ONnedliy local minister Extra sharp and low mileage

73 Ford Van Type ........................ 53795
Club Wagon Small V 8 Luxurious Chatteau model B pass
Like new Full glass model

71 Ford LTD $ta. Wa~11... ............ '1795
Counlry Squire Model Full equipment Including air con
dltlonlno &amp; luggage rack Exceptional condition for 71

367-7250

MANY MORE

UGA'f houseke~pl ng room
Park Centra) Hotel

78

._ _ ----

SEE: Fred Blaettnar, Pat H11J, Melvin Utile,
or Dan Thompson

If

EXC A\fAT INV OOu:l IUdU~ I
OFFICE space tor r~nt
and bac khoe work sepltc
downtown Ph 446 0008
tank s 1ns talted
dump,
2l7 If
trucks and o boys lo r htre
wd! ha ul fill dirt l op sot I
MOBile home space 1 mile
li mestone and graoyet,. Call
from HMC Ph 446 3805
Bob or Roger Jeflers dav
phone R92 70fl9 n1ght phon e ____ ...... _______ _!~I f
99 2 3525 or 9915'23'2
lfc MOBILE home Space ror rent
2 11

esttma te s Phone 992 3284
Goegle n Ready Mt)l, Co
M•ddteport Otlto.
6 30 tf;

FURNISHED apl 112S mo
Phone 446 4007

INCOatOaATSD

NO- 147 - Lovely 2 BR
home excellent condition,
corpetlng drapes, full
base, lge backyard Well
worth seeing, $9 000 oo

270 l

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

Strout" For Rent
Realty

1975 NEW CARRY OVERS in LTDs, Tortnos,
Elites, Granadas, Mavericks, Mustang ll's,
P1ntos &amp; Ptckup Trucks- A large selection and
pnced to sell. Also several Demos and
Execultve cars.

4 RM HOUSE Clly water
chemical to ilet call 446

WE SPECIALIZE In mobile
home furnace repair Phone
992 S8SB
9 18 lie "READY MIX CONCRETE
de l 1/ered r~ght lo your
pro !ect r as1 and easy Free

Real Estate for Sale

house J1, bath all drapes
and rugs furn ished 2 per
ches and garage in town
Adults preferred No pets
Deposit requtred Call 446

0008

sowE~ s REPAIR 1
EXCAVATING BACKHIJES oLWOOD
Sweepers toasters Irons
AND DOZER LARGE AND
all small appliances Lawn
SMA LL SEP TIC TANKS
mow er next to Sl ate Htgh
IN STALLED
BILL
way Garage on Route 71
PULLIN S PHONE 992 2478
Phone 985 3825
DAY OR NIGHT
.:1 16 tfc
n 11 7atp
-IF YOU ... re ~n ; ;;ftfd -,; a c sRAoFo~Auctlone~
a
new home or have your
present one remodeled or
you ar e tn need of a new
roof
Call
Roush Con
stru cllon Greg Roush 992

This man trades almost every year and thiS one has only
14 000 miles

261 6

446 0008

2l1

Open Evenings Ttl6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Tll5:00

DAN THOMPSON

If

FORD

2 SR Mobile Homes. one at
Gallipolis Ferry
one on

Neighborhood Rd 675•886
267 9

461

PHONE
I

PIDNEE~

·~

112·2U&amp;

~

CHAIN SAWS

V.W. --- AM C ···JEEP

FUR N house In Thurman
Oh io utilities paid Sl25 a
month Sl25 dep req Dey

l643

266 If

TRAILER: no pets
adults
only at K&amp;K mobile home
park Ph 446 0390

267 ,,

2 BR MOBILE home for SIOO l
br

Olll

mobile home S125

Through Nov. 26-An 18lb.
Kroger 'Wish Bone' Turkey with every New
or Demo. V. W,, AMC or Jeep or a '72' or
newer used car,

498 Locust Street
Middle~1ort, Ohio

If

- T----~ -------

TEAFORD REALTY

$3000

RUTLAND - 2 BR. bath
carpeting
paneling
porches garage good
condition $9,500
DEXTER - 157 acres
Iorge house, water system
barn &amp; other bldgs S38 000
POMEROY - 7'12 acres 4
BR, bath, carpeting
paneling, hot water heat
basement, storage S15,000
PHDNEm 2259

Ul Living Room Sciiai
20.ot up
121 Hld•A lltds
5995&amp; 11"5
(New} Wood Rocker
2495
I 1I Maple Rocker w &lt;ulllion s.. t &amp; beck
(1 I Recliner, good condition
I11 Lovt Slat
125.00
Ul Odd Living Room Cllairs
10.00 up
I11 B11sett Roll Top Desk and 10
Othtr Desks
39 95 up
I 271 Chests &amp; Dressers
Check tlot Prien
111 Bedroom SultH, 1 with nile st•nd

,,5
.,,
73VW 411Wag
Auto AM FM,
eMire clean
lllh 00

73 Clltv

c 10

tom.va.ps,

red

e. while

$3195 00

12 M G. Midget

4 speed orange,
radials, ;M,OOO
miles
$1995 00

74 Monte Ctrlo
Auto, ps , &amp;c,
AM FM sharp
$409500

For Christmas Gifts/
Black VeMt Framed PictUres
3 SiDs 5.95, 8.95, 19.95

7J

C.IIISS

S..preme
Auto,ps, AC,
etc N C trade
In

Super Special
'12 Comet 2 dr ,
6' auto, p s
Was $1995

2 '73' Capri's

Sharp
$2795 00

Very

Nowmn

~ -----

SAW LOGS
'85.00 m'200.00 PER M
VENEER WHITE OAK, '400.00 PER M

Assortment ot .....,, Rlfl'lllf"llln &amp; lrMkfast Sell
You've liMn Asking For Them - Htrt Thtr Art 141
Wringer w..htrs
01 Mavt•ttl\ulomlllc walhtr
" "
121 Auto Drytrs, I Portalllt, I Full Sin ltoldl
(1 I Wtlnut Lint c:Hir Chtsl
121 Ustd CiiiHns
Radios, one s chtn1111, one 21
chtnnet with power

71 Dodge
Coronet
Custom 4 dr ,
A C, p s, ~u~ 1
etc,

Ph. 992·2689

Porn

Ohio

~-----.----~----

74-ntt X
V 1, auto p s,
very lherp
S1195 DG

$2095

DON WATTS V.W.
••
••
•

,•.

IIVIISIDI AMC.JIIP
IT. 7' H. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

1973 Coventry 3 Br
197l kirkwood 3 Br
1972 Greenbrier 3 Br
1957 Neusha 1 Br
1957 Travel Trailer
1911 Olds V1sta Crutser
mileage

lOW
23 9 If

KANAUGA MOBILE
HOME SALES
Ph 446 t662

Buddy 12x50 2 Br
ParktanCI 1 Br 1'2x60
Dartan 12x.60
Esquire 14x6S 2 Br
Sc hull I~X60 2 Br

270.

BABYS il liNG m my home
weekday even1ngs after S
Have tots of exp and exc
ref Catt 4•6 6579 after 5
262 If

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

268 l

Highest Discount In Trt
Stat~
We s.ell service and
qu1llty complete package
dtal
financing arranged
Camp Conley Star Craft
Sites, Rt 62 N, Pt Pleasan t

w v.

mob t le

168

6

81.5 Mobile

Home Sales
Pt Pletunt, W Va

11NG In my home
Ph 4A6 6551

2l7

If

AUL. T ::.
MuBTLr
Home
Service
Skirting
roof
coating patios awn1ngs
anchors cement work Free
estimates Call 245 9411 "'"
2•5 9-472 after ~ 30 p m
If

Notice
NO HUNTING or trespasstng
on my propertv located on
Slorv's Run Oalsy Saun
ders

266 6

REWARD
REWARD of S100 for th e
arrest and conv1clion of
person or persons who broke
1nto the property a mob1le
home and house on Story s
Run No tify Sheriffs Office
ol Gallla County
De1SV
Saunders
266 6

I
I

'5100

WAS SSIOO

NOW

I ~~~~. w~~ r~w..".:i~y:::.lr ~~~n~:!~~ ';:r

I

9915342

LOAN~

OPER:ATING capltl!ll
s.tart
ups
expans1ons
et&lt;.
Howard A Merkle 216 455

Cadtllac Oldsmobile
GMAC Ftnanc1ng Available

I

Notice

&amp; E SHOE Serv1 ce 427
Se cond
Ave
are an
nounctng St mco Dea lership
Leather goods new end
used work harness Can
order saddles nd tng equip
Santa Rosa boot! tn stock

2693

FOR THE
best
In ar
c htlectural
des.•on
of
newhomes
sma ll com
mercia! but ldtngs ap!s or
NOW OPEN
remodeling w it h state ap
THU~MAN House Furn iture
prova l of plan s Call collect
Stripping Mastrr Method
B 11 walker 1 68:t149B
Process Specla rates fo t
268 II
one week. Nov 17 23 An
llques restored bought and
t:'ean Soup or
sold Ph 245 U19 Cen HlJMt::M~o~.uE:
chili dally at The Burger
lerYIIIe Co Rd 8
270 6 Hut Jackson Pike
224 If

268 l

BEAUTICIAN
wen1eo,
Foun ta ln of Youth 446 3613
261 4

SALESWOMEN
Men

Olange Your Image
Ga in new confidence oet in
on the good pay and the
good ltfe with a nat1onal
corporation menufaclur lng
lighting products. for In
dustrlal and commercial
accounts In local area
Take the firs. I step forward
and start a new career In
Must be Intelligent
at
tractive go getter non
preuure honest sincere
Individual tooklng
for
rewarding future Perfect
bUsiness secure future
Liberal tr11lnlng
com
pens.atlon benefits
We hire nles persons not
r11vme
For tocallntenlew - send
post card or note

Jewel Electric
Products Inc.
17-10 Willow St.
Fairlawn. New
Jersey 07410
-Equa I opportunity
employer •• F

$WEEPER
end
sew1ng
machine repa tr part s and
suppllts
P ick up and
deltverv Davis Vacuum
Cleaner 1 ., mile up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294

HIGLE Y S Used Book Store
Buy sell trade Upp e r
R rver Rd 446 000 2

23711

16l 11

.:::--------------ATTENTION ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS

Up to $30,000 Is now
available to you when
you must e"ter a
Convalescent
Nur
sing Home
For ftn mformcitlon
w1th nO&lt; obligation, moil
this coupon lot

Mutual Protective
Insurance Co.
P.O. Box 4
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
446-1875

------

Name ________ _
Streel--------Citl'------Zip__ _
Phone ________ _

T&amp; T

I
I

1

Pomeroy 1

For Rent

I
I

75 atEVY

Malibu , 2 dr H T, AM
Radio P S

'3895

73 FORD

Gran Torino 2 dr
P S P B a1r

HT ,

•2595
4 Dr

auto

•3395

1

S3815.00

ll l CK20906 Cust Deluxe Suburban 350-4,
auto, P S, P B, center seat. headliner,
mtrrDrs, rad1o, fuel tank , sh1eld, gauges.
H D shocks

(1 l
(1)
(1)
(I)

1973 tnt C&amp;C 104" C A. 8 cyt
19611nt. C&amp;C Tandum 8 cyl.
1972 Chev. 3/4 ton 4 speed 8 cyl
1974 Chev. 3/4 ton 4x4 auto 8 cyl.
(I) 1974

__ _
If

201 If

LOW wee~ly and mont hly
rates at Ltbby Hotel -146 ~~l:oiNG ~ \." I'
r" Ck l\'
IHl
TLl l C'S t 1r ~ C. C'IJir tll Hotel
I

••6
__________

Ca ll '46 9234

-- ~

269 26

NICELY turn lsl1ed 2 BR
aparlmen t Adults only

depl req Ph

l67 0300 or
269 If

446 2852 all er 1 p m

2995 00
3095.00
3895.00
1295 00
2095 00
4495 00
31 00

so

ClaSSI C 4 Door. Co Demo with low mileage, light
green green vinyl roof power door locks windows

"Reliable Service After The Deal"
See
Dallas
Blevtns

See
George Hams

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. T1l8
Pomeroy

For Rent

2 BEDROOM apartment at
Jackson Estates on JS West
$126 monthly plus eteclr tc:

197 t
_..._
~ t: W all elec tr1 l nlll.11 lu 1ome
l n Gall i poliS Adu lts only
~h .. 6 Oll8

3846.00

(2) CC10903 112 Ton Cust Deluxe 350·2, std
P S, P B, rad1o , foam seat, mtrrors.
gauges L78 15 l1res. ta n

992·2126

See Tom Rue,
or Ray Douglas
Ph 992 2594

RE A C) tJ/\tJ L' pr! ccrJ roomS
Special
weeklv
ra tes
Clrcte s Motet 1380 Eastern

J06

P S., H D, P B, rad1o, P S B m1rrors,
gauges, L78 15 l1res, foam seat, H D S
Stabilizer bar, moss gold &amp; whtle

For Rent

weekly

201

•4823.00

(I) CC10903 1!2 Ton, Cust Deluxe 350-2 std ,

LUV PICKUPS IN STOCK &amp; 1976 4x4

203,.1 f

Av' 446 2101
... -

m1rrors, H D S &amp; shocks, H D, P B, P.S,
rad1o, gauges, dua I rear wheels. Red.

Come In Look This
New Chev. Lark Mmi Home
By Travel Equip. Corp.

73 AUDI

•3895

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

!1) CC31003 1 ton Stake 9', Custom deluxe

brakes factory a1r t10l glass Comlorllll AM rad1o &amp;
s loaded &amp; 1t s n 1ce

NI CE Mob il e Home 5pace
Rodney Oh10 446 3434 or
4327
261 II
..._

rate Gallia Hotel

(2) CC109031f2 Ton Cust Deluxe 350-2, auto ,
P S , HD. P B , rad1o, H. D S &amp; shocks, L78151tres, R S B gauges foam seat M~rrors,
red green tan
'4039.00

tape , Cru tse Control 1t

74 PLYMOUTH

Ph. 446·1599

'5898.00

1975 Chev. Chevelle ........... Onlv 14995

Salelllfe 3 seal wag , P S
P B air

Located "" mile west of
Hol1er Hospital on Rt 35

P S, P B, mirrors. radio, deluxe pam!,
chrome front bumper &amp; guards, Stlverodo
equip

CHRYSLER

•3895

I &amp;2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS
From $140per mo
Opan Dilly 1to s
S.turd•y 12to 5
Cio5td on Sund•~

SLEEPING Room

TOM RUE
MOTORS

Charger S E , 2 dr H T
P S P B, cru1se control
air console AM FM rad io

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APAR~ENTS

'5497.00

3f• ton 4x4 S1lverodo 350 4, auto ,

Il

74 DODGE

F URN I'i HtO c1 JJ ilrln~o.;l
off
street par king 1 or 2 adults
centratlv 1oc1ted 446 0338

24~ 11

1

l ______ ------------'

____________ _!!._0 8

WANT E 0 res.ponslble woman
to babysit In my home on
occasional davs for sub
s.tliute teacher 446 0625

I
I

Open Eves Ttl6-Til5 p .m Sat.
You II Like Our Qualify Way of Dotng Bus 10 ess"
See one of these courteous salesmen.
Pete Burns
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marv1n Keeba ugl!

I

2nd Ave Ph "6 9027 Oul&lt;e 8
Cleaners ~4B 2nd Ave Ph
204 If

(1) CK20903

I
'3895 ·.. ·:
I KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT I
I1
I

BY Professiona ls Residential
t4nd Commercial
InSide l=OR Maximum Securrtv use
Tie Down Anchors to
r,our trom e or business
#l'rotect Your Mobile Home
Clean qule1 and efficient
Complete Service Call Ron
Outside In our truck Noise
Sktdmore, 379 2152 or •u
E)Ctracted W1ter
Heavv
1756
Equipment Free estimates.
For more rntor contact
22011
sco tch Clean Cleaner. 656

'
-------------AVAILABLE

'4995

II 72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEANING

"6 W2

( 1) CK20903 lf• ton 4x4 Cust Deluxe 350 4
auto , P S , P B , rad1o, HDS R S B
m1rrors, 750x16 lube type on &amp; off tread
foam seat, gauges, upper mldg Green

While blue vinyl lop blue cloth 10lerlor lull power
Climate Control a1r T&amp; T wheel AM FM stereo tape
radial ttres

S Decoratmg

BA.BY~II

(NEW 1975 MODELS)

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

262 If

pa n11ng
wall pap e r1n g panel1n9
I r ee es t1 mates 075 5689
53 If

LONG LASTING VALUES

full pow AM FM stereo tape T&amp; T wheel factory a1r
radtal tires

HO US EWORK I day a week
REt Cal l 4466579 after 5
...-UN Y

QUICK MOVING
PRICES

Yellow wtth wh1te vinyl top and whtfe leather tnt erior

TRISTAit:

MOBILE HOME SALES

PATRlt!K

DELIVERED TOt

OHIO PALLET CO.

71 Beetle
Yellow,
radio, real nice

for Only '3695

lop Very n1ce Bird

---------- ---------73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

269 2

lht fast growing Sale$ field

WANTED I

1972 Ford T·Bird
Th1s B1rd has everything on tt New Butck trade'" Blue w1th wh1te

·-------,
I
I

Wanted To Do

Bored With Typ1ng?
Low Pay?

Was2"·"· Now 241.00

'2695

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Wanted To Buy

Help Wanted

73 O.tsun
Pickup
4 speed radio,
;10,000 miles
$259500

We sold thiS car

We haves good Used Cars in stock pnced under $1,000 oo So come on m and buy
vour next car from the Frtendly Dealership We want to be your frtend. See one
of these Fnendly Salesmen: Ceward Calvert, J, D Story or B1ll Nelson.
Open Evenmgs 11117 p m. &amp; Sat 9 am 1115 p m Serv1ce 8 a.m . hl4:30 p m Mon
lhru Frt

0181

75V W R1bbll
Auto , radio
15 000
radlels
miles
$37f5 00

'3795

MOBILE HOMES

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

Check Us Flnt For
lest Buys In
Used &amp; New Furniture

a real sharp G P

.

onlv '3695

1976 NOVA 12x60 J br all
electric
1976 Nova 12x.60 2 BR: a ll OLD toy trelns
any ptec es
elrc tnc
parts or accessories No Ho
1969 R1tzcratt J2x60 2 Br
446 1822 call after 6
1970 Kit 12x.47 1 Br
2692
1968 Sty le Mar 121(52 2 Br
1967 F leetwood 12x60 2 Br
•BUYING
1971 Concord 12X65 M H 1968 OLD si lver coins 1964 and
c
under Sl for halves SOc for
Commodore 12)1,52 M H
quarters
20c tor d1mes
1959 Colonial 10X50 M H
Premlurf1 for sliver do lla rs
8&amp;5 Mob1le
N&lt;'IOm 1 Wigs 405 2nd Ave
Home Sates
Ph 446 8533 Hrs
lues
Pt Pleas;,nt w va
Wed
Thurs
Sat
10 30
237 If
5 l O Frl 10 lO lo 7 p m
209 If
1972 l:tx60 MOOtle Home c.CC
cond Fully carpeted except
kitchen wtth window a~r
cond Call 388 8764 or 3fl8
8611 alter 5 p m
BABYSITTING tn my home
261 6 anv lime 446 4946

21&gt;

POMEROY - 2 BR, bath,
full basement has I BR, TV
room , utility workshop
Lorge yard $9,500
MIDDLEPORT Ex
celfent cond , 2 BR. bath,
carpeted, paneled, full
basement, carport, FA N
gas heal $13,000 ,
POMEROY - 200 It
frontage lor home or
trailer water available
originally has 2 houses

one

1973 Opel Wagon

1973 GMC lh Ton Pickup

500 E. MAIN ST.

1911 Concora 12x 65 M H 1968
Comma dore 12xS2 M H
1'59 Colonial 10x50 M H

FREE

IS

Auto, 4 cyl eng1ne red tn color Only 39 421 mdes
new Local owner gas saver

Long bed, V 8 auto P S , P B Deluxe two tone pa1nt Local owner,
low mileage

Mobile Homes For Sale

6926

SMALL ENGINES

1973 Pontiac Grand Prix

}3195

OWNER 1971 Monte
carlo 400 v 8 automa1tc
1ransm ISSion P S P 8 a ir
condlttonmg bucket seats
AM radio
stereo tape
player
green with dark
green vinyl top Can be seen
at The GalliPOliS DallY
Tribune 825 Th lrd Ave
before 3 JO p m or call 992
6192 after 4 p m
249 If

down payment and tak.e
over payments f3hone '156

WILKINSON

clean

IS

'4595

Wh1le with while vinyl fop AM &amp; tape P W This
Must see th iS one Pr~ced R1ght

atr Cru1se Control One owner Extra

267 4

12X60 MOBILE HOME small

We serv1ce all saws
and prects1on grind
cham.

'3595

lust '3695

ONE -

1965
1965
1973
1912

sharp wagon We sold thiS one new local owner

1973 Buick Custom LeSabre 4 Dr. KT

FOR: your T1re and 8atterv
needs come to Sears Ttre
Sh op In Tl1e Stiver Bndge
Pll!lZa
ll If

a&amp; S

Auto P S P B , auto a1r AM FM P seals til l wheel ThiS

1974 Buick CentUIY 2 Dr. KT

Beige with vinyl top P S P B

1972 PLYMOUTH Dusler

268 5

446

267

65 FAIRLANE sport coupe
exc cond 446 145 I
267 6

1974 Pontiac Grandville 9 Pass. Wagon

fill wheel new

P S P B, air AM FM&amp; tape Solid black Just like new Local

269 l

l91l - 2 BR: 12xSO
home 446 76\l

266 4

A~fo
owner

engine Good condtlton
.42 000 miles 245 5862

OUR INFlATION
--------------FIGHTING
SPECIAL

even ing lll

VERY nice J or nome range
and
refrlg
carpeting
throughout , S200 mo plus
deposit Calli k.e Wiseman at
The Wls.eman Agency 446

1969 PLYMO UTH Furv 3 l8l

good cond 446 9352

f~res

•

269 J

STAR( RAFT Fa ll Slle -

266 6

V 8 auto P S, P B super custom cab Radial
G M C trade m

1968 PONTIAC 428 engtne '1
door hardlop excellent
cond F'h 446 1550 after 5

197~

266 l
TRAILER spoce Upper Rf 1
Coil 446 0002

1974 Clev. lh Ton Pickup

4

266 6

s. lbinl

FVRN ap 1 3 rms and bath
dep req 602 Fourtt, Ave
446 2796

ph lll lSSO
6928

1909 DODGE Swmger 3AO
spd 245 5603

BANK FINANCING
PH 446 7572

119 lip

used 1 ._ - - - - - - - - - - - - 1964 10 10 JOHN Deere dozer
11 I• lip
WinCh
6 ft 1 a blade
cano py reversible new
1975 KAWASAK 1 motorcvcle
paint and eng lne good
400 cc luggage rack ufety
condtllon, SA 500 Pnone

bars end wlndshiNd Sl 200
Phone 991 l"l

BEAU TI FY your home Wllh
Perma Stone New homes
as well as remodelmg work
Expert mstallatlon
Free
est1mates Phone 742 2409
10 3i 26tc

1975 LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ................. ..S4395

270 3

MODERN 3 br Ranch Close to
town w w car pet bui ll In
k1tchen garage S175 per
mo plus securtly dep .1146

Coins, Curtency
and Supplies

2628 l

9 l3

good condtt1on $175 Phone

ONE S1Qnet clarinet
year Call 992 2924

&amp; D fREE Trimming 20
years exper1en ce Insured
tree es!lmates C:all 992 3057
or ( 11 667 3041 Coolvtlle
10 ISifc

446

254l

Call 446 3646

--------------lfc

only
used
3
If
Interested

11141 985 lS94

mo ..

vinyl hardtop
after 5 pm

condlfloned full equipment

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

3291fc ,

D

4 dr Sedan Driver's -Training Cor Very low mileage a1r

-------------UNFURNISHED 6 room

Syracuse, Ohto

4-10 1

1975 Ford Gran Tllino ....................$AVE

270 l

0151

1961 BUI'C"K Skylark A C

Let Sm1th Nelson Motors feed your fam1ly Turkey on Than ksg1vmg Day Buy any
used car pnced 9ver $500 00 &amp; we w11t g1ve you a Turkey for your Thanksgtvmg
Day Dtnner Thts offer good lhru Nov. 30, 1975. Plus you can get some of the
cleanest Used Cars tn Town.

P B power windows 5 000
mil es A .speed Ph 446 3132
270 l

power E)(ecutlve Car

------

38RI;;~e-;;iEvergre~n

quickly in fastest turnover and
largest volume.
Sta Wagon like new pastel blue finish w1fh matching In
lerlor Landau Luxury Group Air conditioning and full

bath burn
or unturn •
pasture and !a wn can be
rented tf des tred ~orlland
area call614843 2256atter6

Pm

l974 CORVETTE T lop PS

1975 Ford LTD CountiY Squire ........ $AVE

210 6

COuNTRYho~-;~-;;;:--;jth

LARRY LAVENDER
Ph 992 3993

602 Fourth Ave

=~~~lityGreatest Values
- with Best Service. Priced to sell

BEDRM
home
lust
finished remodeling Sal-:m
St R:u!land Phone 742 'n9.9
after 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutchison

---.------------

Phone 949 2803

dept req
446 2796

Blown
lnsulalton Serv1ces
Blown mto Walls &amp; Att1cs'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp;DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFFITT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

Butld an all sleet bu ld~ng at
Pole Barn pr 1ces" Golden
Gtant All Steel Build 1ngs
Rt A Bo x 146 waverlv
Oh to Phone 9&lt;17 2296
7 24 tic

S EWING
MACH- INE
Repa 1r s servtee all makes
997. 2284 Th e F.p bric Shop
Por;n eroy Au thor~ zed's nger
&lt;, ates and Servtce
We
sharpen Sqssors

270 I

-fU- RN
-----------apt 3 rms and bath

FREE ESTIMATES

11121mo

5 ROOM house for sale m
Ru t land Phone 742 280 1 or
992 5195
11 12 61c
3

446 1052 4460851

WOU LD YOU BELIEVE?

FOR SALE by Owner Jl,.,
story small frame house tn
Tuppers Platns Ohio on Rt
7 4 bedrm
ilvmg rm
k1lchen bath ul1l1tV room 2
porches Elec
baseboard
heat storm door and wm
dows well tnsulated AP
pro x 2 acre lot S12 SOO
Phone (614) 667 6361
11 16 6tp

985 4186

Five new 3 bedroom
homes Now under con
structlon with carpet
ceramic tile, goroge Iorge
lot Buy now and pick your
colors FHA financing
available Price S21 500
Phone 661 6304

Pomeroy

• FOr Sale

l867

MORLAN
Construction Co.

,

Service

Sills

n'E'ver used SOO Also Seers
Glass lined 30 gallon hot
water htlter new Phone

standard 6 new paint $600

Radlato

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

111 14 3tc

1966 DODGE window von

EXPERIENCED

:. '*" '

housetratler 3 ml from town

.

--- - -:-==-:-

PHONE 9'12 3325
10 Mechanic
Pomeroy, 0
mont~s
RUTLAND
8
rms
, 4 or s
Clll H2 1701
A thought for the day
II 1111&lt; B R s, bath 2 car garage
Scothsh novelist Robert
and garden $12,000
Louts Stevenson said, NOW settmg Fuller Brush POMEROY - 8 Rms, 1'12
baths, hot water heat
Products Phone 992 3410
''Mankind was never so
10 6 lie Basement &amp; large yard
happ1ly Inspired as when it
S20 000
A n;l&lt;.o we l d i ng ma chine
made a cathedral "
157 ACRES - Good fences,
new etec: all accessortes
Improved
pastures, 8 room
Included
Phone '92 l410
For
10 28 lie house, &amp; minerals $60,000
TRAILER LAND - 3 9S
ONE FEMALE roglslered red
acres one troller with
RABBIT dog and ducks
and white beagle pup and 8
$Ole Second septic tank
foo t used camper top Phone
Phone 742 2185
992 27&lt;0
11 12 Btc ' Alf for Only S8500
11 lA 3tc
26 ACRES - Of rolling
-~-----------land Good 6 Rm house,
REG Po11ed Hereford bull!i
'REMINGTON 1.100 eutn , one S veer old two both, barn &amp; other
new 12 or 20 ge 1112 50
yearlings
Excellent
buildings S26 000
t:lf~~t' Mlddl~1 Ohj.R.:.,_
d iSpOStliOn$ Phone 992 5565
MIDDLEPORT
3
10 I l61C or 9911826
bedrooms
dining.
nice
------------11 10 61C
kitchen, gos furnace and
GOOD upr ight pract ice piano , - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - full basement 117,000
Just tuned
reas.onablt BUSH hog 5 fl 3 pi h!lch
TOPPER

llltfc
-----------------.,.-------.,ENCLOSED IUb and Shower

Auto Sales

Business Services

BASS E TT twm bed bedrm
sulle and smgle beds
d ressers and double bedrm
su 1IS Refrigerators and
b lack l!lnd wh1le televiS ion
set
Ph one j614) 667 63'61
I I 16 6tp

__ ___________ _

11161tc

• natlonaiiV advert1sed
non .. arbonated vltllm In C
enriched fruit drink. Is
avalttblt for vending In 12
ot cans IndiV Iduals who
are seriously considering a
business of tt,tlr own
should investigate
an
extraordln~rv opportunity
currently available in this
area
Thl~ rs a secure
buslntSI for those who can
s.pare a few hours each
wttk
Cno
selling)
rtstocklng vendon pieced
on
location
by
our

I iOn rord f
350 Heavy du t y LWB ex
ce llent cond I on CDtl 304
773 SJOS alter 5 p m
11 16 If

111 73 TRUCK

11 ll 31&lt;
fhe Alm8118c
Washer
and
By United Pren ID• ELECTRIC
1 8R tlouse at ''6 Locust St
dryer matched set RCA
Mlddleporl or coli 992 5758 tematlonal
stereCI rad10 Am Fm golf
II ll 61p
cart
bags
and clubs
Today is Sunday, Nov 16,
bowl tng bai t and bag
4
2 bedrm Moblte Home in
the 320th day of 1975 with 45 to
ladder back chairs new
Sy racuse
Lo c ated
on
Phone 949 2135
follow
priva te tot Adults only no
111l lip
pels Phone 16141985 lS04 or
The moon Is approaching
992 ll91
ONE FULL lead gll!ISS door
its full phase
11 1l liC
wi th brass fiflings one
The morning stars are
storm
door
and
one
basement door w ith brl!lss
COUNTRY Mobile HOme Mercury, Venus, Mars and
fttttngs
Real cheap
405
P ark Rf Jl ten mlles north
Spring Ave Pomeroy
of Pomeroy ll~rge lots w1th Saturn
II 1J lie
c oncret e p8tiOS \,l dewatks
The evening star is Jupiter
runne r s and off street
Those born on this date are GOLDEN
and
si lver
pafkmg "Phone 99 2 1419
pheasants and pel!lfowl
12 31 If(' Wider the sign of Scorpio
Robert Lew ts Spring Ave
Famed American black
Pomerov Phone 992 2924
1 RAILER s.pt~~c:e for rent
All
II ll lip
W
C
Handy,
composer
uttlltles Phone 992 5535
9 16 ttc
known as the "Father of the WATER HEATER 52 gallon
like new etectr1c S60 GAS
Blues," was born Nov ,6,
2 BEORM
oouDte wtuc
CLOTHES DRYER used
ull tlllu
paid .
near
1873 American actor Burgess
S40 or best ofter Phone 992
Pomeroy Phone 992 7017 or
2082
Meredith also was born on
992 1!66
1113 lie
1l 12 ~lp this date in 1909.
CUSTOM handmade and
On thiS day in history
FREE RENT AT VILLA"E
car \led leather bells purses
In 1007, Oklahoma became
MANOR
IN
MID
dQg collars hair cllps 1 brass
DLEPORTI We are 50 sure the 46th state admitted to !he
ha1r clips Special buckle!.
that you will rove our epart
ideal g ifts Call 9927097
ments lhat we give you two Uruon
II 1l lip
weeks RENT FR:EE Just
In
1933,
the
United
States
pay vour secvrltv deposit
SHOTGUNS AMMO AND
diplomatic
and stay six. months and the established
POWDER Shotgun 410 16
f1rs1 2 weeks is free You wtll relations with the Sov1et
and 12 gauge, 529 up pump
enlov monthlY teases all
guns 20 and 12 gauge SS9
Uruon
l!'lect ric living cerpetlng
automellcs 12 gauqe $99
range end refrigerator free
H10h power sheels S3 83
In 1966, Dr Sam Sheppard
trash pickup cabl~;~ TV
IMR powder S4 98 black
( opllonal&gt; and taundrv was acquitted In a second
powder S2 90 deer slugs
fa ci lities Convenient to trial for the 1954 slaying of his
S1 29
Match and deer
shopping on Third and Milt
barrels for S1100 and S870
10
Middleport
VILLAGE wife He had served more
F tfe s Middleport Phone
MANOR Is yours tor one than 10 years on the original
992 7494
bedroom
apartments
II ll 61&lt;
starling al $10.tl monthiV plus convictton
etec we pay tor everything
In 1968, the Soviet Union
e ts e See the Manager at
t:tAY for sate Phone 843 2.Jdl
orbited
a IHon scientific
R1verslde Ap~rtments or
11 11 61c
calf m J27l This offer will space satellite
- - -----------...,..
end soon so move In now
lU)d save ssss

For Rent

H &amp; N day old or start ed
Leghorn pu l lets Both floor
or cage grown ava tl able
Pou l try
houstng
and
1969 CHEVY Super Sport 4
BUIOITJallon
Modern
speed S900 Phone 74'1 3076
Poultry
399 W
M~ .
11 13 Jtc
Pomeroy 992 2164
-"11 16 ltc
197 1 DODGE Pi ck up 1, ton
v 8 engine automatic good r. fREFJL.ACE Wood Free
runn1ng co ndllton 1800
delivery and stacking Ca ll
Phone 16141 247 2161
(304) 675 1820 after 6 p m
11 1481p
11 16 lip

lllltfc

2lll Roger WamSley

Colltge

1966COMET 6CVI automaltC
Phone 992 7885 between 12
noon and fl p m No ph one
ca ll s on Sunday
I I 1J 61 c

Phone ll041 882 lll6 or 71l
S611

Will pay 26&lt; tor dimes 60c

wrltt

V 8 au tomatt c transmtSSIOn
easy on gas S300 Phone '92
3746
II t331c

- ----~--=---

LARGE busln~::t:t uu11dlno In
Muon large glass fl"ont
drive In rear doors wilt ren t
1 , or al 1of ground floor , 3200
square feet good local ion

196• and older

sptCIIIIIIS

1964 CHEVY NOVA 2 dr 28l

3 25

WA~

U S COINS

FORD PiCkUp
' IOn 6
cy l standar d runs good
S300 Phone 992 3746
II 13 Jlc

Phon e 992 l87A

ttc
-------------SKA TE A
ROLLER --------------RINK ANNOUNCES BUS

L

196~

11 16 6tc

Add it ional 2Sc Charge per
Adverlls.ement
TRA ILER and lo t In Rutland
OFFICE HOURS
Will consider l&amp;nd contr8cf
I 30 1 m to s 00 p m
Phone 992 3960
Dlldy 8 30 a m IO 12 00 Noon
II II 61c
Saturday

For Sal'e

Auto Sales

Pels

REGuLATioNs

:
•
•
•
:
•

~

Wanted

FREE THA,NKSGIVING TURKEY

1969 LE SABRE BUICk
all
power
48 000 mdes
1\ l
446 i61 5 or 446 1143
cond
264 If

THIRTY.fiVE
WEST
Now Available for Rent, 2
Bdnn Townhouse Apts
- Private entry and polio
- Wall to wall carpel
- Ringe •nd Refrlger~tor
- Utilities pal~ . ucept
electric
pool
- Swimming
prtvlteves
C.l1446 98Uor446 3746

For Rent

Quail Creek
Mobile Community
Lots For Rent
Lot s tor r ent Rent Inc ludes
s~ wag e
trash
cottcctton T V hook Up 2
acre re( re atlon area
Rodney Cora Rd
Rodney Ohio
Ph Hl SOl t Gallipolis area
992 7717 Pom~roy area

w~ter

FURN A PT all utilit ies PCI
Adults on ly "'6 952 3

219

If

-----.--'-------t;-

l

�31-The SWlday Times. Sentinel, Sunday ,Nov. Iii, 1975

Fo";F;;;}i;;ults Use The Sunday ·Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In

·For Sale

MIIIIOIJ

Real Estate For S.

For Sale
'New GMC
T r ue~ Headquarters
19 70 Da Tsun Pickup Tr uc k
1972 I T. C h ~ v . Cab .h
Chassis
1971 2 1 " T GM C Ca b and
Cha ssis
1968
T . GM C Pic kup
1971 GMC SUburb an
1973 ' 1 T . GM C Pickup
1970 Ford Pickup
1970 M onle Carl o
1969 F ord Eco noline Van
1974 1 1 T . GMC Pickup

Rad ios Sa ies &amp;
SCP.IICC New B. Used CB's
pol ice monitors , an tennas
e tc Bob ' s Citize n · aa n d
Rad io Equ,p .. Geo r ge s
Cr eek Rd .. Gallipol is, Oh io
~46 45 17.
.,
212 If

TWO

WAY

1,

15" GOO DY EA R Ra ll y
GT tires , .1 15" Cr agar' SS
Whee l s. for Chevy . Ph . 446
0122 a fl er 5

SOMERS G.M . C.

161 .4

Trucks , fp c.
Ill Pine St.
446 -2532

away one year ag o, Nov . 16 ,
197 .. .

A pre c ious one fro m us

is

gone.
·
A vo ic e we lov e I&amp; still ed ,

A plac e Is v ac ant in our hom e,
Which ca n ne v er be fil led .
No one knows th e sil ent hea rt
aches . On l y those wh o ha ve
tost can te ll ,
Of the gr ief !hat com e$ in

silence ,

To som e you ar e fo rgott en ,

To others lust part of th e pa st,
But to us who lov ed and lost
you .
Your memory w ill alw eys
last.
The pa i n ot parnn g witho ut

__ h

_ _,

__ h_h

_ _ _ _

----------.--

210·6

270 I

W IL L do babys itting in mv

home . Coli 388 ·851 1.

27 0·6

Pets
BOARD ING AKC WeSlV and
pug pups . Ci r c le L. Kenn el.

RI , 141. 446 ·4824.
269 3

CA R PE TS an d li f e loo can be
beaut iful If yo u use Blu e
L ustre .
R e nt
ele ctri c
GE NE PLANTS&amp; SON
shampooer
Sl . Central PLUMB IN G - Heat ing - Air
Supp ly.
Co nd ition ing . JOO J; oU rth
A ve . Ph , 446-1637 .
·
210 ·6
A8 ·1f

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

DEWI TT ' S PLUMBING
AN D HEATIN'G
Ro ut e 160 al Evergreen
Phone 446.27lS
187 -11

Semces Offered
L

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAV .E
MANY USES ·

&amp; A Appliance Service
washers , dryers , ra ng es.
r ef. 300 Fourth Ave .. ~ear .
446 -7398.

266·26

20~

. l"'lrU:: RIDGt: \.ULLII:~
~KC Reg . Collies , sable ahd

white . 16 141 256·1267 .

AND HEATING

Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Ph one U6-3888 or 446 ·4477
165 -11

'

Kl. M Construction
Company
.LL Types of Cons truction .
free es timates . AA6 -9202 .

6 fOr ·HOO

249 ·1f

283·11

--------.------BOB BI'S POOd l e Bout iqu e.·

Gallipolis
--------------- Daily Tribune

B A CK HOE and dozer wo rk .

Septic tan ks and l each beds,
3M 8865 or 388 8230.

Professional grooming by
appointment. Ph . A ~ 6 - 1944 .

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES

p Kenn els, 388 -827 4. ~ t.
554, 1, mi. ea st of Port e r .

5535.
264 56
GERM A N Shepherd pup s .
Call 388-8237 ev eni ngs.
267 ·6

" PERSONA L ITY Plus "

-

Pets Trlmbles AKC Coll ie!.

sable ana lr i·colors , 614 ~ 46 ·
&lt;4 49, Gallipolis, Oh io 45631 .
_,_
267 II

___________ _

JUANIT A'S Poodl e Pa r lor ,
exper ienced g r oom ing . wi ll
do all br ee ds. Ph . 446 -7878 .

P fi ~ Q\JJ\L E

Et ec t r'ic
Por
tab l e E l &lt;'ctrt c Alt er n ator
ilnd PowN P l ant s. Ph . dd6
17 16
126 II

ALL

TY'l' E·s · ot

buildlnl

mat er ia ls , b to'tk , brick
se w er pi p es , window"&gt;
lintels, etc . Cl aude Win ter s
RIa Grande , 0 . Phon e 245

5121 ofler 5.

123·11

1973 K . w . Con v enta l , Sl eeper .
T I'Jn d e m . 35 0 c ummi n s
engine , 13 spee d trans ..
225,000 mil es . Ja ke brakes .

25 1 1 969 Pe l e rblll C .O. E .. 335
Cu mmin s Eng .. 13 speed

II

For Sale
WIND CHO KE 1400 V.R . 12
oa . S135 Rem . B. o L
varm l nter 25 .06 SIH .

446.4163,

Ph .
267 6

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

l A LUMINUM awnings , on e
'22 1 7 l( 31 ".', 2 - 71 1 )( 3 1 -. .
Pr iced to se ll. A.t 6-U57 .
269 3

CHIMNEY Blocks . Gall ipoli s
Block co . -446 ·2783 .

23\ .1f

Country se tting l
bed r &lt;Joms , brick and
wood
sid i ng ,
larg e
modern kllchen with lots
of cab inets, garage , 2
• ·veat·s old on a n ice lot in
School District.

ICE 3 BEDROOM

II~~·;;~:~:~~~ ~

largekitchen
livi ng
I
dbl. S·
dishwasher, alum .
, patio, hardwoo,4
and large level lot.
iful home and
ight on Slale

I

H lg hw,ov 554 .
BY FARMS

s

acres or more . Home
bu i ldin g siles , leve l land,
approx . .4 mile off Rt . 35,
rural wate r , ca ll for
detai ls .

rm . frame hom e, llh baths,
new carpet over H .W. ,
copper plumbing , ramlly
rm . panel, metal storllge

101

10ACRE56 ROOMS

80'x250' .

"Go odies "
include air
cond ., drapes &amp;. stainless
steel stove. tf you want
quality , location &amp; price
this is the one . Reduced .
.PINE--ST. - 5 rm ...brlck &amp; '
frame with partial base .
This property is In good
repair &amp; cheap at Sl 2,000 .
2ND AVE. - 2 story, 6. rm .
o ld er home , tile block .
storage bld 'g . &amp; garage .
Locllted on a bi g lot .
Baroatn at S17,000.

CENTENARY -

Nic e 4

rm . house with ba1h , base .,
attic storage, new carpel.
F .A . fur . and F . B. Ideal for
r etired
couple
or
newlyweds . Asking $17,000.

GEORGES

CR .

RD:

-

Good 6 rm . house all
carpet, plenty kit . cab .• 2
baths , F .A . Na t. gas heat,
storage bldg . and big Jot .
Price 525,500.
.

GARFIELD

Nice remodeled home, d
bedroom s, L ·Sh ap ed sun
deck, 2 se ts patio doors.
car pet i ng , nice
and
modern ba th, modern
k itc hen , bui ll -in cabinets.
Ap prox . 5 miles from Rio
Grande , Nice hom e and
some l and to expand .

12ACRES
11 acres tillable with a
1973 - 12' x 55' mobile
hom e. Air cond itioner ,
wash er and dryer goes .
Rural waler system .
Frontage on State Route
south of ~ lo Grande .
for only S8 , 100.

WHAT A BUY

I

rooms , Iaroe to t . with
of garden spece .
. Tot al p rice S6,500 .

OR4BEDROOM
rooms arid bath , fu ll
sement.
garbage
citylevel
water
•~~~~~::~~ ' · nice
lo t,,

space , porch . A
and nice home .
r lc ed to sell. Only

1 1 ~ , 900 .

LOTS

have about 5A lots ,

•"om• restrict ed , some
Ce ll .

VICTORY RD. - 45 A. wllh

!ACRES

'73 model Mobile home ; big
barn , tob . base and ·g ood
fences . Only $13,500.

AVE . ,

I
rm s ., bath and bsae .:
Alum . siding , storm drs.
and windows , good ga s,
F .P., . turn. good roof . good
hot w . lank . Lot AO' xl60' ;
River view . Only $16,000 .

GREEN A. - 1 yr . old, l bd .
rm . frame home, Thermo
Win ., plenty storage, cop .
plumbing ; atL gar. elec .
fur . &amp; all carpet . Ttti s Is a
quality build home . Owner
transferred and hu priced
ttt ls
home
below
replacement cost . Asking

oom House, porch ,
•P""''' rural waler , built in ets , db l. sink
in K vger Creek
Ad dison
tor quick

4 BEDROOM 2 LOTS
2 BOx ISO ' lots just
Qutside of c ity limits on
R t. 141. with a 6 room
hous e. basement and
garage . Nice house , nice
locat ion and on sale tor
only $19,900. See now .
Nat. ou forced air fur -

lOIS -

Mobile home lots . We got
them . we build your: plans
or ours .
ACREAGE - We go t it . All
price
ranges ,
good
loca l ions .

NEAR MINES
14 Acres leve l land . Creek .
3 BR mobile hom e. 2 BR
block home . Lot ot frontage
on Kf!ystone Roa d. You can
make money here . See
toda y :

.VINTON
Business
oPPort't.m ity . Price of a
ho(n e witt buy ttlls good
business including real
es tate and equipm ent. Call
Jay Sheppard for details.
Will fin an ce , 7 rm . house
wi Th bath in ci!y limit s .
Ca rp or t, 2 por ches, large
tot . Call 446 -4127 .
Brick Ra'n ch home, 3 BR .
bath , kit chen wll h har d ·
wood ca bln el s , r ange,
l arger
LR,
ca rp e ted ,
paneled and well insu l ated,
garage. front por ch , pat io
door . Spa c ious' l' 1 acres tot
on Mitchel l Road . Ca ll
about tow , low price .
4 BR Ranch Home. on Rt .
32 5, 15' x 3~' LR. with
fireplace and hardwood
floors , kltchen -dinlng
room , bath , utility ro o!"' .
F .A. furn ace, well 1n ·
sulate d,
so f t
water ,
beautiful l evel 1' 1 acres.
with lar ge garage and
· grape
arbor ,
f en ced .
Ano l ehr Rancho value ..

10 Acres old , old house,
spr ing and lo b. ba se , 1' 1
mllesoffRI . 7from Bladen ,
$3,500 . Wi ll fin ance .
Rancho also has upper
bracket
executive
properties . acreage , ~ifh
few close to tow n ; R1ver
front pr oper ti es , execut ive
houses wit h acreage and
1rees .

Bl· LEVEL
T hr ee b edrooms , bath ,
ki tch en
dl ntno room ,
li v ing room and deck on
upper level. Garage , utility
are&amp; and sp ac e for your
rec . room or 4th bedroom
on lower l evel . Less than 2
yu r s old . This is another
Rancho vll lue pr lcecj below
market.
Ce~l l
l or liP ·
polntment or Information .
Brokers · Builders
Auctioneers

RANCHO COMPANY
Addison 367-0300
Gallipolis 446·0001

tr an s .• ta ndem
.
1969 D iam ond Ruo Conv ., no
sleeper , tand em . 335 eng ine,
13 speed .
1967 F ruc naut van , AO ', 12 ' 6" ,
slid i ng tandem .
1968 F ru ehnuf F lat 40 ', 4 1 sid es
and tarp , sling ing tan dem .
1975 Brown Flat , 30' , slinging
tande m , 4' si des · and tarp .
Don M ye rs , 1126 Shanahan
Rd .. De law ar e, Ohi o 45015.

.: ON STRUCTION
Outdoor
Ev ents. Ph . Galli pol is 446
.H87 . Russe ll's Plumbing ~
H eating .
190 tl
water

DALE
Sanders
Delivery . 256 -6667 .

ALBERT

211 ·If

GRACIOUS, SPACIOUS
LIVING

Your fami l y will "live it
up " in thiS lovely 3 BR , 11'2
. bath , bu i ll -in kitc hen , DR .
' eautuul HW floor s, full
... sm ., gas fu r . and cen tral
.air , 2 patios and well lan dscaped lawn .

LOTS -

LOTS

Just 4 mi . from Gall ipoli s
-· 2 good tot s priced SLI:IOO
and 52,200 . Also , one good
lot on 160, 2 m I. from
hosp ital , n ,aoo.

2ACRES

12' x 65 ' 73 M . mobile
home . tnclud tng an tur .

S\1 ,200.

s

93.ACRES

room home , Iaro e barn
and
out build ing s ,
machiner y , B head cat tl e.
locat ed
10
m i. from
Gallipolis , $41.000.

IN TOWN
Walk tO SChOOl from thiS 2
story hom e , 3 BR , gas f ur ,
basement , porche s, roam
for gar.aen . Ca ll todav .

C· O·Z·Y
Is lhe word for th is one
tto or plan - 3 B R home
w i th comfor table kitchen
and dining area, pl enty
stora ge and carport on a
nice corner lot . Pr iced for a
sure sale .

ATTN' HOME ~UYERS
OVER 500 Home pions lo
choose from, your lot or
ours . We save you lime and
money , up to S2,000 taK
credit . Rancho Co . ,..Addison ,
367 -0300 . Ga ll ipO ii!r, d.46·0001 .
199 -lf

Water Dellvefy Serv lcr
Patriot star , Gallipolis

Ph . 379.2133

243 ·1f

pool land scaping, Stone ,

·-

8274 ,

275 GAL fu el oil ta nk , SJS . Ph .
J46 42 19

251 ·\f

268 3

P f\1-&gt;QlJA LE E tec'trica l 'a,
Ins ula t ing 103 Cedar St .,
Ga l lipolis . Ph . H6 2716 .

7 YR old gen tl e g a ited mare.
2 &lt;~5 9484 .

126·11

268·3

Water

Delivery . .fA6·3962, ··6 ·•162
any lime.

THANKSGIVING SALE

2••·11

'

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

ROO F ING . aluminum sidi11g ,
tre~ estlmates .•Ca ll 'l56 ·6364 .

256·11

Free Turkey WHh Purchase
Of any Outdoors man top or Moby top

or Jacobson Garden Tractor. Offer
good till Thanksgiving Day.

VALLEY AUTO SALES
5 miles west of Gallipolis on Rt. 35.
Open Ba.m.- 6 p.m.-6 Davs a Week

service . reasonable ratts .
We Invite vou to visit our
modern shop located o.t
Mason Co. Fairground (T&amp;T
area) or (Ill for· frte
estimates , Mowrey' s'
Upholstering,
Po nl
Pleuant, 475 - .flS~ .

219 ·1f
;;---:::--.-;-~--;'!;r.:=~---...- .

CUSTOM REMODELING , 20
veers experience . 388 ·8308.
New dry wall ce-Iling wllh
swirl or texture designs :
Other dry wall, repa ir , vinyl
wallpapering , new battts ,
new kitchens. Anything In
remodeling or repair .

.

'

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

1\.lf

BO RDER Garag e IJ u i lct crs .
rr ee eslimates . 15 6 6-11? .
ltl9 If

BORDER'S

GARAGE

poor

Serv!te . Commercial · a nd
residential spec ializing In
operators Local . ?56 641? . ·

189 ·1'

THE TDP SHOP
Custom Built Roof Trusses,
Fo rmi ca Counlertops
Ca binets, Coolville , Ohio,

a.

667 .3186 ..
C OUGHENOUR

256·11

-·--·---------.---Cut R•te
Roollnt and Sfdlnt

Buildup, vin ylf shtngln, alum
steel , chain Ink tenet . Free

eslimailon, 1011 frte . Call
381 ·1S'I.

----------1.....----

KNOm

School of

Auctlone~rlng
by 1no unlo
&amp;Hrd of School
and
Collogo
Registrltlon
11
Columb ... Olllo.
· Registrltion No, 71 -1202UH
Phone Gallipolis

, ... mi·

BEAVER ln

suran ce Co . hu offered
ser vices ror Fire Insur ance
coverage In Gallia Count~
for almost a cen tury .
F arms, homes and personal
proP.erty coverages are
~va!l~ble to meet individual
needs . Contact Emmetl
Church, your neighbor and
agent .

210·6

ALUMINUM SIOING

For Lease
A PT . for lease, 328 11 S~cond
Ave .• overlook ing city park,
2 br ., llv i ~g rm ., kllchrn
with r ang e, r etr lo .. an d
dining area . bath . $135 per
month , yen's lease. Call
P J 's , d-46 -1819 or .446 ·4.425 .

D. ln.

SWAIN

AUtnOft SERVICE
Mv .. nuth Sw•lfl , ,., .. 1..1 .
c.,-nor Thir~ &amp; Olive

ADELAIDE DRIVE , 3 BR

NEAR VINTON HUNTINGTON
19.59' A .,
DOOU

* WINOOWI
FUE ES~Al'ES

PAUL WAllER
can :11&lt;1-om

CAMPSITES ON RAC ·
COON CREEK , locofed at
Cora ,8rices !tart at S1,500.

LINC LN PIKE -

ranch , gas heat r comple te
kitchen , 523,000.

20 A.

TWP.

mobile

home ,

S\5,000 .
PATRIOT - 211 A., good
home , 2 ponds, UO,OOO .

, ,, , , , , , , , ,;, , , , , ,,, , ,,.',.', '.,.,.',''.,.''.,'.,'.,''.,. ,'. , '.,'.,...,.•.•.•,•,•.•.•,•,•.·.·.· . ·. · .· .·.~. . .4.1.r~
...~~er Plylnouth
.

Two bedroom home on
Seco nd Ave nu e, large
tlnished room up sta i rs ,
garage , ·ba sement , central
air condi Ho n ing ; three
room w i lh balh rental on
rear of property , priced
$35 ,000, sho wn by BP ·
pointmen t ontv .
Four room house , located
w est of drive-inn th eater on
Route 7, carpeted, garage,
~ne mobil e hom e hook .up .
Pr.i ced $16,000 .

66 A.

7 acre tract , Harrison
Twp ., 20 feet r to hi ·Of ·way
of Raccoon Creek . $3,000.

JO acre farm . two story ,
thr ee bedroom
home ,
carpeted,
ba th , _ two
firep la ces, moder n kit che n , dishwasher , range
with hOOd, AddiSOn School
distr ic t, pr iced 540.000.

lot s with
offer .

446-3434

1972 FORD

!:
..,
:

TOD~Y AT GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH .
3-1976 CHRYSLER
CORDOBAS IN STOCK
.
I-SILVER WITH 60-40 CLOTH BENCH SEAT
I-WHITE WITH BURGUNDY LEATHER BUCKET SEATS
I- BLACK Willi BURGANDY 60-40 CLOTll BENCH SEAT (Full Power)

USED CAR SPECIALS

!

i
!
!
i

:**********************************************'
Re~l

Real Estate For Sale

Estate for Sale

'

~ROO M

One lot left on
Hollow , priced

house and bath, IIi the
cily , 446 7442 .

Ke mper
to se ll

268·3

---··---- - --

$1 ,825.
Cill Wood Insurance &amp;
Rtal Esltll 446-TOU

HOU SE J br ., on 2 acr es or
land , fir eplac e i n L R , bath ,
oul bl cl g .. good wat er . Call

evenings, Runell Wood

446-4611

1&lt; en More an 446·0971

388 8879 ,

267 · 12

437'1• Second Ave ."
(across from poi t offfco l
Gallipolis, Ohio
Now l1kl119 listings In this

; area.

Evening

hours for

, your convenience. Calllhli
' number 1nytlme.

446-7,00
Bob Lane,
Branch Manager

Oscar Baird
John Fuller
Oouq Wethcrholf
452 Second Av e.
Ga ltipoti s, o.

NEW

LISTING -

REAL ESTATE LOANS
VA - No Down Paym ent M ost Vet eran s s il l qua l if y,
chec k to be s.ur e, F HA - As
tow as 3 pet. down Ever ybody qualifies , J O
ye ar terms . Refinan c ing
al so ava ilab le , Flrsr Mort gage Sendce s, 77 E . SI Ble,
A thens . Ph . 592·3052 for
Informal ion .

251·11

-.. -----.!...-----..:...-

'

270.2

-·-·-------------

balh lo co led In cllv . Priced
at 13.000 .

THE ALL NEW DODGE

BUY ON E OR BUY ALL '
THREE .AND SAVE .

LOVELY OLDER HOME
- Take a look at I his l ov el y
2 story hom e on a · ni ce .
shaded to t , tJas 4 bedroom s,
l 11 baths . new furnac e,
new root , needs som e work
Inside , on l y $16,500 .
JUST Llt&lt; E NEW - Thi s 3
b edroom home has been
comp tele lv r edo ne, n ew
cabinets in kitch en , new
ba throom , n ew carpet ,
county wat er , owner wants
place sold . wi ll trade or sell
with lo w down paym ent .

GOOD OLDER HOME - ,
Has 3 bedrooms, bath , new
furnace , we ll insulaled ,
county wat er , garag e, nit: e
leve l l ot . owne·r wilt help
finan ce. Pr ice S14 ,400 .
21? ACRES - Lcivel yran ch
wilh brlck front , all elec tr ic . 3 bedroom s, n ice bath ,
large famil y room with
fireplace . large garage .
Locat ed close lo Ch eshire .
Price S3 L 600 .
91 ACRES He avily
wood ed hill and beautiful
clear ed boll om . Good road
frontage , s t ream , g ood
farm ing or developm ent
potential .

112 ACR ES -

We have
buyers for al l lypes or
properlies . If vou wa nt
action on vo ur real esl cJie,
en., tact us . We g e l res ulls

VERY NICE 3 BR house In
K ana u ga , walt to wall
carp eting , kit chen includes
ref ., bullt.in n e w el ec .
ranoe . nlltural F .A. ga s
furnace . carport , fen ced in
yard .
Metal
sto r age
building . City schools . Pric e
reduced to sel l 516,700 . Call
dd6-2539 .

269 12
r e mOdel ed . 2

br .• home , bath , uti!. rm .,
bU (If .fn k itc h en , cu r tains
an d
drapes
included .
una ttact"\ed garage , in tarQ e

101 . 11 7.500 . 388 .877 2.

-

266·12
- - -~--- - · --------

AS~EN

power
sharp

mach ine . Locally owned .
Factory air cond .

$1095
1973 MUSTANG
•

Mach I. road wheels,

The Estate of Mrs. Samuel L.. Boanrd
Loeiition: 92 Court Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
DATE: November 22, 1975
TIME: 10:00 A.M.
The Sale Consists of the Following :
Plano. living room suite; chest of drawers,
Zenith television, eiectrlc stove, breakfast
set and chairs. Hotpolnt refrigerator, radio,
pots and pans, .sweeper' •. electric adding
machine. silverware.
ANTIQUES
China cabinet with round glass {perfect
condition), round table and four chairs, 3
clocks, chest of drawers, 4 rocking chairs
(perfect condition&gt;. 2 hall trees, secretary
{perfect condition). 2 mirrors. 4 end tables,
A candle holders, 2 dressers. 2 complete
bedroom sultes1drop-leaf table, cedar chest
{perfect condition), oil lamp, bookcase,
sewing machine (Jreadle), 4 straight chairs,
cane bottom (perfect condition), large
trunk. Iron beds, old pictures and frames, 8
lamps. electric {very old), dishes, books,
cupboard, plates. 1955 Ford (good con . dillon). 26,000 actual miles . Other Items too
numerous to mention.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This Is a good,
clean sale.
· J. A. French, Auctioneer
Ham lin King, AHorney for Estate

1971 BUICK
Sky lark , 4 door sedan, V-8,

Air, 23,587 miles, AM·

power steering , a ut o .,
r ad io, a ll viny l interior .
They don't come any nicer ..

FM-stereo, sharp.

CHRYSI.ER·PLYMOUTH·
DODGE

" Localed at lhe Fool of lhe
Silver &amp; Shadle Bri dg es",
675.5170

c.

•

s old new S5500. Nice.

2 Or. Hdlp ., ai r co nd ..
15,137 miles, 6 cyl., v iny l
top . Clean .

Aufo., P . stee ring , 34,121
miles. Check this .
·

Air, red, black v inyl lop,
lot of c la ss here .

972 Chrysler
Newport
2 Dr. HT
a

1972 Volks

Conv.
4

Speed, exceptionally

nice. Gas Saver .

Air,

lot

44, 218

m ile s ,

$1997 Tf 97

The WISEMAN
Agency
REALTOR

BANK FINANCING

Off. 446-3643
38 1l ACRE FARM - IOac .
2B' '· wood e d
l i lla bt e ,
pa st Ur e Barn , several oul
bu ild ings. pol e barn under
con sl r uc tion . n ew par t of
house in clu d es a beaulifu l
kitc hen . blll h, ul il ity ro om
and 2 bedrooms . Olde r
section In cl. 3 be cfr oom s
and d i n i n g , a ll new I y
c arpet ed . New fu r na ce ,
Ci ty Sch . D is t ., good ne igh
bol'hood . Best buy in Gall ia
Co. r ig hT now .

Sunday Slt-.P•rs Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

NEW HOME · 8 ACRES -

Be au li fu l new l arge 3
bedroom hom e in a pic l ur e
book sett ing on B ac. of
r ollin g, pan iallv wooded
land w i th a far m . The
no me 1Mc 1udes a w1 1e
ap pr ov ed kllchen , 11J
ba ths , l arg e fam ily room ,
d i ning room . l ull bas em ent
pl us 2 car garage Car
p et i ng th ro ugh out and
cent r a l a i r . Love l y co untry
selling near Rio Grande .

NEW

Fl NAL CLOSE-OUT ON 1975
PLYMOUTH-VALIANTS, DUSTERS,
SCAMPS, DODGE DART SPORT,
DODGE DART SWINGERS.

3

- own er v ery anxi ous to
sell thi s near ly new 3
bedroom home . Ov er ldOO
sq. tt . of l i v ing spac e, ra ng e
and r etr ig . b uil t.i n , 7 ba ths .
13 mil es from to wn .

J . MIChUl Ntii446·11Dl
Sam Neoi446-U SI

v ery ni ce 3 bedroom b i ·
level. huge kitc hen , d in in g
ar ea . 2 wo od . burn i ng
fir eplac es , lar g e famil y
room . 21 ' balhs. flal lo t on
U.S. 35 c lose to hospi ta l.
L Ook and m ake ott er .
118,500 .00 BUYS Tt;tiS n lce
3 bedroom hom e on a large
doubl e lo t on Chatham .
N ic e
kll c h en·,
own er
moving oul o f !lte te.

PUBLIC SALE
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER22, 197s-10:30

A.M.

ALL EQUIPPED WITH SIX CYLINDER ENGINES, POWER
S~EERING, AUTOMATIC, VINYL ROOF, WHITE SIDEWALL

TIRES, RADIO, WHEEL COVERS.

NEW CARS- FULL 12 MONTH
FACTORY WARRANTY

1 • SCAMP

1 · SWINGER

2 · DUSTERS

2 ·.DART SPORTS

OWNER TRANSFiRRED

To settle the estate of Ch1rlle Campbell,
deceased.

- And has already mov ed
from th is very n ice 3
bectroom hom e located on
large Spr ing Vall ey tot .
In clu des huge famil y room
&amp; kitchen , comb ln a l i o n ·
with W 8 firepl ace , 11,
ba ths,
full
d ivided
bas emen I. Ready fo r you to
mov e in to .

Location: From GaillpGIIs roliow Route 7
South approxill'!alely II miles. Turn lett on
the Hannan True Road and go 2 miles.. .
The rollowi119 will be offered:
'

•'
I

NEW COMPACT - Dodge introduces an all-new compact car line for 1976.
Called the Dodge Aspen - the new car is available as a two-door coupe, a fourdoor sedan and a four-door wagon. The coupe Is built on a 108.5 inch wheelbase,
while the s~dan and wagon have a wheelbase of. 112.5, The Aspen models are
available in standa rd, high and premium trim levels and provide the motorist with
ride qualities superior to previous Dodge compacts. Engine choices are a 225 cubic
inch slant six, 318 V-8 and 360 cubic inch V-8 with two barrel carburetion.

DODGE
50 STATE STREET

,GAUIPOLIS,

JUST LISTED
LARGE OLDER HOME in 1ow n . Can be used as 1
fam i l y res id ence . 2 fa m i ly
r ental. or comm er cia l . 11
ro oms , inc lude 2 ki tchens ,
p lus f ull bJ se m ent. Th is
house ts In v er y good
con di tion on a large to I Wi tl"1
garag e. Well locate d in
comm er c ia l zon e, next to
Odell Lumb er ,
NEW LISTING -~ ·own er
into th e Army and m ust se ll
thi s 3 yr . old , 3 be"dro om
ranch , In clu des a ni ce
kitchen , full t:la semen t an d
~ car gar ag e. Nal , gas
lurna ce. c ity wat er .
·

we need llstlnh. ca ll the
Wiseman Agency. 446-lUl .
Galli a Co.' s Large st R cal
e stare sates Agency
Office 446 -3643
Eveninqs Ce~ll
l ice Wisemat\ 446 ·37tl
E. N. Wiseman 446·4SOO
Bud McGhee 446-IHS

,youR S

CHOICE
eTRADE·INS WELCOME

f

1972 Dodge
Swinger
2 Dr. HT

3 BEDROOM · 2 AC. LAND

. Evenlntt
Charles M . Neal4t6-1!144

Terms: Calh
Lunch Av1i11ble
Ewing Campbell, Adminlttretor
Auctionur: LH John1011
Not l'lsponslblt for accidents.

automatic,

$3297 $2497 $2597
low miles, worth
m ore .

Real Estate For Sale

NEAR lY

Office Ph . 446·1"4

twa

cond.,

1973 Javelin 1972 Pontiac
Gran Prix
2 Dr. HT

1973 Ford
Mustang

bedroom ran c h , f orm al
d ining , fam il y ro om , lar g e
master bedro om , 2 baths ,
v ery nic e buill in kl lc hen .
cenl ra l a ir , ca r port. la r ge
101 In McGu i r e's Sub . Ci t y
Sc h. Dtst .

!

Dinette set with 4 chairs, Tappan gas stove.
Wood burning cook stove, Sigler fuel oil
stove and tank, dressers, couch and chilr,
buffet, stand tables, hot plate, bed and
springs, glaas door cupboard, wash stand,
two refrigerators, side board, cream
separator, quilts and bed spreads, pots and
pans, utility cabinet and some chairs,
lawn mowers, several small hand tools,
some antlqU... ox yoke, 2 trun ka, 2 VIc·.
trolas, stone Iars. old churn, some books,
one lot of lumber, a few horse·drawn plows,
and other miscellaneous Items.

2t2
Air

Duster

w it h Halo v inyl roo t .

OWNER MOVED - MUST
SELL IMMEDIATELY -

PUBLIC AUCTION

1975.Chevy
Monza

exfra. extra sharp. Red

NO MONEY DOWN for
v ete ra ns .
Non
Vet
SJ . 2~ 0 . 00 ve r y , ve r y n ice 3
bedroom
r an ch
wit h
f i r epla ce , ce ntral ai r ,
carp eting thro ughou t, I ac .
lot. Cit y Scho ol Olsl.

sa v lngs of over 1•.000. Call r
today
tor .vour
ap .
polntment .

1974 Ford
Pickup

v.a,

U4 ,500.00 -· Larg e li v ing
room . d i n i ng , bui l t in
kit chen , 2 bat t1 s, lar ge 2 car
ga r age ,
K .C
Schoo l
District .

'd rilled well plus rural
water . Priced al 115.00&lt;1.

Expect th e bes I.

Air , Landau top, sport

automatic, power steering,
factor y air, low mileage,

No. 160.
11 1 J B R awe 111M on 150' x
200' lol. Walllo wall carpet,

••~

car here .

250 Se ries, Ranger XL T,

E XC E L L E NT
4
BEDROOM REDUCED TO

S2 gal. ho t water tank . 150'

whee l s, 18, 327 m iles .

camper special.. 22,127
mile s,
automatic ,
sharp .

ALL three located 4 mlle1
from hos,plte i on old SA

new roof , rural water and
tuel oil forced air furnace . ~r

Air, 17,221 m il es, mag
w heels, vinyl lop . Lol of

One local owner, air ,

OWNER ANXIOU S
TO SELL

RECENTLY

2 Or . Hdfp., air, AM·
FM, 19,127 m iles , ex ·
ce ptionally nice .

Monlego, 8 cyl. , aulomaflc,
power steering,
brakes, ~ r ea l

Nice 12 by

U ST WITH US -

1974 Olds 1974 Pontiac
1974
Firebird · Monte Carlo
Delta Royale

1970 MERCURY

60 mobil e hort~e with wood
bur n lng fireplace , p lenty of
pastur e, 55 acre'S of tillabl e
land , tobacco base , Iaroe
barn . Barga in pr iced , call
todlly .

ALL THREE could bt l,
boUQh I lor 538,600 . A

RANNV BLACI&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

8

Good

FOR SALE by owner in pr ime
r e sldenlla
area
near
downtown
and
r i ver :
267 ·6
Redecoratep , carpeted , 2
tlr-eple c e!i . paneled de n ; ·F OR sAL E a·v o w NER in
huge k i Tc h en, W·di!thwash er
prim e r esid en ti al ar ea near
and new cabine ts. 4 huge
downtown
.,nd
r i ver ,
bedrooms , new f urnace ,
r edecoraled , carpet ed , 2
utll lt y rooms , patio, pond .
fireplaces , p&amp;neled den ,
Lsrg e l ot Call after si x or
huge k i tchen . W·dishwash er
any time weekends . 4d6and new cab inets, 4 huge
0726 .
bedro o ms , new furna ce.
257 ! f
utility room , pat io , pond ,
large tot. Ca ll after 6 or any
ti me we ekend s. .s.t6 .0776 .
BI · LEVEL 5 bedrooms ,
tamllv room
al,r con
1
dll loned . 2 ' bathS , country
settinO lo t, walk to Schools,
Pomeroy area , best of
financ i no ~ low 40s . Ph .
,O thens , 512 ·3052 tor In ·
formation .

Cu stom F · lOO Pic k.up,

cy li nder , stanbard shift ,
ra di o,
lo call y ow n ed .
Sharp!

horn e with 3 bedroom s, ·
ba th , gar ag e , co unl y
wa ter locat ed on a l arg e
level lot in Bidw ell. Pr ice
S I ·1,900 .

PREMIER SHOWING NOV. 21st

PLUM STREET
We have aS rm . house wlttl

From

1

!::! GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH!
1639 EASTERN AVENUE GAlliPOLIS, 446-3273
. *

Three bedroom home In
Porter , lu!l off Route 160,
l..f4 acres. n ear coa l
mining
area ,
priced

Specials

REALTORS CONSULTANT

..,

Three bedroom . carpe ted
hom es located on 75 ' x 120'
lots , attached garage,
modern kitchen , S20,000,
Gallipo lis City Schoo l
D istrft:t .

wllh copper plumbing

uiiiHies , make

.Mountain State

Road . S\7 ,000.

lot. Bottled gn. thru wall
a -c Priced at sll •.SOO .
131 69 Kirk wood 55' x 12' 3
BR mobile home located on
1' , A. lot . 2 attached room s

6 flal

.:..

R ealty Inc.

J

J. B acre farm, three
bedroom hom e, cerpeted,
storm windows and doors.
located on George's Creek

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS close to
MAPLE SHADE -

OHIO RIVER

*
i*
**~·
*
*~~
*
:*

SE~ THE CHRYSLER C::ORDOBA

,i
i

New thr!e bedroom brick
off Route 35, tully carpeted ,
ba th and one .halr , ut ility
roo m , family roam . large
front room. modern kll ·
chen
wllh
pl enty of
ca binets , priced 137.000.

Priced ot $16.500 .
,
12 1 71 Vlllager 65' x 12' 3 BR
mobile home on o 60' x 250'

tow n . 538,000.

f

:~ 74, DODGE DART CUSTOM 4 DiL~i~:.~:~·:.~·.~~~~;~; ......... 53095
': 72 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT 2 DR HL~i~: ,~~~:·.:.·.~ .. 52095 :
; ~ 72 FORD PINTO S.W... ;~:~~~~ ................................. }1695
72 DiEVY NOVA 6.... ~~~.0:.t.r.~~~·, ~ .......... ... ......... ........ .. s1695 :
:: 72 DO~E CORONET CUSTOM 4 DR SEDAN .............. s16"
72 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR COUPE.. ............................ s1595 :
:* 72 DODGE CHALlENGER 2 DR ................................. 52195
:: 70 DiEVELLE CONV. 4 SPEED ....... :........................... 5995
:!;If 68 pLY. VALIANT 4 DR SEDAN .. ~.~~:?: .........................s995 :
70 FORD SPORT CUSTOM PICKUP • , • • · • SEE ntiS ONE

,u Ac res of lev el qround
loca ted adjacent to Tycoon
Lake, on·e trail er hook -up,
rural
wa t er, can
be
financed . pr iced , 118,000 .

GRAHAM SCHOOL RD . J BR ranch, 2 baths , owner

transferred , S22,SOO.

Dealer

,•,•,•.• ,•.•.• . •.•.·,·, ;~;.;.;.;.;.;:; :;:;!;~;: ;:;:;:;;;:;l;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:; :;:;:;~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:

$26,5(10 .

PRICE REDUCED TO
rolling grass and woods ,
$4,,500 - 4 SRi , 2' , baths, . 112 ,900.
2 fireplaces. basem en!.
Centenary .
GARFIELD
EXT .
Redwood ranch . basemen t.
RODNEY VILLAGE 11 -3
make offer .
BR ranch , family rm .,
F HA approved .
GEORGES CREE K - New ,
DEBBY DRIVE - $39 ,900, sectional hom e. flat lot ,
all brick ranch, 2 ba ths,
will traele .
basement.

mobile h ome , 112,000.

•ITOIM

~
,If
:,.~
,.:•
,.:!::
:
'*
:*~

. llllllh!h.hnson

,.,.,.;,;,,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,),,,,,,,,,,

;

This 3 BR home not only
has a panoramic v1 1w but
Is loaded with ex tra s, :
ovar51z:e 2 car garage ,
electric heet, air con .
dltlonlng , cnv water and
sewage,
bullt ·ln
ap .
plian ces, garbage dispo11L
21 1 bethS , wood burning
fireplace In family room ,
and lo ts of storage space .
All this located on 1 1~ A.
lot near Rio Grande. Must
be seen to be appreciated .
Priced In low 40s.

RIO GRANDE - 55 A. with
tronlage of us 35, S55 ,000,

PLrMOUTH
:Southeasten1 . ohiii;··. . ...,... .... ....

'~

LATE TO WORK

Real Estate F01 Sale

mostlY cropland, S125,000.

FURNITURE
UPHOL STERING , prompt

~&gt;tiMAN

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
~HRUBS ,
TREES , · ROCK
GARDENS ,
ALL
266-6
GUARA NTE ED . Palio ond

614 548·68 57 .

ROBERTS APPLIANCE
~2 Vinton Avt.
Service, expert wuher,
dryer and rt!lllt ropair. All
works guaranteed.
446-IUD

SANDY AND

I~

2S6·1f

NEW LISTING - One ol
Gallla Co .'s bes t, 196 A.,

Selvices Offered

:

T~IRDAVf .

NO MORE !
So cen trally located you
ca n fall out ot bed at the
last minut e and get to
church , school or work on
time . On a tree -l ined str eet
yo u ' ll find thi s 2 story 3 BR
home , nice eat -in kitchen ,
D~ .
plus many ektras .
A lso, a very nice modern
li ving quarters - 2 BR an d
extra nice k il chen , 2 car
garage and storage . Live in
one and r ent the other .

'

CHRYSLER~

, .., );:::::::::;:;::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·············· .,.,.,·.·.·.·,·,· .... : . .. , . . . . . .

Howard Brannon. Broker
Office 446 -2614
LuciJie Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or 446·1:674

$27, 500.
ANY HR . 446-1911

PORTABLE TOI~ET
RENTAL

____________

269 2

LIKE NEW HOME

Senices Offered

- ---------

picker . ex cell ent cond . R ea l
clean . .f 46·1044 or 44 6·7312 .

' I .L._

CENTENARY - Beauly : 6

bl 'dg ., f4al

Ohltl

5 room hou se 'on a
peace ful stree t, por c h ,
nat. gas, fu rna ce. built -In
ca bin ets, ,fenced in yard,
pl enty ot garden space . A
re al buy for only S\5,000 .

GENERAL Cont ract or . ~oom
additions, house raz ing and
l eveling , aluminum or v invl
si ding , carpentry of all WALL
PAPER,
VINYL
k i nds, roofing . 367 .0591 .
HANGING, AND PA I N·
Paul Wa lk er .
TlNG ,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALL 256·6342 .
.
2U if

NEW l PIECE SOFA BED
sand ,
loot.
shrubberv
SUITE WITH ST RONG
trimmi\10 . Dump truck
PLAID
HERCULON
services . 245-9131.
8 x 20
HE AV Y dul y c on
COVER , 1\69 . 95 REG .
18711
stru ct lon shed 5300 . 446 748 6
1199 .95. RICE ' S NEW &amp;
or AA6 ·7H8. '
USED FURNITURE , 114
269 3
work , house
SECOND AVE ., 446 ·9S1J , CAr RPENTER
em od ~ ling ,
wiring ,
-.266.6
p lumb ing , painting . Ph . 446·
1974 - 1&lt; HP BOLE N 42 "
2910,
mower , 33 " Heavv Duty
COR B\N . SNYDER FURN .
T i l le r S1. 90 0. AS' ' Out
259·11
co.
doo r sm an tru c k Cover .
USED FURN .
House typ e door S200. 4A6 F RE N CH
Co lon y
so fa ,
D. DAY
7508 .
be d roo m suite , sw ivel chair .
REFRIGERATION
.....__
269 3
coi l spr ings . 446 1171
REFRIGER fl TION . heo li ng ,
266.1f
el ectric , 11 years ekp . J88·
1 NEW Ideal No. 10 c orn

----------·--

ldlqwh\.

Bldg .

i·:

· - 25 L ocu st Sf.

kinds, hot asphalt. We fiK
the flat ones . P.hone 367 -059'1.
Paul Walker .
254 -11

_- --- ~------·

lf&lt;I _, H Sell er P UPf.&lt; o.:S 1-\Kl... ,
wormed Ch esapeak e, 867

rms ., bath and base .
Alum si ding, storm drs .
and win..
good
gas.

LOTS -

·.GALliPOLIS ( . ·.

!....

-.4*1066

ROO F ING ond gutter of oil

82S Third A-we.
Ga llipolis, 0 .

305 If

_......

11) SI•CDIJd All' II lit'

Real Estate For Sale

:JIEALTOR

140 ·11

60 .11

K -

Rea:tor

POMEROY - Investment ,
opportunity 40 x 80 bri ck
busin ess bldg ., corner
to cat l on, good· tenant s,
good . return . Ca l l Jav
Shej:Jard loday .
·

1

5

210·6

-------------1966 SHAS TA up ri ght camp er ,

B.

~

~USS_EU _WOOD

POMEROY - Established
business opportunity , 5150
M g r oss . S73 M net. Owner
r etir ing , Ca ll tor details .

TlAFORD Sr .•

_,__

----.------- - ---Plumbing &amp; Heatin2

Wanted To Do

-

'1

Card of Thanks

270· 1

AVE .

- .New. 6 rm , 81 -Lev el.
br ick and fram e, elec . turn .
GoOD "clea n lu.mp an·d srok€!, Cen . air , 111 ba ths . K lic hen
" 11
c c..al . Car l Wi n t ers , Rio : and t amilv rrn . pa n el.
270 tf
coppe r plumb ing . Kitc hen
Grand e. Ph . 2A5 ·5115 .
D .W . range
and.
has
P.A . Syst em , 2 hei l trough s,
disposal. This house has
with P EA V EY m ixer , am p .,
eK tr a large rm s . liv . rm .
130 w att s rm s S75 0. 675-5077 .
22 ' x 15' and bdrms .
270 S
CORBIN AND SNYDER
Su itabl e tor K ing size
FURNITURE
furnitur e. Loca ted on
A.
P/\ N A SO NI C 8 tr ack tap e
lo ! .
wi t h
t!K i end ed A DM I R A L Color Television
pl aye r
spea kers , lar ge ant iqu e r oll
se t, F r ench Co lony sofa ,
MILL CREEK - Good 4
top desk 446 1370 aft er 5
antiqu e iron bed , lwin size
rm . home with bath and
27 0 2
mattress sets , co ff ee !able,
nat . gas . Id ea l tor rental or
f ull s ize coi l springs , 955
econ omy living . Pric e
AVO N Decant er s start ing 17 i h
Second Ave . 4d6 -1171.
18.900.
thru 22nd . I p .m . til 5 p ,m . or
258 ·1f
by app oint ment . d3 .Cenlral
TAWNEY SUB · DIV . Av e Phon e 44 6·2975
'
210·6 ,·-'lARGE roo1n . f adng pafk, , Good 6 rm . h·ouse; 3 bdrm .
light
housekeeping,
s., large llv. rm, bliQ r oomy
e l e va lor , facilities
for
kit. and din . area , H .W .
73 F ORO Sla . W aQO i1 Grand
r e t ired person . Park Centra ! I fir s. and extra nice family
Tori no Squ ire air and P.
Hote l.
1 r m . with F .P. High gas bltl
S ! ~c r i n g . A lso 65 Chevy IJ
9R ·If $38 . Pri ce red uced.
cy l. Stand ar d . Ca ll 389 8511.

WINT ER ::.Pt::\.IAL.a
1976 20' TR AVE L tr ail er self goodby e ,
15 tt . ton g w ith access ori es .
contained now 54 .000 - 2A '
Wi ll remllin w i th us until we
5875 . •t46 1313 .
new 54 ,999. Winter prices on
die .
21 0.3
fold downs , au to awnin gs ,
Sadly missed by wi fe, son .
anti -fr eeze . Camp Conley
parent s,
s ist ers
and
1972 A RRO W c amp tra i ler 14' Star Craft Sale s, Rt. 62 N .
brothers .
fl , self -contained 5 1,050
Pt . Ple&amp;sanl , W. Va .
210 · 1
Can be seen on M cCu ll y Rd .,
bel w ee n Geor ges Cr eek and
M i ll Creek Rd . See Wm .
197 5 14 K70 TRAILER . ekc .
Brown ing .
THE
F AM I LY
of
Mr s .
cond .. especially bUilt tor
270.6
· Lawrence ( ~ !d ora ) Garnes
Off ic es, low prl t e for quick
wishes to · ~ck no w t edg e with
sale, 675 -1Y21 or IJ75 -5829 .
gra teful appr eciation a l l th e 1975 23' SLEEK Crall je l boa I,
256·1f
m et al flak e !r i m , g r ai n
many ac ts o f kindne ss
shag
ca rp el. .
acc ent.
shown during th e p~ss l n g of
cocklal l se ating , stereo , 12
our beloved wife , moth er,
p As s . , l ounge -p l ayroom ,
sister an d f r le;nd , R e v .
bu ilt ·in Ice ches t. 45 5 Otds
Elbert M cGe e for his con eng ine, p lus mo r e. Ph . 446·
STANDARD
soling words , and !he Me ·
3732
Plumbing . Heating
Coy .Moore F unerel Ho me
210·3
214 Third Ave .. AA6 -3782
tor effic ient serv ice.
187 .1I
-·
Husband , sons Harold
and Kermit. dau ght e r s . 1969 DO DG E Polar a, good
cond ., Phone 245-94 79.
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
Lynn, Francena and Cher y l.
THE FAMILY Of Harvey A.
Bush would like to I hank all
the ir fr iends , neighbors, and
the pallbearers tor the ir
kin dness dur ing the death of
their lov ed one . Also Holzer
Medical Cent er . Rev . John
Bryant a nd !he Mc Coy Moore fun era l home .

Realty, 32 State $1.
Tel. 61~1998•.

21!0 tf

-

For the one we toveo' so we ll .

Virgil

COUNTRY-AIR ESTATES

LI ME STONE f or dr ive way s.
Ca rl Winters Ph one 245

IN LOVING m emo r y of Je rry
Allen Chur c t1 . w ho pa sse d

MASSIE
GARFIELD

Real Estate F01 Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale .

Real Estate For Sale

l '"'**********.'*********************************··-

.

\,

�31-The SWlday Times. Sentinel, Sunday ,Nov. Iii, 1975

Fo";F;;;}i;;ults Use The Sunday ·Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In

·For Sale

MIIIIOIJ

Real Estate For S.

For Sale
'New GMC
T r ue~ Headquarters
19 70 Da Tsun Pickup Tr uc k
1972 I T. C h ~ v . Cab .h
Chassis
1971 2 1 " T GM C Ca b and
Cha ssis
1968
T . GM C Pic kup
1971 GMC SUburb an
1973 ' 1 T . GM C Pickup
1970 Ford Pickup
1970 M onle Carl o
1969 F ord Eco noline Van
1974 1 1 T . GMC Pickup

Rad ios Sa ies &amp;
SCP.IICC New B. Used CB's
pol ice monitors , an tennas
e tc Bob ' s Citize n · aa n d
Rad io Equ,p .. Geo r ge s
Cr eek Rd .. Gallipol is, Oh io
~46 45 17.
.,
212 If

TWO

WAY

1,

15" GOO DY EA R Ra ll y
GT tires , .1 15" Cr agar' SS
Whee l s. for Chevy . Ph . 446
0122 a fl er 5

SOMERS G.M . C.

161 .4

Trucks , fp c.
Ill Pine St.
446 -2532

away one year ag o, Nov . 16 ,
197 .. .

A pre c ious one fro m us

is

gone.
·
A vo ic e we lov e I&amp; still ed ,

A plac e Is v ac ant in our hom e,
Which ca n ne v er be fil led .
No one knows th e sil ent hea rt
aches . On l y those wh o ha ve
tost can te ll ,
Of the gr ief !hat com e$ in

silence ,

To som e you ar e fo rgott en ,

To others lust part of th e pa st,
But to us who lov ed and lost
you .
Your memory w ill alw eys
last.
The pa i n ot parnn g witho ut

__ h

_ _,

__ h_h

_ _ _ _

----------.--

210·6

270 I

W IL L do babys itting in mv

home . Coli 388 ·851 1.

27 0·6

Pets
BOARD ING AKC WeSlV and
pug pups . Ci r c le L. Kenn el.

RI , 141. 446 ·4824.
269 3

CA R PE TS an d li f e loo can be
beaut iful If yo u use Blu e
L ustre .
R e nt
ele ctri c
GE NE PLANTS&amp; SON
shampooer
Sl . Central PLUMB IN G - Heat ing - Air
Supp ly.
Co nd ition ing . JOO J; oU rth
A ve . Ph , 446-1637 .
·
210 ·6
A8 ·1f

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

DEWI TT ' S PLUMBING
AN D HEATIN'G
Ro ut e 160 al Evergreen
Phone 446.27lS
187 -11

Semces Offered
L

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAV .E
MANY USES ·

&amp; A Appliance Service
washers , dryers , ra ng es.
r ef. 300 Fourth Ave .. ~ear .
446 -7398.

266·26

20~

. l"'lrU:: RIDGt: \.ULLII:~
~KC Reg . Collies , sable ahd

white . 16 141 256·1267 .

AND HEATING

Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Ph one U6-3888 or 446 ·4477
165 -11

'

Kl. M Construction
Company
.LL Types of Cons truction .
free es timates . AA6 -9202 .

6 fOr ·HOO

249 ·1f

283·11

--------.------BOB BI'S POOd l e Bout iqu e.·

Gallipolis
--------------- Daily Tribune

B A CK HOE and dozer wo rk .

Septic tan ks and l each beds,
3M 8865 or 388 8230.

Professional grooming by
appointment. Ph . A ~ 6 - 1944 .

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES

p Kenn els, 388 -827 4. ~ t.
554, 1, mi. ea st of Port e r .

5535.
264 56
GERM A N Shepherd pup s .
Call 388-8237 ev eni ngs.
267 ·6

" PERSONA L ITY Plus "

-

Pets Trlmbles AKC Coll ie!.

sable ana lr i·colors , 614 ~ 46 ·
&lt;4 49, Gallipolis, Oh io 45631 .
_,_
267 II

___________ _

JUANIT A'S Poodl e Pa r lor ,
exper ienced g r oom ing . wi ll
do all br ee ds. Ph . 446 -7878 .

P fi ~ Q\JJ\L E

Et ec t r'ic
Por
tab l e E l &lt;'ctrt c Alt er n ator
ilnd PowN P l ant s. Ph . dd6
17 16
126 II

ALL

TY'l' E·s · ot

buildlnl

mat er ia ls , b to'tk , brick
se w er pi p es , window"&gt;
lintels, etc . Cl aude Win ter s
RIa Grande , 0 . Phon e 245

5121 ofler 5.

123·11

1973 K . w . Con v enta l , Sl eeper .
T I'Jn d e m . 35 0 c ummi n s
engine , 13 spee d trans ..
225,000 mil es . Ja ke brakes .

25 1 1 969 Pe l e rblll C .O. E .. 335
Cu mmin s Eng .. 13 speed

II

For Sale
WIND CHO KE 1400 V.R . 12
oa . S135 Rem . B. o L
varm l nter 25 .06 SIH .

446.4163,

Ph .
267 6

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

l A LUMINUM awnings , on e
'22 1 7 l( 31 ".', 2 - 71 1 )( 3 1 -. .
Pr iced to se ll. A.t 6-U57 .
269 3

CHIMNEY Blocks . Gall ipoli s
Block co . -446 ·2783 .

23\ .1f

Country se tting l
bed r &lt;Joms , brick and
wood
sid i ng ,
larg e
modern kllchen with lots
of cab inets, garage , 2
• ·veat·s old on a n ice lot in
School District.

ICE 3 BEDROOM

II~~·;;~:~:~~~ ~

largekitchen
livi ng
I
dbl. S·
dishwasher, alum .
, patio, hardwoo,4
and large level lot.
iful home and
ight on Slale

I

H lg hw,ov 554 .
BY FARMS

s

acres or more . Home
bu i ldin g siles , leve l land,
approx . .4 mile off Rt . 35,
rural wate r , ca ll for
detai ls .

rm . frame hom e, llh baths,
new carpet over H .W. ,
copper plumbing , ramlly
rm . panel, metal storllge

101

10ACRE56 ROOMS

80'x250' .

"Go odies "
include air
cond ., drapes &amp;. stainless
steel stove. tf you want
quality , location &amp; price
this is the one . Reduced .
.PINE--ST. - 5 rm ...brlck &amp; '
frame with partial base .
This property is In good
repair &amp; cheap at Sl 2,000 .
2ND AVE. - 2 story, 6. rm .
o ld er home , tile block .
storage bld 'g . &amp; garage .
Locllted on a bi g lot .
Baroatn at S17,000.

CENTENARY -

Nic e 4

rm . house with ba1h , base .,
attic storage, new carpel.
F .A . fur . and F . B. Ideal for
r etired
couple
or
newlyweds . Asking $17,000.

GEORGES

CR .

RD:

-

Good 6 rm . house all
carpet, plenty kit . cab .• 2
baths , F .A . Na t. gas heat,
storage bldg . and big Jot .
Price 525,500.
.

GARFIELD

Nice remodeled home, d
bedroom s, L ·Sh ap ed sun
deck, 2 se ts patio doors.
car pet i ng , nice
and
modern ba th, modern
k itc hen , bui ll -in cabinets.
Ap prox . 5 miles from Rio
Grande , Nice hom e and
some l and to expand .

12ACRES
11 acres tillable with a
1973 - 12' x 55' mobile
hom e. Air cond itioner ,
wash er and dryer goes .
Rural waler system .
Frontage on State Route
south of ~ lo Grande .
for only S8 , 100.

WHAT A BUY

I

rooms , Iaroe to t . with
of garden spece .
. Tot al p rice S6,500 .

OR4BEDROOM
rooms arid bath , fu ll
sement.
garbage
citylevel
water
•~~~~~::~~ ' · nice
lo t,,

space , porch . A
and nice home .
r lc ed to sell. Only

1 1 ~ , 900 .

LOTS

have about 5A lots ,

•"om• restrict ed , some
Ce ll .

VICTORY RD. - 45 A. wllh

!ACRES

'73 model Mobile home ; big
barn , tob . base and ·g ood
fences . Only $13,500.

AVE . ,

I
rm s ., bath and bsae .:
Alum . siding , storm drs.
and windows , good ga s,
F .P., . turn. good roof . good
hot w . lank . Lot AO' xl60' ;
River view . Only $16,000 .

GREEN A. - 1 yr . old, l bd .
rm . frame home, Thermo
Win ., plenty storage, cop .
plumbing ; atL gar. elec .
fur . &amp; all carpet . Ttti s Is a
quality build home . Owner
transferred and hu priced
ttt ls
home
below
replacement cost . Asking

oom House, porch ,
•P""''' rural waler , built in ets , db l. sink
in K vger Creek
Ad dison
tor quick

4 BEDROOM 2 LOTS
2 BOx ISO ' lots just
Qutside of c ity limits on
R t. 141. with a 6 room
hous e. basement and
garage . Nice house , nice
locat ion and on sale tor
only $19,900. See now .
Nat. ou forced air fur -

lOIS -

Mobile home lots . We got
them . we build your: plans
or ours .
ACREAGE - We go t it . All
price
ranges ,
good
loca l ions .

NEAR MINES
14 Acres leve l land . Creek .
3 BR mobile hom e. 2 BR
block home . Lot ot frontage
on Kf!ystone Roa d. You can
make money here . See
toda y :

.VINTON
Business
oPPort't.m ity . Price of a
ho(n e witt buy ttlls good
business including real
es tate and equipm ent. Call
Jay Sheppard for details.
Will fin an ce , 7 rm . house
wi Th bath in ci!y limit s .
Ca rp or t, 2 por ches, large
tot . Call 446 -4127 .
Brick Ra'n ch home, 3 BR .
bath , kit chen wll h har d ·
wood ca bln el s , r ange,
l arger
LR,
ca rp e ted ,
paneled and well insu l ated,
garage. front por ch , pat io
door . Spa c ious' l' 1 acres tot
on Mitchel l Road . Ca ll
about tow , low price .
4 BR Ranch Home. on Rt .
32 5, 15' x 3~' LR. with
fireplace and hardwood
floors , kltchen -dinlng
room , bath , utility ro o!"' .
F .A. furn ace, well 1n ·
sulate d,
so f t
water ,
beautiful l evel 1' 1 acres.
with lar ge garage and
· grape
arbor ,
f en ced .
Ano l ehr Rancho value ..

10 Acres old , old house,
spr ing and lo b. ba se , 1' 1
mllesoffRI . 7from Bladen ,
$3,500 . Wi ll fin ance .
Rancho also has upper
bracket
executive
properties . acreage , ~ifh
few close to tow n ; R1ver
front pr oper ti es , execut ive
houses wit h acreage and
1rees .

Bl· LEVEL
T hr ee b edrooms , bath ,
ki tch en
dl ntno room ,
li v ing room and deck on
upper level. Garage , utility
are&amp; and sp ac e for your
rec . room or 4th bedroom
on lower l evel . Less than 2
yu r s old . This is another
Rancho vll lue pr lcecj below
market.
Ce~l l
l or liP ·
polntment or Information .
Brokers · Builders
Auctioneers

RANCHO COMPANY
Addison 367-0300
Gallipolis 446·0001

tr an s .• ta ndem
.
1969 D iam ond Ruo Conv ., no
sleeper , tand em . 335 eng ine,
13 speed .
1967 F ruc naut van , AO ', 12 ' 6" ,
slid i ng tandem .
1968 F ru ehnuf F lat 40 ', 4 1 sid es
and tarp , sling ing tan dem .
1975 Brown Flat , 30' , slinging
tande m , 4' si des · and tarp .
Don M ye rs , 1126 Shanahan
Rd .. De law ar e, Ohi o 45015.

.: ON STRUCTION
Outdoor
Ev ents. Ph . Galli pol is 446
.H87 . Russe ll's Plumbing ~
H eating .
190 tl
water

DALE
Sanders
Delivery . 256 -6667 .

ALBERT

211 ·If

GRACIOUS, SPACIOUS
LIVING

Your fami l y will "live it
up " in thiS lovely 3 BR , 11'2
. bath , bu i ll -in kitc hen , DR .
' eautuul HW floor s, full
... sm ., gas fu r . and cen tral
.air , 2 patios and well lan dscaped lawn .

LOTS -

LOTS

Just 4 mi . from Gall ipoli s
-· 2 good tot s priced SLI:IOO
and 52,200 . Also , one good
lot on 160, 2 m I. from
hosp ital , n ,aoo.

2ACRES

12' x 65 ' 73 M . mobile
home . tnclud tng an tur .

S\1 ,200.

s

93.ACRES

room home , Iaro e barn
and
out build ing s ,
machiner y , B head cat tl e.
locat ed
10
m i. from
Gallipolis , $41.000.

IN TOWN
Walk tO SChOOl from thiS 2
story hom e , 3 BR , gas f ur ,
basement , porche s, roam
for gar.aen . Ca ll todav .

C· O·Z·Y
Is lhe word for th is one
tto or plan - 3 B R home
w i th comfor table kitchen
and dining area, pl enty
stora ge and carport on a
nice corner lot . Pr iced for a
sure sale .

ATTN' HOME ~UYERS
OVER 500 Home pions lo
choose from, your lot or
ours . We save you lime and
money , up to S2,000 taK
credit . Rancho Co . ,..Addison ,
367 -0300 . Ga ll ipO ii!r, d.46·0001 .
199 -lf

Water Dellvefy Serv lcr
Patriot star , Gallipolis

Ph . 379.2133

243 ·1f

pool land scaping, Stone ,

·-

8274 ,

275 GAL fu el oil ta nk , SJS . Ph .
J46 42 19

251 ·\f

268 3

P f\1-&gt;QlJA LE E tec'trica l 'a,
Ins ula t ing 103 Cedar St .,
Ga l lipolis . Ph . H6 2716 .

7 YR old gen tl e g a ited mare.
2 &lt;~5 9484 .

126·11

268·3

Water

Delivery . .fA6·3962, ··6 ·•162
any lime.

THANKSGIVING SALE

2••·11

'

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

ROO F ING . aluminum sidi11g ,
tre~ estlmates .•Ca ll 'l56 ·6364 .

256·11

Free Turkey WHh Purchase
Of any Outdoors man top or Moby top

or Jacobson Garden Tractor. Offer
good till Thanksgiving Day.

VALLEY AUTO SALES
5 miles west of Gallipolis on Rt. 35.
Open Ba.m.- 6 p.m.-6 Davs a Week

service . reasonable ratts .
We Invite vou to visit our
modern shop located o.t
Mason Co. Fairground (T&amp;T
area) or (Ill for· frte
estimates , Mowrey' s'
Upholstering,
Po nl
Pleuant, 475 - .flS~ .

219 ·1f
;;---:::--.-;-~--;'!;r.:=~---...- .

CUSTOM REMODELING , 20
veers experience . 388 ·8308.
New dry wall ce-Iling wllh
swirl or texture designs :
Other dry wall, repa ir , vinyl
wallpapering , new battts ,
new kitchens. Anything In
remodeling or repair .

.

'

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

1\.lf

BO RDER Garag e IJ u i lct crs .
rr ee eslimates . 15 6 6-11? .
ltl9 If

BORDER'S

GARAGE

poor

Serv!te . Commercial · a nd
residential spec ializing In
operators Local . ?56 641? . ·

189 ·1'

THE TDP SHOP
Custom Built Roof Trusses,
Fo rmi ca Counlertops
Ca binets, Coolville , Ohio,

a.

667 .3186 ..
C OUGHENOUR

256·11

-·--·---------.---Cut R•te
Roollnt and Sfdlnt

Buildup, vin ylf shtngln, alum
steel , chain Ink tenet . Free

eslimailon, 1011 frte . Call
381 ·1S'I.

----------1.....----

KNOm

School of

Auctlone~rlng
by 1no unlo
&amp;Hrd of School
and
Collogo
Registrltlon
11
Columb ... Olllo.
· Registrltion No, 71 -1202UH
Phone Gallipolis

, ... mi·

BEAVER ln

suran ce Co . hu offered
ser vices ror Fire Insur ance
coverage In Gallia Count~
for almost a cen tury .
F arms, homes and personal
proP.erty coverages are
~va!l~ble to meet individual
needs . Contact Emmetl
Church, your neighbor and
agent .

210·6

ALUMINUM SIOING

For Lease
A PT . for lease, 328 11 S~cond
Ave .• overlook ing city park,
2 br ., llv i ~g rm ., kllchrn
with r ang e, r etr lo .. an d
dining area . bath . $135 per
month , yen's lease. Call
P J 's , d-46 -1819 or .446 ·4.425 .

D. ln.

SWAIN

AUtnOft SERVICE
Mv .. nuth Sw•lfl , ,., .. 1..1 .
c.,-nor Thir~ &amp; Olive

ADELAIDE DRIVE , 3 BR

NEAR VINTON HUNTINGTON
19.59' A .,
DOOU

* WINOOWI
FUE ES~Al'ES

PAUL WAllER
can :11&lt;1-om

CAMPSITES ON RAC ·
COON CREEK , locofed at
Cora ,8rices !tart at S1,500.

LINC LN PIKE -

ranch , gas heat r comple te
kitchen , 523,000.

20 A.

TWP.

mobile

home ,

S\5,000 .
PATRIOT - 211 A., good
home , 2 ponds, UO,OOO .

, ,, , , , , , , , ,;, , , , , ,,, , ,,.',.', '.,.,.',''.,.''.,'.,'.,''.,. ,'. , '.,'.,...,.•.•.•,•,•.•.•,•,•.·.·.· . ·. · .· .·.~. . .4.1.r~
...~~er Plylnouth
.

Two bedroom home on
Seco nd Ave nu e, large
tlnished room up sta i rs ,
garage , ·ba sement , central
air condi Ho n ing ; three
room w i lh balh rental on
rear of property , priced
$35 ,000, sho wn by BP ·
pointmen t ontv .
Four room house , located
w est of drive-inn th eater on
Route 7, carpeted, garage,
~ne mobil e hom e hook .up .
Pr.i ced $16,000 .

66 A.

7 acre tract , Harrison
Twp ., 20 feet r to hi ·Of ·way
of Raccoon Creek . $3,000.

JO acre farm . two story ,
thr ee bedroom
home ,
carpeted,
ba th , _ two
firep la ces, moder n kit che n , dishwasher , range
with hOOd, AddiSOn School
distr ic t, pr iced 540.000.

lot s with
offer .

446-3434

1972 FORD

!:
..,
:

TOD~Y AT GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH .
3-1976 CHRYSLER
CORDOBAS IN STOCK
.
I-SILVER WITH 60-40 CLOTH BENCH SEAT
I-WHITE WITH BURGUNDY LEATHER BUCKET SEATS
I- BLACK Willi BURGANDY 60-40 CLOTll BENCH SEAT (Full Power)

USED CAR SPECIALS

!

i
!
!
i

:**********************************************'
Re~l

Real Estate For Sale

Estate for Sale

'

~ROO M

One lot left on
Hollow , priced

house and bath, IIi the
cily , 446 7442 .

Ke mper
to se ll

268·3

---··---- - --

$1 ,825.
Cill Wood Insurance &amp;
Rtal Esltll 446-TOU

HOU SE J br ., on 2 acr es or
land , fir eplac e i n L R , bath ,
oul bl cl g .. good wat er . Call

evenings, Runell Wood

446-4611

1&lt; en More an 446·0971

388 8879 ,

267 · 12

437'1• Second Ave ."
(across from poi t offfco l
Gallipolis, Ohio
Now l1kl119 listings In this

; area.

Evening

hours for

, your convenience. Calllhli
' number 1nytlme.

446-7,00
Bob Lane,
Branch Manager

Oscar Baird
John Fuller
Oouq Wethcrholf
452 Second Av e.
Ga ltipoti s, o.

NEW

LISTING -

REAL ESTATE LOANS
VA - No Down Paym ent M ost Vet eran s s il l qua l if y,
chec k to be s.ur e, F HA - As
tow as 3 pet. down Ever ybody qualifies , J O
ye ar terms . Refinan c ing
al so ava ilab le , Flrsr Mort gage Sendce s, 77 E . SI Ble,
A thens . Ph . 592·3052 for
Informal ion .

251·11

-.. -----.!...-----..:...-

'

270.2

-·-·-------------

balh lo co led In cllv . Priced
at 13.000 .

THE ALL NEW DODGE

BUY ON E OR BUY ALL '
THREE .AND SAVE .

LOVELY OLDER HOME
- Take a look at I his l ov el y
2 story hom e on a · ni ce .
shaded to t , tJas 4 bedroom s,
l 11 baths . new furnac e,
new root , needs som e work
Inside , on l y $16,500 .
JUST Llt&lt; E NEW - Thi s 3
b edroom home has been
comp tele lv r edo ne, n ew
cabinets in kitch en , new
ba throom , n ew carpet ,
county wat er , owner wants
place sold . wi ll trade or sell
with lo w down paym ent .

GOOD OLDER HOME - ,
Has 3 bedrooms, bath , new
furnace , we ll insulaled ,
county wat er , garag e, nit: e
leve l l ot . owne·r wilt help
finan ce. Pr ice S14 ,400 .
21? ACRES - Lcivel yran ch
wilh brlck front , all elec tr ic . 3 bedroom s, n ice bath ,
large famil y room with
fireplace . large garage .
Locat ed close lo Ch eshire .
Price S3 L 600 .
91 ACRES He avily
wood ed hill and beautiful
clear ed boll om . Good road
frontage , s t ream , g ood
farm ing or developm ent
potential .

112 ACR ES -

We have
buyers for al l lypes or
properlies . If vou wa nt
action on vo ur real esl cJie,
en., tact us . We g e l res ulls

VERY NICE 3 BR house In
K ana u ga , walt to wall
carp eting , kit chen includes
ref ., bullt.in n e w el ec .
ranoe . nlltural F .A. ga s
furnace . carport , fen ced in
yard .
Metal
sto r age
building . City schools . Pric e
reduced to sel l 516,700 . Call
dd6-2539 .

269 12
r e mOdel ed . 2

br .• home , bath , uti!. rm .,
bU (If .fn k itc h en , cu r tains
an d
drapes
included .
una ttact"\ed garage , in tarQ e

101 . 11 7.500 . 388 .877 2.

-

266·12
- - -~--- - · --------

AS~EN

power
sharp

mach ine . Locally owned .
Factory air cond .

$1095
1973 MUSTANG
•

Mach I. road wheels,

The Estate of Mrs. Samuel L.. Boanrd
Loeiition: 92 Court Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
DATE: November 22, 1975
TIME: 10:00 A.M.
The Sale Consists of the Following :
Plano. living room suite; chest of drawers,
Zenith television, eiectrlc stove, breakfast
set and chairs. Hotpolnt refrigerator, radio,
pots and pans, .sweeper' •. electric adding
machine. silverware.
ANTIQUES
China cabinet with round glass {perfect
condition), round table and four chairs, 3
clocks, chest of drawers, 4 rocking chairs
(perfect condition&gt;. 2 hall trees, secretary
{perfect condition). 2 mirrors. 4 end tables,
A candle holders, 2 dressers. 2 complete
bedroom sultes1drop-leaf table, cedar chest
{perfect condition), oil lamp, bookcase,
sewing machine (Jreadle), 4 straight chairs,
cane bottom (perfect condition), large
trunk. Iron beds, old pictures and frames, 8
lamps. electric {very old), dishes, books,
cupboard, plates. 1955 Ford (good con . dillon). 26,000 actual miles . Other Items too
numerous to mention.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This Is a good,
clean sale.
· J. A. French, Auctioneer
Ham lin King, AHorney for Estate

1971 BUICK
Sky lark , 4 door sedan, V-8,

Air, 23,587 miles, AM·

power steering , a ut o .,
r ad io, a ll viny l interior .
They don't come any nicer ..

FM-stereo, sharp.

CHRYSI.ER·PLYMOUTH·
DODGE

" Localed at lhe Fool of lhe
Silver &amp; Shadle Bri dg es",
675.5170

c.

•

s old new S5500. Nice.

2 Or. Hdlp ., ai r co nd ..
15,137 miles, 6 cyl., v iny l
top . Clean .

Aufo., P . stee ring , 34,121
miles. Check this .
·

Air, red, black v inyl lop,
lot of c la ss here .

972 Chrysler
Newport
2 Dr. HT
a

1972 Volks

Conv.
4

Speed, exceptionally

nice. Gas Saver .

Air,

lot

44, 218

m ile s ,

$1997 Tf 97

The WISEMAN
Agency
REALTOR

BANK FINANCING

Off. 446-3643
38 1l ACRE FARM - IOac .
2B' '· wood e d
l i lla bt e ,
pa st Ur e Barn , several oul
bu ild ings. pol e barn under
con sl r uc tion . n ew par t of
house in clu d es a beaulifu l
kitc hen . blll h, ul il ity ro om
and 2 bedrooms . Olde r
section In cl. 3 be cfr oom s
and d i n i n g , a ll new I y
c arpet ed . New fu r na ce ,
Ci ty Sch . D is t ., good ne igh
bol'hood . Best buy in Gall ia
Co. r ig hT now .

Sunday Slt-.P•rs Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

NEW HOME · 8 ACRES -

Be au li fu l new l arge 3
bedroom hom e in a pic l ur e
book sett ing on B ac. of
r ollin g, pan iallv wooded
land w i th a far m . The
no me 1Mc 1udes a w1 1e
ap pr ov ed kllchen , 11J
ba ths , l arg e fam ily room ,
d i ning room . l ull bas em ent
pl us 2 car garage Car
p et i ng th ro ugh out and
cent r a l a i r . Love l y co untry
selling near Rio Grande .

NEW

Fl NAL CLOSE-OUT ON 1975
PLYMOUTH-VALIANTS, DUSTERS,
SCAMPS, DODGE DART SPORT,
DODGE DART SWINGERS.

3

- own er v ery anxi ous to
sell thi s near ly new 3
bedroom home . Ov er ldOO
sq. tt . of l i v ing spac e, ra ng e
and r etr ig . b uil t.i n , 7 ba ths .
13 mil es from to wn .

J . MIChUl Ntii446·11Dl
Sam Neoi446-U SI

v ery ni ce 3 bedroom b i ·
level. huge kitc hen , d in in g
ar ea . 2 wo od . burn i ng
fir eplac es , lar g e famil y
room . 21 ' balhs. flal lo t on
U.S. 35 c lose to hospi ta l.
L Ook and m ake ott er .
118,500 .00 BUYS Tt;tiS n lce
3 bedroom hom e on a large
doubl e lo t on Chatham .
N ic e
kll c h en·,
own er
moving oul o f !lte te.

PUBLIC SALE
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER22, 197s-10:30

A.M.

ALL EQUIPPED WITH SIX CYLINDER ENGINES, POWER
S~EERING, AUTOMATIC, VINYL ROOF, WHITE SIDEWALL

TIRES, RADIO, WHEEL COVERS.

NEW CARS- FULL 12 MONTH
FACTORY WARRANTY

1 • SCAMP

1 · SWINGER

2 · DUSTERS

2 ·.DART SPORTS

OWNER TRANSFiRRED

To settle the estate of Ch1rlle Campbell,
deceased.

- And has already mov ed
from th is very n ice 3
bectroom hom e located on
large Spr ing Vall ey tot .
In clu des huge famil y room
&amp; kitchen , comb ln a l i o n ·
with W 8 firepl ace , 11,
ba ths,
full
d ivided
bas emen I. Ready fo r you to
mov e in to .

Location: From GaillpGIIs roliow Route 7
South approxill'!alely II miles. Turn lett on
the Hannan True Road and go 2 miles.. .
The rollowi119 will be offered:
'

•'
I

NEW COMPACT - Dodge introduces an all-new compact car line for 1976.
Called the Dodge Aspen - the new car is available as a two-door coupe, a fourdoor sedan and a four-door wagon. The coupe Is built on a 108.5 inch wheelbase,
while the s~dan and wagon have a wheelbase of. 112.5, The Aspen models are
available in standa rd, high and premium trim levels and provide the motorist with
ride qualities superior to previous Dodge compacts. Engine choices are a 225 cubic
inch slant six, 318 V-8 and 360 cubic inch V-8 with two barrel carburetion.

DODGE
50 STATE STREET

,GAUIPOLIS,

JUST LISTED
LARGE OLDER HOME in 1ow n . Can be used as 1
fam i l y res id ence . 2 fa m i ly
r ental. or comm er cia l . 11
ro oms , inc lude 2 ki tchens ,
p lus f ull bJ se m ent. Th is
house ts In v er y good
con di tion on a large to I Wi tl"1
garag e. Well locate d in
comm er c ia l zon e, next to
Odell Lumb er ,
NEW LISTING -~ ·own er
into th e Army and m ust se ll
thi s 3 yr . old , 3 be"dro om
ranch , In clu des a ni ce
kitchen , full t:la semen t an d
~ car gar ag e. Nal , gas
lurna ce. c ity wat er .
·

we need llstlnh. ca ll the
Wiseman Agency. 446-lUl .
Galli a Co.' s Large st R cal
e stare sates Agency
Office 446 -3643
Eveninqs Ce~ll
l ice Wisemat\ 446 ·37tl
E. N. Wiseman 446·4SOO
Bud McGhee 446-IHS

,youR S

CHOICE
eTRADE·INS WELCOME

f

1972 Dodge
Swinger
2 Dr. HT

3 BEDROOM · 2 AC. LAND

. Evenlntt
Charles M . Neal4t6-1!144

Terms: Calh
Lunch Av1i11ble
Ewing Campbell, Adminlttretor
Auctionur: LH John1011
Not l'lsponslblt for accidents.

automatic,

$3297 $2497 $2597
low miles, worth
m ore .

Real Estate For Sale

NEAR lY

Office Ph . 446·1"4

twa

cond.,

1973 Javelin 1972 Pontiac
Gran Prix
2 Dr. HT

1973 Ford
Mustang

bedroom ran c h , f orm al
d ining , fam il y ro om , lar g e
master bedro om , 2 baths ,
v ery nic e buill in kl lc hen .
cenl ra l a ir , ca r port. la r ge
101 In McGu i r e's Sub . Ci t y
Sc h. Dtst .

!

Dinette set with 4 chairs, Tappan gas stove.
Wood burning cook stove, Sigler fuel oil
stove and tank, dressers, couch and chilr,
buffet, stand tables, hot plate, bed and
springs, glaas door cupboard, wash stand,
two refrigerators, side board, cream
separator, quilts and bed spreads, pots and
pans, utility cabinet and some chairs,
lawn mowers, several small hand tools,
some antlqU... ox yoke, 2 trun ka, 2 VIc·.
trolas, stone Iars. old churn, some books,
one lot of lumber, a few horse·drawn plows,
and other miscellaneous Items.

2t2
Air

Duster

w it h Halo v inyl roo t .

OWNER MOVED - MUST
SELL IMMEDIATELY -

PUBLIC AUCTION

1975.Chevy
Monza

exfra. extra sharp. Red

NO MONEY DOWN for
v ete ra ns .
Non
Vet
SJ . 2~ 0 . 00 ve r y , ve r y n ice 3
bedroom
r an ch
wit h
f i r epla ce , ce ntral ai r ,
carp eting thro ughou t, I ac .
lot. Cit y Scho ol Olsl.

sa v lngs of over 1•.000. Call r
today
tor .vour
ap .
polntment .

1974 Ford
Pickup

v.a,

U4 ,500.00 -· Larg e li v ing
room . d i n i ng , bui l t in
kit chen , 2 bat t1 s, lar ge 2 car
ga r age ,
K .C
Schoo l
District .

'd rilled well plus rural
water . Priced al 115.00&lt;1.

Expect th e bes I.

Air , Landau top, sport

automatic, power steering,
factor y air, low mileage,

No. 160.
11 1 J B R awe 111M on 150' x
200' lol. Walllo wall carpet,

••~

car here .

250 Se ries, Ranger XL T,

E XC E L L E NT
4
BEDROOM REDUCED TO

S2 gal. ho t water tank . 150'

whee l s, 18, 327 m iles .

camper special.. 22,127
mile s,
automatic ,
sharp .

ALL three located 4 mlle1
from hos,plte i on old SA

new roof , rural water and
tuel oil forced air furnace . ~r

Air, 17,221 m il es, mag
w heels, vinyl lop . Lol of

One local owner, air ,

OWNER ANXIOU S
TO SELL

RECENTLY

2 Or . Hdfp., air, AM·
FM, 19,127 m iles , ex ·
ce ptionally nice .

Monlego, 8 cyl. , aulomaflc,
power steering,
brakes, ~ r ea l

Nice 12 by

U ST WITH US -

1974 Olds 1974 Pontiac
1974
Firebird · Monte Carlo
Delta Royale

1970 MERCURY

60 mobil e hort~e with wood
bur n lng fireplace , p lenty of
pastur e, 55 acre'S of tillabl e
land , tobacco base , Iaroe
barn . Barga in pr iced , call
todlly .

ALL THREE could bt l,
boUQh I lor 538,600 . A

RANNV BLACI&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

8

Good

FOR SALE by owner in pr ime
r e sldenlla
area
near
downtown
and
r i ver :
267 ·6
Redecoratep , carpeted , 2
tlr-eple c e!i . paneled de n ; ·F OR sAL E a·v o w NER in
huge k i Tc h en, W·di!thwash er
prim e r esid en ti al ar ea near
and new cabine ts. 4 huge
downtown
.,nd
r i ver ,
bedrooms , new f urnace ,
r edecoraled , carpet ed , 2
utll lt y rooms , patio, pond .
fireplaces , p&amp;neled den ,
Lsrg e l ot Call after si x or
huge k i tchen . W·dishwash er
any time weekends . 4d6and new cab inets, 4 huge
0726 .
bedro o ms , new furna ce.
257 ! f
utility room , pat io , pond ,
large tot. Ca ll after 6 or any
ti me we ekend s. .s.t6 .0776 .
BI · LEVEL 5 bedrooms ,
tamllv room
al,r con
1
dll loned . 2 ' bathS , country
settinO lo t, walk to Schools,
Pomeroy area , best of
financ i no ~ low 40s . Ph .
,O thens , 512 ·3052 tor In ·
formation .

Cu stom F · lOO Pic k.up,

cy li nder , stanbard shift ,
ra di o,
lo call y ow n ed .
Sharp!

horn e with 3 bedroom s, ·
ba th , gar ag e , co unl y
wa ter locat ed on a l arg e
level lot in Bidw ell. Pr ice
S I ·1,900 .

PREMIER SHOWING NOV. 21st

PLUM STREET
We have aS rm . house wlttl

From

1

!::! GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH!
1639 EASTERN AVENUE GAlliPOLIS, 446-3273
. *

Three bedroom home In
Porter , lu!l off Route 160,
l..f4 acres. n ear coa l
mining
area ,
priced

Specials

REALTORS CONSULTANT

..,

Three bedroom . carpe ted
hom es located on 75 ' x 120'
lots , attached garage,
modern kitchen , S20,000,
Gallipo lis City Schoo l
D istrft:t .

wllh copper plumbing

uiiiHies , make

.Mountain State

Road . S\7 ,000.

lot. Bottled gn. thru wall
a -c Priced at sll •.SOO .
131 69 Kirk wood 55' x 12' 3
BR mobile home located on
1' , A. lot . 2 attached room s

6 flal

.:..

R ealty Inc.

J

J. B acre farm, three
bedroom hom e, cerpeted,
storm windows and doors.
located on George's Creek

COMMERCIAL
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS close to
MAPLE SHADE -

OHIO RIVER

*
i*
**~·
*
*~~
*
:*

SE~ THE CHRYSLER C::ORDOBA

,i
i

New thr!e bedroom brick
off Route 35, tully carpeted ,
ba th and one .halr , ut ility
roo m , family roam . large
front room. modern kll ·
chen
wllh
pl enty of
ca binets , priced 137.000.

Priced ot $16.500 .
,
12 1 71 Vlllager 65' x 12' 3 BR
mobile home on o 60' x 250'

tow n . 538,000.

f

:~ 74, DODGE DART CUSTOM 4 DiL~i~:.~:~·:.~·.~~~~;~; ......... 53095
': 72 FORD GRAN TORINO SPORT 2 DR HL~i~: ,~~~:·.:.·.~ .. 52095 :
; ~ 72 FORD PINTO S.W... ;~:~~~~ ................................. }1695
72 DiEVY NOVA 6.... ~~~.0:.t.r.~~~·, ~ .......... ... ......... ........ .. s1695 :
:: 72 DO~E CORONET CUSTOM 4 DR SEDAN .............. s16"
72 PLY. SATELLITE 2 DR COUPE.. ............................ s1595 :
:* 72 DODGE CHALlENGER 2 DR ................................. 52195
:: 70 DiEVELLE CONV. 4 SPEED ....... :........................... 5995
:!;If 68 pLY. VALIANT 4 DR SEDAN .. ~.~~:?: .........................s995 :
70 FORD SPORT CUSTOM PICKUP • , • • · • SEE ntiS ONE

,u Ac res of lev el qround
loca ted adjacent to Tycoon
Lake, on·e trail er hook -up,
rural
wa t er, can
be
financed . pr iced , 118,000 .

GRAHAM SCHOOL RD . J BR ranch, 2 baths , owner

transferred , S22,SOO.

Dealer

,•,•,•.• ,•.•.• . •.•.·,·, ;~;.;.;.;.;.;:; :;:;!;~;: ;:;:;:;;;:;l;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:; :;:;:;~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:

$26,5(10 .

PRICE REDUCED TO
rolling grass and woods ,
$4,,500 - 4 SRi , 2' , baths, . 112 ,900.
2 fireplaces. basem en!.
Centenary .
GARFIELD
EXT .
Redwood ranch . basemen t.
RODNEY VILLAGE 11 -3
make offer .
BR ranch , family rm .,
F HA approved .
GEORGES CREE K - New ,
DEBBY DRIVE - $39 ,900, sectional hom e. flat lot ,
all brick ranch, 2 ba ths,
will traele .
basement.

mobile h ome , 112,000.

•ITOIM

~
,If
:,.~
,.:•
,.:!::
:
'*
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. llllllh!h.hnson

,.,.,.;,;,,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,),,,,,,,,,,

;

This 3 BR home not only
has a panoramic v1 1w but
Is loaded with ex tra s, :
ovar51z:e 2 car garage ,
electric heet, air con .
dltlonlng , cnv water and
sewage,
bullt ·ln
ap .
plian ces, garbage dispo11L
21 1 bethS , wood burning
fireplace In family room ,
and lo ts of storage space .
All this located on 1 1~ A.
lot near Rio Grande. Must
be seen to be appreciated .
Priced In low 40s.

RIO GRANDE - 55 A. with
tronlage of us 35, S55 ,000,

PLrMOUTH
:Southeasten1 . ohiii;··. . ...,... .... ....

'~

LATE TO WORK

Real Estate F01 Sale

mostlY cropland, S125,000.

FURNITURE
UPHOL STERING , prompt

~&gt;tiMAN

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE , OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING
~HRUBS ,
TREES , · ROCK
GARDENS ,
ALL
266-6
GUARA NTE ED . Palio ond

614 548·68 57 .

ROBERTS APPLIANCE
~2 Vinton Avt.
Service, expert wuher,
dryer and rt!lllt ropair. All
works guaranteed.
446-IUD

SANDY AND

I~

2S6·1f

NEW LISTING - One ol
Gallla Co .'s bes t, 196 A.,

Selvices Offered

:

T~IRDAVf .

NO MORE !
So cen trally located you
ca n fall out ot bed at the
last minut e and get to
church , school or work on
time . On a tree -l ined str eet
yo u ' ll find thi s 2 story 3 BR
home , nice eat -in kitchen ,
D~ .
plus many ektras .
A lso, a very nice modern
li ving quarters - 2 BR an d
extra nice k il chen , 2 car
garage and storage . Live in
one and r ent the other .

'

CHRYSLER~

, .., );:::::::::;:;::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·············· .,.,.,·.·.·.·,·,· .... : . .. , . . . . . .

Howard Brannon. Broker
Office 446 -2614
LuciJie Brannon
Eve. 446-1226 or 446·1:674

$27, 500.
ANY HR . 446-1911

PORTABLE TOI~ET
RENTAL

____________

269 2

LIKE NEW HOME

Senices Offered

- ---------

picker . ex cell ent cond . R ea l
clean . .f 46·1044 or 44 6·7312 .

' I .L._

CENTENARY - Beauly : 6

bl 'dg ., f4al

Ohltl

5 room hou se 'on a
peace ful stree t, por c h ,
nat. gas, fu rna ce. built -In
ca bin ets, ,fenced in yard,
pl enty ot garden space . A
re al buy for only S\5,000 .

GENERAL Cont ract or . ~oom
additions, house raz ing and
l eveling , aluminum or v invl
si ding , carpentry of all WALL
PAPER,
VINYL
k i nds, roofing . 367 .0591 .
HANGING, AND PA I N·
Paul Wa lk er .
TlNG ,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALL 256·6342 .
.
2U if

NEW l PIECE SOFA BED
sand ,
loot.
shrubberv
SUITE WITH ST RONG
trimmi\10 . Dump truck
PLAID
HERCULON
services . 245-9131.
8 x 20
HE AV Y dul y c on
COVER , 1\69 . 95 REG .
18711
stru ct lon shed 5300 . 446 748 6
1199 .95. RICE ' S NEW &amp;
or AA6 ·7H8. '
USED FURNITURE , 114
269 3
work , house
SECOND AVE ., 446 ·9S1J , CAr RPENTER
em od ~ ling ,
wiring ,
-.266.6
p lumb ing , painting . Ph . 446·
1974 - 1&lt; HP BOLE N 42 "
2910,
mower , 33 " Heavv Duty
COR B\N . SNYDER FURN .
T i l le r S1. 90 0. AS' ' Out
259·11
co.
doo r sm an tru c k Cover .
USED FURN .
House typ e door S200. 4A6 F RE N CH
Co lon y
so fa ,
D. DAY
7508 .
be d roo m suite , sw ivel chair .
REFRIGERATION
.....__
269 3
coi l spr ings . 446 1171
REFRIGER fl TION . heo li ng ,
266.1f
el ectric , 11 years ekp . J88·
1 NEW Ideal No. 10 c orn

----------·--

ldlqwh\.

Bldg .

i·:

· - 25 L ocu st Sf.

kinds, hot asphalt. We fiK
the flat ones . P.hone 367 -059'1.
Paul Walker .
254 -11

_- --- ~------·

lf&lt;I _, H Sell er P UPf.&lt; o.:S 1-\Kl... ,
wormed Ch esapeak e, 867

rms ., bath and base .
Alum si ding, storm drs .
and win..
good
gas.

LOTS -

·.GALliPOLIS ( . ·.

!....

-.4*1066

ROO F ING ond gutter of oil

82S Third A-we.
Ga llipolis, 0 .

305 If

_......

11) SI•CDIJd All' II lit'

Real Estate For Sale

:JIEALTOR

140 ·11

60 .11

K -

Rea:tor

POMEROY - Investment ,
opportunity 40 x 80 bri ck
busin ess bldg ., corner
to cat l on, good· tenant s,
good . return . Ca l l Jav
Shej:Jard loday .
·

1

5

210·6

-------------1966 SHAS TA up ri ght camp er ,

B.

~

~USS_EU _WOOD

POMEROY - Established
business opportunity , 5150
M g r oss . S73 M net. Owner
r etir ing , Ca ll tor details .

TlAFORD Sr .•

_,__

----.------- - ---Plumbing &amp; Heatin2

Wanted To Do

-

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Card of Thanks

270· 1

AVE .

- .New. 6 rm , 81 -Lev el.
br ick and fram e, elec . turn .
GoOD "clea n lu.mp an·d srok€!, Cen . air , 111 ba ths . K lic hen
" 11
c c..al . Car l Wi n t ers , Rio : and t amilv rrn . pa n el.
270 tf
coppe r plumb ing . Kitc hen
Grand e. Ph . 2A5 ·5115 .
D .W . range
and.
has
P.A . Syst em , 2 hei l trough s,
disposal. This house has
with P EA V EY m ixer , am p .,
eK tr a large rm s . liv . rm .
130 w att s rm s S75 0. 675-5077 .
22 ' x 15' and bdrms .
270 S
CORBIN AND SNYDER
Su itabl e tor K ing size
FURNITURE
furnitur e. Loca ted on
A.
P/\ N A SO NI C 8 tr ack tap e
lo ! .
wi t h
t!K i end ed A DM I R A L Color Television
pl aye r
spea kers , lar ge ant iqu e r oll
se t, F r ench Co lony sofa ,
MILL CREEK - Good 4
top desk 446 1370 aft er 5
antiqu e iron bed , lwin size
rm . home with bath and
27 0 2
mattress sets , co ff ee !able,
nat . gas . Id ea l tor rental or
f ull s ize coi l springs , 955
econ omy living . Pric e
AVO N Decant er s start ing 17 i h
Second Ave . 4d6 -1171.
18.900.
thru 22nd . I p .m . til 5 p ,m . or
258 ·1f
by app oint ment . d3 .Cenlral
TAWNEY SUB · DIV . Av e Phon e 44 6·2975
'
210·6 ,·-'lARGE roo1n . f adng pafk, , Good 6 rm . h·ouse; 3 bdrm .
light
housekeeping,
s., large llv. rm, bliQ r oomy
e l e va lor , facilities
for
kit. and din . area , H .W .
73 F ORO Sla . W aQO i1 Grand
r e t ired person . Park Centra ! I fir s. and extra nice family
Tori no Squ ire air and P.
Hote l.
1 r m . with F .P. High gas bltl
S ! ~c r i n g . A lso 65 Chevy IJ
9R ·If $38 . Pri ce red uced.
cy l. Stand ar d . Ca ll 389 8511.

WINT ER ::.Pt::\.IAL.a
1976 20' TR AVE L tr ail er self goodby e ,
15 tt . ton g w ith access ori es .
contained now 54 .000 - 2A '
Wi ll remllin w i th us until we
5875 . •t46 1313 .
new 54 ,999. Winter prices on
die .
21 0.3
fold downs , au to awnin gs ,
Sadly missed by wi fe, son .
anti -fr eeze . Camp Conley
parent s,
s ist ers
and
1972 A RRO W c amp tra i ler 14' Star Craft Sale s, Rt. 62 N .
brothers .
fl , self -contained 5 1,050
Pt . Ple&amp;sanl , W. Va .
210 · 1
Can be seen on M cCu ll y Rd .,
bel w ee n Geor ges Cr eek and
M i ll Creek Rd . See Wm .
197 5 14 K70 TRAILER . ekc .
Brown ing .
THE
F AM I LY
of
Mr s .
cond .. especially bUilt tor
270.6
· Lawrence ( ~ !d ora ) Garnes
Off ic es, low prl t e for quick
wishes to · ~ck no w t edg e with
sale, 675 -1Y21 or IJ75 -5829 .
gra teful appr eciation a l l th e 1975 23' SLEEK Crall je l boa I,
256·1f
m et al flak e !r i m , g r ai n
many ac ts o f kindne ss
shag
ca rp el. .
acc ent.
shown during th e p~ss l n g of
cocklal l se ating , stereo , 12
our beloved wife , moth er,
p As s . , l ounge -p l ayroom ,
sister an d f r le;nd , R e v .
bu ilt ·in Ice ches t. 45 5 Otds
Elbert M cGe e for his con eng ine, p lus mo r e. Ph . 446·
STANDARD
soling words , and !he Me ·
3732
Plumbing . Heating
Coy .Moore F unerel Ho me
210·3
214 Third Ave .. AA6 -3782
tor effic ient serv ice.
187 .1I
-·
Husband , sons Harold
and Kermit. dau ght e r s . 1969 DO DG E Polar a, good
cond ., Phone 245-94 79.
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
Lynn, Francena and Cher y l.
THE FAMILY Of Harvey A.
Bush would like to I hank all
the ir fr iends , neighbors, and
the pallbearers tor the ir
kin dness dur ing the death of
their lov ed one . Also Holzer
Medical Cent er . Rev . John
Bryant a nd !he Mc Coy Moore fun era l home .

Realty, 32 State $1.
Tel. 61~1998•.

21!0 tf

-

For the one we toveo' so we ll .

Virgil

COUNTRY-AIR ESTATES

LI ME STONE f or dr ive way s.
Ca rl Winters Ph one 245

IN LOVING m emo r y of Je rry
Allen Chur c t1 . w ho pa sse d

MASSIE
GARFIELD

Real Estate F01 Sale

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale .

Real Estate For Sale

l '"'**********.'*********************************··-

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.~~~:::=~=~==~~~·:N~ov~.~=--"'il'f,\:' :':'::;:&lt;':· . · . . . . . ,.,,.,.,.,.,:,.,.,.,~::::~:: : : : : : : : ·: l;::::::·:·:::·::,: ::::::,:;:::::::·:·: : :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:::::::::::::..::::: : : : :;:': ·~ ~------

0

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Of the Ben
Beat ...

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· ·

·

I N ·s I G H T
.

· .·· ··

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Dr.

Bazaar dJJtes are Dec. 5-6

..
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J

;t

Ttle strength of any tree lies burled in the dirt below, Tree
•
~~ :oots serve as the invisible force that allows flle tree above to
I
stand tall. Family heritage like the roots of trees allows a man
Bub HoPjlich
I
'
to stand firm, erect, and proud.
'
During the later 60's many black historians began a search
I''
"! was consecrated as .a bishop on the 16th of February . into the Afro-American past. These people were determined to
Please inform my other fl11ends there, too."
prove first to blacks and second to the rest of America the
These words were sent to Mrs. Helen Hayes, Great Bend proud background of American blacks.
resident, in a letter from MundaveU of Kerola, India, who In
These historians also sought to introduce black history Into
(..
the I~ spent time in the Great Bend and Portland area our public school systems. To allow both races to learn jointly
studying the American way of life. He made many friends Of the heritage and accompllshments of the black Americans is
whl~e here. Mundavell is now named Gesoarghese Mar certainly a service we must support.
•
Even today you can stlll hear that fatal question _ "What
• ~::~i~~r~~. relatiyely new role as a,bishop In the Greek
'"
hllve blacks ever done for America?" This 'question has
'
· CAROL AND JIM ADAMS who have been residing on High developed partly because of the various mediums (books,
st., In Pomeroy for several years, are looking forward to television, movies) failing to portray blacks in any meaningful
moving into their new brick home now under construction in role. Throw In a janitor, cook, or a maid and that was suppose
~
Syracuse. The home is the result of much plamlng and the to be sufficient.
·
~
Adams watch for progress each day. Jim drew lhe plans (or
(Note : This is In no way to show disrespect to these
the home - .
professions because there is honor in all _ but blacks have
DEDICATION AND OPEN HOUSE' lor the new Jefferson even more to offer and to give).
t
County Joint vocational School was held last Sunday. George
Showing menial tasks only reinforce the public's belief
•
Hargraves, former Meigs Local School District Superin- that blacks didn't accomplish anythln~ except picking cotton.
rendent and now superintendent of lhat new school, sent along .
But long befo~e slavery was even mtroduced m America,
a program from the open house. The new facility is quite an black men were living, fighting, and dying for the Amerccan
·' .!
impressive setup judging from the pictures in the program.
~olutlonary cause. One by name, Crispus Attucks was the
·
f1rst to be killed during the Boston Massacre Tlda clearly
WEDNESDAY EVENING MEMBERS of Drew Websrer points to the fact that all blacks in America wer~ not products
Post 39, American Legion, will meet at 6 p.m. at the post home of slavery.
to deliver bread to homes throughout the commtJ?ity. In exAnd there have been many black, war .heroes and black
change for the break, members.will receive donations for the units which certainly warrants a place In Ameri
hi t0
"Gift for the Yanks Who Gave" program, design~ to make
But blacks have also made overwhebnln:a::.ar~ 1;
the hollday season for hospitalized veterans a little more science music art Industry medici
d ti
d
·~
ea•~er is post members
'
•
•
•
ne, e uca on, an
bad
dl
I
h
I
R
I
P easan . egar ess o ow
•• e w "'
•
politics. Such names as Marian Anderson Benjamin Banfaithfully carry out tbe bread delivery·
neker, Thurgood Marshall, Jan Matzellger,
Ralph Bunche,
THE BANJO'S back In town.
Robert Smalls, and Mary McLeod Bethune should all be noted
Bill Clark who some years back used to bring the house in our history books.
down with his bright banjo n\]lllbers In shows of the Big Bend ·
This is not hbe time to make a separate section of "black
Minstrel AsllOciation, has been brushing up on the instrument histQry" as blacks performed a very Integral part ill weaving
to make another a~arance in the assoolalion's Fall Follies to and shaping tbe success of our nation. Instead, it is time to
be given at 8:10 ·p.m. on the Saturday following Thanksgiving. view history in its entirety and its truth. This means inBill has been unable to take partfor a number of years because corporating the accomplishments of all races. Since they
of out of town employment but will be home for the long occurred together, they should. be recorded together.
,
Thanksgiving weekend.
We need to be constantly aware of every one who has
Think you'll enjoy this fal!'s show which is being reviv,ed dedicated his time, talents, and abilities.· For it took . their
for the benefit of the Meigs Athletic Boosters. A new voca! trio contributions to make our lives more comforting, more
has been formed consisllng of Mrs. Roberta Kraueter Ma1den, rewarding, and more secure.
who bas moved back to Meigs County, BID Young and Larry
Blacks have a heritage that they can reflect upon with
Brogan with Brogan providing the guitar accompaniment. pride.,This heritage has been neatly hidden for too many
Mrs. Maiden, Young and Brogan all have appeared as soloists years. But slowly America is revf11ling the whole truth _ and
In previous BSSOclation shon and were invited to do so this why shouldn'tshe, afterall, it is her heritage, too.
fall. However, they chose to combine their talents lor
presentatiDI) of some Glen Campbell and John Denver type
numbers. Also working spearately from other cast members is
a girls' trio composed of Jan VanVranken, June Wamsley and
MIDDLEPORT - Plans Dec. 5 and 6 at the Thrift
Paula Eichinger. June Van Vranli;en is trainillll and ac- for the annual Christmas Shop, East Second St.,
eompany the girls who promlaed to be another show stand- bazaar to be held all day on Pomeroy, were finalized
out. ph, and incidentaUy,ln this fall'~ show, Cindy Patterson
when the Meigs County
of Syracuse, will he doing her show stopping novelty number that's a heap of spaghetti.
Humane Society held its
which can't even be eJ:plalned lnwordabutls something to see.
The unit also extends monthly meeting at Mid••
..
The costuming for the llliD!ber Is quite unusual and Cindy's thanks to the Meigs Local dleport village hall.
identification Is hidden all the way by a large hat.
School District for use of one
The bazaar will feature
So - thoee are just some of the highlights planned for the of the district buses for the many homemade · items,
Fall Follies. Advance ssle tickets - selling at 25 cents each training and treatment including novelties, as well as
leestbanll\eywiUbeattbedooronsbowniBht - arelimltedto practice in the group got in homemade food items. The
600. They're on sale at Dutton's Drug Store and Bahr Clothiers extricating processes. Boys group made plans for a
In Middleport; Miller's Market In Rutland, and at Nelson's and girls on the bus helped regional seminar to be held in
Drug Store, Swisher and Lohse Drug Store and the New York out pretending to be "in- Meigs County 'in the spring
Clothing House In Pomeroy.
jured."
with John Inman, Great
Lakes Regional Director of
A HELPFUL TIP to "Poley's Pointers:• by Ruth TIIJis,
THANKS TO ANNA Black- the Humane Society ; in
Rou" I, Rutland, has been accepted for publication and will wood Howell for a touching charge.
·
appear In her column on Nov. 25.
·
letter which she termed
The group · discussed the
Ruth's tip reads: ·
•
"sentimental." Sentimental animal placement program
•
" An easy way to keep a record of long dlsta~ telephone or not, we - and the whole which is going well, t~e
' calla is to keep your appoinlmelll calendar near the pllone and world for that matter - could clinical program and the antithen write the number called on the date it Ia made. When lbe use a gteat deal more of that cruel ty activities being
phone bill comes it is easy to locate any possible errors."
approach.
carried out.

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Lelten of opllllon ar~ welcomed. They sbould he
. leu than 310 words long (or be subject~ ~eduction by
llle editor I ~nd mll81 be signed with die slgoee•a ad....
. . · N••n ~DAY .be wllbheld upoa pubUcatioa.
8owever, ou reqant, names will be dlacloaed. Letten
lbeald be II! good taste, addressing Issues, not per·

1
1
1 IOIUIIltlee.
I
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a .. _

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I organiza,t!on such as S.E:O.E.M.S. can give. Who do you''
I know?
·
I
The most tmportant argument agaiilst S.E.O.E.M.S. Is~
I that it is not free. If the Volunteer E.M.S.' can raise thousands;

I of dollars, is it free? How many people donate "thank-you"

1 money? I would like the best service available for my money,
I

5lliDt
•
•·

~

I

fri~nd

they do tlieir best. 'My father and also a
might not be
I alive
if it were not lor the superior sernce that only an·

Call your commissioners and request that a new election ·
be held. Register and vote for life saving S.E.O.E.M.S.
I
Sincerely/
I
Patricia Hastings, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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Nov. l3, 19?5
· Dear Sir,
As a Registered Nurse and one who is concerend about
health facilities, I address this letter in support of SEOEMS.
My letter is not against the Volunteer Emergency Squad, but
rather to help place things In their proper perspectives - to ·
help establlsh priorities.
One major item to be considere(l is that these men who
currently run the Volunteer Squad, also have their other jobs
to do to provide for their families. Is it lair to either these men
or their respective employers to remove them from their jobs
to give us essentially free services? Or are we, in fact, taking
advantage of a coo~rned group of men who cared enough to.
help supplement OUf Medical Transportation needs. Secondly,
although the men of the Volunreer Squsd are trained to· take
care of someofthe immediate needs, they are not as skilled as
the members of SEOEMS are, nor can the equipment in the
transport vans be considered comparable - SEOEMS is better
equipped for emergency, situations, ·
·
In times past, before tbe Volunteer Squad or SEOEMS
emerged, I rode with Waugh-Halley-Wood in transporting
critically ill children and adults, in emergency situations to
~
hospitals in Cincinnati, Columbus and Huntington in order that
they could receive the benefits of the increased medical
assistance which was not and stillis not available locally. ,
Supposing that the SEOEMS program goes down in defeat
- how do you, who voted against the levy think you are going
to be transported to other hospitals where more In depth
assistance is avallable? And where do., those of you, who feel
SEOEMS is not · a necessary service, plan to obtain the
necessary s!dlled personnel to accompany these volunteers In
transporting the critlca~y Ill person to other hospitals?
It would seem to me that weighing money against a life is a
pretty cheap and uncaring way of life - $25 for a trip here In
Gallipolls ~ as the Tribune suggested, Nov.' 13, 1975, perhaps a·
flat fee should be negotiated. To go to Col,umbus Children's
Hospital it costs, by SEOEMS, $25 for the first 15 miles and $1
for each mile thereafter. The mileage to Columbus Children's
Hospital is 114 miles - that amounts to $124 - Is that amount
of money too much to pay for the life of a child - your child?
Is itlove when we value money more than life and is It love
when we become parasites and take the free services of others
instead of paying In some manner for it? If money is such an
important issue, then I would suggest that the 669 people who
voted down the levy work for and with the Volunteer Service,
I'm sure lhey could use more than mooetary help.
Yes, I reallie full well this letter sounds bitrer - But!
when it comes to my life - I want it ! And, I can in no way
compare my life to dollars and cents.
Sincerely,
JaniCe Luman, R.N.

PLAN IN DANGER
Saturday.
·
WASiUNG:rON (UPI) - A A $23 million appropriation' ..
u
r ~ quest by the Customs
s~fe:~ar~roj~~~t toye~~~.~ Bureau to set up an electronic '
Olympics at Montreal from a security system s for the,
Munich- type terr orist games July 17-Aug. I has .
tragedy may go down the been slashed back to ,2.7
drain because of the Ford million by the Office of
••
adminis Ira tion 's federal Management and Bu1get,
budget squeeze, sources said sources told UP!.
•

..

'COVER GIRLI

RAMBOUILLET, France

: "We welcome the rapprochement, reached at the re·.le$\erl of five allied In- quest of many other coundustrial n•tions today tries, betlj'Jen the views of
. )allliCI)ed a joint cr11ckdown ~e:unll!l&lt;l ~tes and France
. mille worst world ~Uion , on tlie need for stability that
In four decades.,Ford balled ihe ref~rm ·of the inIt 118 "a conviction lhat we ternational monetary system
can maatef our future... .
must promote."
Fcird and the leaders of
limnediately after issuing .
Britain, Frllnce, Japan, the declaration capping three
Gtnnany and Itaiy were daya of informal, cordial
jubilant o~ resollltion of the illscussions held In this quaint
lborniest problem In the cOuntryside village 30 miles
~Y economic summit from Paris, the leaders
-an end to deep U.S.-French dispersed. Ford boarded Alr
disputes over the in- Force One at Orly Airport for
lel'ilalional' monetary sys- his return to Washington .
tem.
"We Intend to play our own
In their "Declaration of full part and ·strengthen our
Ramboulllet," the six leaders efforts for closer inIIIICI:
.
.
ternational cooperation and

constructive dialogue among
all countries, transcending
differences in stages of
economic development,
degrees of resourc~ enfuwinent and politfcal and
social systems," the \,500word declaration said.
The six men said their
nations are determined to
overcome unemployment,
inflation and
energy
problems. There was no
specific action cited, but tbe
leaders
made
their
declaration a charter for
perhaps the most extensive
free
world
economic
cooperation In hiStory.

'.

;...

-

VOL. XXVII . NO. 152
/

WE ALSO
HAVE GIFT
CERTIFICATES

!!!!I!

Middle of Upptr Block. PoiJitroY
()pel) All Dey Thurscleys-Fridty Tlll,i i i i i

::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::

Final four Junior Miss

The Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss committee today announced the final four contestants - two of Racine and
the others of Iron ton and
· Nelsonville - in the 1976
Junior Miss finals to be held
Sunday, Nov. 23, at the Meigs
Junior
High
School
auditorium in Middleport.
Tickets are on sale by
Junior Miss contestants .
Advance tickets are $1.,25 to
students and $1 .50 to adults.
Door price is '1.50 for
students an~ '1.75 for adults.
The even I begins at 3:15p.m.
The latest contestsnts are
Patsy Jean McFadden,
..
daughter of Ladel McFadden
~
' ~
TROPHIES SHOWN - Ralph Werry, director 11 the
and Virginia McFadden ,
,. Southelltern Qlio Junior Mils Cmtest l\llplays .the II
Nelsonville ; Jamisue
tropbls to be awarded IIIIIOO(Ithe 11 contestant&amp; for acMcilwain, daughter of Mr.
C~JU~Pililunentlln various fielda of endeavor. The pageant
and Mrs. William Mcilwain,
will begin at 3:15p.m. Sunday at the Meigs Junior High Ironton; Becky Sayre, .
School In MlddleJIOrt.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

..

Nov . 14, 1975

/

•

'

DESTIN

.

,.
•

,

..

••

iDX (JI '11IE 11 GIRLS wbo want the Soilllleastern Ohio Junior Miss TIUe at 3:15p.m.
imdly 11 the Mete• Junior High School auditorium In Middleport, are front, I to r, Katrina
Bat.ey Eutern · Debr'a Roush, Southern High School; Lynnita Newbury, Southwestern High
Schooi; back, Patly McFadden, Nelaonvllle-York; Becky Sayre, Southern High, and Avis
BilleD, Eutem.

OWM~I
Insurance

you'lllind it at State Farm .

~

'':l,·

'

CARROL K. SNOWDEN

) ' 1 .': ·-i~ ';'

. '

,1,

'•.

w-,
:f•; t~

·!lf.:t. '~ -~ .,._ ..

PICTURE YOuR FAMILY IN THIS KROEHLER CITATION CAPE 000 UVING ROOM
SOFA AND MATatiNG atAIR, THIS WEEK ONLY. •3990o ·

24 State
StrMI

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, THIRD JTLOOR

Ga lllpottt

l'llone 44f~UO
Homo 446-4511

IJlle I good neighbor,
Siltie Fann is there.

·~
-·.
_ ,. r..... _ _
I

:~~. .,,

--·-

PRICE 15'

MONDAY; NOVEMBER 17, 1975

POMEROY·MIOOLEPORT, OHIO

MAIN stoRE. ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE/MYlAND OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, 9:30 TO 8

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY.
'

I

FIVE OF '111E 11 OONTESTANTS In the annual Sou~stern Ohio Junior Miss Contest
' n fnlnl, llo r. Pam Parsons, Sou~ lli8h; JamiJue Menwin, Ironton High School;
Olrla&amp;yMellmlld, Nelsonvllle-YII'k; In~. Pecgy Truuell, Eastern High, and Melania
Wlldnl&amp;, Soutllem. The 11 contestantl and their parentl were guests at a luncheon Sunday
' lfttrnoon at the Meigs Inn.
'
'
~

. W.RECKAGEFOUND
SAULT STE. MARIE
(UP I) - Coast Guard
officials say II Is almost
certain a culler has located
the wreckage of the ore
carrier Edmund Fitzgerald
on the liottom of Lake
Superior II) about 520 feet of
water.
But officials sai,d II was
unlikely the Coast Guard
would attempt to recover
the bodies of the 29 men
who went down with the
Fitzgerald last Monday
night during a fierce storm.

contestants announced

I

ffORC"

Give ms a call today. You'll
discover what's mada State Farm
the numbar ona homeownars in·
·SUrer In the world.

enttne

at y

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

II you're looking
for the best value in

..

•

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

LAYAWAY NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS

THE RUTLAND Volunteer
Unit of the Southeastern Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
extends a big thanks for the
reception given the unit's
spaghetti dinner. Over 350
dinners
served an\1

RUTLAND FLOWER SHOW - Mrs. Pauline Atkins, left, displays her blue ribbon
winner in the class, "Of the Log Cabin ." Pictured center is Miss Ruby Diehl, president of the
Rutland Garden Club which staged the show, and Mrs. Janet Bolin, Rutland, who judged the
show. See Page 4lor report by Charlene Hoeflich.

•

e

A pretty shoe to compliment your pretty
dress and pants outfits.
Black leather .

Volunteer Fire Department
will hold a giant consignment
auction on Saturday, Dec. 6,
at the J . R. Kennedy farm in
Tuppers Plains. Anyone
wishing to consign articles
may contact Clift Longenette,
667-3890 or Undsey Lyons,
667-3303, or any member of
the department.

has been our recognition thai
the objective of sustained,
stable economic growth will
be facilitated by our common
efforts ... Over the past three
days, in this beautiful setting,
we have found a new spirit a spirit of cooperation."
He asserted the six leaders
believe free people "can
master their future."
The high points of the
declaration, hammered out
· at the historic 14th century
castle, were pledges to
eliminate "the waste" of
unemployment, restrain
inflation, lower barriers . to
(Continued on j)age 8)

/ .'.... . '

TimORANGEfu~ip r-~------------~--------------~
· ------------------------------~------------------~-----------------------~

\

Symbolic of the spirit of
Ramhouillet perhaps was an
apparent change in France's
demaud that the United
States abandon its noating
monetary exchange system
in favor of fixed exchange
rates.
Conference sources said
·lhe agreement between Ford
and President Valery
Giscard d 'Estaing resulted in
France all but relinquishing
its demands for the fixed rate
system.
In a separate statement,
Ford said "Perhaps our most
important accompllshmenl
ov.er the past several days

r ·.

SHOES

How much is your life worth?
Dear Slr:
Who will have to die needlessly before the county will
regret voting against the Soulheastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service?
How much Is your life worth? No one knows when he will.
need superior medical service in an ambulance. It is not
unnsual for the sick to hi! transported to another hospital.
WO!J)d you like to die or have a loved one die needlessly
because transportation, · equipment and medica were not
avallable? Are we afraid of spending a little for such a great
service?
,
The Voluateer E.M.S. is much appreciated and I am sure

"
(UP!) - Preaident Ford and

~

Nurse s·upports SEOEMS

;F ord promises full recovery
~f . slumping world economy

Robert Sayre. and Melanie
Waldnig, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Waldnig, all of
Racine.
Miss McFadden, is a
member of the marchinG and
concert band at NelsonvilleYork High School. She also is
a member of •the Quill and
Scroll, Latin t1ub, Future
Teacher, Business Education
Club, F.H.A. and the Drama
Club.
She is sp~nsored by the
Meigs Inn of Pomeroy and
will prsenl a dramatic
reading for her talent.
. Miss Mcilwain is sponsored
by tbe City Loan and Savings
Company of Pomeroy. She Is
a member of the National
Honor Society ,.Science t1ub,
Spanish Club, Rainbow Girls,
'G.A.A., Annual Staff and
Drama Clu~ . She has
received state ann district
Science Fair awards, and a
scholarship to summer music
camp for two years at the
University of Kansas. She is a
senior at Ironton High School.
For her , talent she will
present a vocal solo.
Miss Sayre is a member of
the National Honor Society,
YearbOok Staff, t1ass Officer, Student Council,, t'hess
t1ub and ·a member of the
Ohio Youth Choir.
The Southern High School
senior wiU present a vocal
solo for her talent. She is
sponsored by the Ra cine
Home National Bank.
The final contestant to
enter is Miss Waldnig of
Southern High School. She is
a member of the school choir ,
band
boosters,
office
assistant, member of the TriM, Pep C.:lub, YearbOok Staff,
and was first runnerup in the
Queen of Hearts conU!st.
For her talent she will
present a comedy skit. She is
spohsored by the Racine
Home National Bank.

Picket lines
gO up at GSI

GALI.JPOIJS, Ohio (Uf'l)
- Some members of Communication Workers of
America l.Ax:al 1700 went on
:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::: strike Sunday at Gallipolis
State Institute, a facility for
the mentally retarded .
A spokesman for !he state
Department of Mental Health
and Retardation I!Bid about40
CWA members "are IICiively

Teenage
cyclist
injured

oneqed In !he WlllkaQt'.... ....
local has about 185 mem-

bers.
Dr. Bernard Niehn,
superintendent of tbe facility,
said two other unions - the
Civil Service Employes
Union and the Federation of
A 14 year-old Rt. 2 Patriot State, County and Municipal
youth was admi tied to Oak Employes - have not
Hill Hospital Saturday honored the jjicket lines.
evening following injuries
suffered in a car-motorcycle ;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
accident on &lt;.'rooked Town
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Rd., one and se~en-lenths
Wednesda'y through
miles north of Rt. 233 in· Friday, fair and mild
Galli a County.
Wednesday. Cbance of
According to the Gallia- showers and cooler ThursMeigs Post, Stale Highway day and Friday. Highs In
Patrol, William Lester, 14, the 60s Wednesday, eoollng
suffered two broken legs,
to tbe 40s by Friday. Lows
collar bone, dislocated In the upper 40s and low 50s
shoulder and lacerations.
Wednesday morning ,
The patrol said young dropping to the 30s by
·Lester was headed south on Friday.
(.'rooked Town Rd. , when his
motorcycle collided with an :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
auto driven north by Louis
Paulins, 19, Rt. 2, Patriot in a
curve about 4:50p.m.
The driver of the auto was
Sunny and mild today and
not injured. The accident is Tuesday. Highs in the mid
still under investigation.
60s. Fair tonight. Lows to mid
It was one of five weekend 40s .
Probabili ty
of
accidents probed by the precipitation near zero per
patrol.
cent today, tonight and
(Continued on page 8)
Tuesday.

.

a

Weather

"We
are
probably
OtJ!'ratlng at 75 or 85 per cent
capacity In direct patient
care," Niehn said. "We are
able to take care of tbe
residents and meet minimal
requirements for their care
and safety."
The spokesman for the
Department of Mental Health

grievances over lack of
promotions, transfers,
suspension of an employe for
five days, an Individual workIJ18 beneath his job speclfication and the posting of
positions which have been
reclassified. .
· . He said the department
would not respond to the
and Rel.ardatlan aald the arlevancea until CWA
a.w A · baa pre~:ted "'"J'ben md Ulelr wdi&gt;IIL.

\fWI'.I:Mitl:':'l::&gt;m:::::··:::;:;:::::;:;::::::::8::::~:::!:~:~:!::::::::::::!:!:!:!:!:!:!::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::;::;~::~

ews. . . in Briefs!
By Ualted Prest Interuatlooal
ALBANY, N. Y. - GOV. HUGH CAREY'S PLAN for the
financial (escue of New York City and the state still faces its
biggest problem in the state legislature, whose members m~
consider more than billion in new state and city taxes.
President Ford reportedly Is satisfied with the Democratic
governor's plan to balance the state budget and has dropped
his opposition to federal aid to keep·the city solvent. But the
mammoth tax package has drawn opposition from
Republicans in the legislature.
Before they recessed their emergency session for the
weekend, the lawmaker&lt; approved a plan to allow New York
City to delay repayment of $1.6 billion of its debt grincipal and
narrowly beat a deadline for keeping Yonkers, the state's
fourth largest city, from going broke. They also approved an
. ~ mlllioo emergency appropriation to keep the state's
Housing Finance "Agency from collapsing.
But the toughest parts of Carey, 's financial rescue package
- $872 million in new state taxes and $200 millloo more from
city residents - are yet to come: a freeze on state workers'
salaries, local tax increases of more than $400 million and a
pemy increase In the current four~nt state sales tax coupled
to an income tax credit for persons making less than $20,000.
The governor also has proposed a one-cent hike in tbe city's
four-cent sales tax. Together with lhe stale Increase, the
proposals would bring the sales levy in the nation 's largest city
to 10 per cent.

'I

MADRID, SPAIN - GENERAI.JSSIMO FRANCISOO
(Continued on page 8)

E-R unit makes

Utilities
hit with
damage suit
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Co·
lumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. and city officials
bave been hit with a $150
million civil damage suit by a
man who says utility rate
Increases imposed since Jan.
I; 1974 are illegal.
Ray ~ard of Columbus,
in a Franklin Cllunty Common P\eu Court s9it, claims
a dty ordinance prevent.!l the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio from acting on a
utility's rate Increase request
unless it has first been voted
upon by council and the
electorate.
Columbia Increased rates
· by 45 per cent and C4rSOE by
49 per cent since Jan. I, 1974,
said Leonard, who asked the
court for a restrainlng order
preventing the PUCO from
acting on any more rate hikes
(Continued on page 8)
.I

weekend runs
RACINE - Th~ Racine ER squad was called to Route 2
at 3 a.m. Sunday for Alice
Balser who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 6:02 a.m., the
squad went to Route I for
Hattie Roush who suffered a
possible fracture of her collar
bone. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 8:15p.m.
the squad answered a call in
Racine for Dave Clark who
suffered a possible fracture
on his right knee. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

· SISTERS RETURN TO FATI!ER'S HOME - The Lewis Sisters, Lucie, left and
Virginia returned to the restoro.d home on their father, the late teacher and historiar. Virgil
Lewis, Sunday during a special Open House in Mason. They are shown here with a ptc.ture of
their father above a fireplace. The Lewis residence, located adjacent to the New Ubrary.
was recently renovated and turned into a historical home.

CARS DAMAGED
Minor
damase
was
reported to two cars and one
driver was cited to mayor's
court as the result of a
collision on West Main St. at
7: 07 p.m. Saturday. Police
said a car driven by Bradley
Spen!'er, 62, Pomeroy,
crossed over the center line
and· struck a car driven by
Ronald Ferguson, Gallipolis.
Spencer was cited for driving
left of center.
J,

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